All-Winners Squad
Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary
- Core Identity: The All-Winners Squad was Marvel's first post-World War II superhero team, a short-lived but historically significant group of Golden Age heroes who banded together to protect the world from new atomic-age threats.
- Key Takeaways:
- Role in the Universe: The All-Winners Squad served as the direct successor to the wartime team, the invaders. They represented the transition of Marvel's heroes from soldiers fighting a global war to guardians facing a more complex and technologically advanced world of domestic crime, Cold War espionage, and nascent super-villainy. golden_age_of_comic_books.
- Primary Impact: While their original publication history was brief, the team's legacy is immense. They established the concept of a peacetime superhero team in the Marvel Universe, acting as a crucial narrative bridge between the Invaders and the eventual formation of the avengers. Their adventures also introduced key retcons regarding the post-war identity of captain_america.
- Key Incarnations: The All-Winners Squad is a concept exclusive to the Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe). The team does not exist in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), as the post-war trajectories of characters like Steve Rogers (frozen in ice) and Bucky Barnes (brainwashed as the Winter Soldier) fundamentally prevent such a team from forming.
Part 2: Origin and Evolution
Publication History and Creation
The All-Winners Squad holds a unique place in comic book history, born from a shift in both the real world and the comic book industry. The team's first appearance was in All-Winners Comics #19, published by Timely Comics (the precursor to Marvel Comics) in the Fall of 1946. Their creation was a direct response to the end of World War II. With the Axis powers defeated, the narrative impetus for war-focused teams like the Invaders had vanished. Publishers needed a new angle for their patriotic heroes. The team was conceived by editor Stan Lee and likely scripted by him or writer Bill Finger, with art primarily attributed to Vince Alascia and Syd Shores. The name “All-Winners Squad” was a meta-textual marketing gimmick, as the team was composed of Timely's “all-winning” solo stars who had proven popular enough to carry their own features. This included Captain America, Bucky, the Human Torch, Toro, the Sub-Mariner, Miss America, and the Whizzer. Interestingly, the team's run was incredibly short and inconsistent. After their debut in issue #19, they were absent from issue #20, which featured only solo stories. They made their second and final Golden Age appearance in All-Winners Comics #21 (Winter 1946). After that issue, the series was canceled, and the super-team concept at Timely Comics went dormant for nearly two decades until the creation of the Fantastic Four in 1961. Despite their brief existence, the All-Winners Squad was retroactively integrated into modern Marvel continuity. Writers like Roy Thomas in the 1970s and later Ed Brubaker in the 2000s revisited the team, fleshing out their history, clarifying their roster, and cementing their importance as the crucial link between Marvel's Golden Age and Silver Age eras. These retcons, particularly regarding the identity of Captain America, have added layers of complexity and significance to the team's short-lived tenure.
In-Universe Origin Story
The formation of the All-Winners Squad is a direct consequence of the end of World War II and the dissolution of their previous wartime alliance.
Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)
In the Earth-616 continuity, the end of World War II brought about the disbandment of the invaders. With their primary mission—the defeat of the Axis powers—accomplished, the team members went their separate ways. However, new and insidious threats began to emerge in the uncertain peace of the post-war world. The catalyst for the team's formation was the assassination of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and the rise of a new breed of technologically advanced criminals. The first major threat they faced as a group was the nuclear-armed terrorist organization known as Isbisa. In 1946, the android Human Torch and his sidekick toro were investigating Isbisa's activities when they found themselves outmatched. They called for aid from their former comrades-in-arms. Responding to the call were Namor the Sub-Mariner, the super-speedster Whizzer, and the high-flying heroine Miss America. Most significantly, captain_america and bucky_barnes also joined the fight. However, as would later be revealed in crucial retcons, these were not the original Steve Rogers and Bucky Barnes. With Rogers and Barnes believed to have been killed in action in 1945, President Truman had secretly appointed successors to carry on the mantles. The Captain America leading the All-Winners Squad was initially William Naslund (formerly The Spirit of '76), and his Bucky was a young man named Fred Davis. This newly assembled group successfully thwarted Isbisa's plot to detonate a nuclear weapon. Recognizing the continued need for a force to protect America from such emerging threats, they formally banded together as the All-Winners Squad. Their name was suggested by a newspaper headline celebrating their victory. The team operated for a few years, facing off against threats like the technologically advanced android villain Adam II, who sought to replace key political figures with android duplicates to orchestrate a global takeover. The team's career was marked by internal friction, particularly between the hot-headed Namor and the surface world, but their collective power made them the premiere superhero force of their time. The team eventually disbanded in the late 1940s as the age of superheroes began to wane and many of its members retired or went their separate ways.
Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)
The All-Winners Squad does not exist in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), and the timeline and character fates within this continuity make its formation impossible. The divergence begins at the very end of World War II. In the MCU, as depicted in Captain America: The First Avenger, Steve Rogers crashes the Red Skull's aircraft, the Valkyrie, into the Arctic in 1945 to prevent it from bombing New York. He is frozen in ice and presumed dead, only to be discovered and revived nearly 70 years later. His sidekick, Bucky Barnes, had seemingly fallen to his death from a train earlier in the war, only to be recovered by HYDRA and transformed into the brainwashed assassin known as the Winter Soldier. With the two core members of the Invaders (or in the MCU's case, the Howling Commandos' primary super-powered assets) off the board, the foundation for a post-war team like the All-Winners Squad crumbles.
- No Successor Captain America: Unlike the comics, the U.S. government in the MCU did not immediately appoint a successor to Steve Rogers. The mantle of Captain America was retired, and he was treated as a fallen, one-of-a-kind legend. The concept of a successor wasn't explored until decades later with John Walker and eventually Sam Wilson.
- No Other Golden Age Heroes: The other key members of the All-Winners Squad have not been established as active heroes in the 1940s MCU.
- Human Torch (Jim Hammond): A brief, non-sentient version of the “Synthetic Man” (an homage to the original Human Torch) was displayed at the 1943 Stark Expo, but this was an Easter egg, not an active superhero.
- Namor the Sub-Mariner: The MCU's Namor and his people, the Talokanil, remained completely hidden from the surface world until the events of Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, set in the 2020s. He had no involvement in World War II or its aftermath.
- Whizzer & Miss America: These characters have not been introduced in the MCU in their Golden Age incarnations. An alternate-reality version of America Chavez (Miss America) appeared in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, but she is a contemporary teenage hero with no connection to the 1940s.
The MCU's post-war narrative focused on the formation of S.H.I.E.L.D. by Peggy Carter, Howard Stark, and Chester Phillips. This clandestine intelligence agency, rather than a public-facing superhero team, became the world's primary defense against emerging superhuman and technological threats, effectively filling the narrative role the All-Winners Squad occupied in the comics.
Part 3: Mandate, Structure & Key Members
The All-Winners Squad operated as an informal but highly effective coalition of heroes, bound by their shared wartime experiences and a commitment to safeguarding the hard-won peace.
Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)
Mandate and Modus Operandi
The team's mandate was straightforward: to tackle threats that were too powerful for any single hero to handle. In the post-war era, this meant shifting from military targets to domestic super-crime, atomic-age mad scientists, and would-be world conquerors. They were the world's first line of defense against the super-villains of the new age. Unlike the government-sanctioned Invaders, the All-Winners Squad was a more loosely-affiliated volunteer organization. While they cooperated with the U.S. government and law enforcement, they were not under their direct command. They typically assembled when a major crisis emerged, often alerted by one of their own members who first encountered the threat. Their headquarters was unofficial, though they sometimes gathered at the Human Torch's residence or other secure locations.
Team Roster and Member Analysis
The founding roster of the All-Winners Squad was a powerhouse lineup of Timely Comics' greatest heroes.
