Friday, July 26, 2024

Rewatch: Broncos @ Steelers 12/1/85

Don Criqui and Bob Trumpy are on hand to call the game on a beautiful day from Three Rivers. They are joined in the booth by special guest Paul Zimmerman aka Dr. Z - the famed Sports Illustrated writer. It's a rematch of the AFC Divisional Playoff game played 11 months earlier when the Steelers upset the Broncos at Mile High. The Steelers are again fighting for a playoff spot, tied at 6-6 atop the AFC Central with the Cleveland Browns, with the Cincinnati Bengals and Houston Oilers each a game back at 5-7.

David Woodley is starting due to an injury to the Steelers' main man, Mark Malone, although he's not exactly a picture of perfect health himself, having spent time in the hospital due to intestinal flu in the week leading up to the game. Woodley is most known for starting Super Bowl XVII for the Dolphins. Sammy Winder, only 10 days removed from arthroscopic knee surgery, is back in at running back for the Broncos.

The first half is largely uneventful. The Broncos don't get anything going until Woodley goes deep midway through the second quarter and gets picked off by Steve Wilson. The Broncos need just 5 plays to go 68 yards. Winder gains 27 yards on consecutive plays and John Elway connects with Clint Sampson for a 24-yard touchdown to give the Broncos a 7-3 lead. 

The Broncos get a field goal to extend their lead with 1:08 left in the half, enough time for the Steelers to put together a drive. Dr. Z is emphasizing that the Broncos are daring the Steelers to throw the ball, and the strategy is working as Woodley is only 4 of 12 passing.

But Woodley completes 3 of his next 4 and suddenly the Steelers are at the Broncos 21. Woodley is sacked by Karl Mecklenburg on the next play and the ball comes loose and rolls toward the sideline. It appears the Broncos pounce on it before it goes out of bounds, but the Steelers maintain possession and get a field goal to cut it to 10-6. 

Dan Reeves, who like most of the Broncos staff is nattily dressed in an orange sweater, gives the referee an earful on the way to the locker room.

The Achilles’ heel of the 1985 Broncos was the third quarter. Entering this game, they hadn’t scored a point in the third quarter of the last five games and hadn’t scored a third quarter touchdown in the last seven games. 

Both streaks are extended in this game. The Broncos can't move the ball on their first three possessions of the second half. The Steelers get another field goal to cut it to 10-9. The Broncos get a break when Steve Wilson gets his second interception of the day, setting them up at the Pittsburgh 40. However, they get no points out of it when Karlis misses the field goal from 39 yards.

They mention that Three Rivers Stadium is labeled “Home of Champions” because the Steelers won all those championships in the 70s and the Pirates won the World Series in 1979. My main question is why was there always trash blowing all over the field and also why were there always passenger automobiles parked around the perimeter of the field like it was a high school game. You see it in a lot of old clips of Steelers games, including this one.

Are they like player vehicles, or…

Early in the fourth quarter, the Broncos get their third interception of the day, this one from Tony Lilly. It sets them up at the Pittsburgh 42, and they manage to cash in this time with Steve Sewell taking it in for six.

The cameras give us a shot of a large poster/balloon of lips, in tribute to Louis Lipps. This apparently inspires the Steelers, and they put together their first TD drive of the day, with Lipps himself hauling in a 31-yard TD pass, beating Steve Wilson on the play.

A lot of work went into this piece of fan art

On the broadcast they mention that the Bronco defense is starting to crack, perhaps because they've been on the field so much due to the offense's inability to make anything happen. Moments later, the Broncos are facing a crucial 3rd and 6 when Mike Merriweather picks off Elway and returns it for the touchdown. 

Things are not looking great for the Broncos. After keeping the Steelers out of the end zone all day, they've yielded two touchdowns in a minute and a half of game clock. Only five minutes remain and the crowd is going crazy. The Broncos need a touchdown but haven’t managed one in this game that didn’t follow a turnover. Perhaps like last December, a superior Denver team will again be upset by the Steelers and their tradition.

But hold on....a big return on the kickoff by Vance Johnson sets up the Broncos at the Denver 42, giving them a short field to work with. However, two plays later and the Broncos are facing a 3rd and 9. A graphic flashes that the Broncos are 2 of 12 on third down for the day. 

Elway drills a pass to Steve Watson, who has Donnie Shell all over him. Nineteen yards and a first down.

They give the score of the Saints game and their new head coach Wade Phillips, who have just rolled the Rams 29-3.

The Steelers blitz on second down, but Elway drops a pass into Clarence Kay's outstreched arms inside the Pittsburgh 5 for 27 yards. After the 2 minute warning Dr. Z opines that he likes the blitz call by Tony Dungy because it was forcing the Broncos to make a play to beat them, which results in a bit of a disagreement between Trumpy and Dr. Z. Trump says Kay beat Eric Williams like a drum and Z says he didn’t beat him he just made a great play. Trump seems surprised by the pushback and says well they’re inside the five so take it however you can get it. Sewell gets his second TD of the game and the Karlis extra point puts the Broncos back in the lead. 

The tension remains as the Steelers have plenty of time on the clock for David Woodley to get his team in position for a winning field goal. However, before you know it Mike Harden has picked him off and is racing to the end zone with the clinching touchdown. The extra makes the lead 31-23 and in the era before two-point conversions the Steelers have no shot at two scores. They get as far as the Denver 14 but Rulon Jones puts it away with the team's sixth sack of the day (Mecklenburg had four of them) to go along with the four interceptions. 

So this was a game that was a somewhat dull defensive struggle until the fourth quarter, when the two teams combined for five touchdowns and an exciting finish.

I may or may not have watched some of these back in the day, so I’m using the term “rewatch” kind of loosely. And that's what makes the project kind of interesting. Even though I knew going in that the Broncos get the win, there were points when I was not sure exactly how they were going to pull it off.


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