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1966 American Football League Championship Game
American football championship
American football championship
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| type | aflc |
| name | 1966 |
| visitor | [Kansas City Chiefs](1966-kansas-city-chiefs-season) |
| visitor_record | 11–2–1 |
| visitor_abbr | KC |
| home | [Buffalo Bills](1966-buffalo-bills-season) |
| home_record | 9–4–1 |
| home_abbr | BUF |
| visitor_conf | Western |
| home_conf | Eastern |
| visitor_coach | Hank Stram |
| home_coach | Joe Collier |
| visitor_qtr1 | 7 |
| visitor_qtr2 | 10 |
| visitor_qtr3 | 0 |
| visitor_qtr4 | 14 |
| visitor_total | 31 |
| home_qtr1 | 7 |
| home_qtr2 | 0 |
| home_qtr3 | 0 |
| home_qtr4 | 0 |
| home_total | 7 |
| date | January 1, 1967 |
| stadium | War Memorial Stadium |
| city | Buffalo, New York |
| odds | Kansas City |
| <!-- https://news.google.com/newspapers?id | LMgtAAAAIBAJ&sjid=GZwFAAAAIBAJ&pg=3321%2C309440 -- |
| attendance | 42,080 |
| network | NBC |
| announcers | Curt Gowdy, Paul Christman, |
| and Pat Hernon | |
| HOFers | **Chiefs:** Lamar Hunt (owner), Hank Stram (head coach), Bobby Beathard (personnel administrator), Bobby Bell, Buck Buchanan, Len Dawson, Johnny Robinson, |
| Emmitt Thomas | |
| **Bills:** Ralph Wilson (owner), Billy Shaw |
and Pat Hernon Emmitt Thomas Bills: Ralph Wilson (owner), Billy Shaw |}} |USA |USA New York The 1966 AFL Championship Game was the seventh American Football League's championship game, played at War Memorial Stadium in Buffalo, New York, on January 1, 1967.
It matched the Western Division champion Kansas City Chiefs (11–2–1) and the Eastern Division champion Buffalo Bills (9–4–1) to decide the American Football League (AFL) champion for the 1966 season.
The host Bills entered as two-time defending champions, but the visiting Chiefs were three-point favorites, mainly because of their explosive and innovative offense led by head coach Hank Stram. The Bills were a more conventional team with a solid defensive line and a running mindset on offense. The two teams had split their season series, played early in the schedule without weather as a factor, with the road team winning each.
The Chiefs defeated the Bills by a score of 31–7, and advanced to Super Bowl I to play against the National Football League (NFL) champion Green Bay Packers.
Background
The game was originally scheduled for Monday, December 26, the week after the conclusion of the regular season. The AFL–NFL merger agreement of June 1966 called for a "world championship game" between the league champions. When a date of January 15, 1967, was established, the AFL title game was moved to January 1, same as the NFL championship game in Dallas. The AFL game was at 1 p.m. EST, televised by NBC, and the NFL game followed at 4 p.m. on CBS.
Like the NFL, the host team for the title game was alternated between the divisions, regardless of record. In the AFL, the Eastern division hosted in even-numbered years and the Western in odd; home-field advantage was not adopted until .
Kansas City Chiefs
Main article: 1966 Kansas City Chiefs season
The Kansas City Chiefs finished the 1966 regular season with an 11–2–1 record and clinched the Western Division title five weeks earlier, on November 27. Quarterback Len Dawson finished the season with 2,527 passing yards and 26 touchdowns, with only 10 interceptions, giving him a 101.7 passer rating. The team's top wide receiver was Otis Taylor who caught 58 passes for 1,297 yards and 8 touchdowns; Chris Burford also contributed by catching 58 passes for 758 yards and 8 touchdowns. Mike Garrett was the team's leading rusher, gaining 801 yards and 6 touchdowns. Other reliable options included Curtis McClinton (540 yards, 4 touchdowns) and Bert Coan (521 yards, 7 touchdowns). The Chiefs' offense consisted of five All-Stars: Len Dawson, Curtis McClinton, Otis Taylor, Jim Tyrer, and Ed Budde.
Their defense featured six All-Stars: Johnny Robinson, E.J. Holub, Sherrill Headrick, Bobby Bell, Buck Buchanan, and Jerry Mays.