| Member | Codename | Key Role & Abilities | Notes on Tenure |
|---|---|---|---|
| William Naslund | Captain America | Field Leader. A highly trained athlete and hand-to-hand combatant. Wielded a steel replica of Captain America's original shield. Provided tactical and inspirational leadership. | Naslund was killed in action in 1946 while preventing androids sent by Adam II from assassinating a young Senator John F. Kennedy. |
| Jeffrey Mace | Captain America | Successor Leader. Former patriotic hero The Patriot. Possessed peak human strength and agility. Wielded the same shield as Naslund. Continued to lead the team after Naslund's death. | Mace served as Captain America until the early 1950s before retiring. His tenure with the team represents the majority of its active period. |
| Fred Davis | Bucky | Sidekick & Scout. A former bat-boy for the New York Yankees, Davis was a skilled acrobat and fighter, trained by William Naslund to fill the role of Bucky. | Davis was critically wounded during the same attack that killed Naslund. His injuries forced him to retire from crimefighting, ending his tenure with the team. |
| Jim Hammond | The Human Torch | Aerial Assault & Elemental Power. An android capable of generating and controlling fire, allowing for flight and powerful plasma blasts. Often acted as the team's conscience and a key investigator. | Hammond was a consistent and powerful member throughout the team's existence. His android nature made him immune to many conventional threats. |
| Thomas Raymond | Toro | Junior Member & Fire Support. The Human Torch's young sidekick. A mutant with powers nearly identical to Hammond's, though less controlled. Provided crucial backup for the Torch. | Toro served alongside the Torch and was an integral part of the team's offensive power. |
| Namor | The Sub-Mariner | Heavy Hitter & Amphibious Assault. The King of Atlantis, possessing immense superhuman strength, durability, flight (via ankle wings), and amphibious physiology. The team's most powerful but also most volatile member. | Namor's loyalty was often torn between the surface world and his undersea kingdom, leading to frequent friction with his teammates. |
| Robert Frank | The Whizzer | Speedster & Reconnaissance. A mutant granted superhuman speed after a mongoose blood transfusion. Acted as the team's scout and was capable of creating powerful cyclones. | The Whizzer was a reliable and dedicated member, often using his speed to perform rescues and gather information. |
| Madeline Joyce | Miss America | Aerial Support & Versatile Powerhouse. After being struck by lightning during a scientific experiment, she gained superhuman strength, durability, and the power of flight. | A formidable fighter and one of the most prominent female heroes of the era. She later married The Whizzer. |
Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)
As the team does not exist in the MCU, a direct comparison of its structure and mandate is not possible. However, we can analyze the post-war status of the characters who would have been members, highlighting the narrative reasons for the team's absence.
- Captain America (Steve Rogers): Frozen in the Arctic from 1945 until circa 2011. His absence creates the single largest void, as he was the central pillar around which such a team would have formed.
- Bucky Barnes: Captured by HYDRA and periodically activated as the Winter Soldier from the 1940s onward. He was an antagonist, not a hero, for the majority of the 20th century.
- Human Torch (Homage): The non-sentient android displayed at the Stark Expo was a technological curiosity, not a living weapon or hero. It had no agency to join a team.
- Namor: Remained in isolation with his people in Talokan. The MCU establishes that his first major interaction with the surface world (beyond a brief encounter with his mother) was in the 21st century.
- S.H.I.E.L.D. as a Thematic Successor: The role of a proactive organization dealing with post-war threats was filled entirely by S.H.I.E.L.D. Under Peggy Carter's leadership, the organization hunted down HYDRA remnants and secured dangerous new technologies. This clandestine approach is a stark contrast to the public, heroic nature of the All-Winners Squad, reflecting the MCU's more grounded, espionage-focused take on the post-war era.
Part 4: Key Relationships & Network
Core Allies
The All-Winners Squad's primary ally was the United States Government. Although they were not officially state-controlled, their goals often aligned with national security interests. They worked alongside federal agencies to combat threats to the nation. This relationship was largely a continuation of their wartime service. The public also held them in high regard, viewing them as the saviors of the free world carrying on their duty in peacetime. They were celebrities as much as they were heroes. Their most important relationship, however, was their connection to the legacy of the invaders. The bond forged in the fires of World War II was the bedrock of the All-Winners Squad. It provided them with a pre-existing trust and tactical synergy that made them an incredibly effective fighting force from their very first mission.
Arch-Enemies
The All-Winners Squad faced villains who represented the anxieties of the post-war era: nuclear proliferation and the rise of artificial intelligence.
- Isbisa: A mysterious, cloaked figure who led a terrorist organization. Isbisa's goal was global domination through nuclear blackmail. He masterminded a plot to hold the world ransom with a stolen atomic bomb, a threat that directly led to the formation of the All-Winners Squad. Isbisa represented the very real fear of atomic annihilation that permeated the late 1940s. The name was later revealed to be an acronym for the countries involved in the scheme.
- Adam II: Arguably their most significant foe, Adam II was a sentient, malevolent android created by Phineas Horton (the same scientist who created the original Human Torch). Believing humanity to be flawed and obsolete, Adam II sought to replace key world leaders, including a young Senator John F. Kennedy, with lifelike android duplicates. His ultimate goal was to eradicate humanity and establish a world ruled by machines. Adam II was directly responsible for the death of the first post-war Captain America, William Naslund, making the conflict deeply personal for the team. He embodied the nascent fear of technology turning against its creators.
