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Super Bowl III

 

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Super Bowl III



 
 
Super Bowl III was the third AFL-NFL Championship Game in professional American football
American football

American football, known in the United States and Canada simply as football, is a competitive team sport known for mixing strategy with physical play....
, but the first to officially bear the name "Super Bowl
Super Bowl

In professional American football, the Super Bowl is the championship game of the National Football League . The game and its ancillary festivities constitute Super Bowl Sunday....
" (The two previous AFL-NFL Championship Games would retroactively be called "Super Bowls" as well). This game is regarded as one of the biggest upsets in American sports history. The heavy underdog
Underdog (competition)

An underdog is a person or group in a competition, frequently in election, sports and creative works, who is popularly expected to lose. The party, team or individual expected to win is called the favourite or top dog....
 American Football League
American Football League

Note: There were three earlier and unrelated major Professional Football leagues of the same name in the United States: one in American Football League , one in American Football League and one in American Football League ....
 (AFL) champion New York Jets
New York Jets

The New York Jets are a professional American football team based in the New York metropolitan area. They are members of the AFC East of the American Football Conference in the National Football League ....
 (11-3) defeated the National Football League
National Football League

The National Football League is the Major North American professional sports leagues American football Sports league in the United States. It is an unincorporated 501#501.28c.29.286.29 association controlled by its members....
 (NFL) champion Baltimore Colts
Indianapolis Colts

The Indianapolis Colts are a professional American football team based in Indianapolis, Indiana. The team is part of the American Football Conference South Division of the American Football Conference in the National Football League ....
 (13-1), 16–7.






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Encyclopedia


Super Bowl III was the third AFL-NFL Championship Game in professional American football
American football

American football, known in the United States and Canada simply as football, is a competitive team sport known for mixing strategy with physical play....
, but the first to officially bear the name "Super Bowl
Super Bowl

In professional American football, the Super Bowl is the championship game of the National Football League . The game and its ancillary festivities constitute Super Bowl Sunday....
" (The two previous AFL-NFL Championship Games would retroactively be called "Super Bowls" as well). This game is regarded as one of the biggest upsets in American sports history. The heavy underdog
Underdog (competition)

An underdog is a person or group in a competition, frequently in election, sports and creative works, who is popularly expected to lose. The party, team or individual expected to win is called the favourite or top dog....
 American Football League
American Football League

Note: There were three earlier and unrelated major Professional Football leagues of the same name in the United States: one in American Football League , one in American Football League and one in American Football League ....
 (AFL) champion New York Jets
New York Jets

The New York Jets are a professional American football team based in the New York metropolitan area. They are members of the AFC East of the American Football Conference in the National Football League ....
 (11-3) defeated the National Football League
National Football League

The National Football League is the Major North American professional sports leagues American football Sports league in the United States. It is an unincorporated 501#501.28c.29.286.29 association controlled by its members....
 (NFL) champion Baltimore Colts
Indianapolis Colts

The Indianapolis Colts are a professional American football team based in Indianapolis, Indiana. The team is part of the American Football Conference South Division of the American Football Conference in the National Football League ....
 (13-1), 16–7. It was the first Super Bowl victory for the AFL.

The game was played on January 12, 1969 at the Orange Bowl
Miami Orange Bowl

The Miami Orange Bowl was a stadium in the City of Miami, west of Downtown Miami in Little Havana. Considered a landmark, it was the home stadium for the Miami Hurricanes football American football team and the temporary home of the Florida International University Golden Panthers for the 2007 football season while the FIU Stadium underwent e...
 in Miami, Florida
Florida

Florida is a U.S. state located in the Southeastern United States of the United States, bordering Alabama to the northwest and Georgia to the northeast....
 – the same location as Super Bowl II
Super Bowl II

The second Super Bowl in professional American football, later to be known as Super Bowl II, was played on January 14, 1968 at the Miami Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida....
. Entering Super Bowl III, the NFL champion Colts were heavily favored to defeat the AFL champion Jets. Although the upstart AFL had successfully forced the long-established NFL into a merger agreement
AFL-NFL Merger

The AFL?NFL merger of 1970 was the merger of the two major American Professional American football leagues in the United States at the time: the National Football League and the American Football League ....
 three years earlier, the AFL was not generally respected as having the same caliber of talent as the NFL. Plus, the AFL representatives were easily defeated in the first two Super Bowls.

After boldly guaranteeing a victory prior to the game, Jets quarterback
Quarterback

Quarterback is a position in American football and Canadian football. Quarterbacks are members of the offensive team and line up directly behind the center , in the middle of the Lineman ....
 Joe Namath
Joe Namath

Joseph William Namath , also known as Broadway Joe or Joe Willie, is a former United States American football quarterback. He played for the University of Alabama under legendary coach Paul "Bear" Bryant and his assistant, Howard Schnellenberger, from 1962?1964, and in the American Football League and National Football League duri...
 completed 17 out of 28 passes for 206 yards, and was named the Super Bowl's Most Valuable Player
Super Bowl MVP

File:Eli Manning Giants QB.jpgThe Super Bowl Most Valuable Player Award, or Super Bowl MVP, is an award presented annually to the most valuable player of the Super Bowl, the National Football League's championship game....
, despite not throwing a touchdown pass in the game or any passes at all in the fourth quarter.

