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NFL – Throwback Thursday: No Super Bowl Shuffle

25 Dec

It’s week 17 of this fast-moving NFL season, and one of the matchups pits the Chicago Bears versus the San Francisco 49ers. We’ll harken back to January 6, 1985, when these 2 franchises faced off in the NFC Championship game for the 1984 season. The Bears had snuck into the playoffs and held an 11-6 record, while Bill Walsh’s 49ers were a powerhouse at 16-1. Coach Mike Ditka’s club was on the verge of building something special, and 1985 would be a big year for them, but in this contest they were a year early in their development. Chicago’s defense, a solid unit, held the high-powered SF offense to 2 first half Ray Wersching field goals, and the Niners held a slim 6-0 lead.

Unfortunately the Bears’ offense never got untracked in the game, managing only 186 yards of total offense. They were also hampered by the fact that starting quarterback Jim McMahon was sidelined with a lacerated kidney, forcing backup Steve Fuller into action.  Although their offense was the centerpiece, the San Francisco defense was a solid unit also. They sacked Fuller 9 times in this game. In workmanlike style, the 49er offense took over in the second half. Wendell Tyler scored the only touchdown of the third quarter on a 9 yard run, while Joe Montana hit Freddie Solomon with a 10 yard fourth quarter scoring pass to wrap up a 23-0 49er shutout victory. Chicago’s lone bright spot was a 92 yard rushing day for Walter Payton, while Dwight Clark and Solomon garnered 83 and 73 yards receiving respectively for their team.

San Francisco’s unstoppable freight train motored into the Super Bowl and demolished Dan Marino’s Miami squad 38-16 in the Super Bowl. For the Bears, they would have to wait another year before they could dominate the league and record their famous “Super Bowl Shuffle” video, a cocky gesture that they backed up by going on to win the 1985 Super Bowl in a rout over the New England Patriots.

 

Bears’ Fuller turned head over heels by 49er defense

 

 

 

Classic Team Logo of The Day

25 Dec

Logo of the National Football League’s Chicago Bears, used from 1954 until 1973. Under owner, coach and founder George “Papa Bear” Halas, the Bears enhanced their rough and tumble “Monsters of The Midway” image in this era, playing tough defense and a physical style. The Bears won the NFL title in 1963, riding the league’s most dominant defense that was coached by George Allen to a title game win over the New York Giants. The Bears have more members (32) in the Pro Football Hall of Fame than any other franchise, and from this era Mike Ditka, Gale Sayers and Dick Butkus are all considered by many to be the best at their positions in league history.

 

Classic Sports Card of The Day

25 Dec

1985 Topps football card of former pro football quarterback Steve Fuller, who played 7 seasons in the NFL for 3 different teams. He was a member of the 1985 Chicago Bears’ Super Bowl team, and appeared with teammates in the “Super Bowl Shuffle” video that won a Grammy. His college jersey number (4) is retired by his alma mater, Clemson. In his retirement, Fuller has served as a head coach and offensive coordinator at the high school level.

 

NFL – Throwback Thursday: Bobby Layne Returns

18 Dec

This week’s Throwback Thursday feature pits 2 teams that meet on the NFL slate of games in week 16, the Detroit Lions and Pittsburgh Steelers. The game took place on September 16, 1962 at Detroit’s Tiger Stadium. It marked the “homecoming “of a Lions’ legend, quarterback Bobby Layne. The combative signal caller had led the Motor City club to 3 NFL titles in the 1950s (although Tobin Rote started the last one in 1957). Layne was angered when the Lions traded him to Pittsburgh in the middle of the 1958 season, after an injury and amid gambling accusations that were never proven. Layne angrily proclaimed after the trade that the Lions “wouldn’t win again for another 50 years”, a proclamation that has held true since Detroit is one of the few NFL franchises that has never reached the Super Bowl. This was actually the second time that these 2 teams had met since the trade. In 1959 they battled to a 10-10 tie in a contest that saw Layne account for all 10 Steeler points with a field goal and a touchdown pass to Tom Tracy, but that game was played in the Steel City.

