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The Oilers Leave.......The Fans Wait........The Texans Arrive.........The Fans Wait......

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Hall of Fame
McClain: Anniversary of Oilers' departure stirs special memories
By John McClain
December 15, 2016 Updated: December 15, 2016 8:10am


Since Thursday was the 20th anniversary of the Oilers' last game in Houston, I would like to share with you two special memories of that unforgettable time in our city's sports history.

I will never forget what I witnessed after their last game in Houston on Dec. 15, 1996 and after their last practice in June 1997.

Because owner Bud Adams was negotiating to buy out the last year of their lease, they were unable to move to Nashville and become the Tennessee Oilers until the third week of June in 1997.

Before we get to that last practice, let me tell you about what transpired after their last game in the Astrodome.

The Oilers played Cincinnati. Only 15,131 - the smallest crowd in Houston history - showed up and the Oilers lost 21-13.

Rather than go to the Oilers' dressing room to interview coach Jeff Fisher and his players, I went where I had never been - outside the Astrodome where Adams' limousine would exit.

What an ugly scene. Adams and his family came out, and fans surrounded his limo, throwing anything they could carry - beer, food, rocks, dirt - anything they could get their hands on.

Security was of little help because there were just too many irate fans pelting the limo, jumping on the hood and trunk, banging on the windows and shouting every obscenity they could think of. It was repulsive but understandable considering the circumstances.

Adams' limo moved slowly through the crowd until it could get up enough speed to finally escape and head for the exit to Fannin.

At that time, I wondered what must it feel like to be Bud Adams, to experience something like that and be so hated in your hometown, where you had done business since World War II?

Now, fast forward six months later. After an offseason in limbo, the Oilers knew they were moving to Nashville.

Their dilapidated practice facility was situated off Holly Hall and 288. It resembled a morgue that offseason because the players and coaches knew their fate.

At their last practice in June, there was a lot of local media, as well as reporters from Tennessee who had been covering the team.

As I watched the team practicing for the last time in Houston, I thought back to so many memorable moments at that facility.

Among them:

  • The 1987 strike when players stood in the street throwing rocks and eggs at busses bringing replacement players for three-a-day practices under coach Jerry Glanville.
  • Practice being stopped so a stripper could come on the field on a golf cart to sing "Happy Birthday" to receivers coach Chris Palmer.
  • Because of a prank by Greg Montgomery, the offensive linemen taking the punter's stuffed rabbit from his locker and stringing it up between the goal posts and blasting away with shotguns, leaving nothing but cotton floating through the air.
  • During a rainstorm that stopped practice, running back Lorenzo White climbing on a tractor underneath a shed and singing the "Green Acres" theme song at the top of his lungs.
  • During another rainstorm, guard Doug Dawson going on the rain-soaked field wearing nothing but his jock, running 20 yards and seeing how far he could slide while television cameras recorded him.
I could go on and on about those memories I will always cherish.

The saddest was the last day at practice, when reporters stood on the field interviewing and just talking with players. No one was in a hurry to leave.

Finally, every player had gone into the facility except the greatest one who also happened to be the most outspoken against the move.

When we were through interviewing guard Bruce Matthews, who was finishing his 14th season of a 19-year career that would enable him to be enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, he headed for the dressing room.

Right before he went through the door, with his back to us, Matthews carried his helmet in his right hand and raised his left arm to wave goodbye - signaling the end of pro football in Houston.

I will never forget that moment. While I stood there, I got this nauseating feeling: It's over. The Oilers are gone. The Dome is a dump. Houston will be without pro football for the first time since 1959. The NFL is not coming back to our city.

Not now. Not ever. Never.

And then Bob McNair came along.
 
Bud Adams flicking off the cameras when asked what he thought about Houston or something to that effect is what always stood out to me. It was a nasty divorce.

I take a little extra joy when we beat up on the titans.

Would be nice for everything to go right for one time, one season after decades of heartbreak.
 
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If we keep starting Brock and keep BoB and The Token then it will end the same way with McNair.

As the owner he needs to show the fans he wants to win. At least Bud wanted to win at all costs.
 
If we keep starting Brock and keep BoB and The Token then it will end the same way with McNair.

