Washington Valor
The Washington Valor was a professional arena football team based in Washington, D.C., that competed in the Arena Football League (AFL) from 2017 to 2019.[1] Owned by Monumental Sports & Entertainment under majority owner Ted Leonsis, the Valor played their home games at Capital One Arena and became one of the league's expansion franchises aimed at revitalizing arena football in the nation's capital.[2][3] Founded in 2017 as part of the AFL's revival following a brief hiatus, the Valor entered the league with high expectations, sharing ownership ties with Monumental's other properties like the NBA's Washington Wizards and NHL's Washington Capitals.[4] In their inaugural season, the team finished with a 3–11 record, missing the playoffs amid typical challenges for a new expansion club, including roster adjustments and fan base building, while drawing an average attendance of over 11,000 per game.[1] The 2018 season marked the Valor’s most memorable campaign, as they defied a 2–10 regular-season mark to qualify for the playoffs as the Eastern Conference's #4 seed.[1] They advanced through the postseason with upset victories, losing the first leg of the conference semifinal series to top-seeded Albany Empire 56–57 at home on July 14 before winning the second leg 47–40 on the road on July 21 to advance on a 103–97 aggregate score, then capturing ArenaBowl XXXI with a 69–55 triumph against the Baltimore Brigade on July 28, 2018—the franchise's sole championship and one of the AFL's final titles before its collapse.[5][6][7] This Cinderella run highlighted the team's resilience under head coach Benji McDowell, though average attendance dipped to around 6,700 amid broader league uncertainties.[1] In 2019, the Valor rebounded to a 7–5 record, securing another playoff berth, but fell in the divisional round to the Philadelphia Soul.[1] The season proved short-lived, as the AFL suspended operations in October 2019 due to financial difficulties, leading to the permanent closure of the Valor and all other teams; Monumental Sports expressed disappointment but shifted focus to its surviving franchises.[1] Over three seasons, the Valor compiled an overall record of 14–29, hosted 21 home games with a total attendance of 173,814, and left a legacy as a brief but championship-caliber presence in D.C. sports.[1]Franchise Overview
Founding and Ownership
The Washington Valor was established as an expansion franchise in the Arena Football League (AFL), with the team's acquisition by Monumental Sports & Entertainment formally announced on March 16, 2016, ahead of the league's planned 2017 season following its abbreviated 2016 campaign after a 2015 suspension.[8] This move marked the return of professional arena football to the Washington, D.C., market after a 27-year absence since the original Washington Commandos folded in 1990.[9] Ownership of the Valor rested with Monumental Sports & Entertainment, the sports and entertainment conglomerate founded and led by Ted Leonsis, who also holds majority ownership of the NBA's Washington Wizards, NHL's Washington Capitals, and WNBA's Washington Mystics.[10] Leonsis's investment in the AFL through Monumental aimed to integrate the Valor into the broader D.C. sports landscape, leveraging shared facilities and fanbases at the Verizon Center (now Capital One Arena).[11] Roger Mody served as the team's managing partner and played a key role in initial operations, including branding decisions and fostering connections within the local sports ecosystem as a longtime Monumental executive.[12] Mody passed away on September 24, 2025.[13] The team name "Valor" was unveiled on July 14, 2016, selected to symbolize courage, bravery, and the American spirit, reflecting the franchise's aspiration to embody the resilience of its fans and the nation's heritage.[14] The logo features a bold "V" incorporating elements of the D.C. flag, including red stripes, an eagle's head, and three stars, while the primary colors—red, white, blue, and silver—draw inspiration from American national symbols to evoke passion, integrity, trust, and excellence.[15]Home Arena and Facilities
