The Commercial Appeal

AAF winners, losers: New football league dazzles

- Kevin Allen USA TODAY Sports USA TODAY NETWORK - TENNESSEE

Mavericks. Rebels. Curiosity seekers. Old school football junkies. Older fans who recall the USFL with nostalgic fondness. The Alliance of American Football (AAF) is for you.

It was a memorable first weekend for the AAF. Early reviews, particular­ly on social media, were favorable as fans were intrigued by the mystery of the new league. CBS drew 2.9 million fans between 9-11 p.m. ET for the game on Saturday night.

"Where did that quarterbac­k come from?" "So that's where Rick Neuheisel ended up." "I didn't know he was still playing."

Those are the kinds of comments and questions that were made when the first four games were played in this eightteam league where players receive three-year, non-guaranteed contracts for $250,000.

Here are winners and losers from the opening weekend:

Winner: AAF founders Charlie Ebersol (filmmaker) and Bill Polian (former NFL executive). Their game plan was to put out a product fans would enjoy. In their first weekend, that strategy paid off. The AAF outperform­ed the NBA (Rockets vs. Thunder on ABC) in television ratings, according to Darren Rovell of the Action Network. It's way too early to draw any conclusion­s, but the AAF has enjoyed an exceptiona­l start.

Loser: Former New York Jets quarterbac­k Christian Hackenberg. Playing for the Memphis Express, Hackenberg commanded the only AAF offense to be shut out in the opening week. He completed 10 of 23 passes for 87 yards in the 26-0 loss to the Birmingham Iron. The New York Post said in its headline that Hackenberg's AAF debut "couldn't have gone worse." Jets fans have a right to snicker.

Winner: Orlando Coach Steve Spurrier. The colorful coach is an important salesman for this fledgling league and he delivered the goods in the first weekend. His Orlando Apollos posted a 40-6 triumph against the Atlanta Legends, and Spurrier, 73, called for a trick play that resulted in a TD pass to the quarterbac­k. Plus, he made a nice jab after winning his sixth consecutiv­e opener, saying he "even won with the Redskins. That's not easy to do." This league needs entertaini­ng people like him.

Loser: Road teams. Road teams went 0-4. Birmingham, the Arizona Hotshots, San Antonio Commanders and Orlando all won at home -- with Memphis, the Salt Lake City Stallions, Atlanta Legends and San Diego Fleet the respective road losers.

Winner: Former Nflers Trent Richardson and Terence Garvin. Richardson, a former NFL No. 3 overall pick, started slowly, but the running back finished with 56 yards and a pair of touchdown runs for Birmingham. Garvin, a linebacker, had a pair of intercepti­ons for Orlando, returning one for a touchdown. It can't hurt that NFL scouts will pay attention to this league.

Loser:skeptics. The prevailing wisdom was that this new league wouldn't attract many fans, and they may or may not be correct in the long run. But this first week was a major success for the AAF.

Winner: People who love football. This was quality football -- the right blend of offensive sophistica­tion and hard-nosed hitting. Social media took notice when San Antonio linebacker sacked San Diego quarterbac­k Mike Bercovici with such force that the QB'S helmet popped off. No flag was called on the play.

AAF Week 1 results

Arizona Hotshots 38, Salt Lake Stallions 22

Birmingham Iron 26, Memphis Express 0

Orlando Apollos 40, Atlanta Legends 6 San Antonio Commanders 15, San Diego Fleet 6

 ?? PHELAN M. EBENHACK, AP ?? Orlando Apollos quarterbac­k Garrett Gilbert, left, is congratula­ted by teammates after catching a pass from receiver Jalin Marshall for a 5-yard touchdown during the first half of an Alliance of American Ffootball game against the Atlanta Legends .
PHELAN M. EBENHACK, AP Orlando Apollos quarterbac­k Garrett Gilbert, left, is congratula­ted by teammates after catching a pass from receiver Jalin Marshall for a 5-yard touchdown during the first half of an Alliance of American Ffootball game against the Atlanta Legends .

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