September 11, 2013

1978: Danmeier Kicks 4th FG & Vikings Beat Broncos in Overtime


The Minnesota Vikings were 0-1 after losing in a sloppy performance at New Orleans as they hosted the Denver Broncos on September 11, 1978. Head Coach Bud Grant’s team had dominated the NFC Central with 9 division titles over the previous 10 years, but had not won a Super Bowl and star QB Fran Tarkenton was giving indications that this would be his last season.

The Broncos were AFC Champions in 1977, although they lost badly to Dallas in the Super Bowl. Coached by Red Miller, they were carried by their tough “Orange Crush” defense while veteran QB Craig Morton guided the conservative offense. Denver started off in Week 1 with a win over the division-rival Raiders.

There were 45,508 fans in attendance for the nationally-televised Monday night game at Metropolitan Stadium. What they saw was dominance by both defenses. An early series by the Broncos ended with the Vikings recovering a lateral that went awry at the Denver 23. The Vikings converted a fourth down at the 13 but three plays later WR Sammy White dropped a pass in the end zone and Minnesota settled for a 24-yard field goal by Rick Danmeier, a nondescript placekicker who had spent the ’77 season on injured reserve. He was filling the shoes of Fred Cox, who retired following 15 productive years in Minnesota.

The defenses dominated the rest of the half. The closest scoring opportunity came when Denver drove into Minnesota territory and, as the game headed into the second quarter, reached the 10 yard line. However, a third-down pass was picked off in the end zone to end the threat. The turnover-prone Broncos could not move the ball effectively and the Vikings were plagued by dropped passes. The score remained 3-0 at halftime.

Minnesota took the second half kickoff and drove to another Danmeier field goal, this time from 46 yards. CB Nate Wright intercepted a Morton pass on the next series and the Vikings drove inside the Denver five but the Broncos stiffened and Danmeier booted a 21-yard field goal.

Down 9-0, backup QB Norris Weese (pictured below) relieved Morton for the Broncos. Early in the fourth quarter, DE Lyle Alzado blocked a Minnesota punt to give Denver the ball at midfield. The big special teams play brought the Broncos to life on offense and they drove to a one-yard touchdown carry by FB Jon Keyworth, although DT Alan Page blocked the extra point attempt to keep it a three-point game.



A short series by the Vikings resulted in a punt, but a good return by WR Rick Upchurch was nullified by a penalty and Weese threw a long interception. Minnesota ran time off the clock and punted, with the Broncos regaining possession with a little less than two minutes remaining in regulation.

Weese directed Denver on a 37-yard drive to the Minnesota five, but the clock was down to 11 seconds left and the Broncos were out of timeouts. Weese rolled out to his right, was unable to find a receiver, and was tackled for the loss of a yard. The officials stopped the clock with three seconds remaining, ruling that it was a sack and not a running play.

An infuriated Coach Bud Grant, showing uncharacteristic emotion, ran onto the field to argue the stopping of the clock with the referee and was restrained by Page. Both he and Tarkenton insisted that Weese had left the pocket and was thus a runner. The Broncos were able to get the kicking team onto the field before the last seconds ticked off and Jim Turner booted a 25-yard field goal to tie the score at 9-9 and send the game into overtime.

With Tarkenton nursing a hand injury, Grant put second-year backup QB Tommy Kramer into the game for the overtime period. The Vikings won the toss to gain first possession, and that was all they would need. The winning drive in overtime went 56 yards in 10 plays. Key events along the way were Kramer running for a first down, completing a pass to HB Robert Miller that gained 14 yards, and a 15-yard personal foul penalty called on Denver nose tackle Don Latimer.

At just under three minutes into the extra period, Danmeier kicked a 44-yard field goal – his fourth with no misses – to win the game for the Vikings by a score of 12-9.

In a contest that featured two tough defenses, the Broncos had the edge in total yards (231 to 206) and first downs (18 to 13). However, they also turned the ball over six times, to three by the Vikings, and Denver quarterbacks were sacked six times.

Fran Tarkenton completed 13 of 27 passes for just 98 yards with no TDs and three interceptions. In the overtime period, Tommy Kramer went two-of-seven for 22 yards. RB Chuck Foreman rushed for 59 yards on 22 carries and caught four passes for 28 more yards. Robert Miller had the most receiving yards for the Vikings with 31 on his three receptions. Rick Danmeier was the scoring star with his first four NFL field goals.