The Washington Valor played all home games at Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C., a multi-purpose venue owned and operated by Monumental Sports & Entertainment, the same organization that owned the team.[16] The arena, previously known as Verizon Center until 2017, has a seating capacity of approximately 20,000 for arena football configurations and is shared with other Monumental Sports teams, including the NBA's Washington Wizards, NHL's Washington Capitals, WNBA's Washington Mystics, and Georgetown University's men's basketball team.[16] Over the team's three seasons, the Valor hosted a total of 21 home games at the venue, including regular-season and playoff contests.[17][18][19] The team's inaugural home opener took place on April 7, 2017, against the Baltimore Brigade, marking the first Arena Football League game at the arena since the league's previous iteration.[20] To accommodate arena football, the Capital One Arena's floor was configured to standard AFL dimensions: 85 feet wide by 50 yards long, with 8-yard end zones and padded dasher boards along the sidelines and end lines for player safety and rebounding gameplay.[21] Fan amenities emphasized accessibility, with starting ticket prices set at $10 to encourage local attendance and family outings.[22] For training, the Valor utilized Athletic Performance Inc. (API), a 90,000-square-foot facility in Gambrills, Maryland—located between Washington, D.C., Baltimore, and Annapolis—as their primary practice site, equipped with turf fields, strength training areas, and sports medicine resources through a partnership with MedStar Health.[23][24] The team also had access to Monumental Sports' broader practice resources in the D.C. area, supporting their operational logistics during the season.[25]Organizational Structure
Coaching History
Dean Cokinos served as the inaugural head coach of the Washington Valor for the 2017 and part of the 2018 seasons. With over a decade of arena football coaching experience dating back to his AFL debut in 2003, including a win in the 2008 ArenaCup, Cokinos also held college assistant positions at UMass-Boston, Austin Peay, and West Alabama.[26][27] His tenure emphasized offensive strategies, supported by offensive coordinator Steve Thonn, a veteran AFL coach.[28] Under Cokinos, the Valor compiled a 3-11 record in their debut 2017 season.[29] After an 0-4 start to the 2018 season, the Valor fired Cokinos on May 16, 2018, and promoted defensive coordinator Benji McDowell to interim head coach.[30] McDowell, entering his second season with the Valor after serving as defensive coordinator for the Tampa Bay Storm in 2016, shifted the team's approach toward defensive resilience, leveraging his expertise in that area.[31] This change contributed to a late-season surge, with the Valor qualifying for the playoffs and defeating the Baltimore Brigade 69-55 in ArenaBowl XXXI to claim the championship.[7] McDowell's success led to his official promotion to head coach on September 10, 2018.[32] Entering the 2019 season, McDowell retained core elements of his defensive-oriented philosophy while assembling a staff focused on player development and specialized coaching. The finalized staff included assistant head coach and defensive backs coach Cortez Stubbs, wide receivers coach Jeremy Grier, quarterbacks coach Kevin Huff, and offensive line coach Dionte Savage, with the offensive coordinator role left vacant.[33] This structure supported a balanced strategy that propelled the Valor to a 7-5 regular-season record before the league's dissolution.Notable Players and Personnel
Tracy Belton, the 2016 Arena Football League Defensive Player of the Year during his time with the Philadelphia Soul, joined the Washington Valor as a key defensive cornerstone ahead of their inaugural 2017 season.[34] Over two seasons with the Valor, Belton recorded 105 total tackles (83 solo, 22 assists) and five interceptions, including one returned for a touchdown in 2017, contributing significantly to the team's defensive efforts despite their challenging records.[35] Wide receiver Reggie Gray emerged as a pivotal offensive weapon for the Valor, particularly in their improbable 2018 playoff run, where he tallied multiple touchdown receptions in critical games, including the Eastern Conference Championship series victory over the Albany Empire.[36] Across his two seasons with the team in 2018 and 2019, Gray amassed 110 receptions for 1,250 yards and 30 touchdowns, leveraging his speed and route-running to stretch defenses and provide consistent big-play potential.[37] The Valor experienced notable quarterback transitions that influenced their offensive identity, starting with veteran Erik Meyer in 2017, who brought MVP experience from prior AFL stints but struggled in the expansion year with 1,132 passing yards and 20 touchdowns amid team inconsistencies.