Tampa Bay Storm Arena Football League

Tampa Bay Storm

Arena Football League (1991-2017)

Tombstone

Born: November 15, 1990 – The Pittsburgh Gladiators relocate to St. Petersburg, FL12004 Tampa Bay Storm Yearbook
Folded: December 21, 2017

First Game: June 1, 1991 (L 51-38 vs. Orlando Predators)
Last Game: August 26, 2017 (L 44-40 @ Philadelphia Soul)

Arena Bowl Champions: 1991, 1993, 1995, 1996 & 2003

Arenas

1991-1996: Thunderdome (30,000)21995 Arena Football League Record & Fact Book
Opened: 1990

1997-2017: St. Pete Times Forum (19,200)
Opened: 1996

Marketing

Team Colors:

  • 1994: Black, Silver & Royal Blue
  • 1999: Midnight Blue, Metallic Gold & White31999 Arena Football League Official Record & Fact Book

Dance Team (1995): The Stormsations

Ownership

Owners:

Attendance

The Storm played their first six seasons in the 30,000-seat Thunderdome (now Tropicana Field) in St. Petersburg before moving to downtown Tampa with the opening of the Ice Palace (now Amalie Arena) in late 1996.

The dome was the second largest building in the AFL at the time, trailing only the Louisiana Superdome. As of 2004, nearly a decade removed from their final game in St. Petersburg, the Storm still held 18 of the 19 largest crowds in Arena Football League history, all from games at Thunderdome.

On June 19, 1993 the Storm announced a crowd of 28,746 for a game against their arch rivals, the Orlando Predators. This remained the large crowd in Arena Football League history, never surpassed during the league’s remaining 25 seasons of competition.

 

Tap (mobile) or mouse over chart for figures. Tilting your mobile device may offer better viewing.

Source for Thunderdome-era attendance: 2004 Tampa Bay Storm Yearbook

Ice Palace/Times Forum attendance figures coming soon…

 

Background

The Tampa Bay Storm were arguably the greatest franchise in the 30-year history of the Arena Football League(s). The Storm played for 26 seasons and won 5 Arena Bowl titles. For many years the team was among the most popular box office attractions in the AFL.

The Storm started out as the Pittsburgh Gladiators, one of Arena Football’s four original franchises, in 1987. The team moved to Florida in the spring of 1991 under owner Bob Gries. The Storm made their debut at the Florida Suncoast Dome on June 1, 1991 with a 51-38 loss to the Orlando Predators in front of 10,354 fans. The game marked the start of Arena Football’s greatest rivalry. The “War of I-4” would last for a quarter century until the Predators went out of business in 2016. The Storm and the Preds combined for seven league championships during that time.

Arena Bowl V Program

1990’s Dynasty Years

After that 0-1 start, the Storm lost only one more game in 1991. Crowds grew at the Suncoast Dome as the season went on. Built for baseball (and known today as Tropicana Field, home of MLB’s Rays), the seating could expand well beyond the capacity of an NHL or NBA arena. The Storm’s final two regular season games in 1991 drew announced crowds of more than 20,000 fans. On August 17, 1991 the Storm traveled to Detroit’s Joe Louis Arena and defeated the Detroit Drive 48-42 to win Arena Bowl V.

The great stars of the early Storm years were former University of Louisville quarterback Jay Gruden (Storm ’91 – ’96) and offensive specialist Stevie Thomas (Storm ’91 – ’99) out of Bethune-Cookman. The Storm would win four Arena Bowls between 1991 and 1996 with Gruden and Thomas fueling the offense.

The Storm also had the winningest coach in Arena Football history. Tampa Bay won their first two Arena Bowls under Fran Curci (1991) and Larry Kuharich (1993). Then, in 1995, the Storm hired Tim Marcum to be the team’s third head coach. Marcum already had four Arena Bowl titles on his resume as chief of the Denver Dynamite and the Detroit Drive. Under Marcum, the Storm would win back-to-back titles in 1995 and 1996 and another in 2003. Marcum coached the team through 2010, before a scandal related to content on the Storm coaching staff’s work email accounts forced his resignation. Marcum passed away in 2013.

