Less than two months into the 1967 season the Buccaneers' players threatened to quit after not receiving their pay for two games. The players agreed to stay on with a $75-per-game pay cut, but demanded more of a say in team affairs in return. McCormick and four of his assistants quit afterwards.[2] Former Oakland Raiders player Joe Barbee was hired to coach the team on an interim basis.[3]
The financially troubled franchise was purchased in March 1968 and later renamed to the Sacramento Capitols. Under new head coach George Porter the team improved to 5-7 in 1968 and then 8-4 in 1969. The team made the CFL playoffs for the first and only time in 1969, where they lost 31-0 to the Las Vegas Cowboys. In July 1970, with the future of the CFL in doubt, the Capitols folded after selling less than half of the 3,000 season tickets needed to remain viable.[4]
Season-by-season[]
Year
League
W
L
T
Finish
Coach
Sacramento Buccaneers
1967
CFL
2
10
0
6th, Pacific Division
Don McCormick
Sacramento Capitols
1968
CFL
5
7
0
3rd, Pacific Division
George Porter
Sacramento Capitols
1969
CFL
8
4
0
2nd, Pacific Division
George Porter
References[]
↑"New football league decides on team lineup". Redlands Daily Facts. UPI. May 8, 1967.
↑"Sacramento Pro Grid Coaches Quit". Lodi News-Sentinel. UPI. October 28, 1967.
↑"Nothing Except Trouble". Santa Cruz Sentinel. Associated Press. October 29, 1967.
↑"Capitols Fold, Lack of Fans". The Fresno Bee: p. 15. July 3, 1970.