1967 NFL Championship Game

1967 NFL Championship Game
1234 Total
Dallas Cowboys 01007 17
Green Bay Packers 7707 21
Date December 31, 1967
Stadium Lambeau Field, Green Bay, WI
Favorite Green Bay by 6⅓
Referee Norm Schachter
Attendance 50,861
TV in the United States
Network CBS
Announcers Ray Scott and Jack Buck (play by play), Frank Gifford (color commentator), Pat Summerall and Tom Brookshier (sideline reporters)
Radio in the United States
Network CBS (national)
KLIF (Dallas)
WTMJ (Milwaukee)
Announcers Jack Drees, Jim Morse (CBS)
Bill Mercer, Blackie Sherrod (KLIF)
Ted Moore, Chuck Johnson (WTMJ)
Lambeau 
Field 
Location in the United States
Lambeau 
Field 
Location in Wisconsin

The 1967 National Football League Championship Game was the 35th NFL championship, played on December 31 at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin.[1][2]

It determined the NFL's champion, which met the AFL's champion in Super Bowl II, then formally referred to as the second AFL-NFL World Championship Game. The Dallas Cowboys (9-5), champions of the Eastern Conference, traveled north to meet the Western champion Green Bay Packers (9–4–1), the two-time defending league champions. It was a rematch of the previous year's title game, and pitted two future Hall of Fame head coaches against each other, Tom Landry for the Cowboys and Vince Lombardi for the Packers.

Because of the adverse conditions in which the game was played, the rivalry between the two teams, and the game's dramatic climax, it has been immortalized as the Ice Bowl and is considered one of the greatest games in NFL history.

Route to the NFL championship

The NFL added a 16th team in 1967 and realigned to four divisions, with each winner advancing to the postseason. Future hall of fame head coach Tom Landry of Dallas led his team to first place in the Capitol Division with a 9–5 record. The Green Bay Packers, and future hall of fame head coach Vince Lombardi, won the Central Division with a 9–4–1 record.

1967 NFL playoffs

Main article: 1967 NFL playoffs

In the first round of the four-team playoffs, the Cowboys met the Century Division champions, the Cleveland Browns (9–5) for the Eastern Conference title. In the Western Conference, the Packers hosted the Los Angeles Rams (11–1–2), the Coastal Division champions (with the league's best record). The Baltimore Colts of the Coastal Division were also 11–1–2, but lost the tiebreaker to the Rams and were excluded from the postseason.

At the Cotton Bowl, in a spectacular game by quarterback Don Meredith, the Cowboys obliterated the Browns 52–17.[3] In the week prior to the Rams game, the fire-brand[4] Lombardi inspired his team all week with a rendition of St. Paul's Run to Win letter to the Corinthians[5][6] and, in what Bart Starr would later say was Lombardi's most rousing pre-game speech, incited his team[7] to a 28–7 victory over the Rams at Milwaukee County Stadium.[8]

The home field for the NFL Championship alternated between the two conferences; even-numbered years were hosted by the Eastern and odd-numbered by the Western. Starting with the 1975 season, playoff sites were determined by regular season record, rather than a rotational basis.

Buildup

The 1967 game was a rematch of the previous season's, played in Dallas on January 1, 1967.[9] More than two years after football had become the most popular televised sport in the nation,[10] this game featured a match up that all of America hoped for in the NFL Championship.[9]

Landry's and Lombardi's paths crossed in 1954 with the New York Giants when Lombardi became the offensive coordinator and Landry, the left cornerback for the Giants, took on the added role of defensive coordinator.[11] Landry was the best defensive mind of his era and Lombardi was the best offensive coach of his era.[12] From a personality standpoint, Landry and Lombardi were the antithesis of each other. Lombardi was a vociferously demanding coach[13] who would respond with the greatest elation to success and tremendous sadness to the slightest setback. Landry was stoic and calm in even the most tense situations.

