Sunday, January 31, 2021

1985 Bears Postseason Flashback: "Men Against Boys"


In the two weeks between the Bears’ dismantling of the Los Angeles Rams in the NFC championship game and their date with destiny in Super Bowl XX, Chicagoans were guardedly optimistic. Their teams had a history of near misses and other failures that made it impossible for many fans to fully savor the ride on which the Bears were taking them.
The Bears themselves were confident that they could not lose. Oddsmakers made them double-digit favorites, and the Bears swaggered into New Orleans as conquering heroes. Certainly no team ever entered the Super Bowl with a more colorful cast of characters. Their propensity for unpredictable quotes made the Bears an ongoing media event. One New Orleans sportscaster—not content with the actual outrageous statements of the Bears—falsely reported that quarterback Jim McMahon had called the local women “a bunch of sluts.” This was a rare instance in which the controversial McMahon was blameless. However, he did moon photographers at a workout to show them, he said, the part of his anatomy that was being treated with acupuncture.
The AFC champion New England Patriots were almost forgotten in the general hubbub surrounding the Bears. It wasn’t that the Patriots weren’t deserving (they had won 12 of their last 14 games); it was just that they weren’t the Miami Dolphins—with whom the Bears wished to settle accounts. But the Dolphins hadn’t made it to New Orleans, and the Patriots would have to do.
In a meeting of the Bears’ defensive coaches and players the night before the Super Bowl, Buddy Ryan all but confirmed the rumors that he was leaving to become head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles. “Whatever happens tomorrow,” he told the players, “I want you to know that you’re my heroes.” He then left the room, overcome with emotion. 
The group began watching some film of the Patriots. After just a few minutes, Dan Hampton concluded that the session had gone on long enough. He kicked the projector off its stand. Steve McMichael then hurled a chair through the chalkboard on which some plays had been diagrammed. “Let’s get the hell out of here!” said Hampton. Without anyone saying another word, the players all got up and walked out of the room. The meeting was over, and the Bears were ready.
  
ILL MEET YOU GUYS AT THE QUARTERBACK.

Once the game started, New England had a brief glimmer of hope. On the second play of the game, Walter Payton fumbled at the Bears
19-yard line and the Patriots recovered. “Here we go again,” thought all the Chicagoans who’d learned from bitter experience not to trust their teams too much. But New England quarterback Tony Eason misfired on three pass attempts, and the Patriots settled for a field goal.
Although they were behind 3-0 with the game barely a minute old, it was already perfectly plain by now that the Bears would win. The Patriots had no more idea how to move the ball against them than they’d had four months earlier, when they rushed for only 27 yards in a 20-7 loss at Soldier Field. 
Convinced by the September 15 game that his team couldn’t run on the Bears, New England coach Raymond Berry felt he had no choice but to come out throwing. Therefore, Eason felt the full force of the Bears’ merciless pass rush on almost every play. In the Bears defensive huddle, Hampton said, Ill meet you guys at the quarterback.
“We knew that if we got them into a passing situation,” Mike Singletary said, “we’d have things wrapped up.” 
The Bears’ next two possessions resulted in field goals by Kevin Butler. Then Richard Dent stripped the ball from Patriots running back Craig James, and Singletary pounced on it at the New England 13. Two plays later, Matt Suhey carried 11 yards for a touchdown.
At the end of the first quarter, the Bears led 13-3. New England had run ten plays for minus-19 yards. “It was like trying to beat back the tide with a broom,” said Patriots guard Ron Wooten. The second quarter saw more of the same. “I tried to scramble,” Eason said, “but there was no place to go.” The Patriots simply could not block the Bear defenders. Eason was 0-for-6 passing and had been sacked three times when he was removed from the game, for his own good, five minutes before halftime.
It was 23-3 at the intermission. By now even the most pessimistic Chicagoan must have known that nothing could stop the Bears. “It’s the men against the boys out there,” said NBC analyst Pete Axthelm.
Veteran Steve Grogan replaced the shell-shocked Eason and fared somewhat better, but the Bears continued to pour it on. McMahon hit Willie Gault for 60 yards on their first play of the second half; he concluded the 96-yard drive eight plays later with a quarterback sneak from one yard out. A 28-yard interception return by Reggie Phillips and a one-yard plunge by William Perry gave the Bears their last two touchdowns.
The score was 44-3 when head coach Mike Ditka called off the dogs and replaced his starters early in the fourth quarter. New England finally scored a touchdown on an eight-yard pass from Grogan to Irving Fryar after a 12-play drive against the Bears’ second-team defense. Later, an obscure defensive end named Henry Waechter ended the day’s scoring when he sacked Grogan in the end zone for a safety.
Ditka took a lot of flak for not trying harder to get Payton a touchdown at some pointespecially since Perry, the coach’s favorite novelty act, got the chance to score from the one-yard line in the third quarter. Ditka admitted that he should have realized before it was too late that Payton hadn’t scored in the game. But it was difficult to see how a token touchdown in a blowout game, even if it was the Super Bowl, would have added much luster to Payton’s incomparable career. What really mattered was that he and his teammates were world champions.
 
