02 February 2020

Kansas City Chiefs


The Kansas City Chiefs are a professional American football team based in Kansas City, Missouri.

They compete in the National Football League (NFL) as a member club of the league's American Football Conference (AFC) West division.

Lamar Hunt made unsuccessful attempts to purchase and relocate the NFL's Chicago Cardinals to his hometown of Dallas, Texas but was turned down. So, Hunt then established the American Football League and started his own team, the Dallas Texans, that began to play in 1960.

In their third season, the Texans played in their first American Football League Championship Game, against the Houston Oilers. The game was broadcast nationally on ABC and the Texans defeated the Oilers 20–17 in double overtime.

Hunt decided that the Dallas–Fort Worth media market could not sustain two professional football franchises and considered moving the team to either Atlanta or Miami, but an offer from Kansas City Mayor Harold Roe Bartle with a promise to triple the franchise's season ticket sales and expand the seating capacity of Municipal Stadium to accommodate the team clinched a move to KC.



In 1963, the team relocated to Kansas City and assumed their current name. Oddly enough, Hunt and head coach Hank Stram initially planned to retain the Texans name in KC. But, like many other teams, a fan contest was set up and that determined the new "Chiefs" name. "Chief" would appear to be an Indian reference but actually was meant to honor Mayor Bartle whose nickname of "Chief" that he acquired in his professional role as Scout Executive of the St. Joseph and Kansas City Boy Scout Councils and founder of the Scouting Society, the Tribe of Mic-O-Say.

The other contest leaders were "Mules" and "Royals" and in 1969, "Royals" would be the name of the city's Major League Baseball expansion franchise after the Athletics left Kansas City for Oakland.

From 1960 to 1969, the Chiefs/Texans won 87 games, which was the most in the 10-year history of the AFL. After the American Football League merged with the National Football League, the Chiefs were placed in the American Football Conference's West Division.

In 1970, the Chiefs won only seven games in their first season in the NFL and missed the playoffs.

The Chiefs have won three AFL championships, in 1962, 1966, and 1969. They became the second AFL team (after the New York Jets) to defeat an NFL team in an AFL–NFL World Championship Game when they defeated the Minnesota Vikings in Super Bowl IV.

In 2020, after a 50-year drought, they played in Super Bowl LIV (54) against the San Francisco 49ers and were able to become champions once again with a score of 31 -20. They play the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the 2021 Super Bowl LV.


Many sports teams with names or mascots that allude to Native Americans have been considered controversial. The Chiefs have largely avoided that controversy.

Though their name came from a non-Indian origin, their logo was an Indian arrowhead, and their first mascot was Warpaint, a pinto horse. Warpaint served as the team's mascot from 1963 to 1988.

In the mid-1980s, the Chiefs featured a short-lived and more controversial unnamed "Indian Man" mascot which was scrapped in 1988.

The team then moved to a cartoonish "K. C. Wolf" which has served as the team's mascot. The mascot was named after the Chiefs' "Wolfpack" which was a group of rabid fans from the team's days at Municipal Stadium. The rebranding worked and K. C. Wolf is one of the most popular NFL mascots and was the league's first mascot inducted into the Mascot Hall of Fame in 2006.

San Francisco 49ers

The San Francisco 49ers (also known as the Niners) are a professional American football team. The 49ers are currently a member of the Western Division of the National Football Conference (NFC) in the National Football League (NFL).

The name "49ers" comes from the name given to the prospectors who went west during the California Gold Rush which began on January 24, 1848, when gold was found by James W. Marshall at Sutter's Mill, in Coloma, California.

In the next year, that news brought some 300,000 people to California. The gold-seekers, called "Forty-niners" as a reference to 1849. Because of the gold rush, San Francisco grew from a small settlement to a boomtown, and roads, churches, schools and other towns were built throughout California. A state constitution was written and California became a state in 1850.


The 49ers official mascot is Sourdough Sam who wears jersey number 49. Before Sourdough Sam, the team's first mascot was a prospector's mule named Clementine that wore a red saddle blanket and appeared in the 1950s and 1960s.

Sourdough Sam is a gold rush prospector/miner who first appeared in the 1970s though he was based on a character that appeared on the covers of game programs created by William Kay between 1946 and 1949.

The "Sourdough" refers to sourdough bread which is associated with San Francisco.

Team owner Anthony J. Morabito chose 49ers for his All-America Football Conference squad because it reflected San Francisco’s link to the California Gold Rush.

The 49ers began to play in 1946 as a charter member of the All-America Football Conference (AAFC) and joined the NFL in 1950 after the AAFC merged into the older league.

The team was the first NFL franchise to win five Super Bowls.

The 49ers teams of the 1980s and early 1990s were a dynasty given their five Super Bowl triumphs in that span, including four in the 1980s. The Niners won 10+ games for 16 straight seasons.


Famous 49ers include three-time Super Bowl MVP Joe Montana, perennial Pro Bowler Ronnie Lott, all-time highest career quarterback rating holder Steve Young, and career touchdown leader Jerry Rice.

All of them played for the 49ers during their greatest period.

They have been division champions 20 times between 1970 and 2019, making them one of the most successful teams in NFL history.

The 49ers have been in the league playoffs 50 times (49 times in the NFL and one time in the AAFC).

In 2020, they played in Super Bowl LIV in Miami against the Kansas City Chiefs and lost with a score of 31 - 20.




09 December 2019

Going South

The phrase "going south" to mean "becoming worse" is another one whose origin is not settled.

The most common origin attributes it to the standard orientation of maps. South is the downwards direction so things going south are going down. That would fit this type of usage: "Yesterday the stock market moved south, ending up on a loss for the day."

Another origin say that it was a euphemism used by some Native Americans for dying. "He was unconcerned that his health might go south."

This idiom always means that a situation becomes unfavorable, decreases, or takes a turn for the worse. "My luck went south."