New York Brickley Giants

New York Brickley Giants
General information
Founded1919 (original)
1921
Folded1922
StadiumCommercial Field (2 games)
Ebbets Field (1 game)
Polo Grounds (1 game)
HeadquarteredNew York City, New York
ColorsBlack, orange, gold, cream
       
Personnel
OwnersNew York Giants (1919)
Billy Gibson (1921)
Head coachCharles Brickley
Nickname
Brickley's Giants
Team history

New York Giants (1921)

League / conference affiliations
APFA (National Football League)
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The New York Giants (informally known as Brickley's Giants and Brickley's New York Giants) were a professional American football team with the American Professional Football Association (now the National Football League) whose only season played was in 1921. The team has also been referred to as the Brooklyn Giants and Brickley's Brooklyn Giants. The Brickley's Giants were the first of 17 professional football teams to represent New York City at one time or another. The team was founded in 1919 by Charles Brickley, who received All-American honors while at Harvard. Brickley's Giants played two games in their only season, losing to the Buffalo All-Americans, 55–0, and the Cleveland Tigers, 17–0. It was the second-shortest-lived franchise in APFA/NFL history, behind only another former New York APFA team, the Tonawanda Kardex, who played only one game in the same 1921 season.