RYAN AND DITKA ARE CARRIED OFF THE FIELD.

When it was over, both Ditka and Ryan were carried off the field in triumph. The Bears had been splendid on both sides of the ball, and the final score of 46-10 made it the most lopsided Super Bowl up to that time. Practically any one of a dozen Bears could have taken MVP honors, which ended up going to Dent. McMahon, for example, passed to six different receivers for 256 yards and ran for two touchdowns, while Gault caught four balls for 129 yards. Ryan’s defenders disrupted everything that New England tried to do, limiting the Patriots to a mere 123 yards on offense—seven on the ground.
“It will be many years,” Paul Zimmerman wrote in Sports Illustrated, “before we see anything approaching the vision of hell that Chicago inflicted on the poor New England Patriots in Super Bowl XX. It was near perfect, an exquisite mesh of talent and system, defensive football carried to its highest degree. It was a great roaring wave that swept through the playoffs, gathering force and momentum until it finally crashed home in New Orleans’ Superdome in pro football’s showcase game.”
After exceeding even the wildest dreams of their fans all season, the Bears outdid themselves when it mattered most. In three postseason games, they scored 91 points and yielded only 10. Their opponents averaged fewer than 145 yards per game and converted three third downs out of 36.
The 1985 Bears showed football fans a level of excellence that had seldom been attained. They talked big, played bigger, and shuffled into a place in history. 
  
 
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Thursday, January 28, 2021

1985 Bears Postseason Flashback: "Bear Down, Chicago Bears" Revisited

Even though the Bears’ performance on the field has often been lacking in recent years, Bears fans can still take comfort in knowing that they have the greatest fight song in professional sports. (College sports are another matter, and there is little to be gained by arguing about how “Bear Down, Chicago Bears” stacks up against the venerable fight songs of Notre Dame, Michigan, Wisconsin, Oklahoma, Navy, and others.)                                               
    

“Bear Down, Chicago Bears” was written by
Jerry Downs (a pseudonym for Al Hoffman) soon after the Bears’ incredible 73-0 victory over the Washington Redskins in the 1940 NFL championship game. As anyone who has attended a game at Soldier Field knows, the song is played each and every time the Bears score, in a version recorded by Bill Archer and the Big Bear Band in 1993. 
     The Chicago Symphony Orchestra performed “Bear Down, Chicago Bears” conducted by Sir Georg Solti before the 1986 Super Bowl and conducted by Daniel Barenboim before the 2007 Super Bowl. If recordings of those performances don’t give you goosebumps, nothing will.

 

For those who are in the habit of humming through the middle part of the song (you know who you are), the complete lyrics to “Bear Down, Chicago Bears” are as follows:

Bear down, Chicago Bears,
Make every play clear the way to victory.
Bear down, Chicago Bears,
Put up a fight with a might so fearlessly.
We’ll never forget the way you thrilled the nation
With your T-formation.
Bear down, Chicago Bears,
And let them know why you’re wearing the crown.
You’re the pride and joy of Illinois.
Chicago Bears, bear down!

 

Below, we have adjusted the lyrics to mark the 35th anniversary of the Bears’ unforgettable victory in Super Bowl XX on January 26, 1986. (Apologies to the songwriter.)

