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Finally, an identity

NFL's 32nd franchise will be called Houston Texans

Click here for more on this story
Latest: Thursday September 07, 2000 11:05 AM

 

HOUSTON (AP) -- A not-too-well-kept secret was revealed Wednesday when Houston owner Bob McNair announced the nickname of the NFL's 32nd franchise will be the Texans.

The name won out over the Stallions and Apollos.

"Are you ready for some football?" McNair shouted to a downtown crowd estimated at 16,000 which turned out to learn the team's name, logo and colors.

The colors for the team that will begin play in 2002 will be battle red, steel blue and liberty white with a bull's head logo that includes a Texas Lone Star on one side.

"We're so excited about the return of the NFL to Houston," McNair said. "We don't want to be stereotyped as cowboys. We are proud of our past but we don't want to be bound by it."

The First Texans
Before moving to Kansas City and becoming the Chiefs, the AFL's Dallas Texans played in the Cotton Bowl for three years.
Year  Record  Finish 
1960  8-6  2nd-AFL West 
1961  6-8  2nd-AFL West 
1962  11-3  AFL champs 
 
 

Looking out over a stretch of downtown Texas Avenue that was turned into a football field, complete with goal posts, NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue revealed the team name and logo on a large screen.

"With teamwork you can achieve the impossible," Tagliabue said. "Not many years ago, you thought, 'It's not going to happen,' but it did happen and you can be proud of yourselves. You made it happen."

McNair paid $700 million for the franchise in a lengthy battle with Los Angeles, a favored place for the NFL because of the size of its media market. But Los Angeles never presented a unified plan and McNair won the team.

The crowd that showed up on a steamy afternoon reacted positively to the new name. Several spectators grabbed their cell phones to spread the word. "Yeah, it's the Texans," one man shouted into his phone.

Another fan, Chris Lockeridge, beamed beneath his hard hat that bore a sign with the year 2002 and a question mark attached.

 
Web Of Deception
HOUSTON (AP) -- A Web site the Security and Exchange Commission claims was purposely designed to mislead investors by offering fake shares of the new Houston Texans NFL franchise has been ordered closed by a federal judge.

The SEC said the Web page, www.houstontexans-nfl.com, failed to disclose that its owner, Edgar A. Guilbeau, and his company, Houston Texans NFL Football Team Holding Co., are not affiliated with the NFL or the new Houston franchise, the Houston Chronicle reported in Thursday's editions.

The SEC said Guilbeau's site also did not disclose that the stock offering is not registered with the SEC and created the illusion that Guilbeau's company was prosperous by listing a prosperous Houston address.

Guilbeau, who registered the company name with the Texas Secretary of State's office last spring, twice filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in the 1990s. He could not be reached for comment early Thursday morning by The Associated Press.

The Web site promised investors all the rights and privileges of a common stock shareholder, including receiving declared dividends and free or discounted promotional merchandise.

It required a $4,900 minimum stock investment but did not offer a prospectus on the company or list a broker handling the sale. Investors were told to send their Social Security numbers to a company secretary who would "initiate and process all administrative and necessary transactions upon receipt of payment." 
 

"I rooted for the Oilers and now I'll be rooting for the Texans," Lockeridge said. "It doesn't matter what they're called. I'll root for them."

The team labeled the day "The Big Return," with the Texans replacing the Houston Oilers, who left for Tennessee after the 1996 season.

"We've developed a name and logo that fans throughout the area and around the country and world will embrace for years to come," McNair said. "It is a logo worthy of the name and the brand of football I expect our team to play.

"The name and logo embody the pride, strength, independence, courage and achievement that make the people of Houston and our area special."

Earlier, former NFL kicker Raul Allegre staged a kickoff in the Astrodome to former players from Texas Southern, the University of Houston and Rice University to symbolically get the day of celebration started.

McNair said the footballs would be delivered to the mayors in Austin, San Antonio and Beaumont as part of the nickname announcement in those cities. Presentations to other cities were planned for Thursday.

A 69,500-seat retractable roof stadium is under construction adjacent to the Astrodome that will house the new NFL team and the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo beginning in 2002.

McNair has even bigger plans for his new stadium. He is preparing a presentation to the NFL and expects not only to get the 2004 Super Bowl in Houston, but to become a part of the Super Bowl rotation.

Several former Oilers and former coach Bum Phillips were present at the ceremony.

University of Texas fans, noting the similarity of the Texans' bull logo and their own Longhorns mascot, immediately started waving their "Hook 'em horns" hand signal, including Lockeridge.

"We'll just have to shorten it a bit for the Texans," he said.


 
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