For the Broncos, Craig Morton was successful on 9 of 21 throws for 90 yards with two intercepted before giving way to Norris Weese, who completed 6 of 11 for 81 yards and had one picked off. HB Otis Armstrong had 64 rushing yards on 14 attempts. Jon Keyworth gained just 13 yards on 6 carries, but one was for a TD and he led the team with four pass receptions, for 27 yards. WR Haven Moses had 53 yards on three catches. 

“With three seconds to go, how can you put a ball in play and get the kicking team on the field?” asked Bud Grant of the key official timeout that allowed the Broncos to kick a field goal at the end of regulation. “There is no explanation, to my way of thinking.”

“It was the famous quarterback rollout and if I can’t pass to someone I throw it away,” explained Norris Weese. “I couldn’t find anyone open and was lucky enough to be ruled as being sacked after trying to pass the ball. If the officials ruled I was stopped on a running play, time would have run out and we wouldn’t have got the field goal.”

The Vikings went on to once again win the NFC Central, but with a mediocre 8-7-1 record. They lost handily to the Rams in the Divisional playoff round. Denver recovered to win its next three games and topped the AFC West at 10-6. The Broncos also lost in the Divisional round, to Pittsburgh.

Rick Danmeier had a respectable season as he was successful on 12 of his 19 field goal attempts and 36 of 37 extra point conversions. One of the last straight-ahead placekickers, he played for six years with the Vikings, through 1982. Overall, he kicked 70 field goals and scored 364 points.

September 10, 2013

1960: Chargers Come From Behind to Defeat Texans


On September 10, 1960 two of the most highly-regarded teams in the new American Football League made their regular season debut at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

The Los Angeles Chargers were coached by Sid Gillman, the most experienced of the new circuit’s head coaches as he had previously led the NFL Rams and had one Western Conference title under his belt. LA had signed a fair amount of good young talent, some with pro experience, including QB Jack Kemp (pictured above) who had brief stints in the NFL and CFL after coming out of Occidental.

The visiting Dallas Texans were owned by AFL founder Lamar Hunt and coached by Hank Stram, a highly-regarded college assistant who had most recently been at Purdue. The team had a distinctively Lone Star State composition, starting with QB Cotton Davidson, formerly of Baylor, and including rookie FB Jack Spikes from TCU and quick-footed HB Abner Haynes of North Texas State. Dallas rolled impressively through the preseason without a loss.

There were 17,724 in attendance for the Saturday night game. The Texans went three-and-out on their first possession and Los Angeles fumbled the ball away to end its first series. Taking over at the LA 42, Dallas advanced to the 20 but a 27-yard field goal attempt by Jack Spikes was no good.

Following a punt by the Chargers, the Texans drove 60 yards in eight plays. They ran the ball effectively and Cotton Davidson completed three passes, including one for 16 yards to end Max Boydston and a 12-yard touchdown throw to end Chris Burford. Spikes missed the extra point try and the score remained 6-0 heading into the second quarter.

Following another LA punt early in the period, Dallas, starting from its own six yard line, put together a long drive. The Texans converted four third downs as Davidson completed four passes and ran for three yards on a quarterback sneak. Spikes ran for a touchdown from a yard out and this time was successful in adding the PAT. The visitors were ahead by 13-0.

The teams traded punts before the Chargers came through with a big play. Jack Kemp connected with end Ralph Anderson for a 46-yard TD and, with Ben Agajanian’s extra point, the Dallas lead was cut to six points.

The Texans responded by going 80 yards in 12 plays. Davidson (pictured below) started off with a screen pass to Abner Haynes that gained 17 yards and followed up with a throw to Boydston to the LA 47. With time running out in the half, Davidson primarily kept the ball in the air. Spikes ran for three yards to convert a fourth-and-one at the LA 26 and three plays later Davidson passed to Haynes for a 17-yard touchdown. Spikes again converted the extra point and the score stood at 20-7 in favor of Dallas at the half.



The Chargers went three-and-out to start the third quarter and again the Texans drove into scoring position. Reaching the LA 22, Dallas lined up to attempt a field goal but a bad snap sailed past holder Hunter Enis and gave Los Angeles the ball at the Dallas 49. However, the Chargers were unable to capitalize when their drive reached the 29 and Agajanian’s try for a field goal was blocked.

Following a punt by the Texans, the Chargers advanced to the Dallas eight. But HB Paul Lowe was stopped for no gain, Kemp tossed two incomplete passes, and on fourth-and-goal Kemp was sacked to end the threat. The Dallas lead appeared to be safe heading into the fourth quarter.