Background


Baltimore Colts

Backup quarterback Earl Morrall
Earl Morrall

Earl Edwin Morrall is a former American football quarterback in the National Football League. Morrall, who also occasionally punted, played 21 seasons in the National Football League as both a starter and reserve....
 became the starter due to a preseason injury to legendary Colts star Johnny Unitas
Johnny Unitas

John Constantine "Johnny" Unitas , nicknamed The Golden Arm and often called Johnny U, was a professional American football player in the 1950s through the 1970s, spending the majority of his career with the Indianapolis Colts....
. Morrall would go on to have the best year of his career, leading the league in passer rating
Passer rating

Passer rating is a measure of the performance of quarterbacks or any other passers in American football and Canadian football. There are at least two formulae currently in use: one officially used by the National Football League and the Canadian Football League, and one used in college football....
 (93.2) during the regular season. His performance was so impressive that Colts coach Don Shula
Don Shula

Donald Francis Shula is a former professional American football coach for the National Football League. He is best known as coach of the Miami Dolphins, the team he led to two Super Bowl victories, and to the National Football League first and only post-AFL/NFL merger Perfect Season....
 decided to keep Morrall in the starting lineup after Unitas was healthy enough to play. The Colts had won 10 games in a row, including four shutouts. In those 10 games, they had allowed only seven touchdowns. Then, the Colts avenged their sole regular season loss against the Cleveland Browns
Cleveland Browns

The Cleveland Browns are a professional American football team based in Cleveland, Ohio, Ohio. They play in the AFC North division of the American Football Conference in the National Football League ....
 by crushing them, 34-0, in the NFL Championship Game. By the end of the season, many people thought the Colts were one of the best teams of all time, stronger than even Vince Lombardi's Super Bowl I and II champions.

The Colts offense ranked second in the NFL in points scored (402). Wide receivers Jimmy Orr
Jimmy Orr

Jimmy Orr is a former American Football wide receiver who played for the Pittsburgh Steelers and History of the Indianapolis Colts for 13 seasons from 1958 to 1970....
 (29 receptions, 743 yards, 6 touchdowns) and Willie Richardson
Willie Richardson

Willie Richardson is a former professional American football player who played wide receiver for nine seasons for the History of the Indianapolis Colts and Miami Dolphins....
 (37 receptions, 698 yards, 8 touchdowns) provided Baltimore with two deep threats, with Orr averaging 25.6 yards per catch, and Richardson averaging 18.9. Tight end John Mackey also recorded 45 receptions for 644 yards and 5 touchdowns. Pro Bowl
Pro Bowl

In professional American football, the Pro Bowl is the all-star game of the National Football League . Since the AFL-NFL Merger with the rival American Football League in 1970, it has been officially called the AFC-NFC Pro Bowl, matching players in the American Football Conference against those in the National Football Conference ....
 running back Tom Matte
Tom Matte

Thomas Roland Matte was an American football player who played quarterback in college and running back in the National Football League in the 1960s and 1970s and earned a Super Bowl Ring....
 was the team's top rusher with 662 yards and 9 touchdowns. He also caught 25 passes for 275 yards and another touchdown. Running backs Terry Cole
Terry Cole

Terry Cole is a United Kingdom TV and film stuntman....
 and Jerry Hill
Jerry Hill (football player)

Jerry Hill is a former Professional sports American football running back for the National Football League's History of the Indianapolis Colts....
 combined for 778 rushing yards and 236 receiving yards.

The Colts defense led the NFL in fewest points allowed (144, tying the then all-time league record), and ranked third in total rushing yards allowed (1,339). Bubba Smith
Bubba Smith

Charles Aaron "Bubba" Smith is an United States actor and former athlete. He was a professional football player in the 1960s and 1970s who became an actor in the late 1970s....
, a 6'7 295 pound defensive end considered the NFL's best pass rusher, anchored the line. Linebacker Mike Curtis
Mike Curtis (American football)

James Michael Curtis is a former professional American football player for the History of the Indianapolis Colts, the Seattle Seahawks and the Washington Redskins who played 14 seasons from 1965 in sports to 1978 in sports in the National Football League....
 was considered one of the top linebackers in the NFL. Baltimore's excellent secondary consisted of defensive backs Bobby Boyd
Bobby Boyd

Robert Dean Boyd is a former NFL cornerback who played for the History of the Indianapolis Colts in a nine-year career from 1960 to 1968. A quarterback in college at the University of Oklahoma under Bud Wilkinson, Boyd was a two-time Pro Bowler and led the NFL with 9 interceptions in 1965....
 (8 interceptions), Rick Volk
Rick Volk

Richard Robert Volk is a former American football player. He attended Wauseon High School in Wauseon, Ohio. He played college football at the University of Michigan, where he was selected as a first-team All-American by the Sporting News in 1966....
 (6 interceptions), Lenny Lyles
Lenny Lyles

Lenny Lyles , is a former professional American Football defensive back. He started in Super Bowl III for the History of the Indianapolis Colts....
 (5 interceptions), and Jerry Logan
Jerry Logan

Jerry Don Logan is a former American football player. He played as a Safety for ten seasons in the NFL. He was a part of the History of the Indianapolis Colts Super Bowl V winning team....
 (3 interceptions). The Colts were the only NFL team to routinely play a zone defense. That gave them an advantage in the NFL because the other NFL teams were inexperienced against a zone defense. (This would not give them an advantage over the Jets, however, because zone defenses were common in the AFL and the Jets knew how to attack them.) After winning the 1968 NFL title, the Colts were touted by the sports media as "the greatest team in Pro Football history."

New York Jets

The New York Jets, led by head coach Weeb Ewbank
Weeb Ewbank

Wilbur "Weeb" Ewbank was an United States professional American football coach....
 (who was the head coach of the Colts when they won the famous 1958 NFL Championship game), finished the season with an 11-3 regular season record (one of the losses was to the Oakland Raiders
Oakland Raiders

The Oakland Raiders are a professional American football team based in the city of Oakland, California. They currently play in the AFC West of the American Football Conference in the National Football League ....
 in the infamous Heidi Game
Heidi Game

In professional American football, the Heidi Game refers to a famous American Football League game between the New York Jets and the Oakland Raiders, played on November 17, 1968 in Oakland, California....
) and had to rally to defeat those same Raiders, 27-23, in a thrilling AFL Championship Game.

