Atlanta Falcons Team History
                   
                   The 
                  date of June 30, 1965 will always be remembered as a most significant 
                  day in Atlanta's sports history. That day, the National Football 
                  League awarded its 15th franchise to the city, marking an end 
                  to a long struggle by the Georgia capital city to obtain a professional 
                  football team. The franchise was awarded to 41-year-old Rankin 
                  M. Smith, a successful life insurance executive, for $8.5 million. 
                   
                  One of Smith's first orders of business was to announce a contest 
                  to provide a nickname for the new team. The name "Falcons" 
                  was suggested by many, but a school teacher from Griffin, Ga. 
                  was declared the winner. "The Falcon is proud and dignified," 
                  she wrote, "with great courage and fight. It never drops 
                  its prey. It is deadly and has a great sporting tradition." 
                   
                  Excited Georgia fans showed their enthusiasm and appreciation 
                  by buying season tickets in record numbers. By Christmas Eve, 
                  when the Falcons cut off a brief 54-day ticket sale requiring 
                  almost no promotion, an NFL record had been established for 
                  a new team with the sale of 45,000 season tickets. Minnesota 
                  was the previous record-holder with 26,000 sales in 1961. 
                   
                  Midway through the ticket campaign, the Falcons participated 
                  in their first NFL draft on November 27, 1965. Their first pick 
                  was an Outland Trophy-winning linebacker from the University 
                  of Texas, Tommy Nobis. Nobis was also drafted by Houston of 
                  the American Football League but he signed a Falcons contract 
                  on December 14. 
                   
                  Norb Hecker, an assistant on Vince Lombardi's Green Bay Packers 
                  staff, was chosen as the Falcons' first head coach. The new 
                  Falcons lost their first nine games before defeating the New 
                  York Giants 27-16 on November 20. They finished with three wins, 
                  tying an expansion team first-season record up to that time. 
                   
                  In 1971, the Falcons recorded their first winning season (7-6-1) 
                  under fiery Coach Norm Van Brocklin. In 1973, they finished 
                  with a 9-5 mark, a new team high. The 1977 team under new coach 
                  Leeman Bennett established an NFL team mark that still stands 
                  by allowing just 129 total points in a 14-game season. Bennett 
                  then led the Falcons to the playoffs three times in a five-year 
                  span between 1978 and 1982. In 1980, the Falcons won the NFC 
                  Western Division title with a club-record 12 wins and six Pro 
                  Bowl stars, including quarterback Steve Bartkowski and running 
                  back William Andrews. In addition to Bartkowski, Nobis and Andrews, 
                  such stars as defensive end Claude Humphrey, center Jeff Van 
                  Note, running back Gerald Riggs and Billy "White Shoes" 
                  Johnson made things interesting for loyal Falcons fans. 
                   
                  Atlanta was one of the first teams to have a year-round practice 
                  facility, opening a complex in 1978 in suburban Suwanee. The 
                  Falcons closed out their 26-year era at Atlanta-Fulton County 
                  Stadium in 1991 with an 11-win season, second most in team history. 
                  The next year, the team moved into the luxurious Georgia Dome, 
                  recognized as one of the finest indoor stadiums. 
                   
                  In 1998, the Falcons recorded their most successful season in 
                  franchise history. The team won the NFC West with a 14-2 record 
                  and marched through the playoffs to claim the NFC championship 
                  and earned a trip to Super Bowl XXXIII. |