impact:

ciflfootball.com

The Continental Indoor Football League (CIFL) was an indoor football league based along the Midwestern United States region that played nine seasons from 2006 to 2014. It began play in April 2006 as the Great Lakes Indoor Football League (GLIFL). It was formed by Jeff Spitaleri, his brother Eric, and a third member, Cory Trapp, all from the Canton, Ohio, area. The league was originally called the Ohio-Penn Indoor Football League, but then executives decided to increase the league's appeal to the entire Great Lakes region. Initially, the league was relatively successful, having a cumulative attendance over 75,000 in the inaugural regular season. However, the league, like other indoor football associations, was plagued by folding franchises and unenforceable policies throughout its existence. For example, the 2006 champion Port Huron Pirates were found to have been paying some of their players over the league salary cap. In 2007, several teams folded during the season, and during the 2008 season, the league's most successful team, the Rochester Raiders, moved to another league due to frustration over the failure of the league to provide notice of an opponent's forfeiture, resulting in lost ticket and advertising revenue. The league also failed to return the Raiders' owners' emergency fund deposit, which was collected specifically to protect against such occurrences. More information...

According to PR-model, ciflfootball.com is ranked 489,542nd in multilingual Wikipedia, in particular this website is ranked 270,843rd in English Wikipedia.

The website is placed before buchetchastel.fr and after lalli.fi in the BestRef global ranking of the most important sources of Wikipedia.

#Language
PR-model F-model AR-model
489,542nd place
157,799th place
104,067th place
270,843rd place
62,984th place
48,225th place
arArabic
250,258th place
112,336th place
281,430th place
uzUzbek
63,319th place
28,311th place
11,121st place