Electric Football Grail – A Complete Felt of Footballs

electric football Tudor NFL felt footballs game

The top felt is from 1962. The bottom two are from the 1964-72 period.

Electric football has many great “pieces” to find when collecting old games. We talked in an earlier post about one of our favorite finds, Tudor’s original rub-on number sheets. But one of our ultimate finds is a “felt” of footballs – that is, a complete unused felt of footballs.

Tudor’s earliest electric football games came with felt footballs, although the footballs were already loose and in the storage containers that with the games. The first strips of felt footballs appeared in 1962, the same year that Tudor’s first 3-D electric football players appeared. That was also the first year for Tudor’s 3-D kicker-passer figures — the felt footballs now needed a small split for the quarterback’s throwing arm and for the kicking “tee.” (The top felt in the photo is from 1962.)

Foam footballs in the 1973 Tudor rule book.

In 1964 the felt was enlarged to include a washer for Tudor’s new on-field timer. This was Tudor’s standard electric football felt until Tudor, unfortunately, began making foam rubber footballs in the early 1970’s. (Foam footballs appear in the 1973 Tudor electric football rulebook, both in the instructions and in the replacement parts list.)

This change made the felts we had all the more valuable — raise your hand if you were ever guilty of stuffing a used football back into the felt for “safekeeping.”  And today, after decades of foam football production, discovering a felt with just a single football can make us feel like the electric football version of Indiana Jones. 

Much more to come in The Unforgettable Buzz.

Earl & Roddy

Comments

Electric Football Grail – A Complete Felt of Footballs — 4 Comments

  1. My friends and I never used (well, stopped using) the end zone timer; too many times the players would run into it and blow away correct timing.
    What we did was use our mothers kitchen timers…25 minutes for 1st and 3rd quarters, and 30 mins for 2nd and 4th quarters.

    • The end zone timer was not easy to use. We often did 15 plays per quarter as the “clock.”

      • Speaking of the felt footballs; yes they were put back in their felt tray after use, but always a little dirtier than the unused ones.
        When we ran out of the factory footballs we would cut the timer pads to a football shape.(being that we had no use of the timer).

        • Yes!!! Absolutely tried to use the scraps of the felt or the timer pad for footballs when the last ball went down the heater vent. The Exacto knife needed to be sharp!