The Cardinals moved from St. Louis to Phoenix following
the 1987 season after 28 years and, now called the Arizona Cardinals, they
returned on September 27, 1998 to play the Rams, who had relocated from Los Angeles
to St. Louis in 1995.
The Cards had yet to post a winning record in Arizona and,
thus far in 1998, were 1-2 after winning for the first time the previous week.
Head Coach Vince Tobin was in his third season at the helm and had a promising
second-year quarterback in Jake Plummer (pictured above). There were good wide receivers in
Frank Sanders and Rob Moore and RB Adrian Murrell was dependable. CB Aeneas
Williams was the top player in a fair defense.
St. Louis was in its second season under Head Coach Dick
Vermeil and had not been a winning team since 1989, well before the move from
LA. The Rams were also 1-2 and were coming off of a win the week before. QB
Tony Banks had all the physical tools but had not produced consistently, and
star WR Isaac Bruce was hampered by an injury. Much was expected from rookie RB
Robert Holcombe, the team’s second round draft pick out of Illinois.
There were 55,832 fans in attendance at the Trans World
Dome and many of them booed the visiting Cardinals, who were playing their
first regular season game in St. Louis since moving. The Rams went
three-and-out in their first series and, starting at their 44 yard line
following the punt, Jake Plummer threw to TE Johnny McWilliams for 17 yards.
Two carries by Adrian Murrell and another short pass advanced the ball to the
St. Louis 31, but Joe Nedney’s 48-yard field goal attempt was unsuccessful.
The teams traded punts before St.Louis put together a
scoring drive. With Robert Holcombe carrying six times for 30 yards and Tony
Banks running for 19 and completing two passes, the Rams went 68 yards in nine
plays capped by Holcombe running five yards for a touchdown. Jeff Wilkins added
the extra point to make it 7-0.
The Cardinals responded with a series that extended into
the second quarter. Plummer connected on four passes, two of them to Frank
Sanders (pictured at left) for 11 and 19 yards and the longest to Rob Moore for 25 yards to the
St. Louis 11. The 72-yard drive ended with Nedney booting a 22-yard field goal.
The Rams again moved well on their next possession, with
Holcombe running effectively and Banks successful on three passes, including
one to WR Ricky Proehl that picked up 16 yards to the Arizona 41. However, the
drive stalled at the 27 and Wilkins missed a 45-yard try for a field goal.
Arizona responded by going 65 yards in 11 plays. Plummer
completed four passes, converting a third-and-eight situation with a toss to
Moore for 12 yards and scoring a touchdown with a throw to Sanders from 13
yards out. Nedney converted and the visitors were ahead for the first time by 10-7.
On their next series, the Cards got a big gain right away
when Plummer threw to WR Eric Metcalf for 29 yards. Two penalties on the Rams
helped the drive along and Murrell ran for a four-yard TD, with Nedney adding
the extra point to give Arizona a ten-point lead.
St. Louis got the ball back with a minute remaining in
the period and moved down the field, the biggest plays being Banks passes to RB
Amp Lee for 23 yards and to Proehl for 13. On the final play of the first half,
Wilkins kicked a 57-yard field goal and the score stood at 17-10 in favor of
the Cardinals at the intermission.
The teams exchanged punts through a scoreless third
quarter. The Cardinals reached the St. Louis 33 early in the final period but
FS Keith Lyle intercepted a Plummer pass to end the threat. While the Rams
weren’t able to move the ball and punted, they got a break on the Cards’
ensuing punt when they were penalized for interfering with the fair catch and
St. Louis started in Arizona territory at the 46. The Rams struck quickly as
Banks threw to WR J.T. Thomas for 42 yards and Holcombe ran around right end
for a four-yard touchdown. Wilkins converted to tie the score at 17-17 with
9:52 to play in regulation.
The Cardinals, starting the next series at their 14,
drove to their 37 before facing a third-and-14 situation, but a pass
interference penalty on CB Dexter McCleon picked up 43 yards to the St. Louis
20 and, four plays later, Nedney kicked a 29-yard field goal to put the
visitors back in front by three. The Rams had one last chance but went
three-and-out, punted, and the Cardinals were able to control the ball and run
out the clock. They came away winners by a final score of 20-17.
Arizona had the edge in total yards (281 to 264) and
first downs (22 to 17). The Cardinals also recorded four sacks (two by DE Andre
Wadsworth) to one by St. Louis, but also suffered the only turnover of the
game. The Rams hurt themselves with 10 penalties at a cost of 138 yards, with
the big pass interference calls the most damaging of all, while five flags were
thrown on the Cards.
Jake Plummer completed 21 of 31 passes for 211 yards and
a touchdown while giving up one interception. Frank Sanders had 9 catches for
86 yards and a TD and Adrian Murrell rushed for 68 yards on 29 carries, one of
which was for a score.
For the Rams, Robert Holcombe (pictured at right) was the star on offense as
he gained 84 yards on 21 rushing attempts that included two touchdowns. Tony
Banks was successful on 15 of 26 throws for 171 yards with no TDs or
interceptions. Amp Lee topped the receivers with 5 catches for 53 yards.
“It’s great to be 2-2 after an 0-2 start,” said Coach
Tobin of the Cardinals, who gave owner Bill Bidwill the game ball. “We haven’t
been 2-2 since I’ve been here.”
Arizona lost to the Raiders the next week and hung around
.500 until winning the last three games of the season, placing second in the
NFC East and qualifying for a Wild Card playoff spot. The Cardinals defeated
the Cowboys in the first round, the franchise’s first postseason win since they
were the Chicago Cardinals in 1947, but lost to the Vikings in the Divisional
game.
For the Rams, the loss to the Cardinals was the eighth
consecutive at home on the way to a 4-12 last place finish in the NFC West,
although a stunning turnaround was in the offing for 1999.
Jake Plummer was a big part of the late-season surge for
the Cardinals as he passed for 3737 yards and 17 touchdowns. Frank Sanders
caught 89 passes for 1145 yards (12.9 avg.) and three TDs.
Robert Holcombe’s early promise did not pan out as he ran
for just 230 yards on 98 carries (2.3 avg.). The two touchdowns against the
Cards were his total output for the year. With the arrival of Marshall Faulk, he
was shifted to fullback in 1999 and lasted a total of four years in St. Louis
before moving on to Tennessee, never gaining more than 294 rushing yards in a
season.