Buffalo Bills
Main article: 1966 Buffalo Bills season
Game summary
In a chilly drizzle, Kansas City broke open a tied fierce 7–7 battle and dominated the rest of the contest from there on, forcing four turnovers (without losing any themselves) and outscoring host Buffalo 24-0 over the last three quarters.
On the opening kickoff, Fletcher Smith's short kick was fielded by defensive end Dudley Meredith, who promptly fumbled the ball, and KC punter Jerrel Wilson, who also played on the kick coverage team, recovered it for the Chiefs on the Bills 31-yard line. This led to the first score of the game, a 29-yard touchdown pass from Len Dawson to tight end Fred Arbanas. After an exchange of punts, Buffalo tied the game when receiver Elbert Dubenion raced ahead of defensive back Fred Williamson, "the Hammer", caught a pass from Jack Kemp at the Chiefs 45, and raced all the way to the end zone for a 69-yard touchdown reception.
Later on, Mike Garrett's 27-yard punt return gave the Chiefs a first down on the Bills 45-yard line. After a few plays, Dawson made a key 15-yard completion to Arbanas advancing to the Buffalo 29. It was the last catch of the day for Arbanas, who ended up leaving the game with a separated shoulder; however, it paid off big time as Dawson threw a 29-yard touchdown pass to Otis Taylor on the next play, giving the Chiefs a 14–7 second quarter lead. Buffalo responded with a drive deep into Chiefs territory, featuring Kemp's 30-yard completion to rookie receiver Rob Burnett to the Kansas City 12-yard line. But in what turned out to be one of the most crucial plays of the game, Kemp's next pass resulted in a costly interception in the end zone by safety Johnny Robinson, who returned the football 72 yards to the Bills 28. Mike Mercer eventually cashed in the turnover with a 32-yard field goal that gave the Chiefs a 17–7 halftime lead.
The third quarter was a defensive struggle with each team punting the football twice. Near the end, Kansas City got possession of the football on the Bills 42-yard line, but failed to score when Mercer missed a 49-yard field goal attempt.
The Chiefs put the game away with consecutive touchdown drives in the fourth quarter. First, Dawson's 45-yard completion to Chris Burford gave the team a first down at the Buffalo 4-yard line. Garrett then ran the ball on the next four plays, concluding with a 1-yard touchdown run. On the first play of Buffalo's next drive, receiver Glenn Bass lost a fumble that Bobby Hunt returned 21 yards to the Bills 20-yard line, which led to another Garrett touchdown run, the final score of the game from 18 yards. Footage of the play shows that Garrett was about to throw a halfback option pass but a heavy rush from Buffalo's defense prevented it, forcing Garrett to run.
Dawson completed 16 of 24 passes for 227 yards and two touchdowns and ran for 28 yards. Garrett rushed for 39 yards and two touchdowns, caught 4 passes for 16 yards, returned a kickoff for 3 yards, and added another 37 yards on 3 punt returns. Kemp completed 12 of 25 passes for 253 yards and a touchdown, coupled with two costly interceptions. Burnett caught six passes for 127 yards.
