The Tampa Bay Bandits were trying to keep their flickering playoff hopes alive in the United States Football League’s first season as they faced the Denver Gold on June 27, 1983.
Coached by the offense-minded Steve Spurrier, the Bandits
had broken out to a 4-0 start with 33-year-old veteran QB John Reaves throwing
to a fine corps of receivers led by WR Eric Truvillion (pictured above). However, Reaves
suffered a broken wrist and, while rookie Jimmy Jordan performed capably in his
place, he encountered injury problems as well. The addition of another talented
first-year player, RB Gary Anderson, midway through the season helped, but
Tampa Bay had trouble winning consistently down the stretch and was 10-6 and
fighting the Chicago Blitz and surging Michigan Panthers for dominance in the
tough USFL Central Division.
Denver had a 7-9 record in the mediocre Pacific Division.
Craig Morton had taken over the coaching reins five weeks before and while the
defense was able to keep games close, the offense was unstable at quarterback
and prone to turning the ball over.
There were 46,128 fans in attendance for the Monday night
game at Tampa Stadium. Less than four minutes into the first quarter, Tampa Bay
NT Fred Nordgren intercepted a screen pass by QB Craig Penrose and returned it
23 yards for a touchdown. LB Mike Goedecker ran for a two-point conversion to
stake the Bandits to an early 8-0 lead.
Following a three-and-out series by the Gold, the home
team moved methodically to a score on offense. John Reaves, making his first
appearance since his injury, completed passes to Eric Truvillion down the
middle for 23 yards and to TE Lewis Gilbert along the sideline for 22.
Following a defensive pass interference penalty, the possession concluded with
Gary Anderson running two yards for a TD and Zenon Andrusyshyn kicking the
extra point that made it 15-0.
Early in the second quarter, the Gold finally got on the
board as the result of a 13-play, 65-yard series kept alive when LB Putt Choate
took off for 31 yards on a fake punt. After five consecutive running plays, Penrose,
facing fourth down, tossed a two-yard touchdown pass to TE Bob Niziolek. Brian
Speelman added the point after.
On Denver’s next possession, the visitors again put
together a long drive as they advanced 69 yards in 13 plays. While they lost
Penrose to a hip pointer, backup QB Fred Mortensen’s first pass was good for a
24-yard gain that set up a touchdown on RB Harry Sydney’s one-yard plunge for a
TD. The try for a two-point conversion failed but the Gold was only two points
down at 15-13 with 7:18 remaining in the first half.
That was it until, after CB David Martin of the Gold
intercepted a pass at the Tampa Bay 45 with just under a minute remaining, Speelman
kicked a 41-yard field goal with 17 seconds left on the clock and Denver took a
16-15 lead into halftime.
Jimmy Jordan replaced Reaves at quarterback for the
Bandits in the third quarter, but his first pass was picked off and the Gold took
advantage, moving 44 yards to another scoring carry by Sydney, this time
covering two yards. With Speelman’s conversion, the visitors were up by 23-15.
At just under two minutes into the fourth quarter, the
Bandits put points on the board, this time on a 47-yard Andrusyshyn field goal
that made it a 23-18 contest. Tampa Bay had the ball again when a storm erupted
with heavy rain and lightning, forcing a 50-minute delay in the action with
8:31 left in regulation. On the second play after the game resumed, Jordan
threw to Truvillion for a 44-yard touchdown. Up by a point, the home team got
two more when RB Greg Boone ran for the conversion.
There was still plenty of time, but Denver turned the
ball over on its next series when RB Larry Canada fumbled and CB Jeff George
recovered for the Bandits. It was also George who finally put the game away
with an interception of a Mortensen pass , to the joy of the remaining Tampa
Bay faithful in the stands. The Bandits came away with a 26-23 win.
Tampa Bay had the edge in total yards (283 to 263) while
the Gold led in time of possession (35:37 to 24:23) and first downs were even
at 16 apiece. Denver was hurt by five turnovers, with the two late ones
preventing a fourth quarter comeback, and was penalized 9 times at a cost of 79
yards. The Bandits turned the ball over three times and drew five flags for 55
yards.
In his return to action, John Reaves completed 7 of 13
passes for 72 yards and gave up two interceptions. Jimmy Jordan was 9 of 12 for
131 yards in relief, with a touchdown as well as an interception. Gary Anderson
led the Bandits in rushing with 48 yards on 15 carries that included a TD and
also caught 5 passes for 36 yards. Eric Truvillion gained 94 yards on his three
pass receptions that included the game-winning touchdown.
For the Gold, Craig Penrose was successful on 7 of 11
throws for just 28 yards and a TD while being picked off once and Fred
Mortensen made good on 8 of 14 passes for 81 yards and gave up two
interceptions. RB Vincent White led the club with 72 yards on 13 rushing
attempts while Larry Canada, who ran 8 times for 24 yards, topped the receivers
with 6 receptions for 56 yards. On defense, David Martin intercepted three
passes but was also beaten for the game-winning touchdown.
“I knew we would win when it started to rain,” said Tampa
Bay’s Coach Spurrier. “That was Banditball weather.”
The Bandits needed help to reach the playoffs but it was
not forthcoming as they lost their season finale and Michigan and Chicago won
to claim the division title and wild card spots, respectively. Tampa Bay
finished third at 11-7. The Gold also lost in the last week to place third in
the Pacific Division with a 7-11 tally.
No comments:
Post a Comment