The Texans again punted and the Chargers took over at their 32. Kemp completed three straight passes to get the ball into Dallas territory. It seemed as though LA would again come up empty when Kemp threw an incomplete pass on a fourth-and-two play at the Dallas 43, but the Texans were called for pass interference and the series kept going. Lowe ran for seven yards and then tossed an option pass to Anderson for 24 yards to the eight yard line. Three plays later Kemp scrambled for a seven-yard touchdown and Agajanian’s extra point made the tally 20-14.

The Texans went three-and-out on their next possession and punted once more but had the Chargers backed up to their ten yard line. LA used 15 plays to cover the 90 yards. Along the way, a Kemp fumble was erased by a penalty on the Texans and a third-and-15 situation was converted when Kemp connected with flanker Royce Womble for a 36-yard gain to the Dallas 41. Again a pass interference penalty on a fourth-down play kept the Chargers alive and Kemp finally tossed a four-yard scoring pass to FB Howie Ferguson. Agajanian’s critical extra point try was successful and Los Angeles was ahead by one with just over two minutes remaining on the clock. The Texans still had a chance but Davidson threw an interception to seal the 21-20 win for the Chargers.

Los Angeles outgained the Texans (354 yards to 294) and had the edge in first downs (22 to 21). Each team turned the ball over once, although the Texans were penalized seven times to two flags thrown on the home team.

Jack Kemp completed 24 of 41 passes for 275 yards and two touchdowns with none intercepted; he also ran the ball 7 times for 19 yards and a TD. Royce Womble caught 7 passes for 92 yards and Ralph Anderson gained 103 yards on 5 receptions that included a score. Unheralded HB Paul Lowe led the ground game with just 20 yards on 8 carries while Howie Ferguson was right behind with his 19 yards on 8 attempts.

For the Texans, Cotton Davidson was successful on 22 of 40 throws for 230 yards and two TDs with one interception. Jack Spikes (pictured below) ran for 62 yards on 9 carries and scored a touchdown. Abner Haynes only rushed for 15 yards on three attempts but had 7 pass receptions for 62 yards and a score.



The Chargers lost their next two games and were 2-3 before winning eight of their last nine and topping the Western Division at 10-4. They lost the AFL title game to the Houston Oilers. They also relocated to San Diego for the 1961 season, having failed to draw in Los Angeles despite having an exciting offensive team.

Jack Kemp led the AFL in passing and was an All-League selection, throwing for 3018 yards and 20 touchdowns. Paul Lowe would carry more of the load on offense as the season progressed and finished second in the league with 855 rushing yards.

Dallas finished second in the division at 8-6. Abner Haynes ended up not only being Rookie of the Year but Player of the Year as well as he paced the AFL in rushing with 875 yards and in all-purpose yards with 2100. 

September 9, 2013

MVP Profile: Jim Brown, 1963

Fullback, Cleveland Browns



Age: 27
7th season in pro football & with Browns
College: Syracuse
Height: 6’2”   Weight: 228

Prelude:
Following an outstanding career at Syracuse, in which he distinguished himself as an all-around athlete (lacrosse, basketball, track & field) as well as in football, Brown was chosen in the first round of the 1957 NFL draft by the Browns. With his blend of speed, power, and agility, he moved quickly into the starting lineup as a rookie, leading the league in rushing with 942 yards that included a single-game record at the time of 237 yards. He received MVP as well as Rookie of the Year honors, was a consensus first-team All-Pro and was selected to the Pro Bowl. In 1958, Brown set a new single-season rushing record with 1527 yards, again receiving MVP honors, and continued to lead the NFL in rushing in 1959, ’60, and ’61. He was a consensus first-team All-NFL selection as well as Pro Bowl selection following all of those seasons. In 1962 Brown dropped to 996 rushing yards and, while he again received Pro Bowl honors, received only second-team All-NFL recognition from UPI. In a down season for the Browns, he achieved career highs in pass receptions (47) and receiving yards (517).

1963 Season Summary
Appeared in all 14 games
[Bracketed numbers indicate league rank in Top 20]

Rushing
Attempts – 291 [1]
Most attempts, game - 29 (for 179 yds.) at St. Louis 12/1
Yards – 1863 [1]
Most yards, game – 232 yards (on 20 carries) at Dallas 9/22
Average gain – 6.4 [1]
TDs – 12 [1]
200-yard rushing games – 2
100-yard rushing games – 9

Pass Receiving
Receptions – 24      
Most receptions, game – 4 (for 86 yds.) at NY Giants 10/13, (for 14 yds.) at Pittsburgh 11/10
Yards – 268
Most yards, game - 100 (on 3 catches) vs. Washington 9/15
Average gain – 11.2
TDs – 3

Passing
Attempts – 4
Completions – 0
Yards – 0
TDs – 0
INT – 0

All-purpose yards – 2131 [2]

Scoring
TDs – 15 [1]
Points – 90 [5]

Awards & Honors:
NFL MVP: UPI, NEA, Bert Bell Award
1st team All-NFL: AP, NEA, UPI, NY Daily News
1st team All-Eastern Conference: Sporting News
Pro Bowl

Browns went 10-4 to finish second in the Eastern Conference while leading the NFL in rushing (2639 yards).

