- Arizona Cardinals
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▪ American football teamAmerican professional gridiron football (football, gridiron) team based in Phoenix. The Cardinals are the oldest team in the National Football League (NFL), but they are also one of the least successful franchises in league history, having won just two NFL championships (1925, 1947) since the team's founding in 1898.The Cardinals started out as the Morgan Athletic Club, a neighbourhood team based in the South Side of Chicago. The team acquired its nickname in 1901 when its founder, Chris O'Brien, received a shipment of faded jerseys from the University of Chicago Maroons football team that were cardinal red in colour. Now known as the Racine Cardinals—after the name of the Chicago street on which the team's playing field was located—the team played in a loosely organized “league” composed of Chicago-area amateur clubs. The Cardinals' continued success and popularity gave the team the opportunity to join the American Professional Football League (the forerunner of the NFL) when it was founded in 1920. The team was renamed the Chicago Cardinals in 1922 when a franchise from Racine, Wis., joined the NFL. Three years later the Cardinals were credited with their first NFL championship after compiling a record of 11 wins, two losses, and one tie over the course of the 1925 season.After 1925 the team entered into a long stretch of noncompetitive and sometimes dismal years, which included consecutive 0–10 seasons in 1943 and 1944. Having already coached the team from 1940 to 1942, Jimmy Conzelman was rehired in 1946, and he oversaw a Cardinals victory in the 1947 NFL championship game behind the play of the team's famed “Million-Dollar Backfield.” This feat was followed by a franchise-best 11–1 record and another trip to the title game in 1948, where the Cardinals fell to the Philadelphia Eagles, 7–0. Conzelman left the team the next year, and the Cardinals embarked on another extended period of poor play. This led to a decline in revenue, and in 1960 the franchise relocated to St. Louis, Mo., where the team was invariably referred to as the St. Louis “football” Cardinals, in deference to the city's beloved Major League Baseball team of the same name.The Cardinals began posting winning records more frequently in St. Louis, but the postseason evaded them until 1974, when a team featuring quarterback Jim Hart, running back Terry Metcalf, and a pair of future Hall of Famers, offensive lineman Dan Dierdorf and tight end Jackie Smith, won 10 games and made the first of two consecutive trips to the play-offs, where they lost each time. The Cardinals returned to the play-offs again during the strike-shortened 1982 season, but a general lack of fan support—combined with the ownership's desire for a profitable home stadium—induced the team to move to Phoenix in 1988. The Cardinals' mediocre play continued until 1998, when quarterback Jake Plummer led the team to a nine-win season and its first play-off victory in 51 years. The team's momentum did not continue on into the next year, and yet another long play-off drought ensued. In 2008 the Cardinals had their most successful season since their relocation to Arizona, as veteran quarterback Kurt Warner, heading a powerful offense highlighted by Pro Bowl wide receivers Larry Fitzgerald and Anquan Boldin, guided the team to a division title and the franchise's first Super Bowl appearance the following February, where they lost to the Pittsburgh Steelers.
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Universalium. 2010.