Birmingham Thunderbolts

{{Infobox American football team

| name = Birmingham Thunderbolts

| nickname = Bolts

| logo = Birmingham thunderbolts logo.png

| logosize = 200

| helmet =

| helmetsize =

| established = 2001

| folded = {{start date and age|2001}}

| league = XFL

| division = Eastern

| league_champs = 0

| div_champs = 0

| stadium = Legion Field

| location = Birmingham, Alabama

| colors = Purple, yellow, silver{{cite web|title=Birmingham Thunderbolts Logo Sheet|url=http://ssur.org/research/XFLLogoSheets/images/BirminghamThunderbolts_CL.jpg|website=SSUR.org|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20101128161102/http://ssur.org/research/XFLLogoSheets/images/BirminghamThunderbolts_CL.jpg|archivedate=November 28, 2010}}
{{color box|#241773}} {{color box|#FECB00}} {{color box|#A5ACAF}}

| owner = World Wrestling Federation

| coach = Gerry DiNardo

| manager = Tim Berryman

}}

The Birmingham Thunderbolts were a short-lived springtime American football team based in Birmingham, Alabama. This team was part of the failed XFL begun by Vince McMahon of World Wrestling Entertainment and by NBC, a major television network in the United States.

Opening Season

The Thunderbolts played in the Eastern Division, with the Chicago Enforcers, Orlando Rage and the New York/New Jersey Hitmen. They finished the only year of XFL play – 2001 – in last place with the worst record in the league, at 2-8.

The Thunderbolts played their home games at Birmingham's legendary Legion Field. They were coached by Brooklyn-native Gerry DiNardo, a former star player at the University of Notre Dame, and previously head coach at Vanderbilt University and Louisiana State University. Following the collapse of the XFL, he went on to coach at Indiana University. One of DiNardo's assistants with the Thunderbolts was his predecessor at LSU, Curley Hallman, who was Brett Favre's head coach for three seasons at the University of Southern Mississippi. Hallman also coached at Legion Field with the Alabama Crimson Tide during two stints as an assistant under Bear Bryant, Gene Stallings and Mike DuBose.

The team's colors were purple, yellow, and white. Their logo was a stylized 'B' with six lightning bolts extending from it. On the teams helmets, the logo was placed at the front, instead of the customary position on each side, with only the upper three lightning bolts visible. The team was frequently referred to by fans and the media as simply the Bolts. Team merchandise almost always used the shortened Bolts moniker.

Allegedly, the league had originally planned to name the team the Blast; the XFL had named all of its teams with references to insanity and criminal activity, and the name "Birmingham Blast" likewise invoked images of the 1963 bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church and of Eric Rudolph's 1998 bombing of a local abortion clinic, two tragic events in Birmingham history. As the league soon realized that such a name would have been in extremely poor taste, at the last minute the league changed it to "Thunderbolts," or "Bolts" for short. The team's logo is said to be the same one originally designed for the Blast. The Thunderbolts were unusual in that their nickname was benign.

While XFL players were encouraged to use nicknames instead of their last names on the backs of their jerseys, DiNardo, who earned a reputation as a strict disciplinarian during his college coaching stops, banned Thunderbolts players from doing so.

After losing the opening game to the Memphis Maniax, the Thunderbolts posted wins over the Chicago Enforcers and the New York/New Jersey Hitmen. These would ultimately become the only victories the Thunderbolts would ever see. The Bolts would finish with a 2-8 record.

Birmingham went through all 3 quarterbacks during the season. Former Florida State quarterback Casey Weldon was signed as the starter. Former University of Alabama quarterback Jay Barker was signed as the backup, despite the crowds (averaging only 17,000 fans a game, second-lowest in the league) chanting his name during the home games. Barker (who became much more famous when he married country singing star Sara Evans in 2007) would become the starter after Weldon injured his shoulder. Barker suffered a concussion in Chicago when he collided with Enforcers' cornerback Ray Austin while attempting a bootleg run on a broken play. He was replaced by third string QB Graham Leigh.

NBC dropped the XFL after the first (2001) season due to dismal ratings, and the league was disbanded shortly thereafter.

Season-by-season

{{Start NFL SBS}}

|-

|2001 || 2 || 8 || 0 || 4th Eastern || Out of playoffs

|}

=Schedule=

==Regular season==

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
style="{{Gridiron primary style|Birmingham Thunderbolts|border=2}};"|Week

! style="{{Gridiron primary style|Birmingham Thunderbolts|border=2}};"|Date

! style="{{Gridiron primary style|Birmingham Thunderbolts|border=2}};"|Opponent

! style="{{Gridiron primary style|Birmingham Thunderbolts|border=2}};"|Result

! style="{{Gridiron primary style|Birmingham Thunderbolts|border=2}};"|Record

! style="{{Gridiron primary style|Birmingham Thunderbolts|border=2}};"|Venue

style="background:#fcc"

! 1

| February 4

| Memphis Maniax

| L 20–22

| 0–1

| Legion Field

style="background:#cfc"

! 2

| February 11

| at New York/New Jersey Hitmen

| W 19–12

| 1–1

| Giants Stadium

style="background:#cfc"

! 3

| February 18

| Chicago Enforcers

| W 14–3

| 2–1

| Legion Field

style="background:#fcc"

! 4

| {{dow tooltip|February 24, 2001}}

| at Orlando Rage

| L 6–30

| 2–2

| Florida Citrus Bowl

style="background:#fcc"

! 5

| {{dow tooltip|March 3, 2001}}

| at San Francisco Demons

| L 10–39

| 2–3

| Pacific Bell Park

style="background:#fcc"

! 6

| March 11

| Los Angeles Xtreme

| L 26–35

| 2–4

| Legion Field

style="background:#fcc"