Aftermath:
Having broken his own single-season rushing record in 1963, Brown was again the NFL’s leading rusher in 1964 and ’65, his last two seasons, giving him eight titles in nine years. Along the way he set numerous records as well as a new standard for running backs to be measured against. He retired as the all-time leader in rushing (12,312 yards) and touchdowns (126). Brown averaged 5.2 yards per carry and 104.3 yards per game over the course of his career. He was selected to the Pro Bowl in all nine seasons, was a first-team All-Pro eight times, and received MVP recognition on four occasions. Brown’s #32 was retired by the Browns and he was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Class of 1971.

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MVP Profiles feature players who were named MVP or Player of the Year in the NFL, AAFC (1946-49), AFL (1960-69), WFL (1974), or USFL (1983-85) by a recognized organization (Associated Press, Pro Football Writers Association, Newspaper Enterprise Association, United Press International, The Sporting News, Maxwell Club – Bert Bell Award, or the league itself). 

September 8, 2013

2002: Odd Penalty Caps Wild 4th Quarter as Chiefs Edge Browns


The Kansas City Chiefs were coming off a disappointing 6-10 record in their first year under Head Coach Dick Vermeil as they opened the 2002 NFL season at Cleveland on September 8. QB Trent Green had been a disappointment in his first year with the club in ‘01, but RB Priest Holmes (pictured above), signed away from the Ravens, was outstanding and the team finished strong (5-4 after a 1-6 start).

The Browns were also led by a second-year coach in Butch Davis, formerly of the Univ. of Miami. After two lackluster seasons following the return of the reformed Browns as an expansion team in 1999, they had improved to 7-9 in 2001. QB Tim Couch had shown flashes of the form that was anticipated when he was taken as the first overall pick of the ’99 NFL draft, but due to injury would be sitting out the opening game against the Chiefs – backup QB Kelly Holcomb was filling in. 

There was a crowd of 72,938 on hand at Cleveland Browns Stadium. The Browns got a break on the third play from scrimmage when a pass from Trent Green was intercepted by DB Daylon McCutcheon and returned 24 yards to the Kansas City six yard line. Cleveland couldn’t get into the end zone in three plays but Phil Dawson kicked a 20-yard field goal for the early lead.

The Chiefs came right back and went 73 yards in eight plays. Green immediately threw to FB Tony Richardson for 23 yards and, on a second-and-18 play, he connected with WR Eddie Kennison for 19 yards. Green threw to star TE Tony Gonzalez for a 17-yard touchdown and, with Morten Andersen’s successful extra point, a 7-3 advantage.

Cleveland responded with a 10-play, 55-yard scoring drive that featured the running game and three short passes. Dawson booted another field goal, this time from 32 yards, and the score stood at 7-6 at the end of the first quarter.

Early in the second quarter, the Browns took just two plays to go 80 yards. Kelly Holcomb threw to WR Kevin Johnson for 22 yards and then to WR Dennis Northcutt for a 43-yard TD. But the Chiefs put together another scoring series that featured Green completing a pass to Kennison for 64 yards to the Cleveland seven. Two plays later Priest Holmes ran five yards for a touchdown and Andersen’s extra point put KC back in front by 14-13.

In what was becoming a back-and-forth struggle, the Browns again drove to a score, going 71 yards in five plays. Holcomb connected on passes to TE Mark Campbell for 18 yards and Johnson for 12. A completion on an option pass from Johnson, a former college quarterback, to WR Quincy Morgan was good for a 33-yard TD and 20-14 halftime lead.

Cleveland started off the third quarter with a long drive of 14 plays covering 80 yards. The Browns converted two third downs along the way as Holcomb completed seven passes, the last to WR Andre’ Davis for a touchdown from four yards out. Dawson’s PAT made it a 13-point advantage for the home team.

The Chiefs narrowed the margin in their next possession. Green converted a third-and-seven situation with a completion to WR Johnnie Morton for 15 yards and, two plays later, found Gonzalez for a 30-yard gain to the Cleveland 11. Penalties backed the visitors back from there but they came away with a 33-yard Andersen field goal.

