Tuesday, March 5, 2013

1984 Giants vs Chiefs

Week 13

The Setup

1984 was one of the most significant seasons in Giants history.  To fully understand the impact of 1984, you need to go back to the end of 1981.  The Giants had finally gotten over the hump of 18 years of futility.  They beat the Cowboys 13-10 in OT a the end of the regular season to finish at 9-7 and coupled with the Jets win over Green Bay the following Sunday, put the Giants in the playoffs.  Not only did they make the playoffs, but the Giants made noise in the playoffs, beating the defending NFC Champion Eagles team in Philly, jumping on them taking a 20-0 first quarter lead and held on to beat them 27-21.  They would fall the following week in San Francisco against the eventual Super Bowl champion Niner team.  The Giants were a team on the rise and for the first time in a generation, fans were excited about the future.  However, 1982 was a huge disappointment.  The Giants started the season 0-2, dropping home games to the Falcons and the Packers on a Monday Night.  And then came the work stoppage which killed off nearly 2 months from the season.  The Giants returned from the strike and lost to the Redskins to go 0-3.  In a 9 game season, that could have been a death knell.  Though the Giants would regroup, win their next 3 games to even their record at 3-3.  The Giants would drop their next 2 and finish the season a disappointing 5-6 and out of the playoffs.  There would be more turnover after 1982, Ray Perkins would step down as Giants coach to go back to his alma mater and take over the University of Alabama.  The Giants would hand the head coaching reigns over to their 41 year old defensive coordinator and NJ native Bill Parcells.  Parcells would make the decision to start Scott Brunner as his quarterback and bench his 29 year old former first round pick, Phil Simms.  Simms asked/demanded to be traded, but George Young never pulled the trigger.  Simms played in only 2 games, started none, and the Giants crashed and burned to the tune of 3-12-1 in 1983 and made Ray Handley's first season as head coach look like a Vince Lombardi effort by comparison.

Enter 1984, the media vultures were already circling over Parcells.  People were saying he was in over his head as the Giants coach.  He was best staying as a defensive coordinator and nothing more.  But Parcells weathered the storm and the pressure.  His first move was to rectify his mistake from 1983 and reinstate Phil Simms as the starting QB.  He decided to bring in more explosive players on offense.  Joe Morris, the 3rd year running back was starting to get more playing time instead of still effective but slowing down/plodding FB Rob Carpenter.  George Young also was able to have a strong draft, bringing in an infusion of new talent in Carl Banks, William Roberts, Jeff Hostetler, Gary Reasons, and Lionel Manuel and signed Bobby Johnson as an UDFA.  Factor in that a number of impact players were entering/still in their prime on defense: Harry Carson, Lawrence Taylor, Mark Haynes, Leonard Marshall and Terry Kinard the Giants had talent that would belie a 3-12-1 team the season before.  The Giants would jump out quickly, starting 2-0, beating Philly and Dallas at Giants Stadium.  But inconsistency again reared it's ugly head for the young Giants as they would lose 4 of their next 6 games to sit at 4-4 at the halfway point.  Then the Giants got hot, winning 3 of their next 4, including blowout wins over Washington at Giants Stadium, and winning in Dallas to give the Giants their first season sweep over the Boys since 1963.  The Giants would go on and beat yet another NFC East foe in Week 12, beating the Cardinals 16-10.  By starting out 5-2 vs the division, the Giants were suddenly in unfamiliar territory in Week 13, they were 7-5 and were in a 3 way tie for the division lead with Washington and Dallas and one game ahead of the Cardinals.

The Giants would play host to a struggling AFC West Chiefs team, who came into this game at 5-7 and had the ceiling cave in on what was a promising season to start the year.  The Chiefs also started 2-0 and also were 4-4 at the halfway mark.  But they stumbled after that, losing 3 straight games heading into the Meadowlands.  The Giants suddenly were in the position that they were expected to win, and Vegas had them as a 7.5 point favorite.  The Cowboys had already won their traditional Thanksgiving game earlier in the week as they beat Patriots 20-17 and the Redskins were facing a brutal 1-10 Bills team at RFK.  It was clear the Giants needed to win this game to keep pace and couldn't afford to slip up a must-win game at home against a lesser team, but a team that nevertheless had beaten the Giants in 1983, as Bill Kenney torched the Giants for 342 yards and 4 TDs as the Giants gave up 28 straight points in a 38-17 rout.  Expectations were high as the Giants took the field.

