The date of the 2011 championship game was the subject of ongoing upheaval in the UFL both before and during its
2011 season. At the start of the offseason, the UFL had six teams: the
Las Vegas Locomotives,
Sacramento Mountain Lions,
Omaha Nighthawks,
Florida Tuskers,
Hartford Colonials, and expansion
Virginia Destroyers. The leagued had hoped for a ten-game season involving those six teams that would begin in August with the title game in late October or early November, on the premise that the
National Football League's ongoing
player lockout would extend into its preseason and early regular season, which takes place in August and September. Plans would start to shift in January 2011, when the Tuskers folded and its players and staff shifted to Virginia to form the Destroyers. The UFL's new plans for a five-team season, starting in August and ending with the title game the weekend of October 21–23, would be delayed in July and changed in August, when the Colonials were folded, the NFL's lockout was resolved, and the UFL couldn't reach a national TV partnership. The UFL's 2011 season would finally begin on September 15, with the championship game set for the weekend of November 4–5. By mid-October, when five of the season's seven weeks were played, the UFL announced the cancellation of the last two weeks of the season and moved up the title game to the night of October 21—ironically the weekend originally slated for the title game in the previous five-team plan. Virginia and Las Vegas, who shared first place at the time of cancellation (with identical 3–1 records) were awarded berths in the championship game. Using similar criteria employed to determine the
2010 championship game's host venue (an inexact formula based on team success and fan support),
Virginia Beach Sportsplex was announced as the 2011 title game's venue; the Destroyers attracted crowds in the 12,000 for their two home games, while only 6,500 came to Las Vegas' lone home game on October 8 (the Locos' final two home games were among the games cancelled by the league). On the field, the play of the Locomotives and Destroyers (the former Florida Tuskers) were on par with their performances in
2009 and
2010. Coached by
Jim Fassel, the Locos were led by quarterback
Chase Clement, the
2010 title game MVP, and the top-ranked passing defense in the UFL. The Destroyers, under the guidance of 2011 Coach of the Year
Marty Schottenheimer, were led by running back
Dominic Rhodes, the league's leading rusher, top scorer, and Offensive Player of the Year. ==Game summary==