Bear down, Chicago Bears,
Hand the ball off to Walter constantly.
Bear down, Chicago Bears,
Terrorize quarterbacks so frighteningly.
We’ll never forget the way you chilled the nation
With Refrigeration.
Bear down, Chicago Bears,
And let them know you’re not fooling around.
You’re the best team that we'll ever see.
Eighty-five Bears, bear down!

 

Check out our book Heydays: Great Stories in Chicago Sports on Amazon.

Tuesday, January 26, 2021

The Great Blizzard of '67

We Chicagoans love our extreme weather--not when it hits, exactly, but after the fact when we can relax and tell about it. Parents and grandparents still regale younger generations with tales of the great blizzards of 1967 and 1979 and the deep freezes of 1985 and 2014.
    
COLUMBUS DRIVE LOOKING EAST TOWARD LAKE SHORE DRIVE.

In 1966-67, the Bulls were in their first season of existence. After a promising start, a nine-game losing streak in November and December dropped them into last place in their division. "I remember how cold it was that first winter," sportswriter Bob Logan said, "and how small the crowds were."
     The Great Blizzard of '67 struck in late January, dumping almost 30 inches of snow on the city and surrounding areas. On January 29, the Bulls lost to Los Angeles by 20 points before an announced crowd of 1,077 at the International Amphitheatre (they didn't move to the Stadium until the following season). The usual suspects--Jerry West and Elgin Baylor for the Lakers, Jerry Sloan and Bob Boozer for the Bulls--were the game's leading scorers.
     When questioned about the announced attendance figure, Bulls owner Dick Klein said, "The actual attendance, including security guards, was something like 72 people." Since the Lakers were stranded in Chicago after the game, Klein treated them to a steak dinner.
 
 
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Friday, January 22, 2021

Worth a Thousand Words: Ernie Banks and Hank Aaron

Both during their careers and long after, Hank Aaron and Ernie Banks were dear friends. Aaron showed up for the dedication of Ernie's statue at Wrigley Field in 2008, and he was a pallbearer (along with fellow Hall of Famers Billy Williams and Fergie Jenkins) at Mr. Cub's funeral in 2015. We'd like to say a few words about Aaron on the occasion of his passing at the age of 86.
    
A SPECIAL TOPPS BASEBALL CARD FROM 1963.

Aaron's record more than speaks for itself. Even after the steroid-fueled offensive explosion of recent decades, Hammerin' Hank still ranks first all-time in extra-base hits, runs batted in, and total bases. He ranks second in home runs, third in games played and hits. He played in 25 All-Star Games and was elected to the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility
with 98 percent of the votes. (What were the other two percent thinking?)
     "I never doubted my ability," Aaron once said, "but when you hear all your life that you're inferior, it makes you wonder if the other guys have something you've never seen before. If they do, I'm still looking for it."
     Aaron was reluctant to toot his own horn throughout his career, but after his playing days he was more outspoken about the racism he faced coming up and about the progress or lack thereof he saw over the years. His contributions to our national game both on and off the field and his unceasing class in every situation will never be forgotten.  
 
 Check out our book Heydays: Great Stories in Chicago Sports on Amazon.
  

Monday, January 18, 2021

1985 Bears Postseason Flashback: "The Super Bowl Shuffle"

The lead-up to the Bears’ first Super Bowl was enlivened by “The Super Bowl Shuffle,” the audacious rap song by the Chicago Bears Shufflin Crew that was heard almost incessantly throughout December 1985 and January 1986--and has endured, somewhat surprisingly, as a landmark of sorts in the subsequent 35 years.
    


Despite having sustained their first defeat of the season (after 12 straight victories) shortly before the recording session, the Bears remained quite sure that they were headed to the Super Bowl, and the “Shuffle” was a bold statement to that effect. The project was the brainchild of Dick Meyer, a lifelong Bears fan who enlisted Willie Gault, the fleet wide receiver and aspiring actor/singer, to be his point person with the players. “A substantial portion” of the proceeds was to be donated to charity.
     Meyer and Melvin Owens wrote the lyrics, which were tailored to each of the ten featured “singers”: Walter Payton, Gault, Mike Singletary, Jim McMahon, Otis Wilson, Steve Fuller, Mike Richardson, Richard Dent, Gary Fencik, and William Perry. Bobby Daniels and Lloyd Barry wrote the music, and Meyer acted as producer and choreographer.
     In addition to the ten front men, fourteen other Bears participated in supporting roles. The players might have done the project as a lark, but “The Super Bowl Shuffle” was a genuine phenomenon. It sold more than half a million copies as a 45-RPM record, ascended to No. 41 on the national pop music charts, and was nominated for a Grammy award. At the end of the day, some $300,000 was donated to the Chicago Community Trust to provide food, shelter, and clothing for needy families.