The Game Highlights

The weather was about as good as you could expect for a post-Thanksgiving weekend game in the NY/NJ area.  A sun splashed field and temperatures in the mid 40s.  The Giants started out by kicking off as Ali Haji-Sheikh sent one down the field to JT Smith, who would rip off a nice return out to the 40 before he was stopped by Mark Haynes, playing on specials despite the fact he was a Pro Bowl corner.  Bill Kenney, a Pro Bowler in 1983, was back at QB after missing 5 weeks with a broken thumb.  He looked rusty, missing his first 2 passes and on third down took a shot from Casey Merrill and hurt his arm, which got his backup, Todd Blackledge warming up on the bench.  The 3 and out culminated in a Jim Arnold punt which was taken by Phil McConkey to the 23 yard line, where he was drilled and would not return to the game.

Phil Simms took his offense on to the field and started with a dump off to Carpenter for 2 yards.  On second down, Carpenter would plow through the line and near a first down, where was stopped just short by Deron Cherry.  Joe Morris would convert the first down on the next play, by going around left end to the 35.  A first down pass from Simms was batted down by Art Still and Bill Maas would stuff a draw play to Morris on second down.  A 3rd and 9 play would turn into a free play as Simms drew Mike Bell offsides on a hard count but his long bomb fell incomplete.  Now 3rd and 4, Simms would dump the ball off to Tony Galbreath out of the backfield, but he was stopped a yard shy of the first by Cherry and Dave Jennings would come on to punt it back to KC, where Smith would fair catch it at the 11.

Kenney recovered from the knock on his arm and came back on the field.  Billy Jackson took the first down carry and rumbled out to the 23 for a first down.  Herman Heard followed that up with a 3 yard run up the middle and then a sweep around right end for 2 more to set up a 3rd and 5.  Kenney, back in the shotgun, floated a long pass downfield to Carlos Carson, who had beaten Perry Williams on the play.  Carson dropped the ball and brought on Arnold, who punted it away to Lionel Manuel who returned the ball to the 35.

Simms' drive began with another pass knocked down by Still at the line.  A 2nd down run by Carpenter was good for 5 yards.  Simms would convert on the next play, as he hit Byron Williams for 14 yards and a first down.  Now at the 46, a trap play to Morris got the ball down to the 37.  Carpenter barely converted on short yardage, but the Giants had a new set of downs and were nearing long field goal range.  Simms took a shot deep to Manuel, but had the play broken up by Lloyd Burress.  On 2nd and 10, Simms threw a deep pass to Morris, but overthrew the 5'7" running back.  Simms 3rd down pass to Zeke Mowatt was nearly picked off by Burress.  The Giants trotted out the Sheikh to try a 52 yarder, which was right down the middle but well short and the Chiefs got the ball back.

Starting at the 35 (remember, in 1984, you got the ball from the line of scrimmage on a missed field goal, not from the point of the kick, which is what the rules are today) Kenney would hit Carson deep, but he couldn't get 2 feet down and the pass was incomplete.  LT would harass Kenney on the next play and force a hurried dump off to Heard which fell incomplete.  On 3rd down, Leonard Marshall came bearing down on Kenney and forced yet another incompletion and a 3 and out punt, which was returned by Manuel to the 29.

On first down, Morris started with a 1 yard gain and on second down, Simms dumped it off to Morris in the flat who took it to the 40 for a first down.  The Giants decided to be aggressive on their next first down play


Simms' play action pass was forced deep down the middle to Mowatt, and Cherry cut in front and picked it off and returned the ball to the 43.

Things quickly snowballed, as Kenney went deep on the first play and hit Carson who took it to the 1 yard line for a 56 yard gain and set up KC with first and goal.  A first down carry by Ken Lacy was stuffed by Jim Burt and LT for no gain.  A second down play action pass was hurried by Carl Banks, who forced an overthrow to TE Ken Beckman.  On 3rd down, Kenney missed Heard at the goal line as he threw the ball too hard and the Chiefs brought on Nick Lowery, who had never missed from inside 30 for an expected 3-0 lead


Arnold, the Pro Bowl punter, mishandled the snap and his attempted scramble to get outside and run for the TD was snuffed by LT.  It was a Tony Romo play some 23 years prior, and the game remained deadlocked at 0-0.

Carpenter would begin with a big run around the corner for 20 yards out to the 31.  After a short gain by Carpenter on the next play, Simms would be sacked by Still on 2nd down.  On 3rd and 15, Simms threw a deep pass to Byron Williams, but had the ball knocked away by Albert Lewis and set up a Jennings punt, which was fair caught at the 44.

