That time Washington went to Washington (state) for training camp
'I want to invite everyone in town to drop over and watch the boys work out,' Coach Ray Flaherty said in August 1937. 'This is a great team, and I think we will compile a record that will make Washingtonians proud to claim us as a civic representative.'
Washington, which backed up Flaherty's declaration and won the NFL championship that year, relocated its training camp to Ballston Stadium in Arlington the following summer. After six weeks of practice hampered by hot, humid and dusty conditions at the stadium, which was home to the semipro Ballston Skulls, a frustrated Flaherty declared his team would 'train up north next year.' Instead, the team headed 2,500 miles west.
With Washington coming off a disappointing 6-3-2 season, General Manager Jack Espey announced in February 1939 that the team would hold training camp in Flaherty's hometown of Spokane, Washington. It was, The Washington Post reported, the 'longest training jaunt in either professional football or baseball history.'
While NFL teams seeking isolation had begun holding training camp in secluded locations, most clubs remained in their home or neighboring states.
'The Athletic Round Table Club, a sports-minded group of Spokane businessmen promoting sports for charitable purposes, guaranteed the club a substantial sum for training at Spokane, topping a bid previously submitted by Duluth, Minn.,' The Post reported. 'It also is the first time on record, a hasty perusal of records reveals, that any city has sponsored the training program of a pro football club. Spokane, it is believed, will be more suitable for training than Washington and vicinity, which was abandoned because of the intense heat and humidity which handicapped the men last year. The Western city's climate is said to be ideal for football in the later part of August and early September and Flaherty is confident he will lead a well-conditioned group of athletes East.'
Buck O'Neill of the Washington Times-Herald detailed how Spokane lured the team away from prospective training camp hosts in the Midwest. Duluth's chamber of commerce made an initial offer to Washington owner George Preston Marshall, after which the city of Superior, Wisconsin, made a $5,000 bid to host the team. Flaherty visited Superior and advised Marshall to accept the city's offer. Back home in Spokane, where he played football for Gonzaga during his college years, Flaherty mentioned his team's training camp plans and pending offers to friends.
'Why, we'll double that offer,' one of them said. 'If it is worth $5,000 for Miami to have the New York Giants train there, it is easily worth $10,000 to have one of our own boys train his team right here in town.'
Beyond Flaherty's ties to Spokane, several of Washington's players hailed from the Pacific Northwest, including Turk Edwards, Ed Justice, Max Krause and George 'Automatic' Karamatic. Flaherty hired Roy 'Doc' Mauro, who served as a trainer at Gonzaga for the previous 10 years, to assist trainer Roy Baker. Mauro was a lightweight boxer during the 1920s who in 1935 walked more than 80 miles in freezing conditions from Pullman, Washington, to Spokane to fulfill a bet with the Gonzaga football team.
In early August 1939, a group of 11 Washington players and team officials departed Union Station for Spokane via train. Other players joined the traveling party along the three-day journey. Star quarterback Sammy Baugh arranged his own transportation to camp. Washington arrived to a public reception at the Desert Hotel in Spokane before opening practice the next day in nearby Cheney, on the campus of what is now known as Eastern Washington University. And, yeah, everyone was in the best shape of their lives.
'The boys are big — so big that some are practically crowds in themselves,' the Spokane Chronicle's Herb Ashlock reported. 'And they're all in shape — in the fine fettle to warm the cockles of any coach's heart.'
At the start of camp, Marshall predicted that the National Professional Football League would soon 'stretch from coast to coast.'
'Football of tomorrow will not be seriously concerned about long traveling distance,' Washington's owner told reporters.
Over the next month, Washington debuted the use of blocking aprons, which 'give the wearers the appearance of being a combination hockey goalie and a baseball catcher,' according to the Associated Press, and were considered an upgrade over stationary blocking dummies.
'It works,' Flaherty said, 'because the apron wearers can move.'
At one practice, players tested their strength against a pair of horses. The weather was as advertised.
Training camp ended with an intrasquad scrimmage in front of roughly 10,000 fans at Gonzaga, with proceeds going to charity. Washington played exhibition games in San Francisco, Los Angeles and Boston before returning to D.C. and opening the season at Philadelphia in September.
Washington went 8-2-1, with a loss to the Giants in the regular season finale deciding the Eastern Division title. They returned to Spokane the following summer before relocating to San Diego's Brown Military Academy.