[38] Arvell Nelson assumed the starting role from late 2018 onward, energizing the offense en route to the ArenaBowl XXXI championship with 1,509 regular-season passing yards and 27 touchdowns in limited starts, followed by a dominant 2019 campaign of 2,980 yards and 54 touchdowns that propelled the team to the postseason once more.[39] Nelson's dual-threat ability, including 19 rushing touchdowns in 2019, solidified his role as the franchise's primary signal-caller in its final years.[40] Beyond on-field contributors, non-coaching personnel like player coordinator Cosmo Dematteo provided essential off-field support by managing roster logistics, player relations, and community engagement, helping maintain team cohesion during the franchise's short tenure. Similarly, strength and conditioning coach Ben Jenkins focused on player development and injury prevention, implementing tailored programs to build resilience in the high-intensity arena environment.Competitive Seasons
2017 Inaugural Season
The Washington Valor entered the Arena Football League (AFL) as an expansion franchise in 2017, marking the first professional arena football team in Washington, D.C., since the Washington Commandos of 1987. Under rookie head coach Dean Cokinos, who had prior experience leading the New Orleans VooDoo to an AFL championship in 2012, the team navigated the challenges of building a roster from scratch amid league expansion that added four new franchises. The Valor finished the regular season with a 3–11 record, placing last in the Eastern Division, while scoring 571 points and allowing 695.[17][41] The season began with a promising road victory on April 7 against the Baltimore Brigade, a fellow expansion team, winning 51–38 in front of 15,579 fans at Royal Farms Arena; this debut performance set an energetic tone, with Cokinos noting the "playoff atmosphere" generated by the crowd. However, the home opener on April 22 at the Verizon Center (now Capital One Arena) resulted in a 31–49 loss to the Philadelphia Soul, drawing 12,122 spectators despite promotional efforts tied to the team's integration into Monumental Sports & Entertainment's portfolio. Key subsequent games included close defeats, such as a 47–48 heartbreaker to the Soul on May 27 and a 57–58 loss to the Tampa Bay Storm on June 10, highlighting defensive vulnerabilities; the team's three wins all came against the Brigade, including a 41–35 road triumph on August 4 to close the season.[9][42][17] Roster adjustments proved challenging throughout the inaugural campaign, as the expansion draft and free agency yielded a mix of veterans and rookies who required mid-season tweaks to adapt to the high-scoring AFL style, contributing to inconsistent performances against established teams like the Cleveland Gladiators and Soul. Fan attendance averaged approximately 10,285 for the six home games, reflecting initial marketing pushes by owner Ted Leonsis's organization, including season ticket drives and streaming partnerships to cultivate interest in a market dominated by major league sports. These efforts laid groundwork for local engagement, though the team's struggles limited broader enthusiasm in its debut year.[17][43]2018 Championship Season
The Washington Valor entered the 2018 season with low expectations following a 3-11 inaugural campaign, but their regular season proved even more challenging, finishing with a 2-10 record that placed them last in the Arena Football League standings. Despite scoring a league-worst 482 points and allowing a league-high 642 points on defense, the Valor secured the No. 4 seed in the four-team playoffs due to the league's format, which advanced the top four teams regardless of conference alignment. This berth was particularly improbable given their defensive struggles, though late-season adjustments under interim head coach Benji McDowell—promoted after the firing of Dean Cokinos following an 0-4 start—yielded two victories in the final eight games, providing momentum heading into the postseason. McDowell's tactical shifts emphasized a balanced attack, leveraging quarterback Arvell Nelson's dual-threat abilities as both passer and rusher, while incorporating backup Warren Smith in select packages to manage Nelson's workload.