Erie Express

The Erie Express are a professional American football minor-league team based in Erie, Pennsylvania. Founded in 2011, they will compete in the Tri-Point Football League starting in the 2024 season. From 2018 to 2023, the Express played in the Gridiron Developmental Football League (GDFL), winning the championship in 2021. The team plays at Erie Veterans Memorial Stadium, a historic football venue in midtown Erie.

The "Express" name alludes to Erie being a long-time hub for trains and rail transportation. In 1910, GE Transportation built a locomotive assembly plant in nearby Lawrence Park and designed the entire company town there, which is still in operation today. Erie also has a storied regional history of trains, especially the Erie Gauge War (1853–54).

History
Before the Erie Express won the GDFL national championship in 2021, they had reached the national semi-finals twice, in 2018 and 2019.

In 2019, the Express rostered Glen Conner Jr. as a defensive lineman, wearing the number 23. In their 30–6 victory over the Westmoreland Wolves on April 22, 2019, the Express honored Glen as their "Defensive Player of the Week" with seven tackles, three tackles for loss (−16 yards), three sacks, and an interception. Glen is the oldest brother of the National Football League (NFL) running back James Conner, an Erie native who played for local McDowell High School Trojans before committing to the University of Pittsburgh Panthers (2013–2016). James went on to play in the NFL for the Pittsburgh Steelers (2017–2020) and the Arizona Cardinals (2021–present).

Since 2016, the Express has hosted the Covato Classic each year, a game in memory of former Erie player Tyler Covato, who was killed in a work accident.

2021 National Championship season
The Erie Express defeated the Columbus Fire (Columbus, Ohio) at Erie Veterans Memorial Stadium to win the Xtreme Conference title, advancing to the GDFL National Championship for the first time. On September 5, 2021, at Saxon Stadium, they proceeded to win the GDFL championship with a 42–40 victory over Inglewood Blackhawks, a team from Inglewood, California in the Greater Los Angeles region (Inglewood is also home to the Los Angeles Chargers and the Los Angeles Rams of the NFL, playing at SoFi Stadium).

The Erie Express advanced to the USA Bowl XV Summer National Championship Game at Daytona Stadium in Daytona Beach, Florida versus the Iredell Warriors (Iredell County, North Carolina), in the Charlotte metropolitan area. The Express arrived at the game with an overall 13–0 record, while the Warriors were 12–1 in the Carolinas Elite Football Alliance. On January 15, 2022, the Express overcame the Warriors by a single point, 25–24.

Logos and uniforms
The primary colors of the Erie Express are navy blue, red, and silver. They mirror the colors found in the City of Erie flag. The primary logo features a metallic football player's face capped with a train wedge plow and a smokestack in the team's colors above the "Erie Express" wordmark. The secondary logo, found on the jersey sleeves, includes a Pennsylvania keystone in navy blue, charged with a silver E resembling an industrial wedge plow.

The helmets are silver with a red facemask, featuring navy blue and red horizontal striping and a collegiate E logo on both sides in white on red. This helmet design resembles the one introduced by the Navy Midshipmen football team for the 2012 Army–Navy Game. The home uniforms include a navy blue jersey with broad silver and red stripes sweeping over the shoulders. The secondary logo features prominently on the sleeves. The numbers and player names are in red with a white outline. The pants are silver with navy-red-navy side stripes. The away uniforms feature a white jersey with red stripes and numbers outlined in navy blue. The Express wears either red or white pants for this jersey. For the 2021 USA Bowl, the Express wore red jerseys charged with white and navy blue Northwestern stripes.

Home venues

 * Erie Veterans Memorial Stadium (10,000), 2022–present
 * Erie Sports Center, practice facility, 2021–present
 * Saxon Stadium (1,100), 2021
 * Gus Anderson Field (2011–2020)