Neither of the teams that faced each other on November
10, 1985 in Philadelphia were doing particularly well as they reached the tenth
week of the season. The host Eagles, coached by Marion Campbell, had a 4-5
record after losing at San Francisco the previous week, although they were
showing signs of life after a 1-4 start. 34-year-old QB Ron Jaworski operated
behind a mediocre offensive line. WR Mike Quick (pictured above) was an established star and RB
Earnest Jackson, obtained from the Chargers, was a workmanlike runner. The
defense featured DE Reggie White, a newcomer from the USFL who joined the club
four weeks into the season, and FS Wes Hopkins.
Things were much worse for Head Coach Dan Henning’s
Falcons, who were at 1-8. The top performer on offense was RB Gerald Riggs.
Long-time QB Steve Bartkowski had been supplanted by David Archer, who was far
more mobile but also less talented as a passer. Injuries had affected the
defensive backfield and the linebackers were a mediocre unit.
There were 63,694 fans in attendance at Veterans Stadium
on a sunny and mild afternoon. The Eagles had the first possession and punted.
Atlanta drove into Philadelphia territory helped by two third down conversions.
QB David Archer ran for 14 yards in a third-and-seven situation and Gerald
Riggs picked up 12 yards up the middle on a third-and-two play. However, after
reaching the Philadelphia 34, Archer threw a pass that was intercepted by SS
Ray Ellis.
The Eagles went 54 yards in ten plays that extended into
the beginning of the second quarter. Ron Jaworski completed three passes along
the way, including one to WR Kenny Jackson for 21 yards in a third-and-eight
situation and another to WR Ron Johnson for 10 yards on third-and-eight. That
set up an eight-yard touchdown carry by Earnest Jackson and, with Paul
McFadden’s extra point, the home team held a 7-0 lead.
Following an Atlanta punt, the Eagles started off with
Jaworski throwing to Mike Quick for a 39-yard gain, but the drive stalled in
Falcons territory and Philadelphia had to punt. The Eagles got the ball right
back when Archer was picked off by CB Herman Edwards. Starting at the Atlanta
40, Jaworski threw to Johnson for 37 yards and, after three runs by Earnest
Jackson picked up two yards, Jaworski carried the ball himself on fourth down
for a TD. With McFadden’s kick, Philadelphia was up by 14-0. Neither offense
was able to get anything going for the remainder of the half.
The Falcons punted following their first series of the
third quarter and Philadelphia again drove to a score, going 57 yards in 12
plays. Earnest Jackson ran well and Jaworski threw to TE John Spagnola for 12
yards in a third-and-four situation. The drive stalled at the Atlanta 13 but
McFadden kicked a 30-yard field goal to extend Philadelphia’s lead to 17-0.
The teams traded punts until the Falcons put together an
84-yard series that went into the final period. Archer had two throws to WR
Stacey Bailey for 18 yards apiece and Riggs ran effectively. Finally, Archer threw
to RB Joe Washington for an 18-yard touchdown and, adding Mick Luckhurst’s PAT,
Philadelphia’s lead was cut to ten points.
The Eagles went three-and-out on their next series and
Atlanta again responded with a scoring drive, this time using 11 plays to go 81
yards. Riggs had six carries for 42 yards and Archer ran twice himself for 19
more yards. The last rush by Riggs was for a one-yard TD and, with Luckhurst’s
successful conversion, it was a 17-14 score with 5:30 left in regulation.
On the next play from scrimmage, LB John Rade intercepted
a Jaworski pass to give the Falcons the ball at the Philadelphia 25. Atlanta
largely kept the ball on the ground to get down to the 10 and Luckhurst tied
the game with a 27-yard field goal.
The Eagles had to punt on their next series and Atlanta
drove into Philadelphia territory on a possession highlighted by Archer’s throw
to TE Arthur Cox for 30 yards. But with nine seconds remaining, Luckhurst was
wide to the left on a 42-yard field goal attempt and the game went into
overtime.
The Falcons had the ball first in the extra period and
were forced to punt, but Rick Donnelly’s 62-yard kick went out of bounds at the
Philadelphia one. Jaworski went right to the air, tossing a pass intended for
Kenny Jackson that fell incomplete. He went to the air again, and this time he
didn’t miss as Quick, running a slant pattern and splitting CB Bobby Butler and
SS Scott Case, pulled it in at the 30 yard line and went the distance for a
99-yard touchdown. In stunning fashion at 1:49 into overtime, and after having
blown a 17-0 lead, the Eagles came away winners by a score of 23-17. It was the
first overtime win in franchise history.
The 99-yard touchdown was the longest pass play to decide
an overtime game in NFL history and tied the league record that was first set
in 1939. Jaworski and Quick became the sixth combination to accomplish the feat
(through 2012, seven more had done so).
Philadelphia had the edge in total yards (330 to 310)
although the Falcons generated more first downs (20 to 15). Atlanta also had
215 rushing yards, but only 94 net passing yards. The Eagles sacked David
Archer six times while the Falcons got to Ron Jaworski on three occasions. Each
team suffered two turnovers.
Ron Jaworski completed just 11 of 30 passes for 258 yards
and the one touchdown while tossing two interceptions. Mike Quick, with the
long score to win the game, had three catches for 145 yards. Earnest Jackson (pictured at right) paced the ground game with 74 yards on 19 carries that included a TD. DE Reggie
White and NT Ken Clarke each accounted for two sacks.
For the Falcons, Gerald Riggs rushed for 129 yards and a
touchdown on 27 carries. David Archer gained 70 yards on 10 rushing attempts
while completing 12 of his 25 throws for 133 yards and a TD and had two
intercepted. Stacey Bailey had 5 pass receptions for 51 yards.
“We got beat on a great play by a great athlete,” said
Atlanta’s Coach Henning afterward. “If we have to get beat, that’s the way I’d
like to see us get beat.”
The Eagles won the next week to briefly rise over .500,
but then lost four straight games and finished at 7-9, which placed them fourth
in the NFC East. By the end, Coach Campbell was gone – he would resurface as
defensive coordinator of the Falcons the next year and would succeed Dan
Henning in 1987. Atlanta also came back with a win the following week and ended
up with a 4-12 record, putting them at the bottom of the NFC West.
Mike Quick caught 73 passes for a NFC-leading 1247 yards
(17.1 avg.) and 11 touchdowns. He was a consensus first-team All-NFL selection
for the second time and was named to the Pro Bowl for the third straight year.
Gerald Riggs led the NFC in rushing with 1719 yards on a
league-topping 397 carries (4.3 avg.) and scored 10 TDs. He was chosen to the
Pro Bowl for the first of three consecutive years.
The 80's were a particularly bad decade for the Falcons, after the dismissal of Leeman Bennett at the end of the 1982 season. Bennett may have not been able to get the team all the way over the hump, and his teams may have lacked consistency, but he always was able to keep them contenders. Dan Henning and the utterly incompetent Marion Campbell (in his second incarnation as a Falcons coach!) were never able to come close to achieving what Bennett did for the Falcons.
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