With the score at 27-17, the teams traded punts heading into the fourth quarter. The Browns put together another scoring drive early in the period as they went 50 yards in eight plays. Holcomb completed passes to Morgan for 23 yards, Johnson for 10, and three yards to WR Andre King. Dawson kicked a 34-yard field goal that made it 30-17.

Kansas City struck back quickly, spurred by a 46-yard kickoff return by WR Dante Hall. Green threw to Kennison for 15 yards and Gonzalez for 14 before Holmes ran 26 yards for a touchdown. Andersen’s extra point made it a six-point game, and on the next series the Chiefs recovered a fumble at the Cleveland 15. Holmes immediately ran for a TD from that distance and Andersen put Kansas City in front by 31-30.

With just over eight minutes left in the game, the Browns, whose lead had so quickly evaporated, got the ball back and took five plays to move 66 yards and go back on top. Four of those plays were Holcomb pass completions, the last to Morgan for a 44-yard touchdown.

The Chiefs came right back with another scoring drive of their own. Green threw to Kennison for 22 yards and Gonzalez for 10 and Holmes had a 23-yard run. It was Holmes running the last seven yards for his fourth touchdown (which tied the franchise record). With a one-point lead, Kansas City decided to go for two points but Green’s run came up short. Still, the Chiefs were again ahead by a point at 37-36 and the clock was down to 3:05.



Following the kickoff, the Browns took over at their 32 and Holcomb (pictured above) connected on three straight passes, the last to Johnson for 25 yards to the KC 31. Keeping the ball on the ground, and burning their timeouts, the Browns reached the 23 from where Dawson booted a 41-yard field goal. It was Dawson’s 19th consecutive successful field goal and Cleveland was yet again in front at 39-37 with only 29 seconds left to play. The Browns were penalized for taunting, which had them kicking off from their own 15.

After Hall’s 19-yard kickoff return, the Chiefs started at their 35. Green ran up the middle for 12 yards and then tossed an incomplete pass. On the next play, Kansas City’s receivers all headed for the end zone for a final “Hail Mary” desperation pass, but Green was flushed from the pocket. It seemed as though Green had been sacked with no time remaining – or so LB Dwayne Rudd thought. With his back to the play, he removed his helmet and tossed it some 15 yards down the field in celebration. However, Green had not been sacked and instead quickly lateraled to OT John Tait, who thundered 28 yards to the Cleveland 25 before being forced out of bounds.

An unsportsmanlike conduct penalty was assessed on the Browns and the ball was moved half the distance to the goal. With no time left on the clock, Andersen kicked a 30-yard field goal and, in bizarre fashion, the Chiefs came away with a 40-39 win.

Kansas City outgained the Browns (470 yards to 411) and the teams were even in first downs at 24 apiece. The Chiefs were much more effective running the ball (194 yards to 59) while Cleveland had the edge in net passing yards (352 to 276). There was only one sack (of Holcomb by Kansas City LB Duane Clemons) and each team suffered a single turnover. However, the Chiefs were penalized 9 times, at a cost of 87 yards, to four flags thrown on Cleveland for 38 yards – although it was the one penalty by the Browns at the end that made the difference.

Trent Green had a solid outing, completing 20 of 29 passes for 276 yards and a touchdown with one interception. Priest Holmes rushed for 122 yards and four TDs on 22 carries and also led the club with 6 catches, for 19 yards. Eddie Kennison gained 120 yards on his four pass receptions and Tony Gonzalez added 87 yards on 5 catches that included a TD.

For the Browns, Kelly Holcomb was successful on 27 of 39 throws for 326 yards and three touchdowns with none intercepted. Quincy Morgan was the top receiver with 9 catches for 151 yards and two scores while Kevin Johnson, in addition to throwing a TD pass, contributed 8 receptions for 96 yards. RB Jamel White was the leading ground gainer with just 42 yards on 12 attempts.



“I shouldn’t have taken it (his helmet) off,” said a dejected Dwayne Rudd (pictured at right) regarding the climactic penalty. “It’s against the rules. I thought we had won.“

“I’m sick,” added Coach Butch Davis. “To have something like that happen at the end is inexcusable.”

“This was just luck,” exulted Tony Gonzalez. “The coaches might call it preparation or whatever, but to me it’s luck and I’ll take it every time.”

The Chiefs lost their next two games but finished up at 8-8, although that still put them at the bottom of the AFC West. Cleveland recovered to finish the season strong, end up second in the AFC North, and reach the playoffs as a Wild Card team at 9-7. The lost a close game to division-rival Pittsburgh in the first round.

Trent Green had a solid season, completing 61.1 percent of his passes for 3690 yards with 26 touchdown and was intercepted only 13 times. He also led the NFL in yards per attempt (7.9) and percentage of TDs (5.5) as his passer rating improved from 71.1 in 2001 to 92.6.