Washington trained at Occidental College in Los Angeles from 1946 to 1962 before moving camp to Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, in 1963.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
a few seconds ago
- USA Today
Why 49ers top draft pick has already impressed his new coach
The 49ers are banking upon a defensive talent infusion from the 2025 NFL draft. San Francisco used all five of its first 2025 NFL draft picks on the defensive side of the football, including its first-round selection at No. 11 overall on Georgia defensive lineman Mykel Williams. Williams tallied 67 tackles, 21.5 tackles for loss, 14 sacks, three passes defensed, three forced fumbles and one fumble recovery across 40 games in three seasons with the Bulldogs. The 6-foot-5, 267-pound defensive end started 17 games during his Georgia career. Now, Williams is tasked with fortifying the 49ers' defensive edge and its pass rush. On Thursday, 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan was asked if Williams is pretty well advanced for a rookie. "Yeah, I would say so. Just watching the style of how he played in college, he's just technical and stuff. I thought that jumped out on his tape the most, how good he is with his hands. A lot of pass rushers coming out of college who are talented like him and just use their talent, but he's as good with his hands as anyone I've seen coming out. And it's transferred over to practice too," Shanahan said. San Francisco is getting a good early look at Williams with some of its one-on-one pass rushing drills. Shanahan shared what the staff can glean from its one-one-one pass rushing drills during training camp. "The same as all one-on-ones, just it's able to isolate it. You can really see how a guy blocks with no help around him and you can really see how a guy's just teeing off and all he has to worry about is going to the quarterback. "Then you get out there on 11-on-11 and there's a lot more scheme involved, there's a lot more other guys, knowing what play's happening and there's so much that goes into it. But you get a situation where you can just truly focus on blocking and rushing and that's the hardest time to do it for a blocker and the best time for a pass rusher. And same with one-on-ones for receivers/corners, should be the best time for a receiver and the toughest for a corner without a pass rush, but it truly can show what guys are capable of doing in their total level of talent," Shanahan said. Williams has been impressing early during his time in San Francisco. The former Georgia Bulldog has garnered some first-team work opposite five-time Pro Bowler Nick Bosa. Williams has already drawn praise from future Hall of Fame left tackle Trent Williams, which is another positive sign as his rookie season approaches.


Associated Press
2 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Spurs captain Son Heung-min to leave English Premier League club
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Captain Son Heung-min announced on Saturday that he will be leaving Tottenham Hotspur. At a media conference in Seoul, Son said his decision to leave the English Premier League club was 'the most difficult' of his career and said the club was supporting him as he looks to move on to another club. Spurs will face Newcastle United in a preseason friendly on Sunday in Seoul in what could the final match of Son's time at Spurs. ___ AP soccer:
Yahoo
30 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Blake Perkins homers twice as Brewers get 25 hits in 16-9 win over Nationals
WASHINGTON (AP) — Blake Perkins hit his first two home runs of the season and drove in three runs, and the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Washington Nationals 16-9 on Friday night. William Contreras homered as part of a five-hit night and Andrew Vaughn went deep for the sixth time in 17 games with Milwaukee, which finished with a season-high 25 hits. All nine offensive starters had at least one hit and one run for the Brewers, who have won 16 of 20. Paul DeJong homered in the third inning for Washington, which is a season high-tying 21 games under .500. The Nationals trailed 16-4 before a five-run ninth. Perkins hit a solo home run in the second and a two-run shot in the fifth off Nationals starter Mitchell Parker (7-11). The outfielder missed the Brewers' first 96 games with a fractured right shin and made only his seventh start of the season as Milwaukee placed center fielder Jackson Chourio on the injured list with a right hamstring strain. Milwaukee went ahead when it opened the third with four consecutive singles, and Danny Jansen's sacrifice fly made it 3-1. Two batters later, Andruw Monasterio had a two-run double, then came around on Joey Ortiz's RBI double. Parker allowed eight runs and 12 hits in four-plus innings. He is 0-2 with a 15.58 ERA in two starts against Milwaukee this season. Brewers starter José Quintana (8-4) allowed two runs and struck out four in five innings. Key moment Monasterio's two-out, two-run double in the third allowed Milwaukee to erupt for a big inning early. Key stat The 25 hits were tied for the third most in Brewers history. It was the team's most in a game since a 26-hit effort on Aug. 2, 2010, at the Chicago Cubs. Up next Brewers RHP Brandon Woodruff (2-0, 2.01 ERA) starts against Nationals RHP Jake Irvin (8-5, 4.69) on Saturday. ___ AP MLB: