| Denver Broncos Team History
  The 
                  Denver Broncos have been one of pro football's biggest winners 
                  since the merger of the American and National Football Leagues 
                  in 1970. The Broncos' on-the-field success is more than matched 
                  by a spectacular attendance record of sellout crowds (except 
                  for strike-replacement games) every year since 1970. Denver's 
                  annual sale of approximately 74,000 season tickets is backed 
                  by a waiting list in the tens of thousands. The Broncos now 
                  play in the new INVESCO Field at Mile High which opened in 2001, 
                  but for 41 seasons played on the same plot of ground on which 
                  the original AFL team performed in 1960. This, however, is the 
                  only similarity of Denver teams of yesteryear and today. The 
                  upstart AFL was the target of many jokes and jeers by the established 
                  National Football League in the early 1960s, but the Broncos 
                  were the most laughed-at of all. 
 Bob Howsam, a successful minor league baseball owner who built 
                  Bears Stadium in the 1940s, was awarded an AFL charter franchise 
                  on August 14, 1959. Severely limited financially, Howsam clothed 
                  his first team in used uniforms from the defunct Copper Bowl 
                  in Tucson, Ariz. Making the uniforms particularly joke-worthy 
                  were the vertically-striped socks that completed the Broncos' 
                  dress. Two years later, when Jack Faulkner took over as head 
                  coach and general manager, the socks were destroyed in a public 
                  burning ceremony.
 
 While Denver's on-the-field experience during the 10 years of 
                  the AFL was for the most part bleak, the Broncos did have some 
                  bright moments. On September 9, 1960, they won the first-ever 
                  AFL game with a 13-10 victory over the Boston Patriots. On August 
                  5, 1967, they scored the first win ever for an AFL team against 
                  an NFL opponent with a 13-7 triumph over the Detroit Lions. 
                  But at the end of the AFL's decade, Denver's 39-97-4 record 
                  was the worst for any of the original eight AFL teams.
 
 Denver's current attendance bonanza can be traced to a remarkable 
                  turn of events in 1965 that first threatened and then assured 
                  the future of pro football in the city. Several minority partners 
                  formed a majority voting block to sell the Broncos to Atlanta 
                  interests, but, at the last minute, the Phipps brothers, Gerald 
                  and Allan, who had been left out of the voting block, bought 
                  the team and 34,657-seat Bears Stadium. Excited fans showed 
                  their appreciation by purchasing almost 23,000 season tickets, 
                  compared to 7,996 the year before.
 
 Before the 1968 season, Bears Stadium was purchased by the city 
                  and renamed Denver Mile High Stadium. It was expanded to 51,706 
                  capacity that year, then to 63,532 in 1976 and to 75,100 in 
                  1977. As the stadium grew, so too did season-ticket sales fill 
                  every extra seat.
 
 In their 14th season in 1973, the Broncos under Coach John Ralston 
                  finished 7-5-2 for their first winning season ever. Thus started 
                  a trend that saw the Broncos fall below the .500 mark only three 
                  times in the next 20 seasons. In the 14-year period between 
                  1977 and 1991, the Broncos won seven AFC Western Division titles 
                  and AFC championships in 1977, 1986, 1987 and 1989. It was the 
                  kind of success the Broncos' founders could not, with good reason, 
                  possibly have imagined.
 
 The Broncos reached the pinnacle of the pro football world, 
                  as the team captured its first world championship with a victory 
                  over the Green Bay Packers in Super Bowl XXXII. With a victory 
                  over the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl XXXIII, Denver accomplished 
                  what only five other teams had achieved — back-to-back 
                  Super Bowl championships.
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