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Daytona Beach Thunder

Daytona Beach ThunderBirds
Established 2001
Folded 2009
Played in Ocean Center
in Daytona Beach, Florida
League/conference affiliations

American Indoor Football League (2006)

  • Southern Conference (2006)

World Indoor Football League (2007)
af2 (20082008)

  • American Conference (2008)
    • South Division (2008)
Team colors Light Blue, Red, White
              
Personnel
Team history
  • Daytona Beach Thunder (2006–2007)
  • Daytona Beach ThunderBirds (2008)
Championships
League championships (0)
Conference championships (0)
Division championships (0)
Home arena(s)

American Indoor Football League (2006)

World Indoor Football League (2007)
af2 (20082008)

The Daytona Beach ThunderBirds were an arena football team based in Daytona Beach, Florida. Founded in 2005 as the Daytona Thunder, they played in three different indoor football leagues over three seasons: the American Indoor Football League in 2006, the World Indoor Football League in 2007, and the af2, the Arena Football League's developmental league, in 2008 (when their name was changed to the ThunderBirds). They folded after the 2008 season. The Marquee player for the Thurnderbirds was 6'3" 230 pound Left handed Quarterback Matt Bohnet , an Eastern Michigan Graduate , who completed 160 out of 307 passes for 1,890 Yards 28 Touchdowns and 17 interceptions.

The team began play in February 2006 as the Daytona Beach Thunder in the American Indoor Football League under coach Ervin Bryson and owners Kevin and Zack McDonald, and Jay Burton. The team made some pre-season headlines when former Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback and FOX broadcaster Terry Bradshaw signed an actual players contract in a "blatant publicity stunt" at a Daytona Beach speaking engagement. Bradshaw, citing back problems, never played.

The team also garnered attention for its unique logo and its 45-foot sleeper bus that transported the team to its away games and delivered relief supplies to New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina. A partnership with the local PBS station produced a 30-minute show that aired weekly during the season.

On Friday, March 24, 2006, after losing their first three games, the Thunder got their first-ever win 49-24 against the Augusta Spartans on the road. The team put itself in position for a playoff berth at 5-4, but a three-game losing streak all but denied the Thunder the post-season. The team finished its inaugural season with a 6-8 record, with six losses coming at a combined margin of 19 points.


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