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・ 1963 Indianapolis 500
・ 1963 Individual Speedway World Championship
・ 1963 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup Final
・ 1963 Intercontinental Cup
・ 1963 International Cross Country Championships
・ 1963 International Gold Cup
・ 1963 International Soccer League
・ 1963 Iowa Hawkeyes football team
・ 1963 Isle of Man TT
・ 1963 Italian Grand Prix
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・ 1963 Kansas City Athletics season
1963 Kansas City Chiefs season
・ 1963 Kansas State Wildcats football team
・ 1963 Kuril Islands earthquake
・ 1963 Lancashire Cup
・ 1963 Latvian SSR Higher League
・ 1963 Liberty Bowl
・ 1963 Lime Rock SCCA National Race
・ 1963 Little League World Series
・ 1963 Lombank Trophy
・ 1963 Los Angeles Angels season
・ 1963 Los Angeles Dodgers season
・ 1963 Los Angeles Rams season
・ 1963 LPGA Championship
・ 1963 LPGA Tour
・ 1963 LSU Tigers football team


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1963 Kansas City Chiefs season : ウィキペディア英語版
1963 Kansas City Chiefs season

The 1963 Kansas City Chiefs season was the inaugural season of Kansas City’s new football franchise. Despite winning the 1962 AFL Championship the previous year, the Chiefs finished the year 5–7–2 and third in their division.〔(Kansas City Chiefs History 1960's ) ''KCChiefs.com''〕
For the previous three seasons, the team was known as the Dallas Texans. Owner and founder Lamar Hunt moved the team following the 1962 AFL Championship. Despite enormous success in Dallas, Texas, the city could not sustain two professional football franchises〔 (the other being the NFL's Dallas Cowboys). The team was renamed the Kansas City Chiefs and moved into Municipal Stadium alongside the Kansas City Athletics baseball team.
==Goin' to Kansas City==

After three seasons in Dallas, Texas—including an AFL championship in 1962—it was apparent that Dallas couldn’t support two teams.〔 Hunt investigated opportunities to move his team to several cities for the 1963 season, including Miami, Florida,〔 Atlanta, Georgia,〔 Seattle, Washington and New Orleans, Louisiana. Hunt wanted to find a city to which he could commute easily from Dallas, and when he was unable to secure Tulane Stadium in New Orleans because the university didn’t want its football program to compete with a pro team, he was persuaded by Mayor H. Roe Bartle to move to Kansas City, Missouri.〔
The negotiations in Kansas City were conducted in secrecy.〔 On several occasions Hunt and Jack Steadman, the team’s general manager, were in Kansas City and met with businessmen. Bartle introduced Hunt as “Mr. Lamar” in all the meetings with other Kansas City businessmen. Steadman was introduced as “Jack X.”〔Covitz, Randy; Pulliam, Kent. (Chiefs' founder Lamar Hunt dies ) ''Kansas City Star'', December 14, 2006.〕
Most impressive about this move was the support the team received from the community even before the team announced the move. Hunt made the move dependent upon the ability of Mayor Bartle and the Kansas City community to guarantee him 35,000 in season ticket sales. Hunt had arrived at this number because that was the Texans' average attendance at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas. An ambitious campaign took shape to deliver on Bartle’s guarantee to Hunt of tripling the season-ticket base the Texans had enjoyed in Dallas. Kansas City’s mayor also promised to add 3,000 permanent seats to Municipal Stadium, as well as 11,000 temporary bleacher seats. Along with Bartle, a number of other prominent Kansas Citians stepped forward to aid in the efforts, putting together more than 1,000 workers to sell season tickets.〔
Bartle called to his office 20 business leaders and called upon them to form an association later known as "The Gold Coats", whose sole objective was to sell and take down payments on the 35,000 season tickets required. Not an easy task when one considers the move was still secret and "The Gold Coats" had to sell season tickets to people without knowing the team name, where it was coming from, who the owner was, which football league they played in, who the players or coaches were, when the team played its first game in Kansas City, or where it played. Hunt gave Bartle a 4-month deadline. Bartle and "The Gold Coats" made good in only 8 weeks. Later, Hunt admitted he was really only hoping for 20,000, for which he still would have moved the franchise. On May 22, Hunt announced he was moving the franchise to Kansas City, Missouri.〔
Hunt, with a roster replete with players who had played college football in Texas, wanted to maintain a lineage to the team’s roots and wanted to call the club the Kansas City Texans.〔 "The Lakers stayed the Lakers when they moved from Minnesota to California," he reasoned. "But Jack Steadman convinced me that wasn’t too smart. It wouldn’t sell." The team was renamed the Chiefs—one of the most popular suggestions Hunt received in a name-the-team contest and began playing in Kansas City’s Municipal Stadium in 1963.〔 A name also considered at the time for the team was the Kansas City Mules.〔
The name, "Chiefs" is derived from Mayor Bartle, who 35 years prior, founded the Native American-based honor society known as ''The Tribe of Mic-O-Say'' within the Boy Scouts of America organization, which earned him the nickname, "The Chief."〔
The Chiefs' first Kansas City home was at 22nd and Brooklyn, called Municipal Stadium, which opened in 1923 and had 49,002 seats. The Chiefs shared Municipal Stadium with the Kansas City Athletics of Major League Baseball. The first appearance of the Chiefs in Municipal Stadium attracted just 5,721 fans for a 17–13 preseason victory against Buffalo on August 9.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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