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 Patriots—on 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 be—and rightly so.
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