So that set the stage for the legendary QB to return to the place he had led to glory the previous decade. Some of the excitement was let out of the return by the fact that Pittsburgh’s starting quarterback was actually Ed Brown for this 1962 season opener. After a scoreless first quarter Detroit’s Milt Plum, who had been acquired from Cleveland prior to the ’62 season, tossed a 1 yard touchdown pass to Gail Cogdill. Pittsburgh countered that when Brown connected with Preston Carpenter on a 43 yard bomb to tie the score. The Lions owned the rest of the first half, as fullback Nick Pietrosante rambled 22 yards for a touchdown, and Plum threw for another score to Cogdill, this one a 21 yarder. The Lions took a 21-7 lead into halftime.

Things didn’t change in the second half. Detroit’s Dan Lewis closed out the third quarter and opened the final one with 1 yard touchdown runs to up his club’s lead to 35-7. Layne eventually entered the game, replacing the ineffective Brown, but he didn’t have much luck either, completing 5 of 10 passes for 76 yards. A Wayne Walker field goal and another Plum touchdown pass, of 9 yards to Pat Studstill, finished the scoring as the Lions grabbed a convincing 45-7 win. No revenge was had by Layne, but he really couldn’t be faulted, as he was put in a hopeless situation, and also was at the tail end of his career, with 1962 being his last season.

 

Bobby Layne, one of the last of the no face mask players

 

Classic Team Logo of The Day

18 Dec

From sportslogos.net , this is a logo of a defunct college football team, the Nebraska-Omaha Mavericks. The school began play in 1911 but made the decision to disband the football program in 2010 in order to concentrate on other sports. A Division II program, the school competed in the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletic Association, and won 13 conference championships during it’s existence. Maverick alumni who have enjoyed pro careers include Marlin Briscoe, John Randle, Shaq Barrett, Phil Wise, Joe Arenas and Greg Zuerlein.

 

Classic Sports Card of The Day

18 Dec

1962 Post Cereal football card of former pro halfback Dan Lewis, who played 9 seasons in the NFL for 3 different teams, with 7 of those coming with the Detroit Lions. He led the Lions in rushing yards in 2 of those seasons, and at the end of his career was ranked 4th in rushing yards for the franchise. After retiring as a player Lewis served as deputy director of city planning in Detroit. He died in 2015 at the age of 79 from complications of diabetes.

 

NFL – Throwback Thursday: The NFL In South Dakota

11 Dec

In the past we have featured NFL preseason games on Throwback Thursday, mainly because in the 1960s after the merger, the exhibition contests between NFL and AFL teams were battles for pride. We are featuring another preseason contest this week, played on August 5, 1961, but for another reason. It was a match between the second year expansion Dallas Cowboys and the shiny new expansion Minnesota Vikings, 2 franchises who meet this week. This was the first time the Minnesota franchise took the field in their history, and the game was played in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. It was common in that era for NFL teams to play their exhibition games in non-NFL cities, as the league was still fighting for as much exposure as they could get. South Dakota was not necessarily a good choice however, as the game drew a little less than 5,000 fans, causing the promoters to lose money.The established NFL teams did the new expansion teams no favors in those days, as both the Cowboys in 1960 and Vikings in ’61 were forced to stock their rosters with aging castoffs from the other clubs. The rise of the AFL in 1960 drained the talent pool even more.

Game program from Vikings’ first ever contest

 

With a year’s head start on their opponent, Dallas was superior, scoring first on a touchdown run of 15 yards by L.G. Dupre, then adding another in the second quarter on a pass from Eddie LeBaron of 14 yards to flanker Frank Clarke. The Vikings then countered with an 80 yard drive culminating in the first touchdown (albeit a preseason one) in team history as a pair of castoff vets connected  on a 14 yard pass, with George Shaw finding back Hugh McElhenny. A 36 yard pass from Shaw to Paul Winslow highlighted the drive. Minnesota’s special teams apparently hadn’t been prepared yet, as the extra point try was blocked. As is common in exhibition contests, a second Cowboy quarterback, Don Meredith, took over and after a fumbled punt drove his team to another score, this time a 1 yard run by Amos Marsh. This gave Dallas a 21-6 halftime lead. Another lost Viking fumble set up the only score of the third quarter, a 15 yard field goal by Allen Green. Norris Stevenson caught a 32 yard touchdown pass from Meredith to open the final quarter, upping Dallas’ lead to 31-6.

