The Alabama Hawks were a professional American football team based in Huntsville, Alabama.[1] They were members of various minor league football circuits in the 1960s: the Southern Football League (1963–64); the North American Football League (1965–66), the Professional Football League of America (1967), and finally the Continental Football League during the league's last two years (1968–1969).[2][3][4] While in the CoFL, the Hawks played in the Eastern Division of the Atlantic Conference.[5] During the 1968 season, the team was also known as the Huntsville Hawks.[6][7]
In 1967, in the PFLA's last year of operation, the Hawks won the Western Division with a 9–3 record and hosted the league's championship game at Milton Frank Stadium, losing 31–20 to the Joliet Chargers.
The Hawks served as an "unofficial" minor league affiliate of the Atlanta Falcons.[8] On August 2, 1969, the Falcons came to Huntsville to play an exhibition game against the Hawks at Milton Frank Stadium;[9] playing mostly rookies, Atlanta easily beat Alabama, 55–0.[10][11] The contest marked the only time an NFL squad played a Continental League team. (In 1972, the New York Jets rookies would play the minor league Long Island Chiefs and in 1974, the Houston Oilers rookies would play the minor league San Antonio Toros)[12][13]
^Ford, Mark L. (2000). "25 Significant "Meaningless" NFL Games"(PDF). The Coffin Corner. Vol. 22, no. 5. Pro Football Researchers Association. Retrieved November 6, 2014.
^"Coach Billy 'Tootie' Hill". Rocket City Titans. January 12, 2010. Coach Billy "Tootie" Hill [...] played football at Coffee, Mississippi State, and then for the Huntsville Rockets and Alabama Hawks of the professional Continental League.