The NFL Monday night game on December 2, 1991 featured the team with the best defense in the league, the Philadelphia Eagles, visiting the club with the second-most-productive offense, the Houston Oilers.
Philadelphia was coached by Rich Kotite, who had replaced
Buddy Ryan, the architect of the defense, the previous offseason, and the unit
was now under the tutelage of defensive coordinator Bud Carson. The line,
anchored by DE Reggie White and including DE Clyde Simmons and DT Jerome Brown,
was the key to the defense’s success, but there was plenty of talent at
linebacker and in the defensive backfield as well. The offense was far less
impressive, however, in particular after losing star QB Randall Cunningham to a
season-ending knee injury in the first game of the season. Backup QB Jim
McMahon was talented but brittle, and when he was forced to the sidelines, the
team floundered with the likes of Brad Goebel and Pat Ryan in his place. But after
dropping to 3-5, the Eagles caught fire and won four straight games to come
into the contest in Houston with a 7-5 record and a shot at the playoffs.
The high-flying Oilers, coached by Jack Pardee, were 9-3
and adept at rolling up offensive yards, especially at home in the Astrodome,
which was thus dubbed “the House of Pain”. QB Warren Moon was a prolific passer
in the team’s run-and-shoot attack and had a capable receiving corps.
Philadelphia’s approach to stopping the offense was to use a 4-2-5 defense,
dropping a linebacker and adding an extra defensive back on most downs.
There were 62,141 fans in attendance for the nationally
televised game at the Astrodome. The Oilers had the first possession and, on
the second play, turned the ball over when Warren Moon fumbled and LB Byron
Evans recovered at the Houston 33. However, the Eagles were unable to
capitalize as Jim McMahon threw two incomplete passes and, in between, was
sacked by DE William Fuller for a loss of 11 yards. Forced to punt, they buried
the Oilers deep in their own territory.
The teams exchanged punts before Houston, starting from
its 20, drove into Philadelphia territory, helped along by a pass from Moon to
WR Ernest Givins that gained 20 yards. However, WR Haywood Jeffires fumbled
when hit hard by SS Andre Waters following a catch for a short gain. LB Seth
Joyner (pictured at top) recovered and returned it to the Philadelphia 48.
The teams again traded punts, with neither offense able
to move effectively. As the scoreless game headed into the second quarter,
McMahon completed three passes, the longest to WR Roy Green for a pickup of 22
yards, to reach the Houston 31. But FS Bo Orlando intercepted the next throw to
end the threat. Philadelphia’s aggressive defense continued to thwart Houston’s
passing attack, forcing a punt and, when the Oilers, benefiting from improved
field position on the exchange of kicks, reached the Philadelphia 36, the
Eagles forced another turnover. Joyner jarred the ball loose from RB Allen
Pinkett and DE Clyde Simmons recovered.
The exchange of punts continued until the Oilers, taking
possession with 57 seconds remaining in the first half, advanced 33 yards in
seven plays. Moon completed passes to Pinkett for 13 yards and Givins for 15 to
set up a 42-yard field goal by Al Del Greco on the last play before halftime.
Houston led by 3-0 at the intermission.
McMahon was knocked out of the game with an elbow injury during
the first series of the third quarter and Jeff Kemp (pictured at left), who was claimed off
waivers from Seattle in mid-October, came on at quarterback for the Eagles. Philadelphia
had to punt but got the ball back on the next play when Joyner recovered a Moon
fumble at the Houston eight. The visitors couldn’t reach the end zone in three
plays, but they did tie the score when Roger Ruzek kicked a 23-yard field goal.
The Oilers went three-and-out on their next series,
unable to gain any ground at all from their 12 yard line. The resulting punt
gave Philadelphia possession at the Houston 48. RB James Joseph ran for 24
yards on first down and, after a short running play, Kemp connected with TE
Keith Jackson for a 21-yard touchdown. Ruzek added the extra point and the
Eagles were ahead by 10-3.
In response, the Oilers advanced 41 yards in seven plays
as Moon ran for six yards and completed two passes, to WR Leonard Harris for
eight yards and Jeffires for 22. The drive stalled at the Philadelphia 29 and
Del Greco connected for another field goal, this time from 47 yards.
The teams traded punts once more as the game entered the
fourth quarter. The Eagles then put together a long possession of 50 yards in
16 plays, converting four third downs along the way and eating up over ten
minutes. Kemp completed five short passes and Ruzek finished off the series
with a 29-yard field goal that extended Philadelphia’s lead to seven points.
