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I remember all 49 so far. I remember more from the first 30 than the last 19. I remember the half empty LA Coliseum and both NBC and CBS broadcasting the game before it was called a Super Bowl and wll before Roman Numerals. Max McGee was a backup wide receiver who didn't expect to play, so he went out and got drunk the night before. Then when Boyd Dowler got hurt, caught two TD passes, one on a terrific catch and the Packers up only 14-10 at half, smoked the Chiefs in the second half and won 35-10.
Super Bowl II was more of the same. The Raiders were the victim this time. It was Lombardi's last game as Packer coach. Herb Adderly had a long pick six. I think it was like 33-14 or something like that. Starr was MVP both times.
Joe Namath broke my heart in Super Bowl III, over my favorite team the Baltimore Colts. Earl Morrall looked like a quarterback throwing the most important game of his life. But the Jets were just better. Surprise, but true.
Since Namath was the MVP that day, it meant that all three MVPs in the first three were former Alabama quarterbacks. That game changed the NFL.
The only one I didn't see a live snap in was SB XVII. My aunt in Tulsa had died, and I was executor living in Texas and that was the only weekend we could go clean out her house. Listened to Riggins long TD run on fourth and one with the Redskins holding 17-16 lead to ice the game, late. It was a tenth anniversary of the same matchup when the Dolphins finished off a perfect season in SBVII beating George Allen's Skins 14-7, with Garo Yepremian providing comic relief in the fourth quarter, ruining the Dolphins' bid for a shutout.
Both that Colt team in III and the Dolphin team in VII, had Don Shula for their coach, and Earl Morrall as back up quarterback , who led each team to the best two seasons of the first decade of Super Bowl football seasons, when first John Unitas in 1968 and then Bob Griese in 1972 got hurt early in the season. Shula learned his lesson, and started his best quarterback against the Redskins, in Bob's first game in nearly three months. In III, by the time Unitas started playing, the Colts were pretty much out of it.
And OU's Eddie HInton scored a controversial touchdown in the Colts' SB V win over the Cowboys, who dominated the game, but lost on Craig Morton's frequent fourth quarter turnovers. And a couple of curious officials' calls.
Tom Landry got his first NFL title as HC the next year when Dallas picked up four important veterans late in their careers and thrashed the Dolphins easily in VI.
Eddie Hinton did not score a Super Bowl touchdown, controversial or otherwise....that was done by TE John Mackey on a pass that tipped off of Hinton's hands, off of Mel Renfro's hands and into Mackey's hands. Hinton did fumble deep in Cowboys territory and I recall the ball was recovered in the end zone for a touchback. Might have been the worst played SB I remember and the zebras had a bad day as well.I remember all 49 so far. I remember more from the first 30 than the last 19. I remember the half empty LA Coliseum and both NBC and CBS broadcasting the game before it was called a Super Bowl and wll before Roman Numerals. Max McGee was a backup wide receiver who didn't expect to play, so he went out and got drunk the night before. Then when Boyd Dowler got hurt, caught two TD passes, one on a terrific catch and the Packers up only 14-10 at half, smoked the Chiefs in the second half and won 35-10.
Super Bowl II was more of the same. The Raiders were the victim this time. It was Lombardi's last game as Packer coach. Herb Adderly had a long pick six. I think it was like 33-14 or something like that. Starr was MVP both times.
Joe Namath broke my heart in Super Bowl III, over my favorite team the Baltimore Colts. Earl Morrall looked like a quarterback throwing the most important game of his life. But the Jets were just better. Surprise, but true.
Since Namath was the MVP that day, it meant that all three MVPs in the first three were former Alabama quarterbacks. That game changed the NFL.
The only one I didn't see a live snap in was SB XVII. My aunt in Tulsa had died, and I was executor living in Texas and that was the only weekend we could go clean out her house. Listened to Riggins long TD run on fourth and one with the Redskins holding 17-16 lead to ice the game, late. It was a tenth anniversary of the same matchup when the Dolphins finished off a perfect season in SBVII beating George Allen's Skins 14-7, with Garo Yepremian providing comic relief in the fourth quarter, ruining the Dolphins' bid for a shutout.
Both that Colt team in III and the Dolphin team in VII, had Don Shula for their coach, and Earl Morrall as back up quarterback , who led each team to the best two seasons of the first decade of Super Bowl football seasons, when first John Unitas in 1968 and then Bob Griese in 1972 got hurt early in the season. Shula learned his lesson, and started his best quarterback against the Redskins, in Bob's first game in nearly three months. In III, by the time Unitas started playing, the Colts were pretty much out of it.
And OU's Eddie HInton scored a controversial touchdown in the Colts' SB V win over the Cowboys, who dominated the game, but lost on Craig Morton's frequent fourth quarter turnovers. And a couple of curious officials' calls.
Tom Landry got his first NFL title as HC the next year when Dallas picked up four important veterans late in their careers and thrashed the Dolphins easily in VI.
Eddie Hinton did not score a Super Bowl touchdown, controversial or otherwise....that was done by TE John Mackey on a pass that tipped off of Hinton's hands, off of Mel Renfro's hands and into Mackey's hands. Hinton did fumble deep in Cowboys territory and I recall the ball was recovered in the end zone for a touchback. Might have been the worst played SB I remember and the zebras had a bad day as well.
Hope you're getting better, Plaino. Take care.You are correct sir. I knew that for forty years. To be honest, I've had surgery twice in less than four months, and the anesthesia has played with my brain more than a little bit. I'm pretty sure that the rest of what I typed is correct, though I've had some weird things happen since the first one April 24. Most of the effect has been to short term memory, but I guess now it's both. At least that would show that I was doing that from memory, and not looking it up.
I guess we credit Eddie with a hockey assist.