The Vegas betting line listed the Packers as 6 1/2 point favorites.[14] The Cowboys would employ their vaunted "Doomsday Defense", a nickname given to the defensive unit by a Dallas journalist because it had been successful at making goal line stands.[15] The eight-year-old Dallas franchise was trying to win its first ever world championship.[16] The Packers were on a quest to achieve what had never been done before—three consecutive world championships.[17] To the game, Green Bay brought its renowned Lombardi sweep and the Cowboys brought a defensive scheme, the Flex, which was specifically designed by Landry to stop the "running to daylight" tactic the Packers employed in their sweep.[18] Although the Packers and the Chicago Bears were arch-rivals,[19][20][21][22] Lombardi's most passionate game planning was in preparing for Landry's "Flex".[23]

Saturday, on the eve of the game, NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle called Jim Kensil and Don Weiss, the executive directors of the NFL,[24] for an update on the weather conditions.[8] It is suspected that they informed him that Sunday's game time temperature of about 5° was playable. Rozelle, who in June 1966 had seen to it that the AFL-NFL Championship game would always be in a warm weather city,[25] inquired if the game could be postponed until Monday. Predictions held Monday would be even colder than Sunday and the game was not postponed.[8] Little did they know that the cold front would be far colder and would arrive much sooner than expected. The Packers, who had for years eschewed late-season home games because of the cold winters,[26] would play host to the Cowboys in a game that would mark the coldest New Year's Eve in the history of Green Bay[27] and the coldest title game in the history of the NFL,[28] a record that still stands.[29] David Maraniss recounts in his 1999 Vince Lombardi biography When Pride Still Mattered that Packer safety Willie Wood left his home Sunday morning to find that his car's battery frozen and dead. When a local service-station attendant was summoned to start the car, Wood told him "It's just too cold to play. They're going to call this game off."[30]

"The Ice Bowl"

Weather

Dubbed by the sports media as "The Ice Bowl", the game-time temperature at Lambeau Field was about −15 °F (−26 °C), with an average wind chill around −48 °F (−44 °C); under the revised National Weather Service wind chill index implemented in 2001, the average wind chill would have been −36 °F (−38 °C).[31] Lambeau Field's turf-heating system malfunctioned, and when the tarpaulin was removed from the field before the game, it left moisture on the field, which flash-froze in the extreme cold, leaving an icy surface that became worse as more and more of the field fell into the shadow of the stadium.[32] The heating system, made by General Electric, cost $80,000 and was bought from the nephew of George Halas, George Halas Jr. On the sidelines before the game, some Dallas players believed that Lombardi had purposely removed power to the heating coils.[33] The heating system would eventually be given the moniker Lombardi's Folly.[34] The prior convention to prevent the football field from icing up was to cover the field with dozens of tons of hay.[35]

The University of Wisconsin–La Crosse (then Wisconsin State University–La Crosse) Marching Chiefs band was scheduled to perform the pre-game and half-time shows. However, during warm-ups in the brutal cold, the woodwind instruments froze and would not play; the mouthpieces of brass instruments got stuck to the players' lips; and seven members of the band were transported to local hospitals for hypothermia. The band's further performances were canceled for the day. During the game, an elderly spectator in the stands died from exposure.[36]

Prior to the game, many of the Green Bay players were unable to start their cars in the freezing weather, forcing them to make alternate travel arrangements to make it to the stadium on time. Linebacker Dave Robinson had to flag down a random passing motorist for a ride. The referees for the game found they did not have sufficient clothing for the cold, and had to make an early trip to a sporting goods store for earmuffs, heavy gloves, and thermal underwear.[37] Packers quarterback Bart Starr attended an early church service with his father, who had visited for the game, and as Starr later said, "It was so cold that neither of us talked about it. Nobody wanted to bring it up."

