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1966 Pro Bowl

National Football League all-star game


National Football League all-star game

FieldValue
typepb
name1966
imageLA Coliseum gate.jpg
image_size230px
captionThe front of the L.A. Memorial Coliseum
visitorEastern Conference
homeWestern Conference
visitor_qtr110
home_qtr10
visitor_qtr213
home_qtr20
visitor_qtr33
home_qtr30
visitor_qtr410
home_qtr47
dateJanuary 16, 1966
stadiumLos Angeles Memorial Coliseum
cityLos Angeles, California
visitor_coachBlanton Collier
visitor_coach_team[Cleveland Browns](1965-cleveland-browns-season)
home_coachVince Lombardi
home_coach_team[Green Bay Packers](1965-green-bay-packers-season)
MVPJim Brown
MVPteam[Cleveland Browns](1965-cleveland-browns-season), FB
MVP2Dale Meinert
MVP2team[St. Louis Cardinals](1965-st-louis-cardinals-nfl-season), LB
oddsWest by 7 points
attendance60,124
networkCBS
announcersJack Drees, Frank Gifford

The 1966 Pro Bowl was the National Football League's sixteenth annual all-star game which featured the outstanding performers from the season. The game was played on January 16, 1966, at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles, California, with an attendance of 60,124. The West was favored by a touchdown,

The Western Conference stars were led by Vince Lombardi, head coach of the league champion Green Bay Packers. The coach of the Eastern Conference, Blanton Collier of the Cleveland Browns, used the domination of the West that year as a rallying cry for the Eastern team as they prepared to take the field.

During the 1965 season, the Western Conference had dominated the Eastern Conference — Western teams were 13–1 in regular season inter-conference games and had won the league championship two weeks earlier, the third-place Playoff Bowl, and the previous two editions in this series. The domination extended to the college ranks as well, with the West team winning the Rose Bowl and the East–West Shrine Game (college all-star game).

At the same time, Lombardi felt his West squad was at an unfair disadvantage in the game due to a denial by the league of a last minute appeal to use his own team's quarterback, Bart Starr, in the game. Starr had previously been scratched due to injury, but had recovered sufficiently to play. In his place, San Francisco 49ers quarterback John Brodie threw a record six interceptions, offset with one touchdown pass late in the game to Tommy McDonald of the Los Angeles Rams to avoid a shutout.

Linebacker Dale Meinert of the St. Louis Cardinals was named the "lineman of the game" while the Cleveland Browns' fullback Jim Brown was awarded "back of the game" honors for the third time in his career. Brown carried 21 times for 65 yards, rushing for three touchdowns in the first half. One story line entering the game never materialized, the anticipated showdown between Brown and halfback Gale Sayers of the Chicago Bears, the season's consensus Rookie of the Year; Lombardi surprisingly called only a single play for Sayers, a handoff which gained fifteen yards.

This was Brown's final NFL game; he left at the top of his game (league MVP for third time in nine seasons) to pursue an acting career in Hollywood. A month shy of thirty years old, he had a year remaining (1966) on a three-year contract, estimated at $60,000 per year ($ in ), and officially announced his retirement six months later in July from England, on the set of the 1967 film The Dirty Dozen.

References

References

  1. (January 16, 1966). "West stars picked by 7 over East". Reading Eagle.
  2. (January 17, 1966). "Brown, East bop West in Pro Bowl, 36–7". [[Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]].
  3. (January 17, 1966). "East whips West All-Stars, 36-7". Eugene Register-Guard.
  4. (January 17, 1966). "East wanted win badly, says coach". Eugene Register-Guard.
  5. "The 1966 Pro Bowl". Bolding Sports Research.
  6. (January 3, 1966). "Brown backs off". Toledo Blade.
  7. (July 14, 1966). "Jim Brown announces retirement; Collier plans to readjust offense". Youngstown Vindicator.
  8. (July 14, 1966). "Jim Brown retires from pro football". Free Lance-Star.
  9. (July 14, 1966). "Jim Brown gives up football". Pittsburgh Press.
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