With the clock down to 3:52 in regulation, Moon went to
the air on every play but WR Drew Hill fumbled when hit by CB Otis Smith, who
recovered at the Philadelphia 41. Another punt was followed by one last shot for
the Oilers. Starting from his 23, Moon threw to Harris for 24 yards and had
back-to-back 15-yard completions to Givins and Jeffires. But the game ended for
Houston at the Philadelphia 23, where three straight passes fell incomplete.
The Eagles won the hard-fought contest by a final score of 13-6.
The Oilers, who failed to score a touchdown for the first
time in nearly two years, had the edge in total yards (247 to 240), which was
well below their season average thus far of 392.9 yards, and in first downs (15
to 14). But Houston also turned the ball over five times, all on fumbles, to
one suffered by the Eagles. Philadelphia recorded four sacks, to three for the
Oilers. Further emphasizing the defensive nature of the contest, the Eagles
punted nine times while Houston kicked it away on six occasions.
Seth Joyner, who had been battling the flu prior to the
game, was the biggest star on defense. He recovered two fumbles, forced two
more, and recorded two sacks in addition to eight solo tackles. Jim McMahon
completed 12 of 20 passes for 84 yards with one interception and, in relief,
Jeff Kemp also threw for 84 yards, completing 10 of 17 throws with a touchdown and
none picked off. James Joseph rushed for 56 yards on 12 carries and Keith
Byars, in addition to contributing 29 yards on 9 rushing attempts, led the
Eagles with 7 pass receptions, although for just 19 yards. Calvin Williams had
5 receptions for 32 yards and Roy Green gained 44 yards on his three catches.
For the Oilers, Warren Moon was successful on 24 of 46
throws for 262 yards with no interceptions but also no TDs. Haywood Jeffires
caught 8 passes for 82 yards and Ernest Givins gained 89 yards on 6 receptions.
The team accumulated just 21 yards on the ground, and Allen Pinkett led with 10
yards on 6 carries.
The contest came to be called “the House of Pain Game”
for Philadelphia’s hard-hitting defensive dominance, thus turning around the
original meaning of the phrase, which was further accented by Ernest Givins
suffering a broken nose and Drew Hill leaving with a concussion. As Jerome
Brown said afterward, “They brought the house and we brought the pain.”
“We felt they would complete balls, and when they did complete them we wanted to hit them hard and make them pay,” said Coach Kotite of his team’s approach to dealing with Houston’s passing offense. “We played hard NFL football tonight.”
“We felt they would complete balls, and when they did complete them we wanted to hit them hard and make them pay,” said Coach Kotite of his team’s approach to dealing with Houston’s passing offense. “We played hard NFL football tonight.”
“They did a great job, no question,” summed up Warren
Moon in reference to Philadelphia’s defense. “They put a lot of pressure on me
and forced me to do things too fast. They punished our little guys. They are
everything they’re written up to be.”
The Eagles made it six consecutive wins the following
week against the Giants, but a loss to Dallas in the next contest effectively
eliminated them from the postseason. They ended up with a 10-6 record, placing
third in the NFC East. Houston cruised to the AFC Central title at 11-5,
marking their fifth straight year of making it to the playoffs, but after
defeating the Jets in the Wild Card round, they lost to Denver at the
Divisional level.
While Philadelphia fell short due to the lack of offense, the defense achieved the rare feat of ranking number one not only overall, but against both the pass and the run individually. The unit also led the NFL in turnovers forced (48, tied with New Orleans), fumble recoveries (22), and sacks (55). Seth Joyner, who performed so well against Houston, was named to the Pro Bowl, as was CB Eric Allen. Reggie White, Clyde Simmons, and Jerome Brown were consensus first-team All-NFL selections in addition to being selected for the Pro Bowl. (Pictured below, L to R, are Simmons, Allen, Brown, Joyner, and White)
While Philadelphia fell short due to the lack of offense, the defense achieved the rare feat of ranking number one not only overall, but against both the pass and the run individually. The unit also led the NFL in turnovers forced (48, tied with New Orleans), fumble recoveries (22), and sacks (55). Seth Joyner, who performed so well against Houston, was named to the Pro Bowl, as was CB Eric Allen. Reggie White, Clyde Simmons, and Jerome Brown were consensus first-team All-NFL selections in addition to being selected for the Pro Bowl. (Pictured below, L to R, are Simmons, Allen, Brown, Joyner, and White)
Houston was pretty much a one-dimensional team, with most of it's wins coming from the run-and-shoot offensive scheme and a quarterback (Moon) able to take advantage of it, at least until the playoffs. Philly had some exciting years in this time period, especially with their dominating defense, but could never seem to keep all the pieces of the puzzle together and healthy for a whole season. Buddy Ryan was somewhat overrated as a coach but he was a lot better than Rich Kotite, who was maybe marginally better than Marion Campbell, and ran the team back into the ground after Ryan's mostly successful tenure.
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