The officials were unable to use their whistles after the opening kick-off. As referee Norm Schachter blew his metal whistle to signal the start of play, it froze to his lips. As he attempted to free the whistle from his lips, the skin ripped off and his lips began to bleed. The conditions were so hostile that instead of forming a scab, the blood simply froze to his lip. For the rest of the game, the officials used voice commands and calls to end plays and officiate the game. At one point during the game, CBS announcer Frank Gifford said on air, "I'm going to take a bite of my coffee."[38]

Media

The game was televised by CBS, with play by play being done by Ray Scott for the first half and Jack Buck for the second half, while Frank Gifford handled the color commentary for the entire game.[39] Pat Summerall and Tom Brookshier served as sideline reporters.

Gifford and Summerall were intimately aware of the personality differences that existed between Landry and Lombardi because they had both played on the New York Giants during Landry's and Lombardi's tenure at the Giants. Over 30 million people would tune in to watch the game.

No copy of the complete telecast is known to exist. Some excerpts (such as the announcers' pre-game comments on the field) were saved and are occasionally re-aired in retrospective features. The Cowboys' radio broadcast on KLIF, with Bill Mercer announcing, and the Packers' radio broadcast on WTMJ, with Ted Moore announcing, still exist.[40]

Action

Aided by two Dallas penalties and a 17-yard reception from Donny Anderson, Green Bay opened up the scoring with an 83-yard, 16-play drive that took nearly 9 minutes off the clock. Bart Starr finished the drive with an 8-yard touchdown pass to Boyd Dowler, giving the team a 7–0 first quarter lead. Green Bay's defense quickly forced a punt, and their offense stormed back for another score, this time driving 65 yards. After a 13-yard run by Ben Wilson and a 6-yard run by Travis Williams, the Packers moved to a third-and one on the Dallas 43-yard line. Starr faked to Ben Wilson and threw a 43-yard touchdown pass to Dowler who got behind Mel Renfro, making the score 14–0. Then on the second play of the Cowboys ensuing drive, defensive back Herb Adderley intercepted Don Meredith's pass and returned it 15 yards to the Dallas 32. But after a run for no gain and an incompletion, Cowboys lineman George Andrie sacked Starr for a 10-yard loss, pushing Green Bay out of field goal range.

Dallas' offense went the entire second quarter without gaining a first down, but Green Bay committed two costly turnovers that led to 10 Dallas points. First, Starr lost a fumble while being sacked by Cowboys lineman Willie Townes. Andrie recovered the ball and returned it 7 yards for a touchdown, cutting the lead in half. Then, with time almost out in the second quarter, Packers safety Willie Wood fumbled a Dallas punt after calling for a fair catch, and Cowboys rookie defensive back Phil Clark recovered the ball at the Green Bay 17-yard line. The Packers were able to keep Dallas out of the end zone, but kicker Danny Villanueva kicked a 21-yard field goal to cut the deficit to 14–10 by halftime.

In the third quarter, the Cowboys finally managed to get a sustained drive going, moving the ball to the Green Bay 18-yard line. But Packers linebacker Lee Roy Caffey ended the drive by forcing a fumble from Meredith that was recovered by Adderley. Then after a Packers punt, Dallas once again got moving with a drive to the Green Bay-30-yard line. But once again they failed to score as Caffey sacked Meredith for a 9-yard loss on third down and Villanueva missed a 47-yard field goal attempt.

On the first play of the final quarter, the Cowboys took a 17–14 lead with running back Dan Reeves' 50-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Lance Rentzel on a halfback option play.

Later in the quarter, a 15-yard facemask penalty on Dallas rookie Dick Daniels during a Wood punt return gave Green Bay the ball on the Cowboys 47-yard line. The Packers then drove into scoring range and had a chance to tie the game, but kicker Don Chandler missed a 40-yard field goal attempt.

