Old-Timer Football: An All-Star Lineup
By Glenn Guzzo
Strat-O-Matic’s forthcoming trio of old-timer pro football
seasons recaptures some of the sport’s most memorable teams and games.
The 1969 season marks the final season of
the decade-long American Football League and the year it achieved true parity
with the National Football League – through Kansas City’s
Super Bowl victory that gave the rival leagues a 2-2 record in the pre-merger
period.
The 1978 season reproduces one of the
greatest Super Bowls ever, Pittsburgh’s
35-31 victory over Dallas. This was
the Steelers at the height of its dynasty, winning because of one of the most
memorable dropped passes – Dallas tight end Jackie Smith’s bobble while wide
open in the end zone.
The 1992 season brings to life a Cowboys
team that not only won the Super Bowl in decisive fashion over the star-crossed
Buffalo Bills, but one of Strat-O-Matic’s greatest
teams ever. More historical significance: Pittsburgh
had rookie coach Bill Cowher, whose final season as
Steelers coach was the 2006 season, which Strat-O-Matic will release at the
same time. And New Orleans had a
strong playoff team, one of its few prior to its 2006 crowd-pleasers.
As usual,
Strat-O-Matic will release six top teams from each season in card form. The
computer games will have complete sets of teams.
1969 Season
Before
evening the score with the NFL on behalf of its upstart league, Kansas
City (11-3) had to prevail in a classic
AFL-championship rematch against arch-rival Oakland
(12-1-1), a team that had
beaten the Chiefs twice during the season by a total of seven points.
Then the
Chiefs, big and stylish, manhandled the heavily favored Minnesota Vikings
(12-2), 23-7.
The six
carded teams in this set were impressive in different ways.
Kansas City (11-3): RBs
Mike Garrett, Robert Holmes and Warren McVea combined
for more than 1,800 yards rushing behind C E. J. Holub,
G Ed Budde and OT Jim Tyrer.
QB Len Dawson had big-play WR Otis Taylor. PK Jan Stenerud
was the best in the game. And the Chiefs’ all-star defense (DT Buck Buchanan, DE
Jerry Mays, LBs Bobby Bell, Willie Lanier and Jim
Lynch, plus DBs Johnny Robinson and Emmitt Thomas) held seven season foes and all three of its
post-season opponents to 10 points or less.
Oakland (12-1-1): New coach John Madden led bombing MVP
QB Daryle Lamonica (34 TDs), a protective offensive line (12 sacks), a big pass
rush (47 sacks) and a secondary led by Willie Brown that intercepted 26 passes.
WRs Warren Wells (14 TDs,
27 yds per catch) and Fred Biletnikoff
(12 TDs, 15-yd avg) were
great targets.
The Raiders had beaten Kansas
City twice in the final four weeks of the season,
27-24 and 10-6. The second game was the regular-season finale, with the AFL’s
Western Division championship on the line. Then Oakland
dismantled Houston in the playoffs,
56-7 while Kansas City edged the
Jets, 13-6. But in the AFL championship, Lamonica
hurt his hand early in the second half of a 7-7 game. Replacement QB George Blanda threw an interception in the end zone and missed
three field goals. KC won, 17-7.
Minnesota (12-2): The Vikings thrived on their amazing defense, which
held 13 foes to 14 points or fewer. Led by the Purple People Eaters up front –
Carl Eller, Alan Page and Jim Marshall – the Vikings defense led the NFL in
interceptions (30), fewest yards per completion (9.8) and fewest yards per rush
(3.2). It provided field position that permitted a pedestrian Vikings offense
to lead the NFL in scoring. Joe Kapp was merely the
10th-ranked QB in the NFL. Dave Osborn led the running game with 643
yards and a 3.5 average. No receiver caught 40 balls. Fittingly, Minnesota
wrapped up its 23-20 playoff victory over the Los Angeles Rams with a safety.
Los Angeles (11-3): The Rams won their first 11
games by dominating field position. The Fearsome-Foursome-inspired defense
(Deacon Jones, Merlin Olsen et al) yielded little running or passing. The
defense, PR Alvin Haymond (NFL best 13 yds per return) and the Rams’ ball-control offense (just 18
turnovers) helped LA win the field-position wars. QB Roman Gabriel threw 24 TD
passes against a 2-percent interception rate. WRs
Jack Snow (49 rec, 15 ypc)
and Wendell Tucker (38 rec, 17 ypc)
lead a half dozen decent receiving targets. The
running game is unspectacular, but will get extra yards behind a superior line
(Ts Bob Brown and Charlie Cowan and G Tom Mack).
Dallas (11-2-1) might have had the best team of all.
Its defense had 55 sacks, the most in football, and yielded only 3.4 yards per
rush. DTs Bob Lilly and Jethroe Pugh, LBs Lee Roy Jordan and Chuck Howley
and DBs Mel Renfro and Cornell Green gave the Cowboys
stalwarts at every level.
QB Craig Morton gained 8.7 yards
per pass with a team full of deep threats, most of all WRs
Lance Rentzel (22 ypc) and
Bob Hayes (19 ypc). RBs
Calvin Hill and Walt Garrison (both 4.6 avg) gained
nearly 1,800 yards. But the Cowboys couldn’t contend with Cleveland,
either in the regular season (42-10 Browns) or in the playoffs (38-14).
