Misplaced Pages

Evansville BlueCats

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
See also: Sports in Evansville
Evansville BlueCats
Established 2003
Folded 2007
Played in Evansville, Indiana
at the Roberts Municipal Stadium
League/conference affiliations
National Indoor Football League (2003–2004)
United Indoor Football (2005–2007)
Current uniform
Team colorsBlue, orange
   
MascotT.D. Fiddler
CheerleadersAdults, Junior Blues, Baby Blues
Personnel
Owner(s)Ed, Ann, John & Tara Voliva
Head coachJohn Hart
Team history
  • Evansville BlueCats (2003-2007)
Championships
League championships (0)
Conference championships (0)
Division championships (0)
Home arena(s)

The Evansville BlueCats were a professional indoor football team based in Evansville, Indiana. They were a member of the United Indoor Football Association (UIF). They debuted in 2003 as a member of the National Indoor Football League.

Location

Evansville is located along the Ohio River in southwest Indiana. The BlueCats played their home games at Roberts Municipal Stadium. The stadium seating capacity when configured for Evansville BlueCats football is 11,310.

The name BlueCats

According to the team, the proper and official way to spell the team name, Evansville BlueCats, was with a capital "C" in the word BlueCats. Evansville is a river city and the blue cat, part of the Catfish family, is the largest fish found in the Ohio River, often growing to over 100 pounds. Originally called the 'Rivertown Mudcats' (before being announced), the team's founder, Michael Arnold, changed the name to Evansville BlueCats to reflect that the blue cat is particularly known for its strength and endurance. The BlueCats mascot, T. D. Fiddler, was a giant, walking, kid-friendly catfish that resembled the BlueCats logo.

History

In 2001, Michael Arnold received NIFL franchise rights to build a team in Evansville, and after months of site surveys and putting together a business plan, Arnold went to the city for approval. The city wanted to see samples from the league, so Arnold and SMG Director Sandy Aaron went before the Evansville Parks and Rec. with video samples and letters from the NIFL. Local media jumped all over the concept and the word was quickly published making front page news. In early 2002, Arnold and League President Carolyn Shiver spent hours in the league ownership meetings, in Denver, attempting to get a 'Short Field' variance for Roberts Stadium. They were successful and the Evansville Bluecats were due to kick off in March 2002, but Arnold and city officials felt that it was too quick as the funds had not been developed yet, so the kickoff was postponed until 2003. After months of working long hours and much planning, Arnold was able to secure a group of local investors and went to work on building the team. On March 23, 2003, the Evansville Bluecats kicked off indoor football in Roberts Stadium with a crowd of almost 9000 fans and 92 cheerleaders leading the chant "BlueCats"! In their inaugural season the Bluecats were led by Head Coach and Defensive Coordinator Avery Atadero, Offensive Coordinator John Hart, Offensive line coach Tim Shipp, and Defensive Line Coach Greg Myers. The franchise, after a tough year of growing pains, was sold to new owners in 2004 and was closed after year five in 2007.

Fans – Booster Club

The Evansville BlueCats Booster Club, also known as the “FinHeads”, were a unique organization within the ranks of the United Indoor Football family. The “FinHeads” were more than just a fan group, they were the only UIF Booster Club in the league that was registered with the government and was classified as a 501c non-profit organization. The Booster Club had a written Mission Statement and Code of By Laws, as well as a Board of Directors with elected officers. The Club raised their funds through membership dues, Booster Club sponsorships, and half pot drawings at BlueCats home games.

Cheerleaders

The Evansville BlueCats had three cheerleader/dance teams organized by age. The Baby Blues and Junior Blues were for children and the Evansville BlueCats professional cheerleading team was made up of adults. The adult cheerleaders won the NIFL "Best Dance Team" award in back-to-back seasons in 2003 and 2004, and were known around the league and around the country as one of the elite cheer/dance programs in minor league sports.

The 2006 season

In 2006, the Evansville BlueCats got off to a slow start (1-4) but rebounded in the second half of the season to win four of their last five games of the regular season and clinch a playoff berth for the second consecutive season. Evansville earned the #5 seed in the UIF playoffs. The team continued their late season surge in the playoffs and claimed an impressive 37-15 road win over the Omaha Beef in the first round. Evansville lost by only 6 points, 32-26, to the #1 seed and unbeaten Sioux Falls Storm in the UIF semi-finals. Sioux Falls went on to win the League Championship a week later.