With just over 5 minutes remaining, Villanueva punted the ball deep into Packer territory, and Wood returned it nine yards[41] before being brought down at the Packers own 32-yard line.[42]

The Drive

In their last offensive drive, the Packers took over possession at their own 32-yard line with 4:50 left in regulation time.[43] With the wind chill around −70 °F / −57 °C,[44] (or −50 °F / −46 °C)[45] Starr led his team down the field. He began the drive with a double fake to his backs, but after no one was open downfield he flipped a safety valve pass to running back Donny Anderson who gained six yards. Fullback Chuck Mercein then picked up seven on a sweep around right end, and went out of bounds to stop the clock. Starr dropped straight back on first down and fired a 13-yard pass to Dowler over the middle. Cornell Green's tackle slammed the receiver's helmet off the icy turf, and Max McGee replaced Dowler. Dallas end Willie Townes broke through and smothered Anderson for a 9-yard loss on what was supposed to be a halfback option play.

Anderson had told Starr on the sideline that he could pick up 8 to 10 yards on dump passes since the Dallas linebackers were laying back. Starr used this tip to complete two passes to Anderson for 12 and 9 yards, gaining a key first down on the Dallas 30. Anderson juked linebacker Chuck Howley on both plays and ran by him as Howley sprawled on the icy turf. Mercein told Starr he was also open on the left, and Starr flipped him a pass that the fullback carried down to the Cowboys 11-yard line and out of bounds with 1:11 to play. Then Starr called a play he had kept ready for the right situation, 54-Give, a play that Lombardi frankly called the "sucker" play in the Packer playbook.[46] Left Guard Gale Gillingham pulled to his right like it was a typical sweep, and Cowboy right tackle Bob Lilly with his great reflexes instantly followed Gillingham. The Packers' Bob Skoronski blocked Cowboy end George Andrie and Mercein shot through the hole to the Cowboys' 3-yard line. Anderson carried on the next play to the 1-yard line for a first down (some Cowboys thought Anderson scored on this play, but the officials missed it).[47] Twice Anderson attempted to run the ball into the end zone, but both times he slipped on the icy field before taking the handoff and was tackled at the 1-yard line. The second time he almost fell down before Starr gave him the ball. By then the thermometer read −20 °F/ −29 °C, and the Packers called their last timeout.

The Block

On third-and-goal at the Dallas two-foot line with 16 seconds remaining, Starr went to the sidelines to confer with Lombardi.[48] Starr had asked right guard Jerry Kramer whether he could get enough traction on the icy turf for a wedge play, and Kramer responded with an unequivocal yes.[49] Summerall told the rest of CBS crew to get ready for a roll-out pass, because without any timeouts remaining a failed run play would end the game. Landry would say he expected a rollout pass attempt because an incompletion would stop the clock and allow the Packers one more play on fourth down, either for a touchdown (to win) or a field goal attempt (to tie and send the game into overtime).[50] But Green Bay's pass protection on the slick field had been seriously tested during the game; the Cowboys had sacked Starr eight times.[51]

On the sidelines, according to Starr, he told Lombardi, "Coach, the linemen can get their footing for the Wedge, but the backs are slipping. I'm right there, I can just shuffle my feet and lunge in." Lombardi told Starr, "Run it, and let's get the hell out of here!" Lombardi was asked by Pat Peppler what play Starr would call, to which Lombardi replied, "Damned if I know."[52] Starr returned to the huddle and called a Brown right 31 Wedge,[53][54] a play intended for the fullback, but did not tell his teammates he was keeping the ball.[55][56][57] Kramer and center Ken Bowman executed a post-drive block (double-team) on left defensive tackle Jethro Pugh and Starr lunged across the goal line for a 20–17 lead.[58]

