For the music genre, see Philadelphia soul.
The Philadelphia Soul
were a professional arena football team in the Arena Football League. They began play in 2004 as an expansion team. The team played in the Eastern Division of the National Conference. They won their first ArenaBowl in 2008, defeating the San Jose SaberCats 59-56 in ArenaBowl XXII. The Soul won 13 games and lost 3 in the 2008 regular season, as well as winning three playoff games, including ArenaBowl XXII, and are the current champions. They were coached by Bret Munsey. The team folded along with the league in 2009.
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PHILADELPHIA SOUL TICKETS
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History
The team is owned by co-majority owners
Jon Bon Jovi and Craig Spencer along with minority owners
Richie Sambora,
Ron "Jaws" Jaworski (former QB of the
NFL's
Philadelphia Eagles) and Leo Carlin, Jr. The Soul began play in February of
2004, and plays its home games at the
Wachovia Center, home of the
Philadelphia Flyers of the
National Hockey League and the
Philadelphia 76ers of the
National Basketball Association. When there is a scheduling conflict with the NBA or NHL, games are played at the
Wachovia Spectrum—the former home of the Flyers and 76ers and the current home of the
Philadelphia Phantoms AHL hockey team and the
Philadelphia KiXX MISL soccer franchise. The Soul play in the Eastern Division of the National Conference of the AFL. The name "Soul" refers to the
Philadelphia soul music genre, as the team is owned in part by musician
Jon Bon Jovi. The official mascot of the Soul is the
Blues Brother-like "Soul Man".
[1]
In
2005, the Soul began the season by beating the
Austin Wranglers 66-35. However, after five games, the Soul had two wins and three losses, which led to the firing of head coach Michael Trigg.
Critics
[who?] say that the Soul erred that off-season when they made
Tony Graziani the highest-paid player in Arena League history. The move left them with little money under the
salary cap to improve their defense, and as a result, they were not in competition for the playoffs. The elimination came even after
NBC scheduled 14 games of the Soul to be shown on national or regional television.
In
2006, the Soul began 2-0. They went 2-0 against division rival Dallas Desperados (who finished a league best 13-3), and finished the season at 9-7 and earned their first playoff berth through the wild card. In their wild card playoff game, the Soul defeated the Austin Wranglers in Austin, 52-35. The score was 21-21 at halftime, but the #5 seed Soul outscored the #4 Wranglers 21-7 in the third quarter and ran away with the game. The Soul lost their Divisional Round Playoff game 31-27 to the Orlando Predators in the infamous "round of golf", so-called because viewers missed much of the 1st quarter of that game and another AFL game being broadcasted simultaneously due to a PGA Golf tournament that was televised on NBC.
The Soul started 4-0 in
2007 before losing to the
Georgia Force, 57-49. Afterwards, they lost on a Monday night contest to their division rival, the
Dallas Desperados, 51-41. In the game, Tony Graziani left the game early with a separated left shoulder from a sack by OL/DL Rickie Simpkins. He would miss the next four weeks, all losses, dropping the team to 4-6. Graziani returned in week 12 against the
New Orleans VooDoo and led the team to its highest scoring output in its short franchise history, winning 78-34. In a Week 16 "win-and-in" matchup with the
Columbus Destroyers, Graziani led the Soul down the field and threw a touchdown pass to Charles Pauley with seven seconds left, giving the Soul a 56-53 win and their second trip to the playoffs in their four-year history. In the playoffs, they defeated the Orlando Predators 41-26, then traveled to Atlanta to take on the Georgia Force in the Divisional Round, but lost 65-39.
In
2008, the Soul signed WR
Chris Jackson in the off-season. He was united with a former teammate in Tony Graziani. In the offseason the Soul were picked by many as the favorite to win the championship. However after another good start, once again Graziani was injured. He was replaced by
Matt D'Orazio. Unlike previous years, in 2008 the Soul backup was able to keep the team going. He played well enough that when Graziani was healthy once more, the coaching staff decided to allow D'Orazio to keep the starting job. The Soul finished the 2008 season with a 13-3 record and earned a first-round bye. In the divisional round the Soul defeated the
New York Dragons. In the conference finals the Soul were able to defeat the
Cleveland Gladiators to earn their first berth to the
Arena Bowl. They then won their first ArenaBowl on Sunday,
July 27,
2008 in a 59-56 win over the
San Jose SaberCats in
ArenaBowl XXII.