Priest Holmes continued to excel until he was knocked out of the last two games of the year with a hip injury. As it was, he ran for 1615 yards on 313 carries (5.2 avg.), caught 70 passes for 672 more yards, and scored league-leading totals of 24 touchdowns and 144 points.  He was named NFL Offensive Player of the Year by the Associated Press as well as receiving consensus first-team All-NFL and Pro Bowl honors.

While Tim Couch returned as starting quarterback for the Browns, he was looking over his shoulder at Kelly Holcomb for the remainder of the season. Couch continued to battle with inconsistency while Holcomb, in four games, passed for 790 yards and 8 touchdowns with four interceptions. Starting in the playoff game against the Steelers as the result of another injury to Couch, Holcomb passed for 429 yards in defeat. The career backup would ultimately prove to be a solid understudy who was not a viable long-term option as a starting quarterback.

September 7, 2013

1980: Packers Beat Bears in OT as Marcol Scores TD on Blocked Field Goal


The Green Bay Packers faced their season-opening game on September 7, 1980 with some trepidation regarding the offense. The Packers had not scored a touchdown in their last three preseason games and a total of 17 points overall. Furthermore, there had been rumors in the media during the week leading up to the game that there was a great deal of dissension on the team. Entering his sixth season, there was talk that Head Coach Bart Starr’s job was in trouble.

The Packers were coming off a 5-11 record in 1979 after having contended the year before. QB Lynn Dickey regained his starting job from David Whitehurst late in the season and still held it. He had an outstanding target to throw to in third-year WR James Lofton. RB Eddie Lee Ivery, the previous year’s first draft pick, was back after a knee injury suffered in the first game of ’79 had cost him virtually the entire season.

The division-rival Chicago Bears were the opponents for the opening week. Coached by Neill Armstrong, the Bears had reached the playoffs as a 10-6 Wild Card team in 1979. The key to the offense was RB Walter Payton, who topped the NFC with 1610 rushing yards. QB Mike Phipps, a first-round disappointment with the Browns, had performed ably down the stretch. The defense, under the direction of defensive coordinator Buddy Ryan, was tough and well-balanced.

There were 54,381 fans in attendance at Lambeau Field. Green Bay’s offense continued to misfire against the Bears but the defense rose to the occasion. Chicago took the lead in the first quarter with a 42-yard Bob Thomas field goal, but big plays by the defense in the second quarter not only kept the visitors from adding more points but allowed the Packers to move in front.

Early in the second quarter the Bears advanced into Green Bay territory but LB Mike Hunt sacked Phipps, who fumbled. LB Mike Douglass recovered at his own 41. Once again the Bears moved into Green Bay’s side of the field but a Phipps pass intended for WR James Scott in the end zone was intercepted by DB Wylie Turner.

The biggest defensive play occurred when the Bears passed up a field goal attempt with a fourth-and-one situation at the Green Bay 14. Walter Payton, running a sweep, was tossed for a ten-yard loss by a hard-charging CB Mike McCoy. Lynn Dickey then threw to James Lofton to move the Packers into scoring territory in the waning seconds. Chester Marcol, who had gotten Green Bay on the board earlier in the period with a field goal from 41 yards, kicked another of 46 yards as time expired to give the Packers a 6-3 lead at the half.

The Bears did get another field goal from Thomas less than four minutes into the third quarter, this time from 34 yards, but that was it. The Bears again came up empty in Green Bay territory when McCoy picked off a Phipps pass at his 19 yard line. FS Johnny Gray intercepted another Phipps throw and returned it to midfield. With neither offense able to reach the end zone, the game remained tied at 6-6 after four quarters of play.

The Bears had the first possession in overtime but again the scrappy Green Bay defense came through and they were forced to punt. A clipping penalty nullified a 16-yard return by WR Fred Nixon. Still, the Packers moved to the Chicago 17 in four plays highlighted by Dickey throwing to Lofton for a 32-yard gain.

On the ensuing field goal attempt, Chicago DT Alan Page blocked the low kick but it bounced directly back to Marcol, who grabbed it in midair and ran around left end with no defenders between him and the goal line (pictured at top). Marcol’s astounding 25-yard run with the blocked kick gave Green Bay a 12-6 win at six minutes into the extra period.

Chicago outgained the Packers (268 yards to 214) and had more first downs (18 to 12). The Bears also sacked Dickey four times. However, they turned the ball over four times to one suffered by Green Bay.

