World Bowl

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The World Bowl is the American football Championship game of NFL Europa, similar to the Super Bowl of the NFL.

When NFL Europa was founded in 1991 as World League of American Football (WLAF), with teams in North America and Europe as well as expansion plans for Asia, the name World Bowl was appropriate. It was kept after 1995 when the league limited itself exclusively to Europe.

The World Bowl trophy itself is a globe made of glass measuring 35.5cm (14 inches) in diameter and weighing 18.6 kg (41 lb).

From 1995 to 1997, the World Bowl venue was decided by the standings after 5 weeks of the 10-week season. All venues before, and since, were predetermined before the season.

The 2002 World Bowl was hosted in Rhein Fire home town of Düsseldorf as a farewell to the old Rheinstadion. After the new LTU arena was completed, the 2005 World Bowl was hosted there again. It would return in 2006, as a first ever back to back WB site. Düsseldorf has currently no Bundesliga team and was not selected for FIFA World Cup games, so Football is a major sport there, unlike in other NFL Europa towns.

The former World Football League, a short-lived 1970s competitor to the NFL, also named its championship game the World Bowl. In the only WFL World Bowl contested, the Birmingham Americans defeated the Florida Blazers 22-21 on December 5, 1974.

[edit] World Bowl (WLAF, NFL Europe, and NFL Europa Championships)

Year Venue Winner Score Runner-Up MVP
June 23, 2007 World Bowl XV Commerzbank-Arena, Frankfurt, Germany ?
? (?)
 ?-? ?
? (?)
? ?, ?
May 27, 2006 World Bowl XIV LTU arena, Düsseldorf, Germany
Frankfurt Galaxy (GER)
22 - 7
Amsterdam Admirals (NED)
Butchie Wallace Galaxy, RB
June 11, 2005 World Bowl XIII LTU arena, Düsseldorf, Germany
Amsterdam Admirals (NED)
27 - 21
Berlin Thunder (GER)
Kurt Kittner
Admirals, QB
June 12, 2004 World Bowl XII Arena AufSchalke, Gelsenkirchen, Germany
Berlin Thunder (GER)
30 - 24
Frankfurt Galaxy (GER)
Eric McCoo
Thunder, RB
June 14, 2003 World Bowl XI Hampden Park, Glasgow, Scotland
Frankfurt Galaxy (GER)
35 - 16
Rhein Fire (GER)
Jonas Lewis
Galaxy, RB
June 22, 2002 World Bowl X Rheinstadion, Düsseldorf, Germany
Berlin Thunder (GER)
26 - 20
Rhein Fire (GER)
Dane Looker
Thunder, WR
June 30, 2001 World Bowl IX Amsterdam ArenA, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Berlin Thunder (GER)
24 - 17
Barcelona Dragons (ESP)
Jonathan Quinn
Thunder, QB
June 25, 2000 World Bowl VIII Waldstadion, Frankfurt, Germany
Rhein Fire (GER)
13 - 10
Scottish Claymores (SCO)
Danny Wuerffel
Fire, QB
June 27, 1999 World Bowl VII Rheinstadion, Düsseldorf, Germany
Frankfurt Galaxy (GER)
38 - 24
Barcelona Dragons (ESP)
Andy McCullough
Galaxy, WR
June 14, 1998 World Bowl VI Waldstadion, Frankfurt, Germany
Rhein Fire (GER)
34 - 10
Frankfurt Galaxy (GER)
Jim Arellanes
Fire, QB
June 22, 1997 World Bowl V Estadi Olimpic, Barcelona, Spain
Barcelona Dragons (ESP)
38 - 24
Rhein Fire (GER)
Jon Kitna
Dragons, QB
June 23, 1996 World Bowl IV Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh, Scotland
Scottish Claymores (SCO)
32 - 27
Frankfurt Galaxy (GER)
Yo Murphy
Claymores, WR
June 17, 1995 World Bowl III Olympisch Stadion, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Frankfurt Galaxy (GER)
26 - 22
Amsterdam Admirals (NED)
Paul Justin
Galaxy, QB
1994 Not Played
1993
June 6, 1992 World Bowl II Stade Olympique, Montreal, Canada
Sacramento Surge (USA)
21 - 17
Orlando Thunder (USA)
David Archer
Surge, QB
June 6, 1991 World Bowl I Wembley Stadium, London, England
London Monarchs (ENG)
21 - 0
Barcelona Dragons (ESP)
Dan Crossman
Monarchs, Safety


  • Note: Roman Numerals were not officially used by NFL Europa until World Bowl IX. Prior to 2001, the games were billed as World Bowl 2000, World Bowl '99 etc.

[edit] Trivia

  • There has only been one defensive MVP of the World Bowl to date: Dan Crossman, the London Monarchs' safety - following three interceptions of the Barcelona Dragons' quarterback Scott Erney, one of which he returned for a touchdown as part of the only World Bowl shutout so far, it couldn't really have been anyone else.
  • From 1998 to 2004, only German teams won the World Bowl - a streak broken in 2005 by the single remaining non-German team, Amsterdam Admirals.
  • Teams from the same country have played in the big game five times. There was only one All-American final: World Bowl II (Sacramento Surge/Orlando Thunder). The rest have all been German - VI (Rhein Fire/Frankfurt Galaxy), and then a three-year run: X (Berlin Thunder/Fire), XI (Galaxy/Fire) and XII (Thunder/Galaxy). Due to the league's lop-sided geographical makeup, having just one of six teams outside of Germany, the probability of a World Bowl between two German teams is now as high as 66% (30 possible combinations of home/away teams, and the Admirals not featuring in 20 of them). With the league planning to expand to eight teams, and the likely cities being Leipzig and Hanover, this probability would increase to 75%.
  • Three teams have won the championship in their home stadium: the Monarchs in the inaugural World Bowl at Wembley Stadium, the Claymores at Murrayfield Stadium in Edinburgh (WB IV) and the Dragons at the Estadio Olimpic de Montjuic (WB V). The Claymores' and Dragons' victories were possibly predictable, as between 1995 and 1997 the league not only decided the venue with the leader of the league at the 5-week stage, but also the first team to make it into the World Bowl. This was dropped after WB V, in favour of the top two teams after 10 weeks going to the big game.


NFL Europa
Amsterdam Admirals | Berlin Thunder | Cologne Centurions | Frankfurt Galaxy | Hamburg Sea Devils | Rhein Fire
Former teams: Barcelona Dragons | London/England Monarchs| Scottish Claymores
See also: World Bowl | Stadiums | WLAF
The World Bowl
I 1991 | II 1992 | III 1995 | IV 1996 | V 1997 | VI 1998 | VII 1999 | VIII 2000 | IX 2001 | X 2002 | XI 2003 | XII 2004 | XIII 2005 | XIV 2006 | XV 2007