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In 2008, two indoor football leagues (the United Indoor Football League and the Intense Football League) agreed to dissolve their respective organizations and merge to become the new Indoor Football League. Soon after, the young league began receiving inquiries from teams in other leagues across America. The IFL competed with 19 teams in its 2009 inaugural season. That year the Billings Outlaws defeated the River City Rage was crowned the first United Bowl champion.
The league has come a long way since that inaugural season. In 2018, the IFL celebrated its tenth anniversary season and had the highest per-game attendance in league history. With common goals of entertaining fans in the IFL communities across America and developing talented and deserving players to play at the next level, the IFL has developed a strong model that has allowed it to outlast its competitors and become America’s longest continually-running indoor football league.
Prior to the 2020 season, the IFL agreed to a historic arrangement with the Steve Germain Family which acquired the rights to the League’s national sponsorships, advertising, broadcast rights, licensing, marketing, and communications. This agreement provided, for the first time, a national-level sponsorship and broadcast sales effort for the IFL, while also creating new revenue streams for both the League and the League’s teams.
In 2022, the IFL and XFL announced a monumental player personnel partnership. The partnership provides the framework for transferring players between leagues and the opportunity for players released from XFL teams to be transferred to IFL squads. The two leagues will also work together in scheduling joint tryouts and sharing video and game films.
THE IFL NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP GAMES
Year | Game | MVP |
2009 | Billings 71, River City 62 | Chris Dixon, Billings |
2010 | Billings 43, Sioux Falls 34 | Chris Dixon, Billings |
2011 | Sioux Falls 37, Tri-Cities 10 | Chris Dixon, Sioux Falls |
2012 | Sioux Falls 59, Tri-Cities 32 | Jeremiah Price, Sioux Falls |
2013 | Sioux Falls 43, Nebraska 40 | Terrance Bryant, Sioux Falls |
2014 | Sioux Falls 63, Nebraska 46 | Chris Dixon, Sioux Falls; James Terry, Sioux Falls |
2015 | Sioux Falls 62, Nebraska 27 | Brandon Johnson-Farrell, Sioux Falls |
2016 | Sioux Falls 55, Spokane 34 | Lorenzo Brown, Sioux Falls |
2017 | Arizona 50, Sioux Falls 41 | Justin Shirk, Arizona |
2018 | Iowa 42, Sioux Falls 38 | Ryan Balentine, Iowa |
2019 | Sioux Falls 56, Arizona 53 | Lorenzo Brown, Sioux Falls |
2021 | Massachusetts 37, Arizona 34 | Alejandro Bennefield, Massachusetts |
2022 | Northern Arizona 47, Quad City 45 | JaQuan Artis, NAZ |
2023 | Bay Area 51, Sioux Falls 41 | Dalton Sneed, Bay Area |
2024 | Arizona 52, Massachusetts 16 | Davontae Merriweather, Arizona |
Copyright Green Bay Blizzard Football © 2025. All rights reserved.