Daytona Beach Hawgs

The Daytona Beach Hawgs were a professional indoor football team. They were a member of the NIFL. They played their home games at Ocean Center.

Bryson was replaced by Pepe Pearson, a former Ohio State standout, who commuted to Daytona Beach on gamedays only. His tenure was marred by the team having to fly out to Everett, Washington on the day of the game; a road trip to Fayetteville, N.C., without travel expenses, and a regular season finale in Rome, Ga., where the team traveled in mini-vans and had to share equipment. Despite this, the Hawgs still won their division championship with an 8-6 record and the right to host a playoff game.

The playoff game never came to fruition. The Hawgs' ownership group announced that it had been kicked out of the NIFL playoffs for using an ineligible player in the Rome game. Hawgs players insisted that league president Carolyn Shiver gave the player permission to compete in a conference call and speculated that the Hawg ownership group either did not have the money to host the playoffs or simply did not want to incur the expense.

As the situation was developing, the owner of the team's title sponsor, a local business machine supplier, had attempted to buy the Hawgs to no avail. However, the sponsor struck a deal with the rival American Indoor Football League for an expansion franchise and secured a two-year exclusive with the Ocean Center, thus denying the Hawgs a suitable place to play. That team, the Daytona Beach Thunder, began play in 2006 with Bryson as the head coach and many players and staff jumping over to the new team.

To this date, it is uncertain whether any players received any compensation. The Hawgs were removed off the NIFL web site shortly after the 2005 season concluded.

Famous quotes containing the word beach:

    When the inhabitants of some sequestered island first descry the “big canoe” of the European rolling through the blue waters towards their shores, they rush down to the beach in crowds, and with open arms stand ready to embrace the strangers. Fatal embrace! They fold to their bosoms the vipers whose sting is destined to poison all their joys; and the instinctive feeling of love within their breasts is soon converted into the bitterest hate.
    Herman Melville (1819–1891)