Wednesday, October 23, 2024

Rewatch: Broncos @ Seahawks 12/20/85

It's Monday Night Football…on Friday! This was a rare treat brought to us by the NFL and ABC in the mid-80s where they would play on Friday night in Week 16. It’s an early kickoff - 5:00 on the west coast - so it’s a late arriving crowd. 

This is the second of three consecutive seasons of the Broncos and Seahawks concluding their regular seasons with a non-Sunday game in the Kingdome. This time around, only the Broncos have something at stake. The Jets and Patriots both lost in week 15, so the Broncos can clinch a playoff spot with a win and either a Jets or Patriots loss on Sunday. The Seahawks’ record stands at 8-7 so there will be no playoffs for them, although they do have a chance at the rare 2-2-2-2-2-2-2-2 feat. Their entire season has alternated two wins and two losses. If the pattern follows, the Seahawks will lose this game.

Frank Gifford, working his 300th broadcast on ABC, declares, “The Kingdome. It's a beauty!” The camera pans the interior of the stadium which even by 80s standards was a bit of an eyesore. Perhaps realizing what he just said he follows it with, “Not a whole lot of cosmetics…”

Steve Largent goes over 10,000 career receiving yards on the first Seahawks possession. On the next play, Dave Krieg goes deep for Daryl Turner for a 41-yard touchdown. However, it will be Turner's last catch of the game and season. He has 23 touchdowns in 69 career receptions.

It’s five days before Christmas so they are saying Happy Holidays a lot. We get a shot of Santa. Apparently the northwest was in the midst of an epic fog storm which made visibility extremely poor and travel nearly impossible for several days. They talk extensively throughout the first half of the difficulty the crew had in just getting to Seattle for the game because very few flights were getting into or out of Seattle.

ABC is providing generous holiday helpings of the Seattle cheerleaders - aka "The Seagals" - whenever there is a lull in the on-field action. I love any cheerleader group that uses a pun for their name - see also the Buffalo Jills. The Seagals are basically wearing one-piece swimsuits with big sleeves.

One of many sideline shots provided by ABC

The Broncos punt for their third consecutive drive to start the game and the Seahawks recover and return it for a touchdown. The Broncos are in deep trouble as they are now trailing 17-0 on the road.

The Broncos finally get something going with just over six minutes remaining when Elway connects with Clint Sampson for a 46-yard gain. Two plays later he has Mike Barber open for the touchdown, but Barber trips on a seam in the Kingdom rug. But on 3rd and 10, and Elway hits Steve Watson for the touchdown. 

In addition to the Seagals, there is also a band on the sidelines. Not like a rock band, but a band with chairs and music stands and brass instruments. I'm not sure if they were a regular fixture at Seahawks games or if this was a special occasion. Anyways, it was something fun you could do in the 80s with all the extra space afforded by these multipurpose stadiums.

The Seagals accompanied by a band

The Broncos get the ball back with under two minutes left and it really seems like they want to provide the audience with a chance to get a jump on halftime. After a sack and a penalty, they have a 3rd and 18. But Elway completes a pass downfield to Clint Sampson, who bounces off the tackler for a few extra yards. Suddenly, the Broncos have the ball at the Seattle 32 with 36 seconds left. Passes to Steve Sewell and Butch Johnson get them inside the 10, and Rich "Carlos" comes on to kick a field goal and make the score 17-10.

Clint Sampson breaks free for extra yards

The recording of the game doesn't provide the in-depth look at the knee that ABC was promising at halftime. Not sure how deep they were going to be able to get in 15 minutes. 

The Seahawks get the ball first in the second half but have to punt it. The Broncos really seem to want to end their streak of scoreless third quarters and get a little frisky with their play calls. Elway completes a pass to Mark Cooper, the offensive lineman, that gets them to the Seattle 38.  The drive stalls and Chris Norman comes out to punt. However, instead of kicking, Norman winds up and throws deep to Ricky Hunley, who can't come down with it.

On their next possession, they get to the Seattle 35 and face a 4th and 8. They again eschew the punt and Elway passes to Gerald Willhite, who picks up 16 yards. He's having a good game with 3 catches for 45 yards.

However, the third quarter ends with the Broncos again failing to score. The last time the Broncos scored in the third quarter was in their first game with Seattle on October 20. The last time they scored a touchdown in the third quarter was October 6 against the Oilers.

Willhite winds up with the touchdown after they switch ends of the field, and the game is tied at 17. 

Mike Harden intercepts Krieg on the second play of the ensuing drive. The Broncos are poised to take their first lead of the game, but Rich Karlis is wide left on a 34-yard field goal attempt and the score remains tied. 

The Seahawks put together their first drive of any substance since the second quarter, and a 38-yard run by Curt Warner gets them to the Denver 3. There is much discussion about the knee injury that cost him the 1984 season. The Seahawks aren’t so worried about the knee and hand the ball to him on the next four plays. He finally gets in by leaping over the top on fourth and goal from the Denver 1. With 5:20 left, the Seahawks have regained a 7-point lead. Is the Broncos season near an end?

