

The Panthers made headlines in 1970 with the signing of a holder named Patricia Palinkas, the first woman to play on a men's professional football team. The new owners, who originally planned to rechristen the team as the Orlando Oranges but never did, planned to run the team on a much tighter financial budget. The team was in major financial trouble at the time, fueled by massive overspending, and a new consortium took over the money-bleeding franchise in the offseason. Within weeks of that announcement, the Panthers applied and were accepted for membership in the franchise original home, the ACFL. With the future of the CFL in doubt after the 1969 season, Panthers general manager and president Elmer Cook announced his intention to found a new football league based in Florida, the Sunshine League. Simpson ultimately achieved a contract agreement with the Bills. Simpson agreed to sign with the team with his negotiations with the team that drafted him, the Buffalo Bills, stalled at the time, and the institution of the Common Draft prohibiting him from negotiating with other teams in the AFL or NFL, the Panthers were the highest-profile team able to give Simpson a counteroffer. Such was the team's prestige that in the 1969 offseason, the Panthers entered into a deal with the Florida Citrus Commission to put up $400,000 in salary if O. In 1969, however, Orlando and Indianapolis rematched in the semifinals, with the Capitols prevailing 27–7. In 1968, they repeated the feat by defeating the Ramblers 30–23, though they had to enter the game by winning a playoff with the Indianapolis Capitols (which Orlando won 28–14). In 1967, the Panthers won the title with a 38–14 win over the Orange County Ramblers. In 1966, the team lost the championship to the Philadelphia Bulldogs in sudden-death overtime, 20–17. The team, led by quarterback Don Jonas, appeared in the CFL championship game three seasons in a row starting in 1966, winning two titles during that span. Over the next four seasons the Panthers were consistent winners, never finishing with fewer than 10 wins. Van Buren was promoted to vice president and replaced as head coach by Perry Moss, who led the Charleston Rockets to the 1965 CFL title. The move to Orlando was somewhat of a coup, as there was already a team named the Orlando Panthers that had played in the Southern Professional Football League the year prior (having played as the Daytona Beach Thunderbirds from 1962 to 1964) and, due to the Southern league's folding, was seeking to join the Continental league the Newark ownership group managed to secure the lease, and the previous Orlando owner died, apparently of a rage-induced apoplexy, immediately after the meeting. They signed a 10-year lease to play their home games at the Tangerine Bowl. Newark struggled during its first CFL season, placed fourth in their division and finished with a record of 5-9.ĭuring the subsequent offseason, team owner Sol Rosen sold his franchise to Tom Granatell, who moved the Bears to Orlando, Florida and renamed them as the Orlando Panthers. In 1965 the Bears joined two other ACFL teams in a minor-league merger that led to the formation of the Continental Football League. This time, however, they were defeated by the Boston Sweepers, 14-10. Newark had another strong season in 1964, advancing to their third straight league championship. A few months later the team announced its interest in joining the American Football League at the time, the New York metro area's existing AFL franchise, recently rechristened the Jets, was still on uncertain financial footing, but the Jets survived and the AFL ultimately rejected the Newark bid. The Bears won the Southern Division and claimed the 1963 ACFL title by defeating the Springfield Acorns, 23-6. (The ACFL had several ties to the old AA, including teams in Paterson and Newark, and the same President, Joe Rosentover.) The Bears took their name from a team in the American Association football league in the late 1930s through 1941, itself a direct descendant from the Orange/Newark Tornadoes, a football club with roots dating to the 19th century and that had played two seasons in the NFL. The following summer the Miners moved to Newark Schools Stadium in nearby Newark, New Jersey and were renamed as the Newark Bears. In their first season in Paterson, the Miners won the ACFL championship against the Providence Steam Roller in front of 2,000 spectators at the indoor Atlantic City Convention Hall. The Miners were charter members of the Atlantic Coast Football League upon its founding in 1962, relocating to Hinchliffe Stadium in Paterson, New Jersey in the process. The Franklin Miners were originally established in 1958 as a member of the Eastern Football Conference their head coach was eventual Hall of Famer Steve Van Buren.
