Professional football has one of the shortest seasons in all of professional sports. Hunt believed there was a greater appetite for football, especially among the television networks, and these winter league games would be telecast in the months of least competitive programming.
It would spread the sport across the nation’s calendar.
Would the networks jump at the chance of what he called, a “winter league”? Hunt had pitched the idea as early as 1965 to Carl Lindemann of NBC-TV and Roone Arledge of ABC-TV.
In a letter to New York Jets’ owner Sonny Werblin, who had initiated the AFL’s new broadcast deal with NBC-TV, Hunt indicated that both network bosses expressed some interest and were seeking exclusive TV rights for such a league. Hunt’s offer to the TV’s would include 10 Saturdays and 10 Sundays for games, and a championship game for a total of 21 dates.
Hunt emphasized these major points in his letter to Werblin:
Hunt believed his idea would “produce training which players could not possibly get otherwise,” and, as an example, he thought Chiefs’ backup quarterback Pete Beathard would “be most enthusiastic to play in this league, not only for the chance to earn extra money, but for the opportunity to get experience and prove himself to coaches.”
Moreover, he saw the winter league as a “recruiting weapon” in the AFL’s war with the NFL, and as a boon for a television network to cultivate and recruit more television sponsorship with a mix of AFL football in the fall and winter from January 15-May 15.
Many of Hunt’s ideas may be found in the spring leagues that came decades later, and in the television network deals that were a major factor for their existence.
By JAKE FENNER Published: 14:06 GMT, 8 March 2025 | Updated: 14:06 GMT, 8 March 2025 After
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