However, the Broncos respond. Elway spins away from a sack and Steve Watson drifts behind the defense. Elway fires a pass that travels 60 yards in the air to Steve Watson, who hauls it in at the Seattle 5. The throw clinches Elway's first career 400-yard game. Winder carries the ball to the 2 and Willhite takes it to the 1. Sewell is stopped shy of the goal line and the Broncos now face their own fourth-and-goal. They go for it, with Sewell scoring. The extra point ties it at 24 with 2:35 left. 

The Seahawks go three and out before the 2 minute warning. The win probability has shifted to Denver.  

The Broncos start on the Seattle 40 following the punt. Elway dumps it to Sewell who takes it for a 27-yard gain. However, Jeff Bryant dived and hit Elway below the knee on the play. He gets up hobbling. Didn't Bryant watch the halftime show about the knee? 

Gary Kubiak comes on in relief and runs three plays, getting them close enough for a 43-yard Karlis field goal with 55 seconds left. Elway is out on the field to offer congratulations so it's apparently not that serious.

Elway and Kubiak teamed up for winning drive

The game is not over. The Seahawks still have a shot. They get it across midfield and have a 1st and 10 with 21 seconds left. On 3rd and 10 they get it to the 35 and Norm Johnson comes out for a 52-yard attempt. If he kicks it through, these two teams are headed to their second overtime game of the season. But he hits the upright. Broncos win, 27-24. Battling back from 17 points down on the road to get the win? Denver, are you kidding me? 

Elway was known for having a knack for the late comeback with 44 career regular season fourth-quarter comebacks or game winning drives. This marks his 7th such game of the 1985 season. He had no more than 4 in any other season throughout his career. 

Near the two minute warning, Frank described scenario that I didn’t fully understand even after listening carefully a few more times. It seems like he’s saying that if Denver and the three AFC East teams all end up at 11-5 then it is going to come down to margin of victory and potentially the Dolphins could lose out on not only their division but a wildcard. But if Miami is out of a wildcard, then who gets it? It would have to be Denver. But they’ve been feeding us the line that only a Jets or a Patriots loss will be good enough to get the Broncos the wildcard.

Since I didn’t understand, I decided to research the entire scenario, which is what totally normal people do. Here’s what I think Frank was suggesting.

If the Jets and Patriots win on Sunday and the Dolphins lose, all four teams will finish 11-5. 

In that scenario, the Jets are the AFC East champions by virtue of the third tiebreaker because they have a 9-3 conference record and the Patriots and Dolphins would each be 8-4. 

So the next thing would be to apply tiebreakers to determine who among Miami, New England, and Denver gets the wildcard spots. 

The first tiebreaker does not apply because Denver and New England didn’t play each other so there was no head-to-head sweep among the three teams. This would mean the Broncos’ loss to the Dolphins is basically “thrown out” of the tiebreaker. 

The second tiebreaker is conference record and all three teams would be 8-4.

The third tiebreaker does not apply because the only common opponent among the three teams is the Colts, and there must be at least four common opponents. 

So we’re at the fourth tiebreaker, which is plus or minus points in conference games. Denver finished +27 for the season. The Patriots are +33 so in this scenario the Broncos couldn’t pass them. Miami has a pretty wide margin in this category at +63, but this provides the one more avenue for the Broncos to reach the playoffs should the Jets and Patriots both win. If the Dolphins lose their final game by 37 or more points, the Broncos are in. The one problem is that the Dolphins are playing the Buffalo Bills, who are 2-13 on the season. But anything is possible, right?

Thursday, October 3, 2024

Rewatch: Broncos vs. Chiefs 12/14/85

The Chiefs visit Denver for a late-season Saturday afternoon game. Don Criqui and Bob Trumpy are on hand to bring us the action. 

The season is over for Kansas City. A seven-game losing streak following a 3-1 start ended their hopes of competing in the AFC West. They tell us that head coach John Mackovic will be evaluated after the season. 

Meanwhile, the Broncos’ playoff hopes are hanging by the thread. They must win their final two games and need either the Dolphins, Patriots, Jets, or Raiders to lose their final two to secure a spot. 

The good news is that one small piece of that puzzle has already slid into place. The Jets lost to the Bears in the early Saturday game.

Garcia Lane is returning back punts for the Chiefs, the only actual instance I know of a person with the first name Garcia, other than the fictional whistleblower guy in the movie The Pelican Brief.

The first half moves along quickly, with no penalty flags thrown until well into the second quarter. Don and Bob don't quite know what to make of a quiet Denver crowd, but there isn’t a lot happening. The Broncos get deep into Kansas City territory once but Elway is intercepted in the end zone. 

Elway sets the single season passing yardage record for Denver, surpassing Craig Morton's 1981 mark of 3,195 yards. Interestingly, Broncos receivers have collectively gone the entire season without a 100-yard receiving game. 