Box score
Scoring
- First quarter
- KC – Fred Arbanas 29-yard pass from Len Dawson (Mike Mercer kick). Chiefs 7–0
- BUF – Elbert Dubenion 69-yard pass from Jack Kemp (Booth Lusteg kick). Tied 7–7
- Second quarter
- KC – Otis Taylor 29-yard pass from Len Dawson (Mike Mercer kick). Chiefs 14–7
- KC – Mike Mercer 22-yard field goal. Chiefs 17–7
- Third quarter
- Fourth quarter
- KC – Mike Garrett 1-yard rush (Mike Mercer kick). Chiefs 24–7
- KC – Mike Garrett 18-yard rush (Mike Mercer kick). Chiefs 31–7 Top passers
- KC – Len Dawson – 16/24, 227 yards, 2 TD
- BUF – Jack Kemp – 12/27, 253 yards, 1 TD, 2 INT Top rushers
- KC – Mike Garrett – 13 rushes, 39 yards, 2 TD
- BUF – Wray Carlton – 9 rushes, 31 yards Top receivers
- KC – Otis Taylor – 5 receptions, 78 yards, 1 TD
- BUF – Bobby Burnett – 6 receptions, 127 yards
Starting lineups
:*Source: *
| Kansas City Chiefs | year=1966 | border=2}};" | Kansas City | Position | Buffalo Bills | year=1966 | border=2}};" | Buffalo |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| **Offense** | ||||||||
| Len Dawson | QB | Jack Kemp | ||||||
| Mike Garrett | RB | Bobby Burnett | ||||||
| Curtis McClinton | FB | Wray Carlton | ||||||
| Otis Taylor | FL | Elbert Dubenion | ||||||
| Chris Burford | SE | Bobby Crockett | ||||||
| Fred Arbanas | TE | Paul Costa | ||||||
| Jim Tyrer | LT | Stew Barber | ||||||
| Ed Budde | LG | Billy Shaw | ||||||
| Wayne Frazier | C | Al Bemiller | ||||||
| Curt Merz | RG | Joe O'Donnell | ||||||
| Dave Hill | RT | Dick Hudson | ||||||
| **Defense** | ||||||||
| Jerry Mays | LDE | Ron McDole | ||||||
| Andy Rice | LDT | Jim Dunaway | ||||||
| Buck Buchanan | RDT | Tom Sestak | ||||||
| Chuck Hurston | RDE | Tom Day | ||||||
| Bobby Bell | LLB | John Tracey | ||||||
| Sherrill Headrick | MLB | Harry Jacobs | ||||||
| E.J. Holub | RLB | Mike Stratton | ||||||
| Fred Williamson | LCB | Tom Janik | ||||||
| Willie Mitchell | RCB | Butch Byrd | ||||||
| Bobby Hunt | SS | Hagood Clarke | ||||||
| Johnny Robinson | FS | George Saimes |
Statistics
| Statistics | Kansas City Chiefs | year=1966 | border=2 | color=white}}" | Chiefs | Buffalo Bills | border=2 | year=1966 | color=white}}" | Bills |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First downs | 14 | 9 | ||||||||
| Rushing yards | 113 | 40 | ||||||||
| Yards per carry | 3.4 | 3.0 | ||||||||
| Passing yards | 227 | 253 | ||||||||
| Sacked-Yards | 9–63 | 4–38 | ||||||||
| Total yards | 340 | 293 | ||||||||
| Fumbles-Lost | 1–0 | 3–2 | ||||||||
| Turnovers | 0 | 4 | ||||||||
| Penalties-Yards | 4–40 | 3–23 |
Officials
- Referee: Walt Fitzgerald
- Umpire: Walt Parker
- Head linesman: Tony Veteri
- Side linesman: Cal Lepore
- Back judge: Hugh Gamber
- Field judge: Bob Bauer
The AFL added a sixth game official, the side linesman, in 1966; the NFL added its sixth official, the line judge, during the previous season. The seventh official, the side judge, was added in .
References
References
- Rathet, Mike. (January 1, 1967). "Kansas City is favored to halt Bills today". Youngstown Vindicator.
- Shrake, Edwin. (January 9, 1967). "Firewater for some fired-up Chiefs".
- Rollow, Cooper. (January 2, 1967). "Chiefs rout Buffalo, 31 to 7". Chicago Tribune.
- (January 1, 1967). "Potent Chiefs have slim edge on Bills". Milwaukee Journal.
- (January 2, 1967). "Chiefs ready for Packers". Lawrence Daily Journal-World.
- (January 2, 1967). "Kansas City romps over Buffalo to end Bills' AFL reign, 31-7". Milwaukee Sentinel.
- (November 28, 1966). "Chiefs clinch first pro grid title". Spokesman-Review.
- (November 28, 1966). "Chiefs win, 32-24, for 'West' crown". Milwaukee Sentinel.
- "1966 AFL Pro Bowlers". Sports Reference.
- "Archived copy".
- [http://archives.chicagotribune.com/1967/01/02/page/97/article/chiefs-rout-buffalo-31-to-7 Historical Newspapers from 1700s-2000s - Newspapers.com]
- "Championship - Kansas City Chiefs at Buffalo Bills - January 1st, 1967".
- link. (December 11, 2008)
- (January 2, 1967). "K.C. splits pot 51 ways". Lawrence Daily Journal-World.
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