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The experimental expansion of the CFL into the United States began in 1993 with the addition of the Sacramento Gold Miners into the Western Conference. The relatively high franchise fee that American owners were willing to pay the financially struggling league prompted the CFL to add three more American teams in 1994. The Las Vegas Posse were added to the Western Conference.
The team struggled both on the field and at the box office. In their final home game in Las Vegas they drew the worst crowd in CFL history against the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, a mere 2,350, including about 800 fans who made the trip from Winnipeg. The franchise is memorable for two infamous moments. The first was where, at one home game against the Saskatchewan Roughriders, the singer of the national anthems had only a vague knowledge of the Canadian anthem and so improvised something that made "O Canada" sound somewhat like "O Christmas Tree". Two weeks later he was brought to a Canadian Football League game in Toronto where he sang it properly. The other was that it moved its final home game to Edmonton because of poor attendance in Las Vegas.
Finishing the season with 5 wins and 13 losses, last in the Western Conference and 11th of 12 CFL teams, the franchise quietly folded before the next season.
Defunct Canadian football teams