<P> The first major professional football team to actually reside in Los Angeles were the Los Angeles Bulldogs, who operated both as an independent and as a member of several other leagues from approximately 1934 to 1948, in its later years reduced to minor status . The Bulldogs played most of their tenure at Gilmore Stadium, a stadium on the site of what is now CBS Television City . The NFL had actually admitted the Bulldogs to the league for the 1937 NFL season, but reneged on the agreement because of travel concerns (the great distance between the Bulldogs and every other team, plus having to cross the Rocky Mountains in an era when travel by airplane was still a rare and hazardous endeavor, proved to be too much of a risk for the newly stable NFL to be willing to take; the league had finally stabilized in the mid-1930s after a decade and a half in which teams were leaving and joining the league annually). The NFL would hold its first two All - Star Games in Los Angeles following the 1938 and 1939 seasons . </P> <P> In 1946, the Los Angeles Dons of the All - America Football Conference started play, lasting four years before folding with the demise of the AAFC . In 1960, the American Football League (AFL) was formed, with a franchise at the region, the Los Angeles Chargers . After the inaugural season, the team moved to San Diego to become the San Diego Chargers, who joined the NFL during the NFL - AFL merger in 1970 . The Continental Football League, a second - tier professional league active in the late 1960s, included the Orange County Ramblers among its teams . </P> <P> In 1946, the defending NFL champions, the Cleveland Rams moved to Los Angeles . The other league owners were not pleased with the move, but the league relented due in large part to concern that Los Angeles could potentially become the nucleus of a rival league . The Rams played home games at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, at the time shared with two NCAA teams--the USC Trojans and the UCLA Bruins--and an AAFC franchise, the Los Angeles Dons . It was the establishment of the Rams in Los Angeles that prompted the league to lift its moratorium on African - American players that had been in place since the early 1930s: terms of the Rams' lease on the Coliseum required the team to integrate, and to do so, the Rams signed former UCLA stars Kenny Washington and Woody Strode . When the AAFC folded in 1950, the Dons went out of business, but the AAFC's San Francisco 49ers were admitted to the NFL . This provided the NFL with a workable pair of West Coast cities for travel . </P> <P> Another AAFC franchise which moved over to the NFL in 1950 was the Cleveland Browns, who were based in the city the Rams had deserted . The Browns and the Rams met in three NFL championship games in six seasons--in Cleveland in 1950 (Browns won 30 - 28) and in Los Angeles in 1951 (Rams won 24 - 17) and 1955 (Browns won 38 - 14). </P>

Who was in la first raiders or rams
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