Jets quarterback Joe Namath
Joe Namath

Joseph William Namath , also known as Broadway Joe or Joe Willie, is a former United States American football quarterback. He played for the University of Alabama under legendary coach Paul "Bear" Bryant and his assistant, Howard Schnellenberger, from 1962?1964, and in the American Football League and National Football League duri...
 threw for 3,147 yards during the regular season, but completed just 49.2 percent of his passes, and threw more interceptions (17) than touchdowns (15). Still, he led the offense effectively enough for them to finish the regular season with more total points scored (419) than Baltimore. More importantly, Namath usually found ways to win. For example, late in the fourth quarter of the AFL championship game, Namath threw an interception that allowed the Raiders to take the lead. But he then made up for his mistake by completing 3 consecutive passes on the ensuing drive, advancing the ball 68 yards in just 55 seconds to score a touchdown to regain the lead for New York.

The Jets had a number of offensive weapons that Namath used. Future Hall of Fame
Pro Football Hall of Fame

The Pro Football Hall of Fame is the hall of fame of the National Football League . It opened in Canton, Ohio, Ohio, United States, on September 7 1963 with 17 charter inductees....
 wide receiver Don Maynard had the best season of his career, catching 57 passes for 1,297 yards (an average of 22.8 yards per catch) and 10 touchdowns. Wide receiver George Sauer
George Sauer

George H. Sauer was the Head coach College football Coach at the University of Kansas from 1946 to 1947. Although he only coached two years, he compiled a 15-3-2 record....
 recorded 66 receptions for 1,141 yards and 3 touchdowns. Fullback Matt Snell
Matt Snell

Matt Snell was the American Football League's New York Jets owner Sonny Werblin's first coup, prior to his 1965 acquisition of Joe Namath. A powerful fullback out of the Ohio State University, Snell's 1964 signing jolted the crosstown Giants, who didn't draft Snell until the fourth round, and offered him a fraction of what the Jets gave him...
 was the top rusher on the team with 747 yards and 6 touchdowns, while halfback Emerson Boozer
Emerson Boozer

Emerson Boozer was a running back in the American Football League and in the NFL. In the last year of separate drafts by the AFL and the NFL, Boozer signed with the AFL's New York Jets, rather than with an NFL team....
 contributed 441 yards and 5 touchdowns, despite a 3.1 average per carry. Meanwhile, kicker Jim Turner made 34 field goals and 43 extra points for a combined total of 145 points.

The Jets defense led the AFL in total rushing yards allowed (1,195). Gerry Philbin
Gerry Philbin

Gerald John Philbin is a former American football defensive tackle and four year starter from the University at Buffalo where he earned several honors including second team All-American, Little All-America, and All-American Academic team....
, John Elliott
John Elliott (defensive lineman)

John Elliott was a college and professional American football defensive tackle. He played College football for the University of Texas, and in 1967 was drafted by the American Football League's New York Jets....
, and Verlon Biggs
Verlon Biggs

Verlon Marion Biggs was an American football defensive end in the American Football League and National Football League. He played for the New York Jets in Super Bowl III, but felt he didn't receive enough credit for the Jets' playoff win against the Oakland Raiders in the AFL Championship Game that launched them into the Super Bowl....
 anchored the defensive line. The Jets linebacking core was led by middle linebacker Al Atkinson
Al Atkinson

Al Atkinson was an American college and professional football player. He played High School ball at Monsignor Bonner High School. He played college football at Villanova University, where he was a linebacker....
. The secondary was led by defensive backs Johnny Sample
Johnny Sample

John B. Sample, Jr. was an American football defensive back who played in the National Football League for the History of the Indianapolis Colts , Pittsburgh Steelers , and Washington Redskins , and in the American Football League for the New York Jets ....
(a former Colt who played on their 1958 NFL Championship team) who recorded 7 interceptions, and Jim Hudson
Jim Hudson

Jim Hudson , is a former professional American Football defensive back. He started in Super Bowl III for the New York Jets, and made a key interception just before the end of the first half....
, who recorded 5.

Several of the Jets' players had been cut by NFL teams. Maynard had been cut by the New York Giants
New York Giants

The New York Giants are a professional American football team based in East Rutherford, New Jersey. The team plays its home games at Giants Stadium, which also serves as its headquarters, and trains at an adjacent practice facility within the Meadowlands Sports Complex....
 after they lost the 1958 NFL Championship
NFL Championship Game, 1958

The 1958 NFL season National Football League Championship Game was played on December 28, 1958 at Yankee Stadium in New York City. It was the first ever National Football League game to go into sudden death Overtime ....
 to the Colts. "I kept a little bitterness in me," he says. Sample had been cut by the Colts. "I was almost in a frenzy by the time the game arrived," he says. "I held a private grudge against the Colts. I was really ready for that game. All of us were." Offensive tackle Winston Hill
Winston Hill

Winston Hill was a tennis champion in high school and an American college and professional American football player. He played both offensive and defensive line in college at Texas Southern University and was an All-American....
 had been cut five years earlier by the Colts as a rookie in training camp. "Ordell Braase
Ordell Braase

Ordell Braase was a defensive end in the NFL. He played with the History of the Indianapolis Colts throughout his career. During his football career in Baltimore, Braase also worked as a sportscaster with WMAR-TV, and performed in commercials for Dixie Cola, even singing their jingle....
 kept making me look bad in practice," he says. Hill would be blocking Braase in Super Bowl III.

Super Bowl pregame news and notes


After winning the AFL championship, Namath said there were at least four quarterbacks in the AFL, including himself, his backup, 38-year old Babe Parilli, John Hadl of the S.D. Chargers and Dolphin QB Bob Griese (NAMATH-A Biography, by: Mark Kriegel ) who were better than Earl Morrall.

