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NFL – Throwback Thursday: Taming The Lions

05 Sep

The new NFL season is upon us tonight, as the defending champion Kansas City Chiefs take on Baltimore. And that means that it’s also time for the first installment of 2024 of our Throwback Thursday feature, where we pick out a game from the week’s schedule and go back in time to another earlier meeting between the 2 teams. On this first week’s schedule, the Los Angeles Rams take on the Detroit Lions, and we’ll travel back to November 17, 1963, when these Western Division rivals met at Detroit’s Tiger Stadium. There hadn’t been much of a rivalry, really, as the Lions, who were a powerhouse in the 1950s and a formidable club in the early ’60s, had beaten the Rams 6 straight times, and 9 of 10 times going back to the late ’50s.

The latest embarrassment had taken place earlier that season, when the Lions trounced L.A. 23-2 on their own home turf at the Coliseum. For this November rematch both clubs sported losing records, but coach Harland Svare’s Tinsel Town team came into the match determined to reverse their fortunes against the Motor City Kitties. They started strong, taking a first quarter lead on a 9 yard touchdown run by halfback Dick Bass. Lions’ quarterback Earl Morrall, who had wrestled the starting job away from Milt Plum, matched the Rams’ score with an 18 yard TD toss to Terry Barr. As a precursor of things to come, the Rams’ young second year QB, Roman Gabriel, connected with his favorite target, Carroll Dale, on a 66 yard bomb to give his club a 14-7 halftime lead.

Roman Gabriel in action, Dick Bass looks to protect him

Morrall and the Lions reasserted their dominance, scoring the only third quarter touchdown on a Morrall to Jim Gibbons 32 yard strike, and then taking the lead for the first time in the final quarter with another touchdown pitch to Barr, this time from 20 yards out.  Having earlier found a weakness in the Detroit secondary, Gabriel exploited it with a pair of touchdown throws to Dale, a 42 and a 51 yarder, and when the final gun sounded (they actually signaled the game’s end with a gun back then), Los Angeles ended their misery with a 28-21 victory. Dale enjoyed a career day with 7 receptions for 207 yards and the 3 scores, while Detroit, despite the loss, had 2 receivers, Barr and Gail Cogdill, reach 100+ yards receiving.

Five days later, the unspeakable happened. The President of the United States, John F. Kennedy, was assassinated in Dallas, Texas.

Ticket from November 1963 Rams-Lions game

 

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