[44][45] The playoffs featured an unconventional home-and-home aggregate scoring series for the semifinals, pitting the Valor against the top-seeded Albany Empire, who had defeated Washington in all four regular-season meetings. In Game 1 on July 14 at Capital One Arena, the Valor nearly pulled off an upset, leading late before falling 56-57 in overtime after a failed two-point conversion. Game 2 on July 21 at Times Union Center saw Washington rally for a 47-40 victory, securing advancement on a 103-97 aggregate score—the narrowest margin in the series. These contests highlighted the Valor's resilience, with Nelson throwing for multiple touchdowns in each game and the defense forcing key turnovers to limit Albany's high-powered offense. McDowell's strategy focused on controlling the clock and exploiting mismatches in the secondary, marking a departure from the regular season's pass-heavy approach.[46][47] Advancing to ArenaBowl XXXI against the Baltimore Brigade on July 28 at Royal Farms Arena, the Valor delivered a dominant 69-55 victory to claim their first—and only—league championship. Nelson starred with eight total touchdowns (five rushing, three passing), including a critical 20-yard scramble that extended Washington's lead in the fourth quarter. The game featured comeback elements, as Baltimore closed a 22-point deficit to within one possession, but the Valor responded with a 69-yard touchdown drive capped by Nelson's run. Over the playoffs, Washington outscored opponents 172-152, a stark turnaround from their regular-season margins, underscoring McDowell's adaptive schemes that prioritized run-game efficiency and opportunistic defense. This championship run, achieved by a team with the league's worst regular-season winning percentage, remains one of the AFL's most unlikely triumphs.[48][49][50]2019 Final Season
The Washington Valor entered their third season in the Arena Football League with heightened expectations following their improbable 2018 ArenaBowl XXXI victory, aiming to build on that momentum with a more stable regular-season performance. Under the guidance of head coach Benji McDowell, the team compiled a franchise-best 7-5 record, securing the No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference and clinching a playoff berth for the second consecutive year. This improvement reflected enhanced offensive coordination and defensive resilience, particularly at home, where the Valor went 4-2 at the Capital One Arena.[19][51] Quarterback Arvell Nelson anchored the offense, completing 240 of 412 passes for 2,980 yards with a 58.3% completion rate, while throwing 54 touchdowns against 15 interceptions for a 98.4 passer rating. His dual-threat ability also added 226 rushing yards and 19 scores on the ground, powering the Valor to a league-high 538 total points scored during the regular season. Standout wins included a 41-34 home triumph over the Atlantic City Blackjacks on May 11, a 53-46 victory against the Philadelphia Soul on May 18, and a 42-35 upset of the Baltimore Brigade on June 20, showcasing the team's ability to compete against top Eastern Conference rivals.[52][19][53] In the playoffs, the Valor hosted the No. 3 Philadelphia Soul in the Eastern Conference semifinals but were swept in the best-of-three series, losing 33-69 in Game 1 on July 28 and 41-48 on the road in Game 2 on August 4. Despite the early exit, the postseason run highlighted the team's progress from their 2-10 mark the prior year. The season occurred amid mounting financial instability in the AFL, with reports of legacy debts exceeding $50 million and operational strains emerging by mid-2019, which began to impact league functions and foreshadowed broader disruptions.[54][55][56]Achievements and Legacy
Championships and Statistical Records
The Washington Valor achieved their sole championship in ArenaBowl XXXI on July 28, 2018, defeating the Baltimore Brigade 69–55 at Royal Farms Arena in Baltimore. This victory marked the Valor as the Arena Football League team with the worst regular-season record (2–10) to ever win the league title. Over their three seasons from 2017 to 2019, the Valor compiled an overall record of 14–29, including playoffs, with a home record of 7–14 and a single ArenaBowl appearance. Their playoff record stood at 2–3 across two postseason runs. The franchise's most successful regular season came in 2019, when the Valor posted 7 wins, the highest single-season total in team history. In contrast, their inaugural 2017 campaign yielded 3 wins, followed by the league-worst 2–10 mark in 2018. The team's playoff performance in 2018 included scoring 172 total points across three games: 56 in an overtime loss to the Albany Empire, 47 in a win over the Empire, and 69 in the ArenaBowl triumph.| Season | Regular Season Record | Playoff Record | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | 3–11 | 0–0 | No playoffs |
| 2018 | 2–10 | 2–1 | ArenaBowl XXXI champions |
| 2019 | 7–5 | 0–2 | Lost in conference semifinals |