Chicago Bears Shufflin’ Crew (featured singers, in order of appearance)
34 - Walter Payton, running back
83 - Willie Gault, wide receiver
50 - Mike Singletary, linebacker
  9 - Jim McMahon, quarterback
55 - Otis Wilson, linebacker
  4 - Steve Fuller, quarterback
27 - Mike Richardson, cornerback
95 - Richard Dent, defensive end
45 - Gary Fencik, safety
72 - William Perry, defensive tackle/fullback

Chicago Bears Shufflin’ Crew Band (in alphabetical order)
  8 - Maury Buford, punter (cowbell)
29 - Dennis Gentry, running back (bass)
98 - Tyrone Keys, defensive end (keyboard)
33 - Calvin Thomas, running back (saxophone)
18 - Mike Tomczak, quarterback (guitar)

Chicago Bears Shufflin’ Crew Chorus (in alphabetical order)
21 - Leslie Frazier, cornerback
23 - Shaun Gayle, safety
75 - Stefan Humphries, guard
51 - Jim Morrissey, linebacker
89 - Keith Ortego, wide receiver/punt returner
48 - Reggie Phillips, cornerback
53 - Dan Rains, linebacker
20 - Thomas Sanders, running back
31 - Ken Taylor, cornerback/punt returner

 

 Check out our book Heydays: Great Stories in Chicago Sports on Amazon.

 

Friday, January 15, 2021

George S. Halas Jr., The Man Called "Mugs"

Judging by the fierce reaction to this week's end-of-season press conference by Bears chairman George McCaskey and president Ted Phillips, the majority of fans are not convinced that these two have any idea how to lift their franchise out of mediocrity. Phillips is the only person not named Halas or McCaskey to hold the title of Bears president. During his 22-year tenure, the Bears have a .486 winning percentage and have played a total of nine postseason games, winning three.
 
GEORGE HALAS JR. and JIM FINKS.

When the legendary George Halas retired as head coach after the 1967 season, the Bears had an all-time winning percentage of .680 over 48 seasons and had won nine world championships. Only a few years later, at
a Bears game in 1973, George Halas Jr. turned to his dad and said, "I am so sick of this!" By "this," the man known as Mugs meant the Bears' recent history of losing, which was about to extend to five consecutive sub-.500 seasons. (It was the first such streak of more than two years in franchise history.)
     In September 1974, the Halases did something about it. They hired the Bears' first general manager other than Papa Bear himself--and the man they chose for the job proved to be exactly what the doctor ordered.
     He was Jim Finks, who had just concluded a ten-year stint in a similar role with the Minnesota Vikings, which resulted in Super Bowl appearances after the 1969 and 1973 seasons and the NFL Executive of the Year award in 1973.
     The Bears opened the 1974 season two days after Finks was hired, with a team that did not yet have his fingerprints on it. They beat the Detroit Lions in the opener, but soon reverted to form and finished 4-10.
     Finks had spent the season evaluating the Bears' coaches and players, and he delivered his verdict shortly after clock ticked down on a season-ending 42-0 loss at Washington. Head coach Abe Gibron was sent packing, and so were a good many of his players. Jack Pardee took over as head coach, and Finks and his staff set about planning for the 1975 draft.
     The first player that Finks drafted for the Bears, with the fourth overall pick in 1975, was the immortal Walter Payton. Long-time starters Mike Hartenstine, Virgil Livers, Revie Sorey, and Bob Avellini also were products of that same draft.
     During his years with the Bears, Finks never missed on a first-round pick. After Payton, his other first-rounders were Dennis Lick, Ted Albrecht, Dan Hampton, Al Harris, Otis Wilson, and Keith Van Horne. He got future Hall of Famer Mike Singletary in the second round in 1981.      
 
