Free NFL Team? How the Washington Commanders Started

Free NFL Team? How the Washington Commanders Started


Discover the dramatic origin of the Boston Braves, the NFL franchise that laid the foundation for today’s Washington Commanders. Journey back to 1932 Boston, where George Preston Marshall’s vision brought big-league football to a thriving sports city. Learn how the team borrowed the Braves baseball legacy, recruited future Hall of Famers like Turk Edwards and Cliff Battles, and faced financial struggles, name changes, and a historic relocation. This episode reveals the untold story of Boston’s brief but crucial role in NFL history, from the team’s inception and branding innovation to its lasting influence on American football culture.


#BostonBraves #NFLEarlyHistory #WashingtonCommanders #SportsHistory #NFLPodcast #HistoricFranchise #FootballOrigins #BostonSports #NFLLegacy #ClassicNFL #NFLFamilies #PodcastShowNotes #SportsPodcast #NFL1930s #NFLStories

Listen now! 👉 DailySportsHistory.com 📲 Follow for more daily sports history insights! 

Email: dailysportshistory@gmail.com

YouTube: YouTube.com/@dailysportshistory

Twitter: twitter.com/dailysportshis

Facebook: facebook.com/profile.php?id=61551687917253&mibextid=ZbWKwL

Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/dailysportshistory.bsky.social

Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/dailysportshis/profilecard/?igsh=OWl1MzIyYndqOGU2

