The Minnesota Vikings were 4-4 and coming off of two
straight losses as they faced the Denver Broncos on November 14, 1993. Head
Coach Dennis Green’s team had difficulty scoring and offensive coordinator Jack
Burns was already a casualty. Brittle veteran QB Jim McMahon was injured and
Sean Salisbury (pictured above) had taken over. A star for two years in the CFL, leading Winnipeg to a Grey Cup title, Salisbury had been strictly a backup in the
NFL. The loss of RB Terry Allen for the year with a knee injury further
hampered the offense.
A morning snowstorm had dropped six inches of snow on Denver . While the field at
Mile High Stadium was clear, footing was slippery and the temperature was
around 30 degrees at kickoff.
The Vikings responded by going 71 yards in seven plays.
Following a nine-yard carry by eleventh-year RB Roger Craig to start off the
series, Salisbury
threw to Anthony Carter for 30 yards to get into Broncos territory. Two plays
later he hit Carter again for 39 yards but the drive stalled at the Denver seven yard line and Minnesota settled for a 25-yard field goal
by Fuad Reveiz. The Broncos led by a 6-3 score.
Russell returned the ensuing kickoff 49 yards to give Denver good starting field position at the Minnesota 49. In a
series that extended into the second quarter, the Broncos scored in seven plays
as RB Robert Delpino ran for a three-yard TD. This time the extra point was
successful and Denver ’s
lead was extended to ten points.
Now down by 17 points midway through the second quarter, the
Vikings came back on a series that was highlighted by Salisbury
throwing to TE Steve Jordan for a 53-yard gain to the Denver 11. Two plays later Salisbury completed a nine-yard touchdown
pass to WR Cris Carter.
Following a Denver
punt, the Vikings took possession at their 45 yard line with 1:39 left in the
half. It took four plays to cover 55 yards as Salisbury threw to Cris Carter
for 23 yards, Anthony Carter for 15, and Craig for a 17-yard touchdown. Going
into halftime, Minnesota had narrowed Denver ’s lead to 20-17.
After a punt by the Broncos, Minnesota tied the game in its first series
of the third quarter. However, it had seemed as though the Vikings would do
more than that when Salisbury threw to Cris
Carter for 26 yards and, following a pass interference penalty, they had
first-and-goal on the Denver
three. But two runs by Craig failed to reach the end zone and Salisbury tossed an incomplete pass. Minnesota ended up with
a 19-yard Reveiz field goal.
Elway came out throwing on Denver ’s next series, but an apparent long
completion to TE Shannon Sharpe was nullified by an illegal formation penalty
and the Broncos ultimately had to punt. The Vikings had to kick it back and
once more Elway passed the Broncos down the field, hitting Johnson for 17 yards
and Russell for 30. However, after getting to the Minnesota nine, a 26-yard field goal try by
Jason Elam was blocked by Irwin.
As the game entered the fourth quarter, neither team was
able to mount another threat until the Vikings took possession at the Denver 40 following a
punt. They were able to drive into scoring position and Reveiz kicked a 35-yard
field goal. But Denver responded in kind, going
45 yards in six plays that ended with Elam booting a field goal from 53
yards.
The trading of three-pointers continued when the Vikings
advanced to the Denver 25 on a series
highlighted by a Salisbury
pass to Cris Carter for 55 yards. Reveiz added a 43-yard field goal to put Minnesota back in front.
With a little under three minutes left on the clock, Elway
and the Broncos mounted another promising drive that was helped along by two
defensive penalties. But RB Glyn Milburn’s fumble after catching a pass from
Elway at the Minnesota
21 with 54 seconds left stopped the potential comeback in its tracks and sealed
the 26-23 win for the Vikings.
Sean Salisbury had an outstanding performance, completing 19
of 37 passes for 366 yards with two touchdowns and an interception. Cris Carter
caught 6 of those throws for 134 yards and a TD while Anthony Carter
contributed 111 yards on four receptions. Steve Jordan pulled in 6 passes for
85 yards. Roger Craig was the leading rusher with 41 yards on 14 carries. Tim
Irwin (pictured below) blocked a short field goal and extra point, giving him eight blocked
kicks thus far in his career.
For the Broncos, John Elway was successful on 30 of 40
throws for 290 yards with two TDs and one interception. Shannon Sharpe caught 7
passes for 104 yards. Rod Bernstine gained 37 yards on 8 rushes and added 6
catches for another 37 yards. Glyn Milburn gained 30 yards on four attempts,
caught 5 passes for 27 yards, and had another 116 yards returning kicks, but
also had the critical fumble at the end.
“Salisbury
is throwing the ball well, hitting the open receiver and using good judgment,”
summed up Dennis Green. “Our defense did a good job, holding them to three
points in the second half.”
The Vikings lost their next two games but won four of their
last five to finish second in the NFC Central with a 9-7 record and qualify for
the playoffs as a Wild Card. They lost to the Giants in the first round. Denver also made it to
the postseason with an identical 9-7 tally. The Broncos were a Wild Card entry
as well, placing third in the AFC West, and lost to the division-rival Raiders
in the initial round.
Sean Salisbury started a total of four games for the Vikings
in 1993. Overall, he completed 115 of 195 passes (59 %) for 1413 yards with 9
touchdowns and 6 interceptions. The 366-yard passing performance against Denver was his NFL career
high and the second of back-to-back 300-yard games.
The ‘93 season proved to be the finale for Tim Irwin’s 13
years with the Vikings. He ended up with a total of 10 blocked kicks.
That was a frustrating season for the Broncos. This was one of the games that got away. They should have been 12-4 that year.
ReplyDelete