The 1999 NFL season was a year of transformation for the
Tennessee Titans. First, the name was new, as the club had played the previous
two seasons as the Tennessee Oilers after moving from Houston. Second, the team
had a permanent home at the new Adelphia Coliseum in Nashville – prior to that,
the franchise had played at different venues, including the Liberty Bowl in
Memphis, and often before small crowds. During the period of transition,
including the final season in Houston, the team had put together three straight
8-8 records. In ’99, Head Coach Jeff Fisher’s team broke out to a 13-3 record,
which still wasn’t enough to win the AFC Central (Jacksonville finished at
14-2) but more than enough to grab a Wild Card spot in the playoffs. On January
8, 2000 the Titans faced the Buffalo Bills in their first postseason game at
their new home.
The Bills, coached for the second year by Wade Phillips,
were in the playoffs for the tenth time in twelve seasons as they finished
second in the AFC East with an 11-5 record. While several of the players who
had been key performers during that stretch, such as DE Bruce Smith, WR Andre
Reed, and RB Thurman Thomas, were reaching the end of the trail, younger
performers like RB Antowain Smith, WR Eric Moulds, LB Sam Cowart, and CB
Antoine Winfield made significant contributions. 37-year-old QB Doug Flutie, undersized
but popular and typically productive, had held off the challenge of 26-year-old
Rob Johnson, but in a controversial move, Coach Phillips chose to bench Flutie
in favor of Johnson for the playoff game at Tennessee.
With 66,672 fans in attendance at the Adelphia Coliseum, the defenses took control
early and the first quarter was scoreless. It was a defensive play in the
second quarter that put the first points on the board when Tennessee’s star
rookie DE Jevon Kearse (pictured below) sacked Johnson in the end zone for a safety.
The ensuing free kick was returned 42 yards by WR Derrick
Mason to give the Titans excellent field position at the Buffalo 28. They made
the most of it as, five plays later, QB Steve McNair ran around end for a
one-yard touchdown. With the successful extra point, the home team was ahead by
9-0.
After the Bills punted, the Titans again advanced into
scoring territory. It looked like they would come up dry when, with time
running out in the first half, Al Del Greco missed a 45-yard field goal
attempt. However, a holding penalty on the Bills gave Del Greco another shot
from five yards closer and this time he was successful. Tennessee went into
halftime with a 12-0 lead. The Bills gained just 64 total yards and managed
only three first downs in the first half as Johnson had struggled.
It quickly became a different story in the second half
when, on the opening play from scrimmage of the third quarter, Antowain Smith
ran for 44 yards. It set up his four-yard touchdown carry that capped a 62-yard
drive and got the Bills back in the game.
Later in the third quarter, safety Kurt Schulz deflected
a McNair pass that was intercepted by Antoine Winfield. The Bills got another
big play when Johnson threw to Eric Moulds, who got ahead of CB Denard Walker
down the left sideline, for a 37-yard gain. Kearse was penalized for a roughing
the passer penalty to help move the series along and Smith scored another TD,
this time from a yard out. The try for a two-point conversion failed but Buffalo
was in front by 13-12 with just over eleven minutes remaining in the game.
That was it for the offensive output until, with 6:15
remaining, WR Isaac Byrd returned a punt 16 yards to give the Titans possession
at the Buffalo 45. Tennessee moved methodically down the field with Eddie
George carrying the ball five straight times and Del Greco kicking a 36-yard
field goal. The Titans were ahead by 15-13 with 1:48 to go.
However, Buffalo got a 33-yard kickoff return from WR
Kevin Williams and proceeded to drive 38 yards in six plays. With the clock now
down to 16 seconds, Christie was successful on a 41-yard field goal try that
put the Bills back on top at 16-15.
The Bills kicked off, with Christie booting it short but
high to try and hinder a return. The Titans were anticipating a squib kick and had
lined up for a desperation return play called Home Run Throwback. RB Lorenzo Neal caught the ball and handed off
to TE Frank Wycheck, who then threw a lateral down the 25 yard line to WR Kevin
Dyson. The plan was to gain enough yards to get into field goal range, but Dyson
made the catch of the low-thrown ball and, led by a convoy of blockers, he proceeded
to run 75 yards for a touchdown (pictured at top). It was the first time the Titans had ever run
the play and Dyson, who was filling in for the injured Mason, had never
practiced it.
The Bills furiously argued that the throw from Wycheck (pictured at right) to
Dyson was an illegal forward pass, but the play was reviewed by referee Phil
Luckett and the call stood – much to the delight of the ecstatic home crowd and
the consternation of the shocked Bills players and coaches. Thanks to the touchdown on what came to be referred to as "the Music City Miracle", Tennessee advanced
by a final score of 22-16.
“The line judge’s initial ruling was that it was not a
forward pass,” explained Luckett. “Taking from where the pass left the passer’s
right hand on that (the 25) yard line, the receiver catches it right there on
that yard line. It did not appear to be a forward pass, therefore there is not
a foul.”
“I think it was a forward lateral,” said Buffalo’s owner
Ralph Wilson, who spoke for many (but by no means all) who observed the play.
“I also think there was no way the guy was going to overturn it.”
The Bills led in total yards (219 to 194) although
Tennessee had more first downs (16 to 13). Neither team gained much through the
air, with Buffalo leading in net passing yards (96 to 55). But the Titans
sacked Johnson six times (two by Jevon Kearse) as opposed to Buffalo getting to
McNair three times (2.5 by Bruce Smith). The Bills also were penalized ten
times, while the home team was flagged twice. Each team turned the ball over on
two occasions.
Steve McNair completed 13 of 24 passes for just 76 yards
with one intercepted, although he ran six times for 19 yards and a TD. Eddie
George rushed for 106 yards on 26 carries. Frank Wycheck and TE Jackie Harris
each caught four passes, with Wycheck gaining 29 yards to 20 for Harris.
For the Bills, Rob Johnson, who had difficulty against the
strong Tennessee pass rush but came on in the fourth quarter, was successful on
10 of 22 throws for 131 yards with no touchdowns or interceptions. Antowain
Smith paced the ground attack with 79 yards on 14 carries that included two for
scores. WR Peerless Price had 5 pass receptions for 62 yards and Eric Moulds
also gained 62 yards on his three catches.
The Titans went on to win the AFC title and lost a close
contest to the St. Louis Rams in the Super Bowl. They went 13-3 again in 2000,
although did not advance as far in the postseason. As for the Bills, the loss
to Tennessee signaled the beginning of a long playoff drought. They dropped to
8-8 in 2000 and were over .500 just once in the course of the next 13 years
(and counting).