A hold on KC's first down play set them back at 1st and 20. Rookie Gary Reasons would slam Heard on first down for no gain.  A second down run by Heard went for 11 yards before he was stopped by Kinard and set up 3rd and 9.  Kenney would throw to Henry Marshall down field, but Reasons and Haynes came up to hit Marshall short of the first and force yet another Arnold punt, who's coffin corner attempt didn't go as well as planned, with the ball going out at the 17.

Carpenter started with a 3 yard run.  Simms was sacked again, this time by Calvin Daniels and set up a 3rd and long at the 11 yard line.  Simms would throw from his own end zone to the flat to Galbreath, but the ball was broken up by Burress.  Jennings would then have a short kick which was returned by Smith out to the 39.

Billy Jackson's first down run went for no gain, but Kenney would hit Marshall for a first down to the 28.  Heard took the next carry for a short 2 yard gain and a 2nd down pass from Kenney was knocked down by Reasons.  That set up a 3rd and long and with Kenney in the gun and with time to throw, would make the Giants pay


Kenney made a risky throw down field.  Either Perry Williams or Kenny Hill was in position to pick off the ball.  And while it looked like Hill was in position to pick it off, Paige took the ball away from him for a 26 yard TD and a 7-0 lead.

The subsequent kickoff was taken by Butch Woolfolk to the 21.  Simms first down pass was a screen to Carpenter for a 10 yard gain out to the 31 and close to a first down.  Morris would get the first on a short run on the next play.  Simms would go deep to Bobby Johnson for 20 yards out near mid field.  Morris would follow that for a sweep for 16 yards and another first down to the 34.  Morris would lose 2 on his next carry, but the Giants would keep moving, as Simms hit Mowatt for 24 yards down to the 12.  After Carpenter was hit for no gain, Simms threw to Morris, who was split out at WR and Morris got it down to the 1 yard line.  On first and goal, Carpenter would cash in


The veteran fullback, following TE Mullady's block as he came in motion and plunge into the end zone tied the score at 7-7 and took some pressure off for the Giants.

The kickoff was taken by Smith out to the 26 and Kenney's first down pass was good for 22 yards to Carson down to the 48.  But the Giants defense would step up on the next play


Kenney faked his handoff and rolled to his right, where he set up and threw a pass into traffic, which was tipped and picked off by the safety Bill Currier.  Currier would return the ball to the 43.  Simms would start off by dumping a pass to Carpenter, who ran it across mid field for another first down and was finally stopped at the 44.  But Simms got sloppy on the next play


Simms had time to throw and decided to go for the home run and threw a deep pass to Williams.  However, the pass was a little behind him and the rookie Kevin Ross jumped in to make the INT and raced it back to the Giants 40.

Heard started off with a 5 yard run to the 35 where he was stopped by Banks and George Martin.  LT would stuff Heard for a short gain on 2nd down.  Kenney would hit Theotis Brown for a first down at the the 2 minute warning.  Kenney would miss Marshall on first down.  A draw to Jackson was snuffed out for a 5 yard loss as he tripped on his own feet and Harry Carson rushed in to stop him for good.  Kenney would hit Marshall for 10 yards, but not enough for a first and brought on Lowery to nail a 42 yard FG and a 10-7 KC lead with :47 to go in the half.

After a return out to the 24 yard line, Simms would start off with a dump off to Galbreath over the middle to the 30 and Simms would go to the hurry up to try to get some points to tie the game.  But disaster would strike


Wow, you couldn't draw it up any worse for the Giants.  Simms pass was tipped at the line for a 3rd time by Art Still and Lewis grabbed the deflection and ran it back to the 8 yard line.  With the crowd booing the turnover, they hadn't seen anything yet, as the next play Kenney hit TE Willie Scott over the middle for an easy TD as Harry Carson lost him in coverage and the Giants had given up 10 points in under a minute and where now down by 10 points at 17-7.

The Giants got a good return, out to the 37.  Simms in the gun threw another deep pass, which was amazingly almost picked off by Lewis again as Bobby Johnson didn't react to the pass.  With 3 seconds to go, and sufficiently spooked, Parcells mercifully called for a kneel down and a regroup at halftime down 17-7.

