Houston Chronicle

A baseball birthday and the end of Colt .45s

- By Craig Hlavaty craig.hlavaty@chron.com

On Dec. 1, 1964 the Colt .45s officially changed the name of the team to the Astros, a move that signaled a step into the future for the franchise, the city of Houston and a fundamenta­l change in how baseball would be played.

The name change, after just three seasons, coincided with the team’s move into the Astrodome the next spring. The Colt .45s branding, which many of us still very much champion (those hats and logo are still off the chain), was a relic of old Texas and old Houston.

The Colt Firearms Company was getting a little weird about it, too. The gun maker reportedly had reservatio­ns about merchandis­ing rights and was likely to start asking about a cut of the revenue, and team president Judge Roy Hofheinz wasn’t into sharing.

The Astros name was sleek and futuristic. And with NASA, just down I-45, working on putting a man on the moon, it was also a point of pride, which Hofheinz fully understood.

Basketball fans, on the other hand, had an astronomic­al themed team right from the start.

Many casual fans may not know that the Rockets weren’t named that because of the space industry here, but because of the rockets that were built in their original home.

The team got its name in 1967 while they were still based in San Diego, the winning entry in a naming contest.

The boys on Kirby, the Texans, probably have one of the most unimaginat­ive team names in the NFL. It’s no secret that even some super fans dislike the name. On Sunday afternoons we sometimes call them a lot of other things, too.

However, they weren’t the first Texans to take the field in the Lone Star State.

The Dallas Texans existed in 1952 as an NFL team, from 1960-1962 as an AFL squad, and finally as an Arena League team in the early ‘90s. Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones revived the team in 2000 and changed the name to the Desperados. There were also minor league hockey teams in Dallas in the ‘40s called the Texans.

(Let’s all pour one out for the Oilers, whose name was all too perfect for Houston. The folks in Tennessee couldn’t handle that much awesome and had to change the team name to the Titans.)

As for MLS soccer, many in Houston are still a bit unclear as to the why the Dynamo’s original name, 1836, was scrapped.

The nixing was expected after the name was deemed offensive by some in the Hispanic community shortly after its unveiling on Jan. 25, 2006. Some bloggers at the time said that the move was a slap in the face to Texas history and was a cave to political correctnes­s.

The Dynamo and MLS have maintained that 1836 was meant to honor the year Houston was founded. However, 1836 was also the year Texas fought for and gained independen­ce from Mexico, prompting some in the Hispanic community to object.

The term “Dynamo” was more in line with the city’s energy industry. The word dynamo, an early term for generator and short for dynamo electric machine, is well-known universall­y.

“Dynamo is a word to describe someone who never fatigues, never gives up,” then-team president Oliver Luck said at a March 2006 press unveiling.

The name of the Houston Dash, the city’s National Women’s Soccer League team founded in 2013, has been called generic and plain but we think that its quick and to the point. It also sounds good next to Dynamo. According to reports, they almost had “Dynamo” in their name but trademark issues prevented that. “Dash” is a synonym for “dynamo” so the team received their moniker.

The coolest team name in Houston history though was the short-lived Texas Terror of the Arena Football League. They even had Frankenste­in’s monster in the logo. It was a coup for kids into horror movies and football.

After two years, 1996-1997, the name was changed to the (ugh) Houston Thunder bears. The team was gone by 2001, thankfully.

And lest we forget the USFL’s Houston Gamblers, who had a great logo and color scheme, and a name more suited for Las Vegas than the casino-free Texas Gulf Coast.

 ?? Houston Chronicle file ??
Houston Chronicle file

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