Lynn Dickey completed 10 of 22 passes for 138 yards with no touchdowns and one intercepted. James Lofton (pictured below) caught 5 of those passes for 77 yards. Eddie Lee Ivery rushed for 73 yards on 15 carries. SS Steve Luke had a notable performance, accounting for 10 tackles, but the defense as a unit played very well.



For the Bears, Walter Payton was held to 65 yards on 31 rushing attempts while gaining 38 more yards on four pass receptions. Mike Phipps was successful on 17 of 30 throws for 174 yards and no TDs but with three interceptions. Wide receivers Brian Baschnagel and James Scott each pulled in 5 passes, for 59 and 58 yards, respectively.

“It’s a dream come true,” said Chester Marcol of his touchdown – the only one of his nine-year career. “It was a very fortunate thing. This is probably the biggest moment of my life.”

“If we had lost, people would have brought up a lot of things that the offense did wrong,” said James Lofton. “And they would be right. But since we won, a lot of things can be overlooked today.”

The amazing overtime win did not mark an improvement in fortunes for the Packers. They lost their next three games on the way to a 5-10-1 record that placed them at the bottom of the NFC Central. Chicago also had a disappointing year, ending up third in the division at 7-9.

Chester Marcol, who scored a total of 521 points for Green Bay and twice led the league in scoring, failed to make it through the season with the Packers. He was waived after five games and picked up by the Houston Oilers in what was his final year in the NFL.

Despite the team’s inconsistency and chronic problem with scoring points, Lynn Dickey went on to have a good year in many respects as he passed for 3529 yards and 15 touchdowns – although he also tossed 25 interceptions. James Lofton was chosen to the Pro Bowl for the second time after catching 71 passes for 1226 yards (17.3 avg.) with four TDs. 

September 6, 2013

Rookie of the Year: Mel Farr, 1967

Halfback, Detroit Lions



Age: 23 (Nov. 3)
College: UCLA
Height: 6’2”   Weight: 208

Prelude:
The consensus All-American as a senior in 1966 was chosen by the Lions in the first round of the 1967 NFL/AFL draft (seventh overall). A slashing runner with good hands and blocking ability, it was anticipated that he could play at both halfback and fullback.

1967 Season Summary
Appeared in 13 of 14 games
[Bracketed numbers indicate league rank in Top 20]

Rushing
Attempts – 206 [4]
Most attempts, game - 24 (for 197 yds.) at Minnesota 11/12
Yards – 860 [5]
Most yards, game – 197 yards (on 24 carries) at Minnesota 11/12
Average gain – 4.2 [10, tied with John David Crow & A.D. Whitfield]
TDs – 3
100-yard rushing games – 1

Pass Receiving
Receptions – 39 [19, tied with Ernie Green & Dan Reeves]   
Most receptions, game – 8 (for 70 yds.) vs. Pittsburgh 12/3
Yards – 317
Most yards, game - 82 (on 7 catches) vs. Cleveland 9/24
Average gain – 8.1
TDs – 3

All-Purpose yards – 1177

Passing
Attempts – 2
Completions – 0
TDs – 0
INT – 0

Scoring
TDs – 6
Points – 36

Awards & Honors:
NFL Rookie of the Year: UPI, NEA, Sporting News
NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year: AP
Pro Bowl

Lions went 5-7-2 to finish third in the Central Division of the NFL Western Conference while finishing third in the league in rushing yards (1907).

Aftermath:
A knee injury that required surgery limited Farr to nine games in 1968, yet he still led the club in rushing (597 yards) and touchdowns (7, tied with flanker Billy Gambrell). After appearing in just five games and running for 245 yards in ’69, Farr came back with a Pro Bowl season in 1970 as he rushed for 717 yards, caught 29 passes for 213 more yards, and scored 11 TDs. However, nagging injuries diminished his play in his last three seasons and he dropped behind HB Altie Taylor on the depth chart. He retired in 1973 having rushed for 3072 yards on 739 carries (4.2 avg.), caught 146 passes for 1374 yards (9.4 avg.) and scored 36 touchdowns. Farr received second-team All-NFL honors once and was twice chosen to the Pro Bowl, but injuries diminished his promising career. His older brother Miller was a defensive back in the AFL and NFL and two sons, Mel Jr. and Mike, went on to play in the NFL.

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Rookie of the Year Profiles feature players who were named Rookie of the Year in the NFL, AFL (1960-69), or USFL (1983-85) by a recognized organization (Associated Press – Offense or Defense, Newspaper Enterprise Association, United Press International, The Sporting News, or the league itself – Pepsi NFL Rookie of the Year). 