Radio calls of the Block
"Here are the Packers, third down, inches to go, to paydirt. 17-14, Cowboys out in front, Packers trying for the go-ahead score. Starr begins the count. Takes the snap...He's got the quarterback sneak and he's in for the touchdown and the Packers are out in front! 20-17! And 13 seconds showing on the clock and the Green Bay Packers are going to be...World Champions, NFL Champions, for the third straight year!" Ted Moore, Packers radio announcer
"About a half-yard to go, here come the Packers up again. Mercein sets his feet. Bart Starr's all set...16 seconds left... Starr's in, touchdown!" (About 12 seconds of crowd noise) "And the crowd has gone wild and ran onto the field with 16, 13 seconds left, the Packers are ahead." Bill Mercer, Cowboys radio announcer

Conclusion

Don Chandler kicked the extra point to make the score 21–17. Dallas downed the kickoff in their end zone, and after two Dallas incompletions the game was over.[59] At the conclusion of the game, jubilant Packer fans streamed onto the field knocking over Packer and Cowboy players alike.[60] Since the playoff era began in 1933, the 1967 Packers are the only team to win a third consecutive NFL title.(The 1931 Packers won a third consecutive, but without a postseason.)

Aftermath

Emotionally, both the Packers[61] and Cowboys[62] players were spent. In the Packers' locker room, the players openly wept.[61] Kramer told interviewers, "Many things have been said about Coach (Lombardi). And he is not always understood by those who quote him. The players understand. This is one beautiful man."[63] Packers Linebacker Ray Nitschke developed frostbite in his feet, causing his toenails to fall off and his toes to turn purple.[64] Bart Starr had frostbite on his fingers and several Packer players were suffering from flu-like symptoms.[65] Cowboys George Andrie, Willie Townes, and Dick Daniels also suffered frostbite from the game.[66]

The furthest thing from Starr's mind was the thought of playing in the AFL-NFL World Championship Game. To him, this was the Packers' championship game.[67] Green Bay went on to finish the postseason by easily[68] defeating the American Football League (AFL) champion Oakland Raiders in the second AFL-NFL World Championship Game.[69]

Brookshier and other journalists went into the winning locker room for post-game interviews. At some point, journalists had become aware of the significance of the block Kramer and Bowman had placed on Pugh.[70] Of the eleven cameras Ed and Steve Sabol set up to film the game, the pivot and motion capabilities of Camera Five had become frozen by the time Starr's sneak occurred. This particular camera, however, was fortuitously positioned to offer a perfect view of the block.[71] CBS had been replaying the block repeatedly and had been giving the TV audience a detailed perspective of the workings of the offensive and defensive line.

Frank Gifford recounted in his 1993 autobiography The Whole Ten Yards that he requested and received permission from CBS producers to go into the losing locker room for on-air post-game interviews—a practice unheard of in that era. Gifford, as a New York Giants player and a broadcaster, already enjoyed a friendship with Meredith, and he approached the quarterback for his thoughts on the game. The exhausted Meredith, in an emotion-choked voice, expressed pride in his teammates' play, and said, in a figurative sense, that he felt the Cowboys did not really lose the game because the effort expended was its own reward. Gifford wrote that the interview attracted considerable attention, and that Meredith's forthcoming and introspective responses played a part in his selection for ABC's Monday Night Football telecasts three years later.[72] Defensive tackle Bob Lilly took a different view, telling reporters that the Cowboys were a great team except that they could not win the "big one". Wide receiver Lance Rentzel later remarked that on the team plane home from Green Bay to Dallas' Love Field, "not one word was spoken the entire flight."

