Source:XFL 2001- The Bolts & Hitmen. |
Freezing temperatures and 22 mph wind that made it feel like 6 degrees -- and that was at the start of the game -- sent most of the 36,458 fans at the New York-New Jersey Hitmen's home opener to the exits early.
Only about 5,000 hardy fans were left at Giants Stadium when Charles Puleri's fourth-and-14 pass from the Birmingham 19-yard line fell incomplete in the end zone, allowing the Bolts to beat the Hitmen 19-12 in a sloppily played game.
Stepfret Williams, who played 26 NFL games mostly with the Dallas Cowboys, paced the Bolts' victory with eight catches for 134 yards. He caught a 70-yard second-quarter pass to set up a 7-yard touchdown pass from Casey Weldon to Quincy Jackson, and gave Birmingham the lead for good with a league-best 95-yard punt return for a touchdown with 8:12 left in the third quarter. Weldon's conversion pass to Kaipo McGuire extended the lead to 13-6.
Mike Archie's second 1-yard touchdown run got the Hitmen within a point with 8:14 left, but Puleri's pass for the point after was broken up by Eric Sloan.
Linebacker Keith Franklin closed out the scoring, returning a fumble by Hitmen receiver Anthony DiCosmo 12 yards for a touchdown with 3:32 to go.
While the game was close, both teams made mistake after mistake. There were five turnovers, 18 penalties for 141 yards and a couple of questionable calls by the officials, including one that seemed to deprive the Hitmen of at least a safety.
XFL founder Vince McMahon admitted the new league was still a work in progress, but he insisted we're "the best darn football game there is in February."
The Hitmen got their first touchdown after Weldon (17-of-26 for 190 yards) threw an interception on the opening series. New York-New Jersey also blocked a punt and partially blocked another in the first quarter.
The Hitmen were just as generous. They lost two fumbles, Puleri (13-of-24 for 149) threw an interception and they gave up the two big plays by Williams.
If there was a highlight for the Hitmen it was their cheerleaders, who braved the conditions clad in white halter tops, pinstripe hot pants and what appeared to be garters and full-length leather coats that were rarely buttoned."
From XFL 2001
If it's possible for one man to destroy both a pro football league and a pro wrestling organization, that man is Vince McMahon. And yes, the WWE is still in business today and McMahon still owns it, but it's no longer pro wrestling, but professional fake TV (which is what call so-called reality TV) with more wrestling moves and bigger, stronger, more athletic people.
There's a market in America for a 2nd, competitive, major league, division one, pro football league, but pro football is not pro wrestling. Pro football is real and spontaneous, you don't know what's going to happen, the winners aren't pre-picked. Vince McMahon is at least arguably the father of what's called reality TV in America, but should've never had anything to do with a real, pro football league.
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