"The Guarantee"
Despite the Jets' accomplishments, AFL teams were generally not regarded as having the same caliber of talent as NFL teams. However, three days before the game, Namath appeared at the Miami Touchdown Club and boldly predicted to the audience, "We're [Jets] gonna win the game. I guarantee it." Namath later claimed he only made his famous "guarantee" in response to a rowdy Colts fan at the club, who boasted the Colts would easily defeat the Jets. Namath later claimed he never intended to make such a public prediction, and never would have done so if he had not been confronted by the fan. According to Matt Snell, all of the Jets, not just Namath, were insulted and angry that they were 18-point underdogs.. (Coach Ewbank
Weeb Ewbank

Wilbur "Weeb" Ewbank was an United States professional American football coach....
, in an NFL Films
NFL Films

NFL Films is a Mount Laurel, New Jersey-based company devoted to producing commercials, television programs, feature films, and documentaries on the National Football League, as well as other unrelated major events and awards shows....
 segment, once joked that he "could have shot him [Namath]") Considering the differences between the leagues, however, the Colts should have been heavily favored. Some analysts have suggested that the Jets' record in the NFL might have been 9-5, so against the Colts in the Super Bowl a 9 or 10-point spread would not have been unreasonable. Less public than Namath's feelings was the mood of the team itself. Most of the Jets' considered the Raiders, who they barely beat in the AFL title game, a better team than the Colts. After a film session the Wednesday prior to the game, Jet's TE Pete Lammons, a former Texas Longhorn, was heard to drawl: "Damn, y'all, we gotta stop watching these films. We gonna get overconfident." (Namath, a biography: Mark Kriegel, P.267)

Television and entertainment

The game was broadcast in the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 by NBC - it was a Sports Production of NBC News during the end credits- with Curt Gowdy
Curt Gowdy

Curtis Edward "Curt" Gowdy was an Media of the United States sportscaster, well-known as the longtime "voice" of the Boston Red Sox and for his coverage of many nationally-televised sporting events, primarily for NBC Sports in the 1960s and 1970s....
 handling the play-by-play
Play-by-play

Play-by-play, in broadcasting, is a North American term that means the reporting of a sporting event with a voiceover describing the details of the game in progress....
 duties and color commentator
Color commentator

A color commentator, sometimes known as a color analyst, is a member of the broadcasting team for a sports event who assists the play-by-play announcer by filling in any time when play is not in progress....
s Al DeRogatis
Al DeRogatis

Albert John "Al" DeRogatis was an American football player and television sportscaster....
 and Kyle Rote
Kyle Rote

Kyle Rote Sr. was an American football player and sports announcer....
 in the broadcast booth. Also helping with NBC's coverage were Jim Simpson
Jim Simpson (sportscaster)

Jim Simpson is a retired United States sportscaster, known for his smooth delivery as a play-by-play man and his versatility in covering many different sports....
 and Pat Summerall
Pat Summerall

George Allen "Pat" Summerall is a former American football player and television sportscaster, having worked at CBS Sports, NFL on FOX, and ESPN Sunday Night Football....
. In an interview done by NFL films, Gowdy called it the most memorable game he ever called because of its historical significance. This was the only Super Bowl Summerall worked for a network other than CBS and later FOX.

While the Orange Bowl was sold out for the game, the live telecast was not shown in Miami due to both leagues' unconditional blackout
Blackout (broadcasting)

In broadcasting, a blackout is when certain programming, usually sports, cannot be television in a certain media market.The purpose is theoretically to generate more money by obligating certain actions from fans, either by making them buy tickets or watch other games on TV....
 rules at the time.

For the first time, famous celebrities appeared for the Super Bowl ceremonies. Entertainer Bob Hope
Bob Hope

Bob Hope, Order of the British Empire, Order of St. Gregory the Great , was an British-born American comedian and actor who appeared in vaudeville, on Broadway theatre, and in radio, television and movies....
 led a pregame ceremony honoring the astronauts of Project Apollo
Project Apollo

The Apollo program was a human spaceflight program undertaken by NASA during the years 1961?1975 with the goal of conducting manned moon landing missions....
 and the recently completed Apollo 8
Apollo 8

Apollo 8 was the first manned space voyage to achieve a velocity sufficient to allow escape from the gravitational field of planet Earth; the first to escape from the gravitational field of another celestial body; and the first manned voyage to return to planet Earth from another celestial body....
 mission, the first manned flight around the Moon.

Singer Anita Bryant
Anita Bryant

Anita Jane Bryant is an United States singer. She is also known for her strong views against homosexuality and for her prominent campaigning in 1977 to repeal a local ordinance in Dade County, Florida, that prohibited discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation....
 later sang the national anthem, while the Florida A&M University
Florida A&M University

Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University, commonly known as Florida A&M or FAMU, is a Historically black colleges and universities located in Tallahassee, Florida, United States, the state capital, and is one of eleven institutions in Florida's State University System....
 band performed during the "America Thanks" halftime show.

This game is thought to be the earliest surviving Super Bowl game preserved on videotape in its entirety. The original NBC broadcast was aired as part of the NFL Network
NFL Network

NFL Network is an United States television specialty channel dedicated to American football. It is owned and operated by the National Football League and is also shown in Canada and Mexico....
 Super Bowl Classics
NFL Classics

NFL Classics is a series of videotaped rebroadcasts of National Football League games that air on the NFL Network. The show airs Thursday nights at 8 p.m....
 series the day before Super Bowl XLI
Super Bowl XLI

Super Bowl XLI was an American football game played on February 4, 2007, at Dolphin Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida, Florida, a suburb of Miami, Florida, to decide the National Football League champion following the 2006 NFL season....
.