! 7

| {{dow tooltip|March 17, 2001}}

| at Las Vegas Outlaws

| L 12–34

| 2–5

| Sam Boyd Stadium

style="background:#fcc"

! 8

| March 25

| at Chicago Enforcers

| L 0–13

| 2–6

| Soldier Field

style="background:#fcc"

! 9

| {{dow tooltip|March 31, 2001}}

| Orlando Rage

| L 24–29

| 2–7

| Legion Field

style="background:#fcc"

! 10

| April 8

| New York/New Jersey Hitmen

| L 0–22

| 2–8

| Legion Field

Personnel

=Staff=

class="toccolours" style="font-size:95%"
colspan="7" style="background-color: #241773; color: white; border:2px solid #FADC41; text-align: center;"|2001 Birmingham Thunderbolts staff
colspan="7" align="right" |
valign="top"|

| style="font-size: 95%;" valign="top" | Front office

  • Vice president/general manager – Tim Berryman
  • Director of player personnel – Bob Gates

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

|width="35"| 

|valign="top"|

| style="font-size: 95%;" valign="top" | Defensive coaches

  • Co-Defensive Coordinator/Defensive Backs – Curley Hallman
  • Co-Defensive Coordinator/Defensive Line – Don Wnek
  • Linebackers – Paul Arslanian
  • Personal Coach John Guimond
  • Defensive assistant – Woodrow Lowe, Jr.
{{cite book |title=2001 Birmingham Thunderbolts Media Guide |publisher=XFL |pages=4–11}}

Standings

{{2001 XFL East standings}}{{cite web |title=XFL Standings |url=https://www.usatoday.com/sports/xfl/standings.htm |work=USA Today |date=May 12, 2001 |accessdate=February 18, 2011 }}

Birmingham Thunderbolts players

Post-XFL developments

After the league folded, head coach Gerry DiNardo joined the staff of Birmingham sports talk radio station WJOX 690, as did Jay Barker, who also did sports commentary on local CBS TV affiliate WIAT channel 42. Barker currently hosts "The Opening Drive" on WJOX 94.5 in Birmingham with Tony Kurre and former NFL kicker Al Del Greco.

DiNardo returned to his college football coaching roots in 2002 as the head coach of the Indiana Hoosiers football team. The team was sometimes jokingly nicknamed "The Fighting DiNardos" in his honor. He was fired at the end of the 2004 season. He is currently a studio analyst for the Big Ten Network.

The Thunderbolts were the last playing stop for defensive back Anthony Blevins, after the team folded, Blevins went into coaching at first the high school, then college and NFL levels. In 2023, Blevins was named the head coach of the Vegas Vipers of the re-established XFL becoming one of the only links between the new XFL and the original one.

Team leaders

class="wikitable"
colspan="2"| Legend
style="background:#cfecec; width:3em;"|

| Led the league

= Passing =

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
style="text-align:center;{{Gridiron primary style|Birmingham Thunderbolts|border=2|color=white}};"colspan="12"|Passing statistics
NAMEGPGSRecordCmpAttPctYdsTDIntRtg
Casey Weldon662–410216462.21,2287586.6
Graham Leigh320–2449745.44991639.0
Jay Barker320–2376556.94251549.8
Joe Douglass11100.02210158.3
colspan="1"| [https://www.statscrew.com/football/stats/t-XFLBIR/y-2001 Totals]10102–818432756.32,174101666.5

= Rushing =

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
style="text-align:center;{{Gridiron primary style|Birmingham Thunderbolts|border=2|color=white}};"colspan="8"| Rushing statistics
NAMEAttYdsAvgLngTD
James Bosticstyle="background:#cfecec;"|1535363.5562
Casey Weldon20301.5160
Curtis Alexander18814.5190
Jay Barker5265.2170
Graham Leigh2147.0120
Steve Smith11313.0130
Joe Douglass1-5-5.0-50
colspan="1"| [https://www.statscrew.com/football/stats/t-XFLBIR/y-2001 Totals]2006953.5562

= Receiving =

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
style="text-align:center;{{Gridiron primary style|Birmingham Thunderbolts|border=2|color=white}};"colspan="9| Receiving statistics
NAMERecYdsAvgLngTD
Stepfret Williams51style="background:#cfecec;"|82816.2style="background:#cfecec;"|92t2
Quincy Jackson4553111.836t6
Ed Smith251957.8161
Kaipo McGuire231817.9230
James Bostic1217214.3500
Joe Douglass1011411.4270
Steve Smith8546.8150
Reggie Johnson3155.080
Damon Gourdine23115.5161
Kevin Drake22914.5270
Curtis Alexander2157.5120
Nicky Savoie199.090
colspan="1"| [https://www.statscrew.com/football/stats/t-XFLBIR/y-2001 Totals]1842,17411.89210

= Scoring =

8-17 (47.1)% on extra point conversion attempts{{cite web | url=https://www.all-xfl.com/birminghambolts/team/teamstats/week10.html | title= 2001 Bolts Final Regular Season Stats}}

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
style="text-align:center;{{Gridiron primary style|Birmingham Thunderbolts|border=2|color=white}};"colspan="9| Total Scoring
NAMERushRecReturnXPMFGMPTS
Quincy Jackson0600036
Brad Palazzo0000721
Stepfret Williams0212020
James Bostic2001013
Eric Sloan0020012
Ed Smith010208
Duane Butler001006
Keith Franklin001006
Damon Gourdine010006
Curtis Alexander000101
Kaipo McGuire000101
Steve Smith000101
colspan="1"| [https://www.all-xfl.com/birminghambolts/team/teamstats/week10.html Totals]210587131

References