Jacksonville football history
For decades, Jacksonville had earned a
reputation of being a good football town,
hospitable for both college and pro football.
Every year the city hosts the
Gator Bowl, an annual civic highlight
traditionally accompanied by parties,
ceremonies, parades and other events leading up
to the game. The annual
Georgia–Florida
game is also played in Jacksonville.
The Gator Bowl stadium was built out of steel
trusses during the Great Depression and was
frequently built onto, with the final addition
of the reinforced-concrete west upper deck
coming in 1982. The stadium hosted short-lived
teams in both the
World Football League (Jacksonville
Sharks/Express) and the
United States Football League (Jacksonville
Bulls) and the occasional NFL exhibition
game. The city also hosted the
American Football League All Star Game in
1967 and 1968. The city briefly attempted to
lure the
Baltimore Colts, whose owner
Robert Irsay famously landed a helicopter in
the stadium as thousands of Jacksonville
citizens urged him to move the team there. City
leaders also attempted to get the
Houston Oilers to move to Jacksonville at
one point in the late 1980s. Great efforts were
made to lure the Oilers, including the creation
of a "Jacksonville Oilers" banner and
designation of a specific section of the Gator
Bowl as a non-alcohol, family section for
proposed home games.
Logo and uniforms
The day after the NFL awarded the expansion
team to Jacksonville, a triumphant and surprised
Wayne Weaver held up the Jaguars' proposed
silver helmet and teal jersey at the NFL owners'
meeting in Chicago. The team's colors were
revealed to be teal, gold, and silver with black
accents. However, this jersey and helmet design
stirred controversy. Both included the team's
logo with a gold leaping jaguar. This caught the
attention of
Ford Motor Company/a>, parent of the automaker
Jaguar, in that the Jaguars' logo bore what
they considered to be too much resemblance to
the automaker's logo, which was also used as a
hood ornament. Though no lawsuit was brought to
trial, an amicable agreement was ultimately
reached where Jaguar would be named the official
car of the Jaguars, and the Jaguars would
redesign their uniforms.
The new logo became a prominent snarling
Jaguars head with a teal tongue, which Weaver
said was his wife's touch. During the Jaguars'
first ever preseason game, teal-colored candies
were handed out to all the fans who attended,
turning their tongues a teal color just like on
the logo. The redesigned uniforms feature an
all-black helmet, white pants, gold numbers and
trim, and either teal or white jerseys. A
prowling jaguar replaced the leaping jaguar on
the sleeves. Minor modifications have been
introduced since then, such as changing the font
of the jersey numbers.
For most of its short history, the Jaguars
did what many other NFL teams located in
subtropical climates traditionally practice:
wear their white jerseys at home during the
first half of the season — forcing opponents to
wear their dark ones under the sweltering
autumns in Jacksonville. However, ever since
Jack Del Rio took over as head coach in 2003,
the team seems to only wear their white jerseys
at home during September.
The team introduced an alternate black jersey
in 2002. During that same year, the team also
started to wear black pants, mostly with their
white jerseys. With the introduction of the
black pants, the team stopped wearing the white
jersey/white pants combination on a full-time
basis, as it's still used on a part-time basis.
The black pants design has the team Jaguar head
logo on them, unlike their white pants.