As the owner he needs to show the fans he wants to win. At least Bud wanted to win at all costs.

As a long-time Oiler's fan I often wonder where this narrative was invented. Bud was a cheap, sorry son of a ***** and he only spent big at the end of his life because he knew that if he didn't he would go down in history as "Bottom-Line Bud". His cheapness is legendary and even when he was spending as much as just about any owner in the league on talent he was still trying to get by with very economical contracts for coaching and he was still running that dump of a training facility on Holly Hall.

Bud was a piece of ****. There's no need to go back and turn him into some guy with a redeeming quality just because we've found Bob McNair to be somewhat disappointing now that the bloom is off the rose and we see through some of his bullshit.
 
Bud was a piece of ****. There's no need to go back and turn him into some guy with a redeeming quality just because we've found Bob McNair to be somewhat disappointing now that the bloom is off the rose and we see through some of his bullshit.

I'm just thankful Bud never lived to see his Titan team win a Super Bowl. That dispicable man deserved nothing good.

You guys said it all.
 
As a long-time Oiler's fan I often wonder where this narrative was invented. Bud was a cheap, sorry son of a ***** and he only spent big at the end of his life because he knew that if he didn't he would go down in history as "Bottom-Line Bud". His cheapness is legendary and even when he was spending as much as just about any owner in the league on talent he was still trying to get by with very economical contracts for coaching and he was still running that dump of a training facility on Holly Hall.

Bud was a piece of ****. There's no need to go back and turn him into some guy with a redeeming quality just because we've found Bob McNair to be somewhat disappointing now that the bloom is off the rose and we see through some of his bullshit.

Let's step back and be objective about it.

I'm no fan of Bud, but I'm also pragmatic and like to entertain truth instead of pushing an emotion-based agenda.

During the run & shoot years, Bud consistently had the highest payroll in the NFL. His roster was stocked with pro bowl and all pro players. It was coaching that failed to get them far for 7 straight playoff years.

Investing a lot of money into a training facility does not make sense when he had absolutely no power at the attached stadium. Uncle Drayton and his good buddy Bob Lanier railroaded Bud out of town. Drayton said there was nothing wrong with the Astrodome...until Bud left. Then he leveraged that situation to get his shiny new stadium downtown or he was moving the baseball team to another city. Bud got played. He later admitted that his biggest regret was not letting the Astros leave first. He realized that Bob McNair ended up getting what he wanted in Houston: a new stadium.

John McClain said recently that the only reason we did not have tailgating at Oilers games was because of Drayton Mclane. He wanted to wring every cent of profit out of Oilers games. When Bud moved to Tennessee, he allowed tailgating from the very beginning. He was planning to allow it in Houston once he had his own stadium.

No, I'm not a fan of Bud, but we cannot separate him from the Houston Oilers. While he was certainly responsible for moving them, let's not act like it happened in a vacuum without any influence. He was always a political outsider in Houston and did not kiss people's ass. That maverick attitude eventually alienated everyone and he did not have any goodwill with the fans by that point. Sure, he "got what he deserved" in the end, but ultimately, the biggest losers were Oilers fans.
 
Let's step back and be objective about it.

I'm no fan of Bud, but I'm also pragmatic and like to entertain truth instead of pushing an emotion-based agenda.

During the run & shoot years, Bud consistently had the highest payroll in the NFL. His roster was stocked with pro bowl and all pro players. It was coaching that failed to get them far for 7 straight playoff years.

Investing a lot of money into a training facility does not make sense when he had absolutely no power at the attached stadium. Uncle Drayton and his good buddy Bob Lanier railroaded Bud out of town. Drayton said there was nothing wrong with the Astrodome...until Bud left. Then he leveraged that situation to get his shiny new stadium downtown or he was moving the baseball team to another city. Bud got played. He later admitted that his biggest regret was not letting the Astros leave first. He realized that Bob McNair ended up getting what he wanted in Houston: a new stadium.

John McClain said recently that the only reason we did not have tailgating at Oilers games was because of Drayton Mclane. He wanted to wring every cent of profit out of Oilers games. When Bud moved to Tennessee, he allowed tailgating from the very beginning. He was planning to allow it in Houston once he had his own stadium.