Game summary

New York entered the game with their primary deep threat, wide receiver Don Maynard, playing with a pulled hamstring. But his 112-yard, two touchdown performance against the Oakland Raiders
Oakland Raiders

The Oakland Raiders are a professional American football team based in the city of Oakland, California. They currently play in the AFC West of the American Football Conference in the National Football League ....
 in the AFL championship game made the Colts defense pay special attention to him, not realizing he was injured. Using Maynard as a decoy—he had no receptions in the game—Joe Namath was able to take advantage of single coverage on wide receiver George Sauer, Jr.
George Sauer, Jr.

George Sauer, Jr. , is a former professional American football wide receiver who played six seasons for the American Football League's New York Jets....
. (After studying the Colts' zone defense, Ewbank had told his receivers, "Find the dead spots in the zone, hook up, and Joe will hit you.") The Jets had a conservative game plan, emphasizing the run and short, high-percentage passes to minimize interceptions. Meanwhile, with the help of many fortunate plays, the Jets defense kept the Colts offense from scoring for most of the game.

1st half

The game started badly for the Jets. After taking the opening kickoff, they gained only 15 yards on five plays and were forced to punt. (However, Colts safety Rick Volk was knocked out and sustained a concussion on the game's second play tackling Snell and would miss much of the game.) Then on the Colts' first drive, they advanced the ball from their own 27-yard line to the Jets' 19-yard line in an 11-play drive, aided by a 19-yard catch-and-run from Earl Morrall
Earl Morrall

Earl Edwin Morrall is a former American football quarterback in the National Football League. Morrall, who also occasionally punted, played 21 seasons in the National Football League as both a starter and reserve....
 to tight end John Mackey
John Mackey (American football)

John Mackey is a former American Football tight end who played for the History of the Indianapolis Colts and the San Diego Chargers . He starred collegiately at Syracuse University....
 on their first play. But after two incomplete passes and a quarterback run for no gain, they came up empty when defensive lineman/kicker Lou Michaels
Lou Michaels

Lou Michaels is a former American football player who was a standout defensive lineman for the University of Kentucky Kentucky Wildcats football, 1955-57....
' 27-yard field goal attempt went wide right. "You could almost feel the steam go out of them," said Snell.

On the Jets' second possession, Namath threw deep to Maynard, who, despite his pulled hamstring, was open by a step. The ball was overthrown, but this one play helped change the outcome of the game. Fearing, they thought, the speedy Maynard, the Colts decided to rotate their zone defense to help cover Maynard, leaving Sauer covered one-on-one by Lenny Lyles
Lenny Lyles

Lenny Lyles , is a former professional American Football defensive back. He started in Super Bowl III for the History of the Indianapolis Colts....
, helping Sauer catch 8 passes for 133 yards, including a crucial third quarter 39 yard reception that kept a scoring drive alive. Although the Colts were unaware of Maynard's injury, the Jets were aware that Lyles had been weakened by tonsillitis all week, causing them great glee when they saw the one-on-one matchup with Sauer (Kriegel |first= Mark |title= Namath, A Biography |publisher= Penguin Books
Penguin Books

Penguin Books is a United Kingdom publisher founded in 1935 by Allen Lane. Lane's idea was to provide quality writing cheaply, for the same price as a pack of cigarettes....
 |year= 2004}}

With less than two minutes left in the period, Colts punter David Lee
David Lee (Baltimore Colts)

David Allen Lee is a former American football Punter for the former History of the Indianapolis Colts in the National Football League and subsequently retired from a career as a General Motors executive in Shreveport, Louisiana, the seat of Caddo Parish, Louisiana, in northwestern Louisiana....
 booted a 51-yard kick that pinned the Jets back at their own 4-yard line. Three plays later, Sauer caught a 3-yard pass from Namath, but fumbled while being tackled by Lyles, and Colts linebacker Ron Porter
Ron Porter

Ron Porter is a former professional American football player who played linebacker for seven seasons for the Baltimore Colts, Philadelphia Eagles, and Minnesota Vikings....
 recovered it at New York's 12-yard line. However, on third down (the second play of the second quarter) Baltimore quarterback Earl Morrall
Earl Morrall

Earl Edwin Morrall is a former American football quarterback in the National Football League. Morrall, who also occasionally punted, played 21 seasons in the National Football League as both a starter and reserve....
's pass was tipped by Jets linebacker Al Atkinson, bounced crazily, high into the air off tight end Tom Mitchell, and was intercepted by Jets cornerback Randy Beverly
Randy Beverly

Randy Beverly is a former professional American football player. He played cornerback for the American Football League's New York Jets and is best known for making two key interceptions that helped the Jets to their historic victory in Super Bowl III in 1968 AFL season....
 in the end zone for a touchback. "That was the game in a nutshell," says Matte. Starting from their own 20-yard line, Jets running back Matt Snell
Matt Snell

Matt Snell was the American Football League's New York Jets owner Sonny Werblin's first coup, prior to his 1965 acquisition of Joe Namath. A powerful fullback out of the Ohio State University, Snell's 1964 signing jolted the crosstown Giants, who didn't draft Snell until the fourth round, and offered him a fraction of what the Jets gave him...
 rushed on the next 4 plays, advancing the ball 26 yards. (The Jets would have success all day running off left tackle behind the blocking of Winston Hill, who, according to Snell, was overpowering 36-year-old defensive end Ordell Braase, the man who had tormented the rookie Hill in Colts' training camp. Said Snell, "Braase pretty much faded out.") Namath later completed 3 consecutive passes, moving the ball to the Colts 23-yard line. Running back Emerson Boozer
Emerson Boozer

Emerson Boozer was a running back in the American Football League and in the NFL. In the last year of separate drafts by the AFL and the NFL, Boozer signed with the AFL's New York Jets, rather than with an NFL team....
 gained just 2 yards on the next play, but Snell followed it up with a 12-yard reception at the 9-yard line, a 5-yard run to the 4-yard line, and capped the drive with a 4-yard touchdown run, once again off left tackle. The score gave the Jets a 7-0 lead, and marked the first time in history that an AFL team led in the Super Bowl.

