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Colts depart Baltimore in late night move 40 years ago

Television cameras were rolling as a fleet of Mayflower moving vans descended upon the Colts training facility in Owings Mill, Maryland, in March 1984. The Indianapolis Colts moved to Indianapolis from Baltimore in 1984, a move that was announced by Indianapolis Mayor William Hudnut. The move was part of a high-stakes move years in the making, with plans to build a domed stadium capable of housing an NFL team in the Circle City. The city of Indianapolis bet big on building the stadium in the hopes of landing an NFL expansion team. The Hoosier Dome was completed in 1982 and the roof was inflated in 1983 without a tenant. However, the team moved to Baltimore due to declining game attendance and disrepair at Memorial Stadium. Despite initial outcry from fans and team employees, the move was deemed a significant economic boost by business and city leaders.

Colts depart Baltimore in late night move 40 years ago

Published : a month ago by Michael Hartz, By: Michael Hartz in Lifestyle

INDIANAPOLIS — With an ear-to-ear grin, Indianapolis Mayor William Hudnut made it official on March 29, 1984.

"Ladies and gentleman, it is my understanding that the Colts are on their way to Indianapolis," Hudnut said.

But news of the move was already making the rounds. Television cameras were rolling as a fleet of Mayflower moving vans descended upon the Colts training facility in Owings Mill, Maryland. It was the crescendo of a high-stakes move years in the making.

Plans to build a domed stadium capable of housing an NFL team in the Circle City first bubbled to the surface six years earlier. Mayor Hudnut confirmed the news with former WRTV reporter Jack Rinehart on April 5, 1978.

“It’s a dream, it’s a hope,” Hudnut said. “We’ve been studying it for the better part of two years and I don’t have any immediate plans on that subject, but the news has floated to the surface and I have said that iIf we could generate the kind of enthusiasm and the commitment in the private sector that could underwrite this project, I think it would be great for our city and it would help us become a major league city.”

The news broke at a time in which Indianapolis was known as “Naptown” and “India-no-place.” However, business and city leaders saw an opportunity for economic growth — sports.

The Indiana Sports Corporation was formed in late 1979 and the following year, a task force formed inside the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce found the domed stadium project was viable and unveiled renderings on Sept. 3, 1980.

The city of Indianapolis bet big on building the domed stadium in the hopes of landing an NFL expansion team. The 61-thousand seat stadium was named the Hoosier Dome in 1982 and the roof was inflated in the summer of 1983. However, the building still had no tenant.

But just as things were coming together in Indianapolis, they were coming apart in Baltimore. Game attendance was down at Memorial Stadium and the venue itself had fallen into disrepair. Team owner Bob Irsay began looking for a new stable for the Colts to call home.

“He was quite smitten by the fact that even though it hadn’t been finished yet, the seats were blue and white which were the Colts colors,” Hudnut told WRTV in 2014.

So in the cover of night, that cold wintry March, the team packed up and headed east. Colts fans and even some Colts employees were shocked by the move.

Baltimore’s mayor William Schaefer even made a plea for mayor Hudnut to refrain from using the name Indianapolis Colts because, “there was something obnoxious about the name.”

Nonetheless, the moving trucks arrived at the then vacant Fall Creek Elementary school where the team would set up its temporary practice facility. Awaiting their arrival was Indianapolis mayor William Hudnut, wearing that same ear-to-ear grin.

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