     Finks was no longer employed by the Bears when his rebuilding project culminated in the 1985 world championship. He had resigned in 1982 after Papa Bear hired head coach Mike Ditka without consulting him. 
     
Sadly, neither George Halas Jr. nor his dad lived to see the Bears' resounding victory in the 1986 Super Bowl. Mugs passed away suddenly on the morning of December 16, 1979. He was only 54 years old. That afternoon, the Bears dedicated their game (the season finale) to Mugs and routed the St. Louis Cardinals 42-6 to make the playoffs for just the second time since the 1963 championship.
     George Halas Jr. had been groomed for his whole life to take over the Bears some day. If he had survived his dad, who passed away on Halloween in 1983 at age 88, Mugs would have taken control of the franchise and eventually passed it on to his children, Christine and Stephen. In that case, Mugs's sister and brother-in-law, Virginia and Ed McCaskey--along with their ten children and 21 grandchildren--would have been stockholders but would not have been running the show all these years.
     It's only fair to wonder how different the Bears' recent history might have been. 
 
 
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Tuesday, January 12, 2021

1985 Bears Postseason Flashback: January 12, 1986

We are revisiting the three postseason games that confirmed the 1985 Bears as one of the greatest teams in pro football history—the NFC playoff games against the New York Giants and Los Angeles Rams and the Super Bowl against the New England Patriotson the 35th anniversary of each. We hope you enjoy the ride.
 

OTIS WILSON and WILBER MARSHALL.

After the Bears dispatched the New York Giants 21-0 on January 5, they hosted the Los Angeles Rams in the NFC championship game on January 12. It was another cold and windy day in Chicago, and the Rams looked as if they longed for the temperate climes of southern California. Bears defensive end Dan Hampton said he could see defeat in their eyes even at the opening coin toss. When the Rams won the flip and elected to receive, the crowd of 63,522 cheered, figuring the Bear defenders would push them backward.
From the start, Los Angeles quarterback Dieter Brock (10-for-31 passing) and running back Eric Dickerson (17 carries for 46 yards) were wholly ineffective. Dickerson, supposed to be the man who would eventually break Walter Payton’s lifetime rushing mark, had gained a playoff-record 234 yards against Dallas the week before. The Bears held him to less than three yards per attempt and forced him to fumble twice. “If they would have run him more,” said defensive coordinator Buddy Ryan, who had predicted three fumbles by Dickerson, “he would have had three.” 
In the third quarter, Dickerson and Mike Singletary—Southwest Conference rivals at S.M.U. and Baylor, respectively, renewed their acquaintance in the Rams’ backfield. Dickerson had just taken a handoff when he blasted into Singletary filling the gap and stopped dead in his tracks. He moved not one inch forward after meeting up with the Bears’ middle linebacker. “I like this kind of party!” Singletary shouted to the Rams. “I’m gonna be here all day!” 
Bears quarterback Jim McMahon, meanwhile, was brilliant. Despite the weather, he hit on 16 of 25 passes for 164 yards. On the Bears’ first series, he ran 16 yards for a touchdown on a play that was called as a pass. Later he passed for a touchdown on a play called as a run. “The coach sent in a play I didn’t agree with,” McMahon said, “so I called my own.” His 22-yard strike to Willie Gault put the Bears ahead 17-0, and the outcome was decided. The Bears would be NFC champions. 
The fans began to chant: “Super Bowl, Super Bowl.” Late in the fourth quarter, the hapless Brock dropped back to pass and was flung to the turf by defensive end Richard Dent. The ball popped loose. Linebacker Wilber Marshall picked it up at midfield and headed into Rams territory with Otis Wilson escorting him. 
Just then, it started to snow. 
Marshall and Wilson romped 52 yards to the Los Angeles end zone all alone, while the crowd cheered both them and the snow. As the final minutes ticked away, the Bears briefly abandoned the business-as-usual demeanor that had characterized them all year. They embraced one another on the sideline, and head coach Mike Ditka congratulated each man individually. Safety Dave Duerson said that Ditka even became choked up. 
The final score was 24-0. “The way we were playing defense,” said Ditka, “it didn’t matter what we scored.” The Bears became the first team ever to post back-to-back playoff shutouts. They were headed to the Super Bowl as confident as a team could beand rightly so.
 
 
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