On Baltimore's ensuing drive, a 30-yard completion from Morrall to running back Tom Matte
Tom Matte

Thomas Roland Matte was an American football player who played quarterback in college and running back in the National Football League in the 1960s and 1970s and earned a Super Bowl Ring....
 helped the Colts advance to the New York 38-yard line, but they once again failed to score as Jets cornerback Johnny Sample
Johnny Sample

John B. Sample, Jr. was an American football defensive back who played in the National Football League for the History of the Indianapolis Colts , Pittsburgh Steelers , and Washington Redskins , and in the American Football League for the New York Jets ....
 broke up Morrall's third down pass and Micheals' missed his second field goal attempt, this time from 46 yards. Two plays after the Jets took over following the missed field goal, Namath's 35-yard completion to Sauer enabled to New York to eventually reach the Baltimore 32-yard line. But Namath then threw two incompletions and was then sacked on third down by Colts linebacker Dennis Gaubatz
Dennis Gaubatz

Dennis Gaubatz was a linebacker in the NFL....
 for a 2-yard loss. New York kicker Jim Turner tried to salvage the drive with a 41-yard field goal attempt, but he missed.

On their ensuing possession, Baltimore went from their own 20-yard line to New York's 15-yard line in three plays, aided by Matte's Super Bowl record 58-yard run. But with 2 minutes left in the half, Morrall was intercepted again, at the Jets' 2-yard line, deflating the Colts considerably. The Jets then were forced to punt on their ensuing drive, and the Colts advanced the ball to New York's 41-yard line. What followed is one of the most famous plays in Super Bowl history. Baltimore tried a flea flicker play
Flea flicker (American football)

A flea-flicker is an unorthodox play in American football designed to fool the defensive team into thinking that a play is a run instead of a pass....
 which had a huge impact on the momentum of the game. Matte ran off right tackle after taking a handoff, then pitched the ball back to Morrall. The play completely fooled the NBC Camera Crew, and the Jets defense, leaving receiver Jimmy Orr
Jimmy Orr

Jimmy Orr is a former American Football wide receiver who played for the Pittsburgh Steelers and History of the Indianapolis Colts for 13 seasons from 1958 to 1970....
 wide open near the end zone. But Morrall failed to spot him and instead threw a pass intended for running back Jerry Hill
Jerry Hill (football player)

Jerry Hill is a former Professional sports American football running back for the National Football League's History of the Indianapolis Colts....
 that was intercepted by Jets safety Jim Hudson
Jim Hudson

Jim Hudson , is a former professional American Football defensive back. He started in Super Bowl III for the New York Jets, and made a key interception just before the end of the first half....
 as time expired, maintaining the Jets' 7-0 lead at halftime (The irony is that earlier in the season, against the Atlanta Falcons, on the same play, Morrall had completed the same pass for a touchdown to Orr, the play's intended target). "I was the primary receiver," Orr said later. "Earl said he just didn't see me. I was open from here to Tampa." "I'm just a lineman but I looked up and saw Jimmy open", added center Bill Curry
Bill Curry

William "Bill" Curry is an United States college football coach and the current head coach of the Georgia State University football team that begins play in 2010....
. "I don't know what happened."

2nd half

The third quarter belonged to the Jets, who controlled the ball for all but three minutes of the period. Baltimore ran only seven offensive plays all quarter, gaining only 11 yards. Matte lost a fumble on the first play from scrimmage in the second half, yet another demoralizing event, which led to Turner's 32-yard field goal to increase the Jets' lead, 10-0. Then, after forcing the Colts to punt again, Namath completed 4 passes for 40 yards to set up Turner's 30-yard field goal to increase the lead, 13-0. On that drive, Namath temporarily went out of the game after injuring his right thumb, and was replaced by backup quarterback Babe Parilli
Babe Parilli

Vito "Babe" Parilli is a former American football player....
 for a few plays. Namath returned by the end of the third quarter, but the Jets would not run a pass play for the entire fourth quarter.

Said Matt Snell, "By this time, the Colts were pressing. You saw the frustration and worry on all their faces..." Then after Turner's second field goal, with four minutes left in the third quarter, Colts head coach Don Shula
Don Shula

Donald Francis Shula is a former professional American football coach for the National Football League. He is best known as coach of the Miami Dolphins, the team he led to two Super Bowl victories, and to the National Football League first and only post-AFL/NFL merger Perfect Season....
 took Morrall out of the game and put in the sore-armed Johnny Unitas
Johnny Unitas

John Constantine "Johnny" Unitas , nicknamed The Golden Arm and often called Johnny U, was a professional American football player in the 1950s through the 1970s, spending the majority of his career with the Indianapolis Colts....
 to see if he could provide a spark to Baltimore's offense. But Unitas could not get the Colts offense moving on their next drive and they were forced to punt again after 3 plays. Then aided by a 39-yard pass from Namath to Sauer, the Jets drove all the way to the Colts 2-yard line. Baltimore's defense wouldn't quit, and kept them out of the end zone, but Turner kicked his third field goal early in the final period to make the score 16-0.

On Baltimore's next possession, they managed to drive all the way to the Jets' 25-yard line. However, Beverly ended the drive by intercepting a pass from Unitas in the end zone, the Jets' fourth interception of the game. New York then drove to the Colts 35-yard line with 7 consecutive running plays, but ended up with no points after Turner missed a 42-yard field goal attempt.