Franchise highlights
- On Sunday, February 13, 2005, in a Week Three home game against the Nashville Kats, quarterback Tony Graziani would throw for six touchdowns. One of those touchdown's came on a third quarter play from their own five-yard line. Graziani got the snap, tripped over his own fullback's foot, and threw a 45-yard touchdown pass to OS Steve Smith off his own knee. The Soul would go on to win , this is at #6. It also finished in The Best Damn Sports Show Period's Top 50 Spectacular Plays. [2]
- On Saturday, April 24, 2004, the Soul was trailing to the New York Dragons by a point with 1.3 seconds left in the fourth quarter. The Soul had the ball at their own two-yard line. Ken Hinsley kicked a field goal from the back of the endzone which just barely made it over the crossbar as the buzzer went off, winning the game for the Soul 60-58.
- Since its inception, the Philadelphia Soul has been deeply involved in the community. In 2006, The Philadelphia Soul Foundation was formed to further the organization's commitment to the Philadelphia area. Former President Bill Clinton joined Soul majority owner Jon Bon Jovi on stage to announce a project that would rehab 15 townhouses in North Philadelphia. Scheduled to open in November 2007, the homes will also be eco-friendly, saving not only money for its new tenants, but improve the environment as well.
- On Saturday, July 12, 2008, the Philadelphia Soul defeated the Cleveland Gladiators 70-35 in the AFL National Conference Title game, earning their first ever ArenaBowl berth in Arena Bowl XXII.
- On Sunday, July 27, 2008, the Philadelphia Soul defeated the San Jose SaberCats in Arenabowl XXII, 59-56, capturing their first Arena Bowl championship.
Season-by-season
Note:
W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties''
Season
| W
| L
| T
| Finish
| Playoff results
|
2004
| 5
| 11
| 0
| 5th NC Eastern
| --
|
2005
| 6
| 10
| 0
| 3rd NC Eastern
| --
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2006
| 9
| 7
| 0
| 3rd NC Eastern
| Won Wild Card (Austin 52-35) Lost Divisional (Orlando 31-27)
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2007
| 8
| 8
| 0
| 2nd NC Eastern
| Won Wild Card (Orlando 41-26) Lost Divisional (Georgia 65-39)
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2008
| 13
| 3
| 0
| 1st NC Eastern
| Won Divisional (New York 49-48)* Won NC Championship (Cleveland 70-35)* Won ArenaBowl XXII (San Jose 59-56)
*
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2009
| Did Not Play
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Totals
| 46
| 41
| 0
| (including playoffs)
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Coaches
Head coach
| Tenure
| Regular season record (W-L)
| Post season record (W-L)
| Most recent coaching staff
| Notes
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Michael Trigg
| 2004 - 2005
| 7-14 [3]
| 0-0
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James Fuller
| 2005
| 4-7 [4]
| 0-0
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Bret Munsey
| 2006 - 2008
| 30-18 [5]
| 5-2
| Assis. Head Coach: Jerry Odom OC: Connell Maynor DL Coach / Head Player Personnel: Mickey Mays
| 1x ArenaBowl winning coach (XXII)
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Front office staff
- Jon Bon Jovi - Founder, Majority Owner, and Co-Chairman of the Board
- Craig A. Spencer - Majority Owner and Co-Chairman of the Board
- Richie Sambora - Member of the Ownership Group
- Leo Carlin, Jr. - Member of the Ownership Group
- Ron "Jaws" Jaworski - Team President
References
- http://www.philadelphiasoul.com/fanzone/soulman/
- http://www.arenafootball.com/mediaPlayer/video.dbml?DB_MENU_ID=&SPSID=38064&SPID=3172&DB_OEM_ID=3500&CLIP_ID=31065&CLIP_FILE_ID=35080&CONTENT_TYPE=ONDEMAND
- ArenaFan Online: AFL Coaches: Michael Trigg
- ArenaFan Online: AFL Coaches: James Fuller
- ArenaFan Online: AFL Coaches: Bret Munsey