Los Angeles Wildcats (XFL)

The Los Angeles Wildcats (LA Wildcats) are a professional American football team based in the Los Angeles suburb of Carson, California. The team is a franchise of the new XFL founded by Vince McMahon’s Alpha Entertainment and plays its home games at the Dignity Health Sports Park, which is also home to the MLS’s LA Galaxy.[4]

Los Angeles Wildcats
Established2018 (2018)
Based inLos Angeles, California
Home stadiumDignity Health Sports Park
Carson, California
Head coachWinston Moss
General managerWinston Moss
Team presidentHeather Brooks Karatz
Owner(s)Alpha Acquico, LLC[1]
LeagueXFL
DivisionWest[2]
ColorsBlack, red, light orange[3]
     
Websitexfl.com/teams/los-angeles

Los Angeles joins New York, Dallas, Houston, Seattle, St. Louis, Tampa Bay and Washington, D.C. as the league's inaugural cities. Teams have 40-man active rosters and play a 10-week season. Vince McMahon said "the game will feature simplified rules for a faster pace of game that should complete in under three hours", and draw from former college and NFL players.[5]

History

On May 7, 2019, Winston Moss was announced as the team's head coach.[6]

On August 21, 2019, the team revealed its name, logos, and identity as the Los Angeles Wildcats, alongside the rest of the XFL teams.[7] A secondary logo was released August 24.

On February 8, 2020, the team played its first game losing to the Houston Roughnecks 37–17 in Houston.[8] Chad Kanoff scored the first touchdown in franchise history with a scramble left for a five yard score.[9]

On February 23, 2020, the Wildcats earned their first win in franchise history, defeating the DC Defenders 39–9.[10]

Market overview

Los Angeles is one of two cities to have also hosted a team in the original XFL, the other being New York/New Jersey; the Los Angeles Xtreme was the champion of the earlier XFL in the league's only season. (A third broader megalopolis, Central Florida, has also hosted teams in both the 2001 and 2020 incarnations of the league.)

As television networks have required alternative leagues to field teams in New York and Los Angeles to secure television coverage without brokering the airtime,[11][12] Southern California has a long history of alternative professional teams. In addition to the Xtreme, the city has hosted: the Los Angeles Avengers, LA KISS, Anaheim Piranhas and Los Angeles Cobras in the Arena Football League; the Los Angeles Express in the USFL; the Southern California Sun in the World Football League; the Orange County Ramblers and short-lived Long Beach Admirals in the Continental Football League; and numerous teams in the Pacific Coast Professional Football League in the 1930s and 1940s.

The Wildcats are in one of the most heavily crowded sports markets in the United States, competing for sports dollars against two NFL teams (Los Angeles Rams and Los Angeles Chargers), two NHL teams (Los Angeles Kings and Anaheim Ducks), two NBA teams (Los Angeles Lakers and Los Angeles Clippers), multiple NCAA Division I college basketball and college football programs, and in March and April, both the LA Galaxy and Los Angeles FC in MLS and the Los Angeles Dodgers and Los Angeles Angels in the MLB.

Staff

Los Angeles Wildcats staff
Front office
  • Director of player personnel – Joey Clinkscales
  • Director of football operations – Charles Bailey
  • Manager of football operations – Ty Knott
Head coaches
Offensive coaches
 
Defensive coaches
Special teams coaches
East Division
DC
NY
STL
TB
West Division
DAL
HOU
LA
SEA

Roster

Los Angeles Wildcats roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen
  • -- Sean Brown T
  • 59 Fred Lauina G
  • 75 Lene Maiava T
  • 73 Jaelin Robinson T
  • 56 Nico Siragusa G
  • 66 Patrick Vahe C
  • 62 Dwayne Wallace G

Defensive linemen

  • 99 Latarius Brady DE
  • 90 Roderick Henderson NT
  • 97 Reggie Howard NT
  • 95 Alex Jenkins DE
  • 77 Shawn Oakman DE
  • 91 Boogie Roberts DE
  • 96 Andrew Stelter NT
  • 98 Devin Taylor DE
Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists


Roster updated January 4, 2021
Depth chart
50 active, 15 inactive

XFL rosters

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.