Team history

John Hart took over as the head coach of the Evansville BlueCats prior to the 2006 season and led the team to their best season ever. Coach Hart was named as the UIF Coach of the Year "Honorable Mention" by the league following the 2006 season. Coach Hart also served as Head Coach in 2007.

Head coaches

  • John Hart (2006–2007)
  • Ollie Guidry (2004–2005)
  • Avery Atadero (2003)

Season-by-season records

Season records
Season W L T Finish Playoff results
Evansville BlueCats (NIFL)
2003 1 13 0 6th Atlantic Eastern --
2004 4 10 0 4th Atlantic North --
Evansville BlueCats (UIF)
2005 7 8 0 2nd South Lost Round 1 (Lexington)
2006 8 9 0 2nd East Won Round 1 (Omaha)
Lost Semifinal (Sioux Falls)
2007 5 10 0 5th East --
Totals 25 50 0 (including playoffs)

Roster

2007 Evansville BlueCats "Frozen" roster
Quarterbacks
  • 10 Brent Dearmon

Running backs

  • 34 Ray Kirkley
  • 22 Michael Cosey
  • 82 Brandon Warner

Wide receivers

  • 88 Drouzon Quillen

Running Backs/Wide receivers

  •  7 Dale Jennings
  • 11 Otis Shannon

Offensive linemen

  • 51 Don Pitt
  • 55 Kevin Reese
  • 64 Doran Yilla
  • 77 Anthony Bullock
  • 60 Jim Booker

Defensive linemen

  • 56 Deion Holts
  • 31 Arlan Johnson
  • 79 Johnny Brown
  • 44 Terrance Cheatham
Linebackers
  • 12 John Winchester

Defensive backs

  • 16 A. J. Bryant
  • 23 Tez Morris
  •  2 Tarron Acuff
  •  3 Hunter Pingston
  •  6 David Reese
  •  8 Shelton Williams

Kicker

  • 35 Nate Meyer

Inactive Protected Reserve

  •    Richard Johnson WR/DB
  •    Matt Sola DL
  •    Efi Eyo QB

Injury Exempt

  •    Haven Mosley QB
  •    Jon Penrod OL
  •    J.R. Webber DB
  •    Carlo Heard WR

Roster

Updated 2007-07-24

References

Also see: Sports in Evansville.

External links

Sports teams based in Indiana
Baseball
IL
Indianapolis Indians
ML
Fort Wayne TinCaps
South Bend Cubs
AA
Gary SouthShore RailCats
FL
Evansville Otters
NwL
Kokomo Jackrabbits
PL
Dubois County Bombers
Lafayette Aviators
Terre Haute Rex
Flag of Indiana
Basketball
NBA
Indiana Pacers
WNBA
Indiana Fever
G League
Indiana Mad Ants
ABA
Indiana Lyons
Football
NFL
Indianapolis Colts
IFL
Fishers Freight
Hockey
ECHL
Fort Wayne Komets
Indy Fuel
SPHL
Evansville Thunderbolts
Motorsport
IndyCar
Andretti Global
Arrow McLaren
Chip Ganassi Racing
Dreyer & Reinbold Racing
Ed Carpenter Racing
Juncos Hollinger Racing
Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing
IMSA
Bryan Herta Autosport
Wayne Taylor Racing
Indy NXT
Abel Motorsports
HMD Motorsports
Roller derby
WFTDA
Demolition City Roller Derby
Fort Wayne Roller Derby
Naptown Roller Derby
Soccer
USLC
Indy Eleven
USL2
Fort Wayne FC
South Bend Lions FC
NPSL
F.C. Indiana
WPSL
F.C. Indiana
Ultimate
UFA
Indianapolis AlleyCats
Premier Ultimate League
Indianapolis Red
Volleyball
Pro Volleyball Federation
Indy Ignite
College athletics
NCAA
Division I
Ball State Cardinals
Butler Bulldogs
Evansville Purple Aces
Indiana Hoosiers
Indiana State Sycamores
IU Indy Jaguars
Notre Dame Fighting Irish
Purdue Boilermakers
Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons
Southern Indiana Screaming Eagles
Valparaiso Beacons
NCAA
Division II
Indianapolis Greyhounds
Purdue Northwest Pride
NCAA
Division III
Anderson Ravens and Lady Ravens
DePauw Tigers
Rose-Hulman Fightin' Engineers
Wabash Little Giants
NAIA
Indiana Wesleyan Wildcats
Marian Knights
Oakland City Mighty Oaks
Saint Francis Cougars
Taylor Trojans
Categories: