It's time for defunct and relocated sports team logo fun. We'll start with teams formerly in Houston and Atlanta: Three ice hockey teams (Houston Aeros in the WHA, Atlanta Flames and Thrashers in the NHL) and Houston Oilers.
Boston and Milwaukee Braves.
And now to the NBA. Rochester Royals ->Cincinnati Royals->Kansas City and KC/Omaha Kings-> (Now the Sacramento Kings)
St. Louis Browns, Philadelphia Athletics, Kansas City Athletics
Syracuse Nationals -> Philadelphia 76ers.
Ft. Wayne Pistons -> Detroit Pistons
USFL is filled with beauties. Some greats: Memphis Showboats, Birmingham Stallions, Oklahoma Outlaws and San Antonio Gunslingers
Chicago Packers -> Chicago Zephyrs ->Baltimore Bullets -> Washington Bullets (sometimes Capitol Bullets) -> Washington Wizards
Seattle Pilots, Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants
When Cleveland had an NHL team: The Barons. They started off as the Oakland Seals.
More ex-WHA hockey: Quebec Nordiques, Hartford Whalers became Colorado Avalanche and Carolina Hurricanes. But the Cincinnati Stingers and Minnesota Fighting Saints disappeared.
Some lost WHA logos: Los Angeles Sharks, Vancouver Blazers, Calgary Cowboys, and Birmingham Bulls.
Not defunct or relocated teams, but re-named teams: Houston Colt 45s (now Astros), New York Titans (now Jets) and Tampa Bay Devil Rays (now just Rays).
NBA: St. Louis Hawks (now Atlanta). ABA: Virginia Squires, Kentucky Colonels and Pittsburgh Condors.
Some more from the ABA: Utah Stars, Dallas Chaparrals (now the San Antonio Spurs), Carolina Cougars and Memphis Sounds.
Ridiculous ABA logos: Oakland Oaks, Miami Floridians, Houston Mavericks and Anaheim Amigos.
The Minneapolis Lakers. And an encore for the Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons.
Defunct NBA teams: Chicago Stags, Anderson Packers, Sheboygan Redskins and Waterloo Hawks.
Houston Oilers had two fights songs: Luv Ya Blue and Houston Oilers #1.
Great moment in Houston Oilers history: A huge homecoming celebration after they...lost...to the Pittsburgh Steelers in the 1978-79 AFC Championship. Such a colorful team, with Coach Bum Phillips.
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Well, a shoulder MRI is not exactly a pleasant experience. 25 minutes of loud pulsing like the keyboards in The Who's "Won't Get Fooled Again" (less melodic, though with random Kelly Clarkson playing through the earmuff), and you can't sit up inside the tube. Good times...
I'm not normally claustrophobic. But years of CBT training for anxiety disorders definitely came in handy.
It's for a rotator cuff tear, BTW. MRI to determine extent of tear before likely surgery. But really, the hardest part was how long it took. I thought it'd be over in about 10 or 12 minutes. But then we had to do 5 minutes extra at the end, so it was 25 minutes total.
Summary thread of what I think about covid: 1) Zero covid ain't happening. It will be endemic. 2) Patterns of endemic SARS-CoV-2 infection and covid severity will depend on seasonality and population immunity. 3) Population immunity means vax and/or prior infection.
4) Mandated NPIs (masks/distancing) should be avoided except in absolute emergency situations (hospitals overwhelmed). 5) Boosters will be a fact of life for people aged 65+ (and possibly 50+); maybe semi-annual, maybe not. But age is still the biggest factor in covid outcomes.
6) Where I differ from US policy - Young people age 12-21 (especially male) should be given either a lower vax dose, single dose, or the dose spread out. 7) School kids 5-11 should not be mandated vax. But given lower dose level for under 12s, I will get for my kids.
So sad to hear off Dr. Steve Ash's passing. He was an invaluable mentor to me along the way while in grad school. He was one of the finest historians of Civil War Tennessee and just a wonderful all-around human being.
To do him justice, I'll post a link to each of his books. As you can see, he was a prolific scholar. But more than that, he was a really skilled writer. His prose was quite lyrical at times, even when discussing corn and hogs in 1850s Rutherford County. utpress.org/title/middle-t…
His thoughtful discussion of Union occupation of Confederate territory and the challenge of civilians and soldiers navigating uncertain zones of control. amazon.com/gp/product/B00…
Neither the Giants nor Dodgers were in the original National League, founded 1876. Only two of those teams - Chicago White Stockings (later Cubs) & Boston Red Stockings (later Braves) still exist. The Cincinnati Reds, Philadelphia Athletics & STL Browns disbanded and reappeared.
The New York Giants began as the New York Gothams in 1883, changing their name to Giants in 1885.
The Dodgers began as the Brooklyn Atlantics in the American Association in 1883. Interestingly, the Cincinnati Reds, Pittsburgh Alleghenies (later Pirates) and St. Louis Browns (now Cardinals) from the American Association also still exist today in their NL form.