Unitas started out the next drive with 3 incomplete passes, but completed a key 17-yard pass to Orr on fourth down. Ten plays later, aided by three Jets penalties, Baltimore finally scored a touchdown on a 1-yard run by Hill to cut their deficit to 16-7, but with only 3:19 left in the game. The Colts then recovered an onside kick
Onside kick

Onside kicks is a term used in American football and Canadian football for types of Kick used at a kickoff or other free kick, or scrimmage kick or other kick during play, in which the ball is kicked favorably for the kicking team to avoid giving away the ball....
 and drove to the Jets 19-yard line with 3 consecutive completions by Unitas, but they turned the ball over on downs after his next 3 passes fell incomplete. That ended any chance of a Baltimore comeback, as the Jets ran the ball for 6 plays before being forced to punt. The announcers (and later commentators of the game) failed to mention that if the Colts had kicked a field goal on fourth down that they would have had 3 time outs left with 2:20 left in the game, and only trailed 16-10. However, considering kicker Michaels' earlier lack of success (two missed field goals), going for it on 4th down was somewhat understandable.

When the Colts got the ball back, only 8 seconds remained in the game. The Colts then attempted two final passes before time ran out, and the Jets had won Super Bowl III. Said Matt Snell, "Leaving the field, I saw the Colts were exhausted and in a state of shock. I don't remember any Colt coming over to congratulate me." As he ran off the field, Namath, in a spontaneous show of defiance held up his index finger, signaling "number one."

Years later Morrall said, "I thought we would win handily. We'd only lost twice in our last thirty games. I'm still not sure what happened that day at the Orange Bowl, however; it's still hard to account for." Wrote Matt Snell, "The most distinct image I have from that whole game is of Ordell Braase and some other guys--not so much Mike Curtis--having a bewildered look."

Namath finished the game having completed 17 of his 28 passes. (Interestingly, he is the only Super Bowl MVP at the quarterback position to not throw at least one touchdown pass). Snell rushed for 121 yards on 30 carries with a touchdown, and caught 4 passes for 40 yards. Sauer caught eight passes for 133 yards. Beverly became the first player in Super Bowl history to record 2 interceptions. Morrall had a terrible day -- just 6 of 17 completions for 71 yards and was intercepted 3 times. Despite not being put into the game until the fourth quarter, Unitas finished with more pass completions (11) and passing yards (110) than Morrall, but he was intercepted once. Matte was the Colts' top rusher with 116 yards on just 11 carries, an average of 10.5 yards per run, and caught 2 passes for 30 yards. The Colts were minus-4 in turnovers, four of five deep in Jet territory, which, along with the turnovers, was the real story of this game.

Scoring summary

Quarter Time Team Drive Scoring Information Score
Length Plays Time NYJ BAL
2 9:03 NYJ 80 12 5:06 TD: Matt Snell 4 yard run (Jim Turner kick) 7 0
3 10:08 NYJ 8 8 4:17 FG: Jim Turner 32 yards 10 0
3 3:58 NYJ 45 10 4:06 FG: Jim Turner 30 yards 13 0
4 13:26 NYJ 61 7 3:58 FG: Jim Turner 9 yards 16 0
4 3:19 BAL 80 14 3:15 TD: Jerry Hill 1 yard run (Lou Michaels kick) 16 7


Starting lineups


Source:
N.Y. Jets Position Baltimore
OFFENSE
George Sauer, Jr.
George Sauer, Jr.

George Sauer, Jr. , is a former professional American football wide receiver who played six seasons for the American Football League's New York Jets....
 
SE Jimmy Orr
Jimmy Orr

Jimmy Orr is a former American Football wide receiver who played for the Pittsburgh Steelers and History of the Indianapolis Colts for 13 seasons from 1958 to 1970....
Winston Hill
Winston Hill

Winston Hill was a tennis champion in high school and an American college and professional American football player. He played both offensive and defensive line in college at Texas Southern University and was an All-American....
 
LT Bob Vogel
Bob Vogel

Robert Louis Vogel is a former professional American football offensive lineman for the Baltimore Colts from 1963 to 1972. During that span he appeared in Super Bowl III and Super Bowl V for the Colts and was selected for the Pro Bowl five times....
Bob Talamini
Bob Talamini

Robert Guy "Bob" Talamini , a stout, 6'1", 250 lb lineman, earned third-team All-SEC honors at the University of Kentucky and was drafted by the Houston Oilers of the American Football League....
 
LG Glenn Ressler
Glenn Ressler

Glenn Emanuel Ressler was a National Football League offensive lineman from 1965 through 1974. During that span he appeared in Super Bowl III and Super Bowl V for the History of the Indianapolis Colts....
John Schmitt
John Schmitt (football player)

John Charles Schmitt is a former American football Center in the National Football League who played ten seasons for the New York Jets, from whom he Starting lineup in Super Bowl III....
 
C Bill Curry
Bill Curry

William "Bill" Curry is an United States college football coach and the current head coach of the Georgia State University football team that begins play in 2010....
Randy Rasmussen
Randy Rasmussen

Randall Lee Rasmussen was an American football Guard for fifteen seasons for the New York Jets, beginning with the 1967 AFL season American Football League season....
 
RG Dan Sullivan
Dan Sullivan (football player)

Daniel Joseph Sullivan was a National Football League offensive lineman from 1962 through 1972. During that span he appeared Super Bowl III and Super Bowl V for the History of the Indianapolis Colts....
Dave Herman
Dave Herman

Dave Herman was an American collegiate and professional American football Tackle . He played collegiately for Michigan State University and began his professional career with the American Football League's New York Jets, for whom he played from 1964 through 1969....
 
RT Sam Ball
Sam Ball

Sam Ball was a National Football League offensive lineman from 1966 through 1970. During that span he appeared in Super Bowl III and Super Bowl V for the History of the Indianapolis Colts....
Pete Lammons
Pete Lammons

Pete Lammons is a former professional American football player who played tight end for the American Football League's New York Jets, winning the AFL Championship with them in 1968, and playing in their victory over the NFL's overrated champion Baltimore Colts in the third Professional American football championship games game....
 