Cleveland (10-3-1): The Browns thrived on RB Leroy Kelly’s running
behind OT Dick Schafrath and G Gene Hickerson, and on deep-threat WRs
Gary Collins (15 ypc, 11 TDs)
and Paul Warfield (21 ypc, 10 TDs).
TE Milt Morin (37 rec, 13 ypc)
and Kelly (13 ypc) are receiving threats, too. QB
Bill Nelson’s 7.8 yards per pass was fourth best in the NFL.
1978 Season
Pittsburgh
and Dallas, both two-time Super
Bowl winners and clearly the class of the AFC and NFC, traded touchdown punches
like prize-fighters in one of the most exciting Super Bowls.
Terry Bradshaw threw four TD passes
and Roger Staubach threw three. But the sure
touchdown that Cowboys TE Jackie Smith dropped while wide open in the end zone
forced Dallas to settle for a field
goal on that drive. And the Steelers won, 35-31.
The card set also features the potent
defenses of Los
Angeles
(12-4), which was good enough to beat Pittsburgh,
and Denver (10-6), which yielded
more than 17 points just three times and held eight foes to 7 or fewer.
It has New England (11-5), which won its first 10 games behind the NFL’s top ground
game, big-play WRs Harold Jackson (20 ypc) and Stanley Morgan (24 ypc) and
a turnover-happy defense.
It has Miami (11-5), the AFC’s highest-scoring team with QB Bob Griese, 1,258-yard RB Del Williams and a defense that shut
out three teams.
Foremost, it has 14-2 Pittsburgh and
the 12-4 Dallas, which
won their final six games (five by rout).
Pittsburgh’s
Bradshaw was the AFC’s No.1 passer, throwing 28 TDs,
mostly to WRs Lynn Swann and John Stallworth,
while FB Franco Harris ran for 1,082 yards. The Steel Curtain defense, led by
DT Mean Joe Greene, LBs Jack Lambert and Jack Ham and
DB Mel Blount, had 48 turnovers, 44 sacks and gave up more than 17 points only
twice. (And get this: the Steelers’ secondary included Tony Dungy, who
intercepted six passes. Dungy, of course, is the coach of the 2007 Super Bowl
winners, Indianapolis.)
Dallas QB Staubach
was the No. 1 passer in the NFC with conference leading 25 TD passes and 7.7
yards per pass. All five of his starting receivers had impressive yards per
catch. RB Tony Dorsett gained 1,325 yards to lead the NFC’s
best ground attack, but FB Robert Newhouse’s 4.2
averages kept defenses honest. With DT Randy White andDEs
Ed “Too Tall” Jones and Harvey Martin, the Cowboys had an NFL-best
58 sacks, and yielded fewer points than all but Pittsburgh,
holding 10 foes to 10 points or fewer.
1992 Season
How timely. Strat-O-Matic releases
a card set with a rare New Orleans
playoff team at the same time as its 2006 team advanced to the NFC title game
for the first time. The set also has Pittsburgh
with rookie coach Bill Cowher, who has just retired
after coaching the 2006 Steelers.
Can you resist playing the 1992
teams against their 2006 counterparts?
There’s no resisting Dallas (13-3), which won its first Super Bowl
since 1977 and was just three years removed from a 1-15 embarrassment. This is
one of the deadliest SOM teams, with QB
Troy Aikman (3,445 yds, 23 TDs), RB Emmitt Smith (1,713 yds, 4.6 avg, 18 TDs), WR Michael Irvin (1,396 yds),
two-TD PR Kelvin Martin and a run-stuffing defense that held eight opponents to
10 points or fewer.
In the Super Bowl, Dallas’
52-17 conquest belittled a Buffalo (11-5) team that boasted QB Jim Kelly (3,457yds, 23 TDs), RB Thurman Thomas (1,487 yds,
4.8 avg) and a versatile receiver corps.
San Francisco (14-2) had the best record, outscored Dallas
and yielded fewer points. QB Steve Young passed (66.7% complete, 25 TDs) and ran (7.1 avg) for 4,000
yards. RB Ricky Watters (1,013 yds, 4.9 avg) and WR Jerry Rice (1,201 yds)
had some fun.
New Orleans (12-4) led the NFL in sacks (57), sent
an unprecedented four linebackers to the Pro Bowl and never yielded more than
21 points.
Pittsburgh (11-5) had the AFC’s leading runner in
Barry Foster (1,690 yds, 11 TDs)
and the AFC’s stingiest defense.
Philadelphia (11-5) RB Herschel Walker ran for 1,070 yds, QB Randall
Cunningham passed and ran (6.3 avg) for 3,300 and WR
Fred Barnett caught 67 for 1,083 yards. The Eagles had the NFC’s
No. 1 pass defense and recovered the most fumbles. PR Vai
Sikahema had a TD..
The top-heavy season features three more 11-5 teams on the computer: Minnesota, Miami and San Diego.
Also on
computer: Detroit RB Barry Sanders (1,352 yards rushing) leads eight
1,000-yard runners.