Scoring summary

Kickoff 1:00 pm CST

Source:The NFL's Official Encyclopedic History of Professional Football, (1973), p. 121, Macmillan Publishing Co. New York, NY, LCCN 73-3862

Final statistics

Statistical comparison

Dallas Cowboys Green Bay Packers
First downs1118
First downs rushing45
First downs passing610
First downs penalty13
Total yards192195
Passing yards100115
Passing – Completions-attempts11–2614–24
Passing – Yards per attempt3.84.8
Interceptions-return yards0–01–15
Rushing yards9280
Rushing attempts3332
Yards per rush2.82.5
Penalties-yards7–582–10
Fumbles-lost3–13–2
Punts-Average8–39.18–28.8

Individual statistics

Cowboys Passing
C/ATT Yds TD INT
Don Meredith 10/25 59 0 1
Dan Reeves 1/1 53 1 0
Cowboys Rushing
Car Yds TD
Don Perkins 17 51 0
Dan Reeves 13 42 0
Don Meredith 1 9 0
Cowboys Receiving
Rec Yds TD
Bob Hayes 3 16 0
Dan Reeves 3 11 0
Lance Rentzel 2 61 1
Franklin Clarke 2 24 0
Packers Passing
C/ATT Yds TD INT
Bart Starr 14/24 191 2 0
Packers Rushing
Car Yds TD
Donny Anderson 18 35 0
Chuck Mercein 6 20 0
Travis Williams 4 13 0
Ben Wilson 3 11 0
Bart Starr 1 1 1
Packers Receiving
Rec Yds TD
Boyd Dowler 4 77 2
Donny Anderson 4 44 0
Carroll Dale 3 44 0
Chuck Mercein 2 22 0
Travis Williams 1 4 0

Legacy

The game was the end of an era and the beginning of another.[66] This would be the last year the NFL championship game was considered more important than the AFL-NFL World Championship Game, for in the following year Joe Namath and the New York Jets staged an upset victory over the Baltimore Colts that would bring the AFL to full legitimacy and validate the merger of the two leagues that had been agreed upon in 1966 and would be consummated in 1970.[73] Landry, not alone, believed that football games should never be held in weather conditions so harsh.[74] In the post-merger era of the NFL, the World Championship Game (as it is officially called) would be offered to cities on a bid, and no outdoor stadium in a cold-weather city would be offered the World Championship Game until 2013, when MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey hosted Super Bowl XLVIII on February 2, 2014.[29]

With Green Bay having won five NFL championships in seven years[75] and the first two Super Bowls, Vince Lombardi retired as head coach of the Packers on February 1, 1968, but retained his position of general manager for the 1968 season.[69] Many Dallas players described this game as the most devastating loss of the 19661970 period. Having lost this game and the 1966 title game in the waning seconds of each game, Landry was subject to criticism that he was unable to win the Big One,[66] a stigma that persisted until Dallas won its first NFL title in the 1971 season. In the three seasons following 1967, the Cowboys suffered two upsets in the playoffs to the Cleveland Browns, then lost Super Bowl V to the Baltimore Colts 13–16 on a last-second field goal. Schramm considered this game to be turning point to Dallas becoming America's Team because of the way the Cowboys battled back in the game.[76]

There has been a bit of revisionism in some Cowboy memories concerning the game. Frank Clarke thought the Packer final drive was "lucky football," though Chuck Howley acknowledged that the Cowboy double coverage on the wide receivers left the backs open underneath. Cornell Green even claimed that a bad pass interference call, "the worst call I've seen in history," on Dave Edwards aided the Packer final drive: "That was the game."[77] In reality, the play Green recalled in which Starr threw a pass behind Donny Anderson happened back in the first quarter; but the call was defensive holding (Willie Townes held tight end Marv Fleming), a 5-yard penalty, and the infraction occurred before Starr threw the pass. There were no penalties called on either team during the final Packer drive. Even Tom Landry in the NFL Film of the Ice Bowl stated that if he had realized the field was frozen, the Cowboys would have switched to a zone defense. It is difficult to see how anyone could not realize the field was frozen after watching both Craig Baynham and Meredith slip to the turf on the previous Dallas possession.

