Albany Firebirds (2023–)

The Albany Firebirds are a professional arena football team as an inaugural team in the third iteration of the Arena Football League. The team is based in Albany, New York. Home games are played at the MVP Arena. This is the third time the Firebirds name has been used, first from 1990 to 2004 with the original Albany and Indiana Firebirds from the original AFL, and the Albany Firebirds of the af2 in 2009.

Albany's arena football history (1990–2023)
Before the current franchise, the original Albany Firebirds franchise was started in 1990. It was the most successful Albany arena football franchise in history, going 88–60 and made every playoffs in the AFL, except in 1990 and 1997. The team was most successful in 1999, going 13–3 and beating the Grand Rapids Rampage, Arizona Rattlers, and then beating the Orlando Predators in ArenaBowl XIII in their home turf, the MVP Arena. After the 2000 season, the Firebirds moved to Indianapolis becoming the Indiana Firebirds. The Firebirds were mainly unsuccessful in their new location, and folded in 2004.

During this time, the Albany Conquest began by the former owners of the Albany Firebirds, and were successful early on, however started to lose towards the end of the af2. The team rebranded to the Firebirds in 2009, lasting one season and a short playoff stint. The second incarnation of the Firebirds did not survive the transition to a unified Arena Football League in 2010.

After almost a decade, the Arena Football League in 2017 announced a new Albany arena football team named the Albany Empire. The Empire were very successful during their two years, winning the league's regular season title in back to back years and eventually won ArenaBowl 32 in 2019; however, the team folded with the league's Chapter 7 bankruptcy the same year.

In 2020, the National Arena League announced a new Empire franchise in November 2020. The new Empire won 2 straight NAL Championships in 2021 and 2022.

In 2023, former National Football League (NFL) wide receiver and Super Bowl champion Antonio Brown bought shares to the Empire, and joining with him was father, Albany Firebirds' legend "Touchdown" Eddie Brown. The Empire were expelled from the NAL two months into the 2023 season due to Antonio Brown's wildly erratic behavior.

Return of the Firebirds (2023–present)
After the Antonio Brown fiasco, Bob Belber, general manager of the arena, stated that New York's exceptionally high worker's compensation premium, running around $1,500,000, a full order of magnitude higher than other indoor squads, was the main factor in the NAL Empire's sale to Brown and its collapse, and the primary reason the Empire was not included among the inaugural teams in the 2024 Arena Football League relaunch; he stated that if the city wanted arena football to return, the state would have to lower that premium before the middle of August 2023. Belber was nonetheless "optimistic" that a resolution could be achieved and noted he had been in discussions with two reputable groups to potentially bring arena football back to the arena. On September 23, according to an unconfirmed report from WNYT, the team would revive the brand of the Albany Firebirds and play in the Indoor Football League; however, former Empire owner Mike Kwarta and former team president Jeff Levack stated that joining the IFL was not a certainty, as the Arena Football League remained in play, the name was still under review, and that the new team was able to renegotiate a 60% reduction in its worker's compensation cost which, while still unusually high, was good enough to allow the team to move forward. On October 2, 2023, the Albany Firebirds were announced to be joining the AFL. On October 6, the league announced the addition of the Firebirds, as well as the Southwest Kansas Storm, Wichita Regulators, Orlando Predators, Rapid City Marshals, and a team eventually known as the Washington Wolfpack.

In contrast to several of the other smaller midwestern teams that were covered under a merger agreement with Champions Indoor Football, the Firebirds indicated they had received the full cooperation of AFL management, which had honored all promises made to the team. Firebirds president Jeff Levack blamed the smaller teams for having "scared off" a television carriage agreement with NFL Network.