September 5, 2013

1974: Oliver & Durrance Lead Sharks to Win Over Bell


The two World Football League teams facing off for the nationally televised Thursday-night game on September 5, 1974 were sporting losing records and trying hard to stay in the playoff hunt.

The Jacksonville Sharks were at 3-6 and having trouble with missed payrolls and dwindling attendance. They were on their second head coach, Charlie Tate, after original coach Bud Asher was let go six weeks into the schedule. They also changed quarterbacks with rookie Reggie Oliver (pictured above) from Marshall replacing Kay Stephenson behind center. RB Tommy Durrance, a former college star at Florida, was a stalwart on offense, but one of the better defensive players, SS Ron Coppenbarger, was out with an injured knee.

The visiting Philadelphia Bell had a 4-5 record and Head Coach Ron Waller’s team was known for its intricate offense directed by colorful QB Jim “King” Corcoran, the WFL’s current leader in scoring passes with 18. Running backs John Land and Claude Watts were also key contributors. But large crowds in their early home games proved to have been padded with free or heavily discounted tickets (which also happened to some extent in Jacksonville) and fan support dwindled thereafter.

There were 17,851 fans in attendance on a rainy night at the Gator Bowl. Jacksonville scored on the first play from scrimmage as Reggie Oliver connected with WR Edgar Scott for a 45-yard touchdown. Tommy Durrance ran for the action point (in the WFL, touchdowns counted for seven points and were followed by an action point that could not be kicked). The Bell put together a 67-yard drive that ended with QB Frank Dimaggio running three yards for a TD. The try for the action point failed and the Sharks remained in front by 8-7.

Still in the opening period, Philadelphia took the lead when CB Bernard Chapman returned a blocked field goal try by the Sharks 59 yards for a touchdown. A pass to RB Alan Thompson added the action point and the Bell took a 15-8 lead into the second quarter. Grant Guthrie kicked a 21-yard field goal for the Sharks to make the score 15-11 at the half.

In the third quarter, the Bell blocked a second field goal attempt that was returned for a touchdown. This time it was for 77 yards by LB George Chatlos and John Land ran for the action point that extended Philadelphia’s margin to 23-11. Jacksonville’s defense was putting heavy pressure on Corcoran, but the two blocked field goal returns had the Bell in front.

The Sharks came back with two scoring carries by Durrance, both covering eight yards. The first made the score 23-18 and was followed by a run for the action point that fell short. The second put Jacksonville in front by 26-23 as Durrance then ran for the action point. Both drives were helped along by Oliver’s effective passing and the Sharks added another touchdown in the fourth quarter as Oliver threw to WR Drew Buie from 13 yards out. Kay Stephenson completed a pass to RB Wayne Jones for the action point.

In the closing minutes the Bell put together a 67-yard drive that led to a one-yard plunge by Land for a touchdown. It was a case of too-little, too-late. Philadelphia had squandered scoring opportunities on two missed field goal attempts, a fumble, and a bad snap on another field goal try and the Sharks came out on top by a final score of 34-30.

Jacksonville outgained the Bell (454 yards to 334) and had more first downs (24 to 17). Philadelphia also turned the ball over three times, to one by the Sharks, although the two blocked field goals were costly to Jacksonville.

Reggie Oliver completed 14 of 24 passes for 321 yards and two touchdowns with one intercepted. Tommy Durrance (pictured below) rushed for 72 yards on 20 carries that included two TDs. Edgar Scott caught four passes for 107 yards and a TD and TE Dennis Hughes added 101 yards on his three receptions. Drew Buie also caught four passes, for 71 yards and a score.



For the Bell, “King” Corcoran was successful on just 13 of 30 throws for 174 yards and had no TDs while being picked off once. John Land ran for 88 yards on 17 attempts and also led the receivers with 6 catches for 66 yards

“I wasn’t sacked once,” exclaimed a jubilant Reggie Oliver. “Our offensive line gave me the best protection of the year and blocked so well for our running game that the passes opened up.”

“I wish I had the time that other fellow had,” said Corcoran in defeat about Oliver. “He looked like All-Pro and they blitzed me all night.”

The Bell got their revenge the next week with a resounding 41-22 win in Philadelphia. Beset by increasing money woes, the Sharks went 4-10 before folding. The Bell made it to the end of the season and, while finishing with a losing 9-11 record, managed to make it to the playoffs where they lost in the first round.

Overall, Reggie Oliver ended up passing for 1415 yards and 7 touchdowns against 12 interceptions. Tommy Durrance ran for 658 yards on 218 carries (3.0 avg.) and scored five TDs. The demise of the Sharks marked the end of both of their brief pro careers, but the win over the Bell was a significant highlight for each.