Offensive specialist George LaFrance on the cover of a 1995 Tampa Bay Storm program from the Arena Football League

Ownership

The Storm passed through many ownership hands over the years. Founding owner Bob Gries won two titles with the team. In a sign of just how small potatoes the AFL was in the early 1990s’, he sold the team to minor league baseball investor Woody Kern in 1994 for just $447,000. Kern oversaw the Storm’s growth and relative stability for 13 years from 1994 to 2007. During that time, the team won three more titles and moved from the Suncoast Dome to the St. Pete Times Forum in 1997. In 2007, Kern sold the Storm to Tampa orthopedic surgeon Robert Nucci for $18.8 million. And then …. hoo boy.

“Ponzi Scheme” Lawsuit

Nucci, a professional sports novice, made a spectacularly ill-timed purchased. His deal with Kern called for a $9.6 million down payment in 2007 to acquire 51% interest in the team and additional installments through 2011. Nucci would own the team for just one season (2008). He never made the additional payments, as the Arena Football League’s house-of-cards financial model collapsed in late 2008. The league closed its doors and filed for bankruptcy in August 2009. Nucci soon filed for personal bankruptcy. He has spent much of the next decade filing lawsuits against Storm and AFL officials. Nucci alleged that by the mid-late 2000’s, the Arena Football League was little more than a “disguised Ponzi scheme” with a broken business model that was dependent on expansion fees from unwitting investors to fund its massive debt.

Final Seasons

There was no Arena Football in 2009 as the original league moved into bankruptcy. In 2010, a group of former AFL investors and operators from its small market Arena Football 2 developmental league purchased the old league’s intellectual property and trademarks from the bankruptcy court. A new original football league launched in 2010, with a revived  but lower-budget Tampa Bay Storm re-taking the field under Marcum’s direction. The following year the owners of the NHL’s Tampa Bay Lightning acquired the Storm and brought the team under its Tampa Bay Sports & Entertainment umbrella. Former Tampa Bay Buccaneers star Derrick Brooks was tabbed as President to run the team.

The new Arena Football League struggled badly over the next six seasons. The Storm were a relative beacon of stability, but Tampa Bay Sports & Entertainment finally gave up on the league in late 2017. The Storm folded on December 21, 2017.

 

Tampa Bay Storm Shop

 

 

Tampa Bay Storm Video

Arena Bowl X. Tampa Bay Storm vs. Iowa Barnstormers at Veterans Memorial Auditorium in Des Moines, Iowa.

 

In Memoriam

Lineman Al Lucas (Storm ’03) died of spinal cord injury suffered during an Arena Football League game on April 10, 2005 while a member of the Los Angeles Avengers. Lucas was just 26 years old.

Wide receiver Chandler Williams (Storm ’12) died of a heart ailment during a flag football game on January 5, 2013. He was 27.

Head Coach Tim Marcum (Storm ’95-’10) passed away on December 5, 2013 at the age of 69.

Storm owner Woody Kern (Storm ’94 -07′) died on January 7, 2014. Kern was 66 years old. Tampa Bay Times obituary.

Fullback-linebacker Cedric McKinnon (Storm ’95-’00) passed on May 23, 2016 at age 48. Bethune-Cookman University obituary.

Head Coach Lary Kuharich (Storm ’92-’94) died of brain cancer at age 70 on November 13, 2016.

Kenyatta Jones (Storm ’08) died or cardiac arrest on June 13, 2018. The former USF and New England Patriots offensive lineman was 39. Tampa Bay Times obituary.

 

Downloads

2013 Tampa Bay Storm Media Guide

2013 Tampa Bay Storm Media Guide

 

2014 Tampa Bay Storm Media Guide

2016 Tampa Bay Storm Media Guide

2017 Tampa Bay Storm Media Guide

February 2015 Court Complaint Robert C. Nucci vs. Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney, PC – Sheds light on final days of original AFL circa 2007-2008.

 

Links

Arena Football League Media Guides

Arena Football League Programs

Comments

3 Responses

  1. And now Arena Football has been reduced to three, because the Cleveland Gladiators are now on a two-year hiatus due to the renovation of Quicken Loans Arena.

  2. The Gladiators did not relocate to Tampa Bay, FL. There is no such place. They relocated to St. Petersburg, Fla. Then to Tampa, Fla.

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