TE John Mackey
John Mackey

John Mackey can refer to:*John Mackey , a former American football tight end*John Mackey , founder and CEO of Whole Foods Market*John Mackey , an American composer of classical concert music...
Don Maynard FL Willie Richardson
Willie Richardson

Willie Richardson is a former professional American football player who played wide receiver for nine seasons for the History of the Indianapolis Colts and Miami Dolphins....
Joe Namath
Joe Namath

Joseph William Namath , also known as Broadway Joe or Joe Willie, is a former United States American football quarterback. He played for the University of Alabama under legendary coach Paul "Bear" Bryant and his assistant, Howard Schnellenberger, from 1962?1964, and in the American Football League and National Football League duri...
 
QB Earl Morrall
Earl Morrall

Earl Edwin Morrall is a former American football quarterback in the National Football League. Morrall, who also occasionally punted, played 21 seasons in the National Football League as both a starter and reserve....
Emerson Boozer
Emerson Boozer

Emerson Boozer was a running back in the American Football League and in the NFL. In the last year of separate drafts by the AFL and the NFL, Boozer signed with the AFL's New York Jets, rather than with an NFL team....
 
RB Tom Matte
Tom Matte

Thomas Roland Matte was an American football player who played quarterback in college and running back in the National Football League in the 1960s and 1970s and earned a Super Bowl Ring....
Matt Snell
Matt Snell

Matt Snell was the American Football League's New York Jets owner Sonny Werblin's first coup, prior to his 1965 acquisition of Joe Namath. A powerful fullback out of the Ohio State University, Snell's 1964 signing jolted the crosstown Giants, who didn't draft Snell until the fourth round, and offered him a fraction of what the Jets gave him...
 
RB Jerry Hill
Jerry Hill (football player)

Jerry Hill is a former Professional sports American football running back for the National Football League's History of the Indianapolis Colts....
DEFENSE
Gerry Philbin
Gerry Philbin

Gerald John Philbin is a former American football defensive tackle and four year starter from the University at Buffalo where he earned several honors including second team All-American, Little All-America, and All-American Academic team....
 
LE Bubba Smith
Bubba Smith

Charles Aaron "Bubba" Smith is an United States actor and former athlete. He was a professional football player in the 1960s and 1970s who became an actor in the late 1970s....
Paul Rochester
Paul Rochester

Paul "Rocky" Rochester attended Michigan State University. He played defensive tackle in the American Football League for the Kansas City Chiefs, and the New York Jets....
 
LT Billy Ray Smith Sr.
Billy Ray Smith Sr.

Billy Ray Smith, Sr. was a National Football League defensive lineman ....
John Elliott
John Elliott (defensive lineman)

John Elliott was a college and professional American football defensive tackle. He played College football for the University of Texas, and in 1967 was drafted by the American Football League's New York Jets....
 
RT Fred Miller
Fred Miller

Fred Miller may refer to:*Fred Miller , journalist and editor of The Daily Telegraph*Fred Miller , American football player*Fred D. Miller , American football player...
Verlon Biggs
Verlon Biggs

Verlon Marion Biggs was an American football defensive end in the American Football League and National Football League. He played for the New York Jets in Super Bowl III, but felt he didn't receive enough credit for the Jets' playoff win against the Oakland Raiders in the AFL Championship Game that launched them into the Super Bowl....
 
RE Ordell Braase
Ordell Braase

Ordell Braase was a defensive end in the NFL. He played with the History of the Indianapolis Colts throughout his career. During his football career in Baltimore, Braase also worked as a sportscaster with WMAR-TV, and performed in commercials for Dixie Cola, even singing their jingle....
Ralph Baker
Ralph Baker

Ralph Robert Baker is a former professional American football player.Baker was drafted in both the 1964 1964 AFL Draft and 1964 NFL Draft drafts?the Pittsburgh Steelers selected him with their 3rd-round pick, while the New York Jets used their 6th-round pick to select him....
 
LLB Mike Curtis
Al Atkinson
Al Atkinson

Al Atkinson was an American college and professional football player. He played High School ball at Monsignor Bonner High School. He played college football at Villanova University, where he was a linebacker....
 
MLB Dennis Gaubatz
Dennis Gaubatz

Dennis Gaubatz was a linebacker in the NFL....
Larry Grantham
Larry Grantham

Larry Grantham is a former collegiate and professional American football player.A member of the "Ole Miss" Athletic Hall of Fame, he was a linebacker of the University of Mississippi who came to the American Football League's New York Jets in the 1960 college draft and helped form the backbone of a New York Jets defense that reached the pl...
 
RLB Don Shinnick
Don Shinnick

Don Shinnick was a linebacker who played thirteen seasons in the NFL for the History of the Indianapolis Colts. He had 37 career interceptions with the Colts, still an NFL record for a linebacker....
Johnny Sample
Johnny Sample

John B. Sample, Jr. was an American football defensive back who played in the National Football League for the History of the Indianapolis Colts , Pittsburgh Steelers , and Washington Redskins , and in the American Football League for the New York Jets ....
 
LCB Bobby Boyd
Bobby Boyd

Robert Dean Boyd is a former NFL cornerback who played for the History of the Indianapolis Colts in a nine-year career from 1960 to 1968. A quarterback in college at the University of Oklahoma under Bud Wilkinson, Boyd was a two-time Pro Bowler and led the NFL with 9 interceptions in 1965....
Randy Beverly
Randy Beverly

Randy Beverly is a former professional American football player. He played cornerback for the American Football League's New York Jets and is best known for making two key interceptions that helped the Jets to their historic victory in Super Bowl III in 1968 AFL season....
 
RCB Lenny Lyles
Lenny Lyles

Lenny Lyles , is a former professional American Football defensive back. He started in Super Bowl III for the History of the Indianapolis Colts....
Jim Hudson
Jim Hudson

Jim Hudson , is a former professional American Football defensive back. He started in Super Bowl III for the New York Jets, and made a key interception just before the end of the first half....
 
LS Jerry