No, I'm not a fan of Bud, but we cannot separate him from the Houston Oilers. While he was certainly responsible for moving them, let's not act like it happened in a vacuum without any influence. He was always a political outsider in Houston and did not kiss people's ass. That maverick attitude eventually alienated everyone and he did not have any goodwill with the fans by that point. Sure, he "got what he deserved" in the end, but ultimately, the biggest losers were Oilers fans.

Bud did some good things but they were few and far between. Most of the time he was a mizer. Between 1963 and 1986 the Oilers had 5 playoff seasons.

5 and never made it to the dance.

Oiler fans had a reason to be disgruntled and angry when he asked for a new stadium when the last renovation was only a few years old. He had a mediocre product and didn't deserve more than mediocre support
 
Bud did some good things but they were few and far between. Most of the time he was a mizer. Between 1963 and 1986 the Oilers had 5 playoff seasons.

5 and never made it to the dance.

Oiler fans had a reason to be disgruntled and angry when he asked for a new stadium when the last renovation was only a few years old. He had a mediocre product and didn't deserve more than mediocre support

Yep. I don't disagree. History is what it is.

Being a Houston pro football fan is arduous, at best. We endured everything that was Bud and the Oilers, and now we have a shiny new team with 15 seasons already and only 3 playoff years that amounted to essentially nothing. This in a day and age when quick turnarounds are possible due to design by the modern NFL.
 
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The only thing that keeps me from laying a big, stinking turd on Bud's tomb is that at my age I don't see any upside to risking jail time if I get caught and a don't run so fast anymore.

The Oiler's were a **** show even when he finally forked over the money for a quality roster. Investing money in your product (in this case your training facility) always makes sense. The difference between what Bud did and what Bob McNair ended up with all comes down to one basic thing. Bud was Bud and couldn't charm a prostitute with a handful of hundreds to save his life. Long before anyone gave a crap about stadiums Bud was rubbing the Houston football fans the wrong way.

Looking at his time here objectively (really) Bud did not "want to win at all costs". That is a myth.
 
Let's step back and be objective about it.

I'm no fan of Bud, but I'm also pragmatic and like to entertain truth instead of pushing an emotion-based agenda.

During the run & shoot years, Bud consistently had the highest payroll in the NFL. His roster was stocked with pro bowl and all pro players. It was coaching that failed to get them far for 7 straight playoff years.

Investing a lot of money into a training facility does not make sense when he had absolutely no power at the attached stadium. Uncle Drayton and his good buddy Bob Lanier railroaded Bud out of town. Drayton said there was nothing wrong with the Astrodome...until Bud left. Then he leveraged that situation to get his shiny new stadium downtown or he was moving the baseball team to another city. Bud got played. He later admitted that his biggest regret was not letting the Astros leave first. He realized that Bob McNair ended up getting what he wanted in Houston: a new stadium.

John McClain said recently that the only reason we did not have tailgating at Oilers games was because of Drayton Mclane. He wanted to wring every cent of profit out of Oilers games. When Bud moved to Tennessee, he allowed tailgating from the very beginning. He was planning to allow it in Houston once he had his own stadium.

No, I'm not a fan of Bud, but we cannot separate him from the Houston Oilers. While he was certainly responsible for moving them, let's not act like it happened in a vacuum without any influence. He was always a political outsider in Houston and did not kiss people's ass. That maverick attitude eventually alienated everyone and he did not have any goodwill with the fans by that point. Sure, he "got what he deserved" in the end, but ultimately, the biggest losers were Oilers fans.
Great info, DB. It also seems to backup what I'd heard before.

Back in college, I had a professor who was Drayton's cousin. She used to talk in class every once in a while about how much of an asshole he was. One day she and I were talking privately as I was one of the only big sports fans in the class, and she told me something similar about Bud and Drayton's relationship. Drayton was a penny pincher and an ego maniac. He loved sticking it to Bud, and Bud was never going to be the political savant that Drayton was. Drayton manipulated the whole thing behind the scenes until Bud was done with the city of Houston and our politics.

Take it for what it's worth, but I haven't thought about that conversation since you brought this up.
 