They mention that the Chiefs have a 14-year playoff drought going. Their last appearance was in 1971, when they lost to the Dolphins in the longest game in NFL history on Christmas Day. That loss concluded a very successful decade from 1962 to 1971 in which the Chiefs went 90-42-8 with three AFL titles and a Super Bowl victory.

The Broncos score just before the half when Elway beats the Kansas City blitz and fires to Vance Johnson for the touchdown and take a 7-3 lead into halftime.

The Chiefs narrow the margin to 7-6 in the third quarter. Bob Trumpy is concerned about the Broncos’ listless performance. "Looking stiff." "No life." "Waiting to lose."

Elway connects with Vance Johnson on a 48-yard pass play that gets them to the Kansas City 30. There are still more than four minutes left in the quarter. Could the scoreless third quarter streak finally be coming to an end?

Vance Johnson breaking free for 48 yards

They send Sammy Winder up the middle for a gain of 2. The fans boo, I'm assuming due to the play call. On 2nd and 8, Elway chucks the ball up under pressure and it is intercepted by Albert Lewis at the 2-yard line.

And so the streak of scoreless third quarters reaches 8 games, or half of an NFL season.

The Broncos have the ball as the fourth quarter opens.  They cross midfield on a 20-yard completion to Steve Watson. But two plays later, Elway is intercepted by Lloyd Burruss on 3rd and 10. It's Elway's fourth interception of the game. 

The Chiefs' drive stalls at the Bronco 37. The punt is a touchback so the Broncos take over at their own 20 with just over nine minutes remaining and still clinging to a one-point lead.

There's a skip in the recording because the next thing we see is the Chiefs have the ball at the Denver 8. Wait, what did we miss?

Turns out, just another Elway interception. He was intercepted by Lewis on the first play of the Broncos' drive, setting the Chiefs up at the Denver 28. None of the previous four interceptions had cost the Broncos anything more than a little field position. But this gave the Chiefs their best field position of the day. A 7-yard touchdown pass from Todd Blackledge to Stephone Paige and the Nick Lowery extra point puts Kansas City back in front, 13-7.

I realized while watching that this was the "Janet Elway" game. I remember the story from years ago and had to look it up to refresh the details. From an article written by T.J. Simers of the LA Times:

The Denver faithful were booing Elway, as they did so often during those early years, and after a fifth interception, a fan stood and let Janet Elway’s husband really have it.

“You can get your . . . wife pregnant, but you can’t . . . do anything else, ya bum.”

Janet Elway popped the guy. Slapped him right in the face before a number of Elway’s college buddies jumped in to save the heckler’s life.

For context, John and Janet's daughter Jessica was two months old, having been born in October, about a week before the previous meeting between Denver and Kansas City. I imagine this was big news around town.

Football players are real people, which is hard to remember. I don't know why John Elway was having an off day. He was still a young quarterback and continuing to deal with the pressure and expectations of an inpatient fan base. Maybe it had been a rough week with the baby. Who really knows?

The same goes for the entire Broncos team. Bob Trumpy was rightfully critical of their lackadaisical performance. But in their defense, they were only six days removed from a really tough overtime loss in which they had surrendered a two-touchdown lead to the rival Raiders, one that had likely cost them the AFC West title. They still had slim hopes of making the playoffs as a wild card, but as described above, they were going to need a lot of help. Perhaps the players could see the writing on the wall. Even if they are professionals, I imagine it's hard to get up for a game if there is a sense that the season is already lost. They are only human. 

However, falling behind seems to have given the Broncos a spark. Elway completes a 12-yarder to Steve Sewell. Then a 14-yarder to Watson. Then a 29-yarder to Vance Johnson, and with that catch Vance becomes the Broncos' first 100-yard receiver of the season. 

It really does seem like the Broncos are done messing around and are going to take control. But on a 3rd-and-3 from the Kansas City 8, Elway pitches to Sewell and the ball winds up on the ground. The Chiefs recover. It's the fifth consecutive Denver drive to end with a turnover.

Only 2:30 remains in the game, but the Broncos have all their timeouts remaining. But if the Chiefs can manage a first down or two they might be able to run out the clock. 

They can't get a first down and as an added bonus they stop the clock twice. At the two-minute warning it's 4th and 2 and the Broncos have only used one timeout. The Chiefs punt it back to the Broncos with 1:53 left.

The first play is a 42-yard catch-and-run by Steve Watson that gets them inside the Kansas City 20. Elway converts a 4th and inches at the Kansas City 8. Winder scores three plays later on a 3rd and goal from the 1.

The extra point is up and through to give the Broncos a 14-13 lead with 22 seconds left. The Broncos survive, moving their record to 10-5. A win next week against the Seahawks, paired with a Jets loss, will be enough to get them to the AFC playoffs.

This one takes its place in a long list of Broncos games from the Reeves era that were pretty ugly for three and a half quarters yet because John Elway was the quarterback they came away with a win. After the Chiefs took the lead with seven minutes remaining, John Elway completed 8 of 8 passes for 122 yards.