Showing posts with label Gale Sayers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gale Sayers. Show all posts

Saturday, September 26, 2020

Gale Sayers vs. The Steelers (and Fun Facts About the 1970 NFL Draft)


The Absent Friends post that I wrote on here two days ago in tribute to Gale Sayers prompted me to wonder how Sayers did in his career against the Pittsburgh Steelers.  As you know, the Internet allows us to research just about anything, so here it is for all you Steelers fans out there.

Turns out, Sayers' Bears played against the Steelers only twice, in 1967 and in 1969.

The 1967 game was alluded to in the previous post, but to restate:

The Steelers won that game, 41-13, and in it, Sayers was, astonishingly, held to two (2) rushing yards on only seven carries, and he did not catch a pass in that game, either.  He did, however, return two kicks for 147 yards, which included a 103 yard return for a touchdown.

In 1969, both Sayers and the Bears got their revenge.  Chicago routed the Steelers that day, 38-7.  Sayers had 28 rushing attempts for 112 yards and two touchdowns.  He also caught one pass for 25 yards and had one kick return for 9 yards.  He totaled 149 yards, the same number of yards he totaled in the 1967 game.   In his two game career against Pittsburgh, the Steelers held Sayers to 114 rushing yards on 35 attempts, an average of 3.26 yds/carry, well below his career average of 5.00 yds/carry.

That 1969 win against the Steelers was the only game that the Bears won that year, and allowed them to tie the Steelers for the worst record in the NFL that year, 1-13.  In an era before the NFL invented their elaborate system of tie-breakers, this meant that the Bears and Steelers would flip a coin to see who would get the overall Number One Draft Pick.  As Steelers fans know, Dan Rooney won the toss, the Steelers selected Terry Bradshaw with that pick, and the rest, as they say, is history.

And here are some Fun Facts you can learn when you go down the Internet Rabbit Hole....

What did the Bears do with the Number Two overall pick?  Well, they traded that  pick to Green Bay, and the Packers used it to select defensive lineman Mike McCoy of Notre Dame.  Chicago, in fact, didn't have selection until the third round that year.  

Only one other quarterback was selected in the first round, Purdue's Mike Phipps by the Browns.  Ten other quarterbacks were drafted that year, and the only one that stirred even the remotest interest in me was USC's Mike Holmgren.  He was taken by the Cardinals in the eighth round, the 201st player selected.  He would go on to a rather significant coaching career, taking both Seattle and Green Bay to Super Bowls, and winning one with the Packers.

With the fifth pick in the first round, the Bills selected USC linebacker Al Cowlings, he of OJ's White Bronco Fame.

A total of 442 players were drafted by NFL teams in that 1970 Draft, and only two of them, thus far, have made it into the Pro Football Hall of Fame: Bradshaw and another Steeler, defensive back Mel Blount, selected with the first pick of the third round, the fifty-third player taken in the draft.

Wednesday, September 23, 2020

To Absent Friends - Gale Sayers

 

Gale Sayers
1943 - 2020

University of Kansas and Chicago Bears all-time great and Pro Football Hall of Famer Gale Sayers died today at the age of 77.  It has been 49 years since Sayers played his last game, and, really, 51 years since he made any meaningful impact on the game.  Thus, most people know him more for his relationship with teammate Brian Piccolo that a was immortalized in the TV movie "Brian's Song."  

Severe knee injuries limited Sayers career to a mere seven seasons, 1965-71, and he only appeared in four games in those final two seasons, so Sayers' accomplishments were limited to an astonishing five year span.  By today's standards, Sayers stats seem rather modest when you look at them in a reference guide.  4,956 yards and 39 TDs rushing (5.0 yds/carry), 112 catches for 1,307 yards and 9 TDs, and 3,172 return yards  for 6 TDs.  In his rookie season, he even THREW a TD pass.  Still, only twice did he rush for over 1,000 yards in a season.  And he only played in 68 games.  Why is he in the Hall of Fame?

Well, he shares the NFL record for once scoring six touchdowns in a single game, but more to the point, if you ever saw him play, and I did (see next paragraph), you have no doubt as to his worthiness as a Hall of Famer.    Only an injury shorthened career kept Sayers from compiling numbers that would probably have surpassed Jim Brown, the all-time rushing leader at the time of his retirement.  The HOF voters recognized that and voted Sayers in in his first year of eligibility.

I have one very distinct personal memory of Gale Sayers.  It was September 17, 1967 (I looked it up.  Thank you, Internet and pro-football-reference.com).  The Steelers against the Bears, and I was sitting in the scoreboard end zone at Pitt Stadium.  I was there with my Dad, and I think that my brother Jim was there.  Don't think that brother Bill was, but I could be wrong.  From our seats, we were looking straight up what would have been to us the left hand sideline.  The Steelers took a 3-0 lead in the first quarter, and on the ensuing kickoff, Sayers took the ball three yards deep in the end zone, ran to his right and then began steaming down that sideline, his right, our left, and took it all the way for a touchdown.  It looked like he was running right at us.  I was sixteen years old at the time, what did I know, but I did know that I had just witnessed something GREAT.

As an aside, my only memory of that game was that kick return by Sayers, and all these years later, I had always assumed that the Steelers, a lousy team at the time, lost that game.  Not so.  In fact, the Steelers shut out the Bears over the last three quarters and won that game 41-13.  The Steelers didn't win much in those days, so why don't I remember what had to be a pretty significant win for them back then?  Well, the reason, I guess, is that everything else that day was eclipsed but that Gale Sayers kick return for a touchdown.

Here is some more minutia about that game.  Bill Nelson threw for 223, yards and two TDs for the Steelers that day.  Steelers scoring TDs that day were Willie Asbury (2), Mike Hilton, Charlie Bivins, and Dick Compton.  The Steelers would finish that season 4-9-1, the Bears 7-6-1.  (Better days and better players were ahead for the Steelers.)

Oh, and what else did Sayers do that day.  Astonishingly, the Steelers defense held him to a total of two (2!!) yards rushing on seven carries.

Below is a link to a 3:41 YouTube clip that might give some of you youngsters out there an idea of just how Great with a capital G Gale Sayers was.


RIP Gale Sayers