I'm not saying Drayton wasn't the devil and that he didn't con and push Bud into going first. I'm just saying that from the very beginning of his AFL days Bud was never this "win at any cost" guy. That's entirely made up and a result of his being a big spender during the R&S days when he was getting on in years and feeling like he was never going to get a Lombardi and a ring.

Being unable to even host a Super Bowl in the Astrodome stung his pride but never getting to play in one or win one was starting to make him think his legacy was in trouble (it was) so he started paying for a team and at one point I think he was in the top 4-5 payrolls in the league (this is pre-salary cap days) but at the same time he was building this juggernaut he was hiring guys like Hugh Campbell and Jerry Glanville to coach it. Jack Pardee was a nice man but he was in over his head against the great coaches of that era.
 
Great info, DB. It also seems to backup what I'd heard before.

Back in college, I had a professor who was Drayton's cousin. She used to talk in class every once in a while about how much of an asshole he was. One day she and I were talking privately as I was one of the only big sports fans in the class, and she told me something similar about Bud and Drayton's relationship. Drayton was a penny pincher and an ego maniac. He loved sticking it to Bud, and Bud was never going to be the political savant that Drayton was. Drayton manipulated the whole thing behind the scenes until Bud was done with the city of Houston and our politics.

Take it for what it's worth, but I haven't thought about that conversation since you brought this up.

yeah Houston sports fans have been pretty much cursed with team owners. Adams and McClane and other Astro Owners. Has Alexander turned into the best owner in Houston history?
 
yeah Houston sports fans have been pretty much cursed with team owners. Adams and McClane and other Astro Owners. Has Alexander turned into the best owner in Houston history?
And I don't even think it's close. Alexander is far and away the best owner we have. He's always been willing to spend money to get stars (Barkley, Pippen, Tracy, Yao, Harden), has always hired basketball guys to run his team for him (Dawson and Morey), yet he actually seems to love his team evidenced by his attendance and spot on the floor for every game. I've never had an issue with Les Alexander.

The jury is still out on Jim Crane. I know lots of people on this board seem to hate him for his political affiliation, but thus far he seems like a decent owner. I do believe he's going to be willing to spend, but he does exactly what any team should ask in that he lets the experts (Ryan and Luhnow) run his team for him. McNair would be a fantastic owner if he could just get out of his own way.
 
I'm not saying Drayton wasn't the devil and that he didn't con and push Bud into going first. I'm just saying that from the very beginning of his AFL days Bud was never this "win at any cost" guy. That's entirely made up and a result of his being a big spender during the R&S days when he was getting on in years and feeling like he was never going to get a Lombardi and a ring.

Being unable to even host a Super Bowl in the Astrodome stung his pride but never getting to play in one or win one was starting to make him think his legacy was in trouble (it was) so he started paying for a team and at one point I think he was in the top 4-5 payrolls in the league (this is pre-salary cap days) but at the same time he was building this juggernaut he was hiring guys like Hugh Campbell and Jerry Glanville to coach it. Jack Pardee was a nice man but he was in over his head against the great coaches of that era.

All of the AFL owners were that way to some extent. You think Bud was any different than Al Davis? They were all maverick businessmen who wanted to stick it to the NFL so they could eventually join the club.

The primary difference were that some, like Lamar Hunt and Ralph Wilson, had some class. My in-laws are from Buffalo, and there was a lot of animosity toward Wilson because he was so cheap. But, maybe they had to be because this was before the billions being split from massive tv deals and guaranteed stadium sellouts because of PSL scams.

I'm not here to defend Bud, but I'm also not going to get emotional about it. He was who he was, and while he was certainly 'bottom line Bud' for the first several decades, I do not doubt that he really wanted to win. He was just clueless how to do it.

Just like our current owner.

The big difference between the Oilers and the Texans is one has a first class marketing department....and has their own stadium.

But, at the end of the day, I see both franchises floundering around while accomplishing not much of anything significant.
 
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The big difference between the Oilers and the Texans is one has a first class marketing department....and has their own stadium.

But, at the end of the day, I see both franchises floundering around while accomplishing not much of anything significant.

Yep. I think it's this way for all sports teams over time. It's largely a matter of luck. '74 Steelers draft class and a Tom Brady don't come around that often. When the stars align you better take advantage
 
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