If the Packers did not score on the final drive, Lombardi likely would not have become the iconic fixture in football that he is.[78] Landry later remarked that on the "tundra"[79] of Lambeau Field the better team lost,[80] and that it was Lombardi's ability to develop character in his Packers that gave them the ability to never lose hope.[81] Schramm believed that Lombardi's installation of the heating-coils under the playing field showed he was more concerned with sportsmanship than winning.[82] At Lombardi's funeral mass in 1970 in New York, Terence Cardinal Cooke gave the eulogy, based on Lombardi's favorite scripture, St. Paul's Run to Win letter to the Corinthians.[83]

Interviewed by reporters amid the Packers' post-game celebrations, Jerry Kramer's comments about Lombardi were widely quoted later. Intimating that past press treatments of the coach, including an unflattering 1967 Esquire magazine piece by sportswriter Leonard Schecter were unfair, Kramer said "Many things have been said about Coach. And he is not always understood by those who quote him. The players understand. This is one beautiful man."[84]

The synergy between Gifford and Meredith in the post-game interview prompted Roone Arledge to team Gifford with Meredith and Howard Cosell for the second season of Monday Night Football in 1971.[85] Don Meredith would never win a championship, but he would later become more famous as an announcer for Monday Night Football than he had been as a player. Although Landry and Lombardi were very different, they did respect each other and regarded each other as friends.[86]

A few months later, Lombardi assembled family members, friends and journalists to his home to watch The Greatest Challenge, the 1967 Packers season highlight film, which was produced by Ed Sabol and his son, Steve, and narrated by John Facenda.[87] In the finale of the film, Facenda would say of the Green Bay Packers:

They will be remembered as the faces of victory. They will be remembered for their coach, whose iron discipline was the foundation on which they built a fortress. And most of all, they will be remembered as a group of men who faced the greatest challenge their sport has ever produced—and conquered.

[88]

NFL Films produced 2 highlight films of the Ice Bowl itself, one called "A Chilling Championship" narrated by William Woodson, and another version which was the NFL Game of the Week with a different narrator. Those films were then later used to produce the NFL Films recreation of the game in their "Greatest Games Series", released on VHS and on the Packers History DVD.

On the NFL Network's countdown program, The NFL Top 10, the Ice Bowl has been named the top or near the top of several lists such as:

Ice Bowl II

Since the original Ice Bowl game, there have been other playoff games at Lambeau Field that have been dubbed by fans and/or the media as "Ice Bowl II":

Future Pro Football Hall of Fame inductees involved in the game

Packers

Cowboys

Officials

The NFL had six game officials in 1967; the line judge was added two seasons earlier in 1965 and the side judge arrived eleven years later in 1978.