Affiliations
The All-Winners Squad's primary affiliation is its place in the lineage of Marvel's premier superhero teams.
- Successor to The Invaders: They were the direct, peacetime continuation of the Invaders. The roster was nearly identical, with the key exception of the individuals wearing the costumes of Captain America and Bucky. They carried the torch of heroism from the battlefields of Europe to the streets of America.
- Predecessor to The Avengers: The Squad's existence, though brief, established the template for a non-wartime superhero team in the Marvel Universe. They proved that Earth's greatest heroes could and should band together to face world-ending threats. This concept laid the groundwork for the eventual formation of the Avengers years later, with Captain America (the original Steve Rogers) once again playing a key leadership role, bridging the two eras.
Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines
The team's Golden Age history is contained within two key comic book issues, with modern comics adding significant context and depth through retcons.
All-Winners Comics #19 - "The Crime of the Ages!"
The team's debut adventure saw them unite to stop the nuclear terrorist Isbisa. The story begins with the Human Torch and Toro investigating a crime wave that leads them to Isbisa's organization. Realizing they are outmatched, they send out an “All-Winners Signal” to their former Invaders teammates. The story is notable for showcasing each hero's unique abilities as they individually answer the call before uniting. Namor battles Isbisa's forces at sea, Captain America and Bucky foil a bank robbery meant to fund the organization, and Miss America and the Whizzer stop a plot at a major dam. The heroes converge on Isbisa's secret island headquarters, battling his high-tech forces and ultimately preventing him from detonating an atomic bomb. The story concludes with the heroes formally agreeing to remain a team, dubbed the “All-Winners Squad” by the press.
All-Winners Comics #21 - "The Menace of the Future Man!"
The second and final Golden Age story pits the team against Adam II, also known as Future Man. The plot involves Adam II's plan to replace humanity with his “robotoids.” The story is significantly darker and had long-lasting repercussions in modern continuity. Adam II murders a rival scientist and orchestrates a plot to kill Senator Kennedy. The All-Winners Squad intervenes, but in the ensuing battle, the android succeeds in killing William Naslund, the man serving as Captain America. In the chaos, Bucky (Fred Davis) is also severely wounded. The remaining members of the squad rally, with Jeffrey Mace (The Patriot) donning the Captain America costume to inspire the team to victory. They manage to defeat Adam II, but the cost is immense. This story marks a crucial turning point, establishing the legacy and danger associated with the mantle of Captain America and explaining the transition from Naslund to Mace.
Modern Retcons (Brubaker's Captain America & The Marvels Project)
Modern comics have revisited the All-Winners Squad era to fill in historical gaps. Ed Brubaker's seminal run on Captain America extensively detailed the post-war Captains, confirming that William Naslund and Jeffrey Mace were the ones who served with the team, not Steve Rogers. These stories provided a deeper, more tragic context to their brief careers. Similarly, The Marvels Project miniseries by Brubaker and artist Steve Epting retold the origins of Marvel's Golden Age heroes, and its epilogue depicted the formation of the All-Winners Squad, tying it more cohesively into the overarching history of the Marvel Universe and reinforcing its status as the bridge between the war and the modern age of heroes.
Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions
Due to their relatively obscure status compared to teams like the Avengers or X-Men, the All-Winners Squad has very few prominent alternate-reality versions. Their story is deeply tied to the specific historical context of Earth-616's post-WWII era.
- Earth-9997 (Earth X): In this alternate reality, the Human Torch (Jim Hammond) eventually becomes the worldwide head of the new S.H.I.E.L.D. It is mentioned that his time with the All-Winners Squad was a formative part of his journey toward understanding and protecting humanity, informing his later decisions as a global leader.
- Legacy and Spiritual Successors: While not direct variants, other teams have filled a similar thematic role.
- liberty_legion: A stateside team of heroes who protected the home front during World War II, featuring several members who would later join the All-Winners Squad (like The Whizzer and Miss America). They share a similar Golden Age, patriotic aesthetic.
- V-Battalion: A modern organization that grew out of the wartime group, the V-Battalion. It was founded by allies of the Invaders and carries on the legacy of Golden Age heroism. Jim Hammond served as a key member for a time, connecting the organization directly to the All-Winners Squad's legacy.
The primary legacy of the All-Winners Squad is not in its variants, but in the foundational concept it represents: that even in times of peace, the world will always need heroes to assemble against the odds.