MUST BE SOME TOROS IN THE ATMOSPHERE
Minor league football returns to San Antonio as Toros ride again

Out with the San Antonio Brahmas, in with the San Antonio Toros.
If at first you don’t succeed in San Antonio, try, try again. Minor league football is coming back to Alamo City with the unexpected comeback of the Continental Football League (CoFL) and the San Antonio Toros, a team that hasn’t seen gridiron action for half a century.
The news comes just two weeks after the United Football League decided to sideline the San Antonio Brahmas, citing a need to focus on stadiums that were smaller than the 64,000-seat Alamodome. The Toros will be the third minor league San Antonio team in less than a decade, with the San Antonio Commanders folding in 2019.
The original Toros had a somewhat chaotic run between 1967-1974, switching leagues three times. Still, the team was a consistent winner, nabbing four league titles from 1967 to 1971. In its sole year before CoFL folded, 1969, the Toros claimed the Texas Division Championship.
“The San Antonio Toros were one of the most electric teams in the original Continental Football League,” said current CoFL Commissioner Mike Kelly, via a press release. “They represented everything this league stands for — tough football, community pride, and a relentless drive to compete. Bringing them back connects the legacy of the past with the opportunity of the future.”
According to the release, the new Toros will have a 36-man active roster, which will draw heavily from Texas and South-Central universities. 25 of the players will be between 18 and 25 years old, keeping with CoFL’s commitment to giving young athletes a professional development bridge.
Each franchise’s CoFL season will run from mid-May through July, with three home games and three road games, plus a non-league match to start the season. The league says it is not trying to compete with spring or fall football, but instead creating a chance for football fans to enjoy year-round play.
CoFL did not reveal where it would be playing its San Antonio games. So far, the league has only revealed two other teams: the Ohio Valley Ironmen and the Texas Syndicates in Austin. It promised that arena details, open tryout dates, and more teams will be announced in the coming weeks.