A bright ray of hope for Minnesota’s future entered the game after that, as rookie QB Fran Tarkenton took the field. The scrambling signal caller produced immediate results, as he hit Don Ellersick for a 36 yard score. A Meredith to Clarke 7 yard TD toss ended the scoring, giving the Cowboys the win by the final 38-13 count. The Vikings, on opening day of the regular season that year, shocked the gridiron world by trouncing the Chicago Bears 37-13, but would lose to the Cowboys twice in the first 4 weeks on their way to a final record of 3-11. Dallas finished the year at 4-9-1, moving another year closer to respectability under coach Tom Landry.

 

 

Vikings’ Paul Winslow swarmed by Dallas defenders

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Classic Team Logo of The Day

11 Dec

Used from 1999 until the present, this is an alternate logo of a college football team that plays in the Big 10 conference, the Oregon Ducks. They were long time members of the Pacific 12 conference before that. Yes, the duck used in the logo is Disney favorite Donald Duck, who became the school’s mascot in a handshake deal between Walt Disney and Oregon athletic director Leo Harris in the 1940s. The school boasts 5 players in the Pro Football Hall of Fame – Norm Van Brocklin, Tuffy Leemans, Dave Wilcox, Gary Zimmerman, Dan Fouts and Mel Renfro.

 

Classic Sports Card of The Day

11 Dec

1961 Fleer football card of former pro quarterback George Shaw, who played 8 seasons of professional football, 7 in the NFL with 3 different teams in the mid-1950s to early ’60s and a final season with Denver in the AFL in 1962. He was mostly a backup in his pro days, and in that role was a member of the Baltimore Colts’ 1958 championship club. After retiring he worked for a stock brokerage, and eventually rose to the position of vice president. Shaw passed away in 1998 at the age of 64 after a long struggle with bone marrow cancer.

 

NFL – Throwback Thursday: Panic For Air Coryell

04 Dec

On November 30, 1980 the Philadelphia Eagles faced the San Diego Chargers at Jack Murphy Stadium, and with the now Los Angeles Chargers taking on the Eagles on Monday night to close out the weekly NFL slate of games, the 1980 clash will be our Throwback Thursday feature. The game was a bit of a clash of titans at that time. The Eagles entered the match with an 11-1 record, sitting atop the NFC East standings on their way to a Super Bowl appearance. Meanwhile, the Chargers were in their “Air Coryell” era, an offensive machine named for head coach Don Coryell.

Despite the Eagles owning a stout defense, San Diego owned the entire first half. The Air Coryell machine, powered by quarterback Dan Fouts, opened the first and second quarter scoring with touchdown passes of 14 and 17 yards to All Pro tight end Kellen Winslow. Add in 2 Rolf Benirschke field goals (and a missed extra point) and the Chargers led 19-0 at the halftime break. Coryell’s club may have gotten a little complacent with that lead as the second half unfolded. Costly fumbles (a total of 3 on the day) allowed the Eagles to rally. Star running back Wilbert Montgomery provided the only scoring in the third quarter with a 1 yard touchdown plunge, while Benirschke booted his third field goal in the final quarter to up his team’s lead to 22-7.

The proud Eagles stormed back to put a scare into their hosts. Quarterback Ron Jaworski, nicknamed “The Polish Rifle”, engineered a pair of touchdown drives, ending with scoring passes of 16 yards to tight end Keith Krepfle and 11 yards to Montgomery. With no 2 point conversion option available at that time, the Eagles fell short by a point, losing by a 22-21 count. The Chargers’ dynamic wide receiver, John Jefferson, burned the Philly defense with 8 catches for 164 yards to complement Winslow’s 6 grabs for 89 yards and 2 TDs. Montgomery led the Eagle attack, totaling 139 yards of offensive production.

Both teams qualified for the postseason, with the Eagles advancing all the way to the Super Bowl, where they would lose to the team that eliminated the Chargers in the AFC Championship game, the Oakland Raiders.

 

Chargers’ John Jefferson beats the Eagles’ defense (Focus On Sport/Getty Image)