In February 1991, the WLAF held its inaugural draft, and unlike the
NFL draft, the WLAF version was carried out with individual positions being drafted over a period of several days. Offensive linemen were drafted on February 14; running backs, punters and placekickers on February 16; quarterbacks, wide receivers and tight ends on February 18; defensive linemen on February 20; linebackers on February 22; and defensive backs on February 24.
Training camp started shortly thereafter, and in mid-March the Fire lost to San Antonio in a controlled
scrimmage at
San Marcos, Texas. The Fire played their first game on March 23 against the
Montreal Machine at Legion Field. Although they lost 20–5, an attendance of over 53,000 resulted in the start of the game being delayed 21 minutes to allow fans into the stadium as only two gates were open at the time. The next week, the Fire won their first game against the
Sacramento Surge. The 17–10 win only drew 16,000 spectators, but the featured a 99-yard
interception return for a touchdown by John Miller. One week later, they suffered their only
shutout of the season in their 27–0 loss against eventual
World Bowl champion London. Birmingham then rebounded with a 31–6 road win at the
Orlando Thunder and a 16–12 with at home against San Antonio to even their overall record at 3–3. The Fire then lost both of the games played in
Europe, and as a result their record dropped to 3–5. The first loss came against the
Barcelona Dragons in an 11–6 defeat and against the
Frankfurt Galaxy in their 10–3 loss at the
Waldstadion. In their final home game of the season, Birmingham defeated the
New York/New Jersey Knights 24–14 to put the team in contention for the last playoff spot as they entered the final week of the regular season. In their regular season finale the Fire defeated the
Raleigh–Durham Skyhawks 28–7, and clinched a spot in the first WLAF playoffs as the winners of the North American West division with a 5–5 record. In the WLAF semifinals, Birmingham lost for the second time in the season to Barcelona 10–3 at Legion Field to finish their inaugural season with a final record of 5–6. In the buildup to their playoff game in the months that followed, the Fire started their effort to host
World Bowl '92 at Legion Field. In the formal request for the event, team ownership indicated they were willing to undertake a $12 million renovation of the facility that would increase the seating capacity from 72,000 to 80,000, add luxury skyboxes and a giant TV scoreboard. Michael Huyghue resigned as general manager on June 20 to take a position in the WLAF front office. ==1992 season==