Threads
https://www.threads.net/@dailysportshis
Every NFL dynasty began with a wild leap of faith and back on October second, nineteen thirty two, everyone was buzzing in the streets of Boston as football was now becoming professionalized in their town and they had their very own team, born from a laundry tycoon with ambitions and decked out in blue and gold, thrown straight into the pro football spotlight. This was the Boston Braves, and they weren't just another franchise. They would spark a legacy that would one day grow to dominate the league, but also give the league one of its blackest eyes. With a name that they had for years of Redskins. They now changed that to the Commanders. And today we're going to dive into the history of how the Washington Commanders started out as the Boston Braves and came to be today on Daily Sports History. Welcome to Daily Sports History. I'm Ethan Reese, your guide because as a kid, I could win Techno Bowl without using Bo Jackson. Today's trivit question to listen out for is how much did it cost the owners of the Boston Braves to join the NFL. So the NFL technically started in the nineteen twenties, and they continuously looked for places in cities. They kind of wanted to follow the baseball model major cities in the East Coast Northeast, and they had a team in Boston called the Boston Bulldogs. But what happened a lot back then in nineteen twenties, especially in nineteen twenty nine during the Great Depression, teams folded. They couldn't afford to pay their players, they couldn't fold their travel or the uniforms. It was an expensive thing, especially in football compared to baseball, you have more players and you know, more injury risk. So the Boston Bulldogs folded in nineteen twenty nine, and the NFL was desperate to gain traction into Boston as it was a major city back then as it still is today, and they had a fan base already established. So in nineteen thirty two, George Preston Marshall partnered with Vincent Bindex, j O'Brien and dore Lynd Doyle and all these different businessmen had a dream to start an NFL franchise. But George Preston Marshall was really the spearheaded guy of the team, and he made his money through a laundry service that his family had bought into previously, and he helped grow it to give him wealth. And so these guys in the NFL worked together, and they were excited for the opportunity to bring another team to Boston and have great financial backing behind it. And so to make it even easier for them to join the league, the NFL didn't even make them pay for the rights. All they had to cover was the operating expenses, so they were freely let into the NFL. Stand me, this team was in the NFL for free. Back in nineteen thirty two. You could own an NFL team as long as you could pay for the operating expenses. What every NFL team now is worth over a billion dollars, and less than one hundred years ago, it was free. Let that bottle of your mind today. But they also wanted to create a good establishment and build a brand in this major city that they had, So George Marshall wasted no time blending spectacle with the business. He contracted with the Boston Braves baseball club to use the Braves field and also use their name. What this is something that actually happened a lot back in the day. You have a football team name the same team name as the baseball team. Could you imagine, you know, I'm gonna go see the Boston Braves and it's September or October, you know, when both the teams are playing, and you don't know which one you bought a take it for. It was a great way to get recognition that the Boston Braves had won and had an established fan base. So it was great for them, but confusing for the fans. I cannot believe, especially back then, when you couldn't look up things like today, you just had to go based off what you knew and what was in the newspaper. Crazy crazy, crazy time back then, and Marshall's marketing strategy for the team was very aggressive. He ran local ads promising top quality football at accessible ticket prices of fifty five cents a bleacher, one dollar and ten cents for the grand stands, and one dollar in sixty five cents for a box seat. That means you could have got a ticket back then. Remember this is the Great Depression time, so that means the ticket price for the lowest one would be about thirteen dollars a day, very reasonable, and for a box seat it'd be thirty eight dollars. Would you want box seats for thirty eight dollars? I would. So this aggressive value they offered allowed the team and the fans to come see the team. You couldn't see them on TV. Eventually you'd be able to hear them on the radio. But to gain that fandom that you needed, you needed people to come and watch, and that's what he did. He also hired x NFL player JR. Ludlow Lude Weary as their head coach, providing them with leadership and respectability at that coaching position. And he recruited top end talent and would raid players from other teams, giving them expensive signing bonuses, like All American tackle Turk Edwards was giving fifteen hundred dollars to sign with them, which was a lot of money during the Great Depression, and it gave them instant credibility. And he also had dynamic runner Cliff Battles and Ernie Pinkert, future Hall of famers, join as well, and they were off and running during their first training camp. It was actually held in Land, Massachusetts, and they would play exhibition games throughout the area to build buzz about the football going on in Boston to gain even more fans. So the team had all the vision and was ready to go. Now they needed the jersey. And the business that Marshall owned was called Palace Laundry, who had brand colors in blue and gold. So the team more blue win Gold, inspired by his own business, linking both his business to the NFL. So now the team is ready. They've had training camp, they have their coach, they have their stars and their free agents, and they're ready to begin their first season at Braves Field, home of the Boston Braves. The baseball team and now the Boston Braves football team is ready to take on the Brooklyn Dodgers. The baseball team, no, no, no, the football team. Yes, this is confusing. Two teams named after baseball teams played a football game against each other. I'm so glad these teams changed their names, as the Brooklyn Dodgers would later become the Brooklyn Tigers before folding in nineteen forty five. But at least they changed it to avoid confusion. But the first game is ready to kick off. Fans fill the stadium to watch these two NFL teams to the first time, as has been three years since Boston has had a professional football team, and they were all excited watching this team go on and lose and not even score, lose fourteen to zero to the Brooklyn Dodgers football team. But it sounds bad, but just a week later they would come back and win their very first game against the New York Giants the football team, and they would win fourteen to six, showing that they did quality players enough to compete with a mainstay in the NFL in the New York Giants. And it really showed that the talent they had could produce, as they would go on to have a five hundred record that season, which is very good for an expansion team. They would win four games, lose four, and have two ties as ties were more common back then as they did not have overtime rules. But despite the team having a lot of hype arounded the city, supporting them by showing up to the games, they still operated in a deficit of forty six thousand dollars. It's not too bad in today's era a million dollars. Back then, during the Great Depression, I was tough. So after this season, George prest Control bought out his partner and became sole owner of the team, giving him complete control, as he thought would really help giving them a single direction and he could lead them to success like he had success in his businesses, and he took more of a hand on approach. In the following year, he would move them to Finway to play the rest of their games, kind of diverging away from the Boston Braves as there is a loud of confusion, especially doing research back into this on which team was which, and so to help that, he stuck with the Native American style. So he picked the worst name he could have possibly picked. Maybe there was worse names, but not many, as he picked the worst name in North American sports history, hands down, the Boston Redskins. Now, this name sounds innocuous, and it was a different time. We can always say that having this name at that time, no one bad than I Now we bad an eye. That doesn't sound right, And it didn't matter what your skin color is, your race, any name, any color. Then you had skin to it sounds wrong. White skins that sounds wrong, Black skins sounds wrong, yellow skins sounds wrong. No matter what you did, it sounds wrong. Today. Nineteen thirties was different. I wish they didn't do that, would have much rather than been in the Boston Braves forever and ever kept the Braves name forever. You know that we still have the Kansas City Chiefs. Similar vein. They could have moved to Washington, been the Washington Braves, no issue, or picked any other animal, been the Boston Flamingos, it would have been perfect. No one else would have been the Flamingos. We would have had the pink team fighting for everybody. It would have been perfect. Right, Just any other name, any other animal, It didn't matter what animal you picked. Any animal would have worked great. But he picked a terrible name that stuck around with the team even when he moved them to Washington, DC in nineteen thirty seven. Struggled with attendance and they were still fluctuating, and he wanted them to get away from Boston. They had a lot of sports options in Boston. Come to Washington, DC. They had the Washington Nationals, but that was the only other competition as they were a baseball team. This was the only football team in the area, and he was from Washington, DC, had a lot more connections. He saw a lot more success, So he was granted that right and the team would have a success immediately winning their very first NFL championship, and they would win another one in nineteen forty two and then go a long drought until the Super Bowl came around in nineteen eighty two, winning their very first Super Bowl, and they would win two more in eighty seven and ninety one, but those were the last Super Bowls they have won. And they won those Super Bowls with terrible names of the Redskins, and that name stuck around until twenty twenty when they became the Washington Football Team. Terrible name still, but better. And then they became the Washington Commanders, still a terrible name, but better. I was like, just about it name over Redskins, so at least we got away from that. Now we have a terrible name in the Commanders, but at least it doesn't offend anybody, so we'll take that. And it's crazy to think that this team that's now worth billions of dollars join the NFL for free at the Boston Braves over ninety years ago. Just shows you it takes some time to have success in sports. I want to thank you for listening to today's Daily Sports History. If you like this, please hit that share button wherever you're listening, Share this with a friend, Text it to them, group chat it, snapchat it, chatt it chat chat chat. I don't know all the chats, but send it to a buddy that loves sports just like you so that we can continue to grow this. The more we grow, the more I can give you, and I'm looking forward to it. I want to thank you for listening and come back tomorrow for more daily sports history. And did you catch the answer to today's trivia question? How much did it cost the owners of the Boston Braves to join the NFL? The answer is nothing. It was free. I'd have a time machine and go back and join this team. Start a team for free. Name it much better than the previous team.