See also

Citations

  1. Strickler, George (January 1, 1968). "Packers win, 21-17, in last seconds!". Chicago Tribune. p. 1, section 3.
  2. Lea, Bud (January 1, 1968). "Packers topple Dallas, 21-17". Milwaukee Sentinel. p. 1, part 2.
  3. St. John, 2000 pg. 147
  4. MacCambridge, 2004–2005 pg. 290
  5. O'Brien, 1987 pg. 300
  6. Claerbaut, 2004 pg. 222
  7. O'Brien, 1987 pg. 301
  8. 1 2 3 Davis, 2008 pg. 347
  9. 1 2 St. John, 2000 pg. 248
  10. MacCambridge, 2004–2005 pg. 267
  11. St. John, 2000 pg.172, 173
  12. Gruver, 2002 pg. 212
  13. Claerbaut, 2004 pg. 237
  14. Shropshire, 1997 pg. 159
  15. Gruver, 2002 pg.208
  16. http://weatherstories.ssec.wisc.edu/stories/icebowl.html
  17. Claerbaut, 2004 pg 212–213
  18. MacCambridge, 2004–2005 pg. 291
  19. Claerbaut, 2004 pg. 138–139
  20. Gruver, 1998 pg. 80
  21. Shropshire, 1997 pg. 6, 38
  22. Eisenberg, 2009 pg. 151
  23. Shropshire, 1997 pg. 160
  24. Phillips, 2001 pg. 166
  25. Davis, 2008 pg. 330
  26. Eisenberg, 2009 pg. 192
  27. St. John, 2000 pg. 249
  28. Gruver, 2002 pg. 224
  29. 1 2 "Owners warm up to New York/New Jersey as Super Bowl XLVIII host". NFL. Associated Press. May 25, 2010. Retrieved May 25, 2010.
  30. Maraniss, 1999, pg. 411
  31. http://www.crh.noaa.gov/news/display_cmsstory.php?wfo=grb&storyid=99351&source=0
  32. Maraniss, David (2000). When Pride still Mattered New York: Simon and Schuster ISBN 0-684-87018-5
  33. Gruver, 2002 pg. 251
  34. Gruver, 2002 pg. 21
  35. Maraniss, 1999 pg. 420
  36. Shropshire, 1997 pg. 173
  37. Gruver, 2002 pg.
  38. Shropshire, 1997 pg. 189
  39. Gruver, 2008 pg. 186
  40. Gruver, 1998 pg. 190
  41. Gruver, 1998 pg. 254
  42. Gruver, 2002 pg. 210
  43. http://www.footballxos.com/download/offense/pro-offense/1966-Green-Bay-Packers-Offense-Vince-Lombardi.pdf
  44. Gruver, 1998 pg. 200
  45. Gruver, 1998 pg. 203
  46. Gruver, 1998 pg. 202
  47. Ribowski, 2014 pg. 299
  48. Gruver, 2008 pg. 253
  49. Maraniss, 1999 pg. 424
  50. Maraniss, 1999 pg. 414
  51. Phillips, 2001 pg. 173
  52. Claerbaut, 2004 pg. 229
  53. Kramer, 2006 pg. 210
  54. Shropshire, 1997 pg. 193–194
  55. Mercein thought he was to take a hand-off from Starr, and once he realized that Starr was running a sneak, he unsuccessfully tried to stop his forward momentum. Mercein raised his hands as he fell onto the pile to show that he did not push Starr into the end zone, which would have resulted in a penalty.(multiple sources) Gruver, 2002 pg. 227
  56. Gruver, 2002, pg. 239
  57. Kramer, 2006 pg. 211
  58. 1 2 Gruver, 2002 pg. 256
  59. Ribowski, 2014 pg. 300
  60. Marannis, 1999, pg. 427
  61. Gruver, 2002 pg. 259
  62. Gruver, 2002 pg. 258–259
  63. 1 2 3 St. John, 2000 pg. 151
  64. Claerbaut, 2004 pg. 230
  65. Shropshire, 1997 pg. 199
  66. 1 2 Claerbaut, 2004 pg. 234
  67. Kramer, 2006 pg.212
  68. Gruver, 2002 pg. 215–216
  69. Gifford and Waters, 1993, pg. 243
  70. MacCambridge, 2004–2005 pg. 338
  71. St. John, 2000 pg. 149
  72. MacCambridge, 2004–2005 pg. 306
  73. Shropshire, 2004 pg.199
  74. Golenbock, 2005, Chapter 28, "The Ice Bowl"
  75. MacCambridge, 2004–2005 pg. 305
  76. Maule, Tex (January 8, 1968). "The Old Pro Goes in for Six". Sports Illustrated. pp. 10–15. Retrieved July 28, 2016.
  77. St. John, 2000 pg. 150
  78. O'Brien, 1987 pg.307–308
  79. Shropshire, 1997 pg. 163
  80. Maraniss, 1999 pg. 499
  81. Maraniss, 1999 pg.427
  82. Davis, 2008 pg. 354
  83. St. John, 2000 pg. 179
  84. Maraniss, 1999 pg. 330, 428
  85. Maraniss, 1999 pg. 428

Sources

Further reading

External links

Coordinates: 44°30′04″N 88°03′43″W / 44.501°N 88.062°W / 44.501; -88.062

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