The second half began with a KC kickoff for a touchback.  Simms came back on the field, with 3 INTs in the first half already on his record and people wondering if he had the stuff to play in a pressure game.  Morris got the offense going with an 11 yard run on first down.  Carpenter took the next carry, cut back over the middle and gained 17 more yards to near midfield as he carried members of the KC secondary for a little ride.  Carpenter would get stuffed by Daniels for 1 yard on the next play.  Simms would miss an open Morris down the sidelines, again he was split out wide, for what would have been a good gain.  On 3rd and 9, Simms would throw a bullet to Bobby Johnson for 19 yards and a first down (though the Giants got lucky because he was ruled down on the play and he actually fumbled.  But no replay in 1984, so them's the breaks).  Morris would run for 9 more down to the 19 and Carpenter would convert for a first down on the next play.  Simms next pass was an out to Johnson, which was again nearly picked by Lewis.  A draw to Carpenter would be snuffed for just 1 yard.  On 3rd and 9, Simms would hit Galbreath, who would spin his way down to the 1 yard line and a first and goal.  Morris would get stopped for no gain on first down.  On second down, Carpenter attempted to leap over the pile again, but was also stopped short.  The Giants would go to the well again on 3rd down


The bruising fullback would get over the pile this time for a crucial TD and cut the lead to 17-14.

With the Giants crowd back to life, the Chiefs took the kickoff out to the 27.  On first down, Kenney was sacked by rookie Carl Banks on a blitz for a 10 yard loss.  An 8 yard run by Heard set up a 3rd and 12, and a pass to Scott over the middle was stopped just short of a first down on a tackle by LT, which set up another Arnold punt, who returned it 22 yards out to the 43.

Unfortunately, even with the momentum, the Giants offense stalled.  Morris was stuffed by Still, and passes to Mowatt and Galbreath were not enough for a first and Jennings punted it back to KC where Smith returned it to the 23.

Heard started with no gain on first as he was swallowed up by Marshall and LT.  Kenney would hit Carson deep down the sidelines for 25 yards, as Carson beat Haynes on the play out to near mid field.  Kenney would miss Marshall on the next play as he was under pressure from Jim Burt and LT.  Andy Headen and Reasons would nail Heard for a loss on second down to set up yet another 3rd and long.  Kenney's pass was dropped by Perry Williams and ruined a sure INT (Kenney actually rocked back on the play out of the gun before the snap.  That would have been a false start in 2013.)  Arnold had a punt block rush on him and he hurried the kick, shanking it out at the 35.

The Giant would start with a short gain by Morris and Simms would follow that with a bullet pass to Williams for a 24 yard gain out to the 40.  Carpenter was stuffed for no gain on first down and a hold on the next play set the Giants back at 2nd and 20.  Simms would then throw a deep pass to Johnson for 19 yards and just shy of the 30 for a 3rd and 1.  Carpenter would get upended and fall short of the conversion.  Deciding against trying a long FG after the Sheikh's earlier miss, Parcells decided to go for it.  But instead of handing the ball off to his bruising fullback (Carpenter) or his promising young RB (Morris), he decided to out think himself and went for the shotgun draw to Tony Galbreath.  Galbreath ran into a pile and was held short.  Turnover on downs.  Momentum squashed.

The Chiefs took control of the ball and a Billy Jackson burst was good for 19 yards, a first down and was the final play of the 3rd quarter.  On the first play of the 4th, LT pressured Kenney, who dumped it off to Heard for a 4 yard gain.  A short run by Lacy was followed by a first down pass to Carson out at the Giants 35.  A short run by Brown and 2 incomplete passes to Brown and Marshall led to a 53 yard Nick Lowery FG, to give the Chiefs a 20-14 lead.

Joe Morris returned the ensuing kickoff, but was dropped at the 10 yard line.  On first down, Simms retreated into his own end zone, and he dumped a safety valve pass to Carpenter for a 1 yard loss.  On second down, Simms narrowly avoided getting sacked for a safety, but missed a deep pass downfield to Stacy Robinson.  Simms' third down pass was knocked down by Albert Lewis and the Giants were forced to have a Jennings punt from his own end zone, which was fielded at the 50 by Smith and a short return out to the 48.

Kenney started off with an incomplete pass intended for Carson.  Lacy was stuffed for a gain of one yard by LT.  On 3rd and 9, Kenney's pass was tipped by Andy Headen, however he got enough on it to be caught by Paige for a first down.  After a Heard run for a short gain, and 9:30 to go in the game, Kenney went deep


Carlos Carson continued to burn the Giants, and Mark Haynes in particular.  In this case, he hauled in a 36 yard TD and it looked like the back breaker vs. the Giants as the Chiefs took a 27-14 lead and ruin the Giants division title hopes.

The following kickoff didn't start well, as Woolfolk bobbled the return and had to scramble to get it to the 10 yard line, where he was resoundingly booed by the Giants crowd.  Simms would come out throwing however.  He hit Mowatt on consecutive passes for 27 yards and 25 yards which got the ball to the KC 41. Another bomb by Simms, this time to Johnson, was knocked down by KC.  Undeterred, Simms threw another deep pass, this time to Morris (again at flanker) and Lewis missed the INT, which allowed Morris to get the ball to the 22 yard line.  KC's defense was on it's heels, so Simms kept up the pressure


Simms lobbed a perfect pass to Johnson, who beat Ross on the play, for a 22 yard TD catch and the Giants were right back in the game 27-21 on a 90 yard drive.

The crowd was right back in the game, as the kickoff was returned by Smith to the 27 yard line and the Chiefs offense took the field with a 6 point lead and 7:20 to go in the game.  Instead of running to kill the clock, Kenney would hit Marshall for 13 yards out to the 40 and a first down.  Martin and Burt would hit Lacy for a 2 yard gain on first down.  The 2nd down play was a safe checkdown pass to Lacy, who was hit by Carson and set up a huge 3rd and 3 play.  Kenney's third down pass was out of Brown's reach in the flat and stopped the clock.  After Arnold's punt sailed into the end zone for a touchback, the Giants go the ball at the 20 with 5:03 to go in the game.

Simms first pass, he scrambled out of pressure and threw a deep pass to Manuel, who was only able to get one foot down for an incompletion.  Simms would keep throwing, hitting Morris for 16 yards and a first down out to the 36.  Simms would take off himself on the next play, scrambling up the middle and got the ball down to the 50.  With the clock running and 4 minutes to go, Simms would hit Mowatt to the 35 and stopped the clock at 3:57.  Simms and Mowatt kept up the hot hand, this time connecting for a huge 32 yard gain down to the 3 yard line as the crowd went crazy.  The first down play was a short run by Carpenter.  But the Giants would make good on their comeback on the next play


Zeke Mowatt got open in the flat, as you could hear announcer Bob Trumpy call him out as being open seconds before Simms throw it.  The Sheikh nailed the extra point, and comeback was complete.  Giants were now in the lead 28-27 and Giants Stadium was up for grabs.  Now it was on the Giants defense to hold it.

The Chiefs started off with a return by Smith out to the 23 and the Chiefs just needed a field goal with 2:22 to go in the game and a great kicker in Lowery who already boomed a 53 yarder earlier.  On first down, Kenney would hit Marshall on a deep pass over the middle for a first down out to the 40 which took the game to the 2 minute warning.  Kenney's next pass was a deep one which was tipped and nearly picked off by the Giants' Ricky Shaw, however, his tip was nearly caught by a KC receiver for what would have been a huge gain.  On second down, the Giants defensive captain made the play.


Kenney threw the ball out to Brown, who took about one step before Harry Carson was all over him.  Carson knocked the ball loose, the Chiefs tackle Rich Baldinger had a clear shot at the recovery and blew it.    Anthony Hancock, their former first rounder at WR, also botched the attempt and actually pushed Baldinger forward.  In doing so, the ball squirted behind Baldinger and Haynes jumped into the pile to grab the ball.  As the mass of bodies had formed, Haynes snuck out of the pile with the ball and ran off to the side (which incidentally is always great when you see this happen.  The players and refs are all involved in the scrum, with all the confusion going on to see who has possession, and some guy came out of the pile already with the ball and is standing a few yards away as the refs try to figure out what happened).  In the end, it was the Giants ball at the 47 with 1:43 to go in the game.

The Giants, needing to just run out the clock, got 5 free yards when Art Still jumped offsides.  Carpenter ran for a short gain and KC called time out.  On second down, another Carpenter run up the middle, but for a first down, another KC time out with 1:26 to go.  The Giants would need 2 more Carpenter runs to seal the game and give them a huge 28-27 win which was needed to keep them alive not only for a playoff spot, but the NFC East as well.

Interesting Tidbits/ Post Mortem


  • To say the Giants needed this win was an understatement.  As noted above, the Giants needed to keep up with the Joneses in their own divison.    The Cowboys were already at 8-5 after beating the Patriots on Thanksgiving.  The Redskins blew out the Bills, 41-14 to also go to 8-5.  The Cardinals beat the Eagles, knocking Ron Jawarski out for the season in the process, and they went to 7-6.  So that was 4 teams within 1 game of each other, no margin for error.
  • As the rest of the season would play out, the Giants would beat the Jets the following week to get to 9-5.  However, they would end up dropping their last 2 games, on the road at St. Louis and then amazingly they lost a brutal 10-3 game on a Saturday at the Meadowlands to a 6-9 Saints.  The Giants, a 10 point favorite going into the game, were sacked 7 times, Simms threw 2 INTs and managed 189 total yards.  But the Giants still had hope...but it was a long shot. 
    • The Rams, who lost on the Friday before to the Niners, were 10-6, and had a better record than the Giants.
    • The Redskins (10-5) were playing the Cardinals (9-6) at RFK on Sunday. A Cardinal win would end the Giants season and give St. Louis the NFC East title as they would have swept the Redskins in 1984.  A loss would knock the Cards out of the playoffs due to the tie breakers.
    • Lastly, Dallas (9-6) was playing on Monday Night vs. the Dolphins (13-2) at Miami.  The Cowboys had lost the previous week in Dallas vs. the Redskins 30-28 on a late John Riggins TD. A Dallas win or tie and the Giants are out of the playoffs.
    • If Dallas and St. Louis both lost, a 9-7 log jam in the NFC East would somehow give the Giants the last Wild Card slot.
  • So What happened?
    •  The Redskins would blow a 26-17 lead, as Neil Lomax led them to a field goal and then a TD pass to Roy Green to take a 27-26 advantage.  The Skins would respond and win the game on a late Mark Moseley 37 yard FG and clinch the NFC East with a 29-27 win and an 11-5 record.  Cardinals, now at 9-7 were out of the playoffs because they couldn't make it in a 3 way tie with the Giants and Cowboys, and if Dallas had a win or tie, the Cowboys were in.
    • The following Monday Night, the Dolphins were playing for home field advantage, as the Broncos has won their Saturday game at the Seahawks to win the AFC West at 13-3. The Cowboys controlled their own destiny.  A win or tie and they face the Rams in the Wild Card round.  A loss and the Giants make the playoffs.  The Cowboys and Dolphins had fought to a 21-21 tie in the 4th Quarter, but Dan Marino would throw his 4th TD pass of the game, a 63 yarder to Mark Clayton would cap a 340 yard passing day, give him an NFL record 48 TD passes (which stood until Peyton Manning broke it 20 years later with 49...and was then broken by Tom Brady with 50 in 2007).  His TD would hold up, the final score was 28-21 Dolphins. Cowboys were out of the playoffs.
  • Improbably, the Giants gained the final playoff spot at 9-7.  And they actually made some noise when they got there, beating the Rams in LA in the Wild Card round, as they jumped ahead 10-0, held Eric Dickerson, who set the NFL record of 2105 rushing yards in 1984 (a record which barely withstood Adrian Peterson's charge in 2012) to 107 yards on 23 carries and scored a 16-13 upset win.  The Giants would go to San Francisco the next week, where they would fall behind 14-0 quickly, but fought back to make it 14-10 before losing 21-10 to the eventual champion Niners.  But none of this is possible if the Giants don't come back to beat KC and put them in position to win 9 games.
  • One other note about that 3 way tie.  If you want to measure the true strength of a team on it's points scored/points allowed differential, well, the St. Louis Cardinals got screwed.  The Giants and Cardinals both went 5-3 vs. the NFC East.  Dallas went 3-5.  However, the Cardinals were +78 in points scored/points allowed, good for 8th in the NFL.  The Cowboys were at a net 0.  The Giants... -2.  
  • UPDATE- Thanks to feedback from other fans, it turns out I got a detail wrong.  The season finale game vs. the Saints, actually meant nothing to the Giants, win or lose.  As it turns out, the Rams lost on Friday Night to the 49ers, which set them up at 10-6.  Meanwhile, the Giants' fortunes were totally dependent on the Cardinals and Cowboys, needing them both to lose.  If either team won, they would end up 10-6, and even if the Giants won and went to 10-6 themselves, the Giants would lose out in the tie breakers with Los Angeles in the mix.  So even though they put up a garbage effort against the Saints on the final Saturday of the season, the Giants hopes to make the playoffs came on Sunday with St. Louis and Monday with Dallas.
  • Phil Simms would throw for 343 yards in this game.  It would be his fourth 300+ yard game of 1984 (and he threw for 290 in a loss to SF earlier in the season).  Included in this stretch was a 407 yard, 4 TD effort on opening day vs. the Eagles.  His 4 games over 300 yards tied his season career high, which he also matched in the 1986 Super Bowl Championship season.  It should also be noted that Simms threw for over 300+ yards 3 times in 1985, included in there were back to back games of 432 yards vs. Dallas and 513 yards at Cincinnati.  Back in the 1980s, huge passing stats usually meant you lost the game, and that was the case here as well, as the Giants dropped both games despite nearly 1000 yards passing in 2 games from Simms.
  • Simms set 2 passing records for the Giants in this Chiefs game.  He broke Fran Tarkenton's most passes in a season mark and YA Title's season passing yardage mark.
  • Rob Carpenter scored 2 TDs in this game.  It was the only time in his Giants career that he rushed for multiple TDs in a single game.  The last, and only other time, he accomplished this feat was in 1978 as a member of the Houston Oilers in a 26-23 win at New England.
  • Carpenter's 86 yards rushing were his 2nd highest total of 1984, behind his 87 yards in a 28-7 win over Dallas in Week 2.
  • The Giants were so strapped for TE help at the goal line due to injuries in this game that they lined up DE George Martin and LB Andy Headen at TE to block.
  • Currier's interception was his first of the season for the Giants.  He would only intercept one more pass in his career, in the 1985 shutout win over the Eagles, 21-0.
  • Zeke Mowatt would have a career game for the Giants with 7 catches for 126 yards.  His next closest total yards in a game was 80 yards in a win vs. Dallas and 77 yards in a loss at St. Louis, both in 1984.
  • Mowatt had a breakout season in 1984, with 698 yards on 48 catches for the 23 year old former UDFA out of Florida State.  But his career got derailed due to a blown ACL that cost him the 1985 season.  As he went down, a rookie TE out of Notre Dame named Mark Bavaro took his spot in 1985 and would become the best TE in the NFL by 1986.  Ironically, it was a blown ACL suffered by Bavaro in a win at San Diego in 1989 which gave the starting job back to Mowatt for the remainder of the season.
  • Mowatt was also embroiled in a controversy in 1990.  Mowatt signed as a Plan B free agent by the Patriots, as his roster spot was taken by Bavaro's return from surgery and Howard Cross' continued development.  Mowatt was prominently involved in a sexual harassment scandal with Lisa Olsen, who was covering the Pats for the Boston Herald.  Mowatt would last just one season in New England and was released.  However, Mowatt would again intertwine with Bavaro.  In 1991, Bavaro failed the Giants pre-season physical and was released.  The Giants picked Mowatt back up and he played his final season in the NFL back in NY.
  • Lionel Manuel returned 3 punts in this game, and it was the first time that he was asked to return punts in the NFL as he was forced into action after McConkey's injury in the first quarter.  In all, Manuel would return 11 punts in his career, which all came in 1984 or 1986.  In fact, it was an injury to Manuel in 1986 in the Week 3 win at the Raiders that brought McConkey back to the Giants.  With Manuel out, the Giants tried Tony Galbreath and Mark Collins at returner, with Galbreath getting 1 yard on 3 returns.  The Giants needed a returner badly.  Meanwhile, McConkey had been released and was in Green Bay.  George Young reached out to the Packers and traded for McConkey, who was back with the team by Week 5 in St. Louis, where McConkey would return 7 punts and remain with the Giants through the 1988 season.
  • The Giants offensive line featured 4 key members of the "Suburbanites" group which would eventually gel to win the 1986 Super Bowl.  Brad Benson, Billy Ard, Chris Godfrey, and Karl Nelson were all on this line.  As was promising 2nd year center named Kevin Belcher, who became a starter in 1983. Belcher's career was tragically cut short due to a car accident suffered in 1985, which resulted in nerve damage and he never played again.  The Giants would replace Belcher with a former USFL star in Bart Oates.  Oates would go on to play for the Giants for 9 seasons, helping to win 2 Super Bowls and go to 3 Pro Bowls.  Oates would leave the Giants as a free agent and finish his career with the 49ers, where he would go to 2 more Pro Bowls and win another Super Bowl.  Sadly, in 2003 Belcher passed away at age 42 in his home in Texas.
  • Joe Morris came out of the backfield and lined up at WR several times in this game, which is interesting as in his prime years in 1985 and 1986, Morris was not known as a good receiver, and if anything, was subpar.  Morris' 4 catches vs. the Chiefs were a season high, as was his 56 yards.  This output was second only to his 59 yard receiving effort vs. the Redskins in 1986 in a Monday Night win (in which he also ran for 181 yards and was better known as the game in which the Mets won Game 7 of the World Series and Joe Jacoby famously was called for a false start because he was startled by the crowd cheering for the Mets as they watched on their portable TVs...no iPhones back then).
  • Morris' 50 yards rushing vs. the Chiefs was a more significant number.  It was his second highest output to that point in the season.  He would follow that with 83 yards the next week against the Jets and then 107 yards at St. Louis, his first 100 yard game of his career.  This was the point in which Parcells started to gain more confidence in Morris and began to give the ball more to the explosive Little Joe, rather than the plodding war horse in veteran Rob Carpenter.  This would set the stage for Morris' 1985 season: 1336 yards and 21 TDs.
  • Banks' sack was the lone one of the game for the Giants.  It was his first sack at Giants Stadium, but not his first career sack.  He registered that in a 19-7 win at Atlanta (he had 2 sacks that day).
  • Dave Jennings was showing signs of age by this time in his career.  A few times the Giants needed a big punt deep from their own end and Jennings couldn't get the job done.  He averaged a pedestrian 38.6 yards on 5 punts vs. the Chiefs.  In fact, in the last 9 games of 1984, Jennings never averaged more than 40.0 yards on punts a game.  It was no surprise that after 1984, the Giants moved on from Jennings and signed another former USFL'er in Sean Landeta.  Jennings would finish up his career staying in NY by going to the Jets.
  • Though the family of Lamar Hunt might be thought to be in control of the Chiefs, the Giants tend to own them when they meet.  Since their loss in 1983, the Giants are 6-1 vs. the Chiefs.  Their only loss in that stretch was at Kansas City in OT in 1995.  In that game, the Giants blew a 17-3 lead, highlighted by Keith Hamilton picking up a fumble and rumbling it back 87 yards before running out of gas and fumbling, which was then recovered by Tito Wooten for a TD.  The Giants were unable to convert a 3rd and 1 as they were driving for a score, because Dave Brown's shoe fell off on a QB sneak and he got stuffed and the Giants had to punt.  In overtime, the KC running back Greg Bell fumbled the ball, but Mo Douglass of the Giants missed the recovery and set up a Lin Elliott game winner.
  • The Chiefs would actually rebound well from this gut wrenching loss to the Giants.  They went on to win their last 3 games and finish the season 8-8.  Part of this streak included a 34-7 blowout victory over the Seahawks, who would finish the season at 12-4, and had blown out KC by the score of 45-0 six weeks prior and started the Chiefs midseason swoon.  That loss would haunt Seattle, as they finished one game behind the 13-3 Broncos and made them a Wild Card team.  Seattle would beat the Raiders in the Wild Card round, but would lose the following week at Miami to the eventual AFC Champions.
  • KC had a young secondary which would become one of the best in the NFL.  They featured Deron Cherry (6 Pro Bowls), Albert Lewis (4 Pro Bowls), Kevin Ross (2 Pro Bowls), Lloyd Burress (1 Pro Bowl).  A grand total of 13 appearances for this quartet from 1983-1990.
  • A little more about Albert Lewis, who picked off 2 passes in this game.  Lewis was an amazing special teams player in his career.  He blocked an amazing 11 kicks over the course of his career with KC.  Included in there was a blocked punt in the AFC Wild Card game as he blocked a Dave Jennings punt and returned it for a TD in the Chiefs loss to the Jets in 1986.
  • Carlos Carson, a Pro Bowler at WR in 1983 for KC, torched the Giants for 153 yards on 5 catches for an average of 30.6 yards per catch, his highest single game total of 1984.  His 153 yards was the second best of the season, behind 165 yards in a win over the Chargers.
  • JT Smith was the Chiefs return man and he actually had a remarkable career in hindsight.  Smith joined the Chiefs in 1978 after he was released by the Redskins.  He would become one of the NFL's best return men in KC, leading the NFL in punt return yardage in 1979 and 1980 and made the Pro Bowl as a returner in 1980.  He also scored 4 TDs on punts in that 2 year span.  By 1981, Smith was transitioning more into a WR, catching 63 passes.  Injuries set in though, limiting him to 14 games total in 1982 and 1983.  Smith returned to health in 1984, but at age 29, was putting up journeyman type stats on returns (8.5 yards per return).  Smith would be let go from the Chiefs and landed in St. Louis where he would start his comeback.  At age 30, he caught 43 passes in 1985.  In 1986, he improved more, catching 80 balls for 1014 yards.  By 1987, Smith led the NFL with 91 catches and 1117 yards (it should be noted, Smith crossed the picket line and played in the 3 replacement games, catching 15 passes for 217 yards in that span).  At age 33 in 1988, Smith would make the Pro Bowl as a WR with 83 catches for 986 yards.  He would finally retire after the 1990 season, but in his six seasons with the Cardinals, he caught 377 passes, all after age 29.  Maybe the Chiefs should have hung on to him.








2 comments:

  1. Excellent work, as always. I simply love this blog. Please keep up the great work... Thanks. GO GIANTS!!! ~Sash

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  2. If my memory serves correctly, the Saints game was not entirely meaningless. The Giants needed a Cowboys and Cardinals loss to make the playoffs. However, I believe that if either the Cowboys or Cardinals game had ended in a tie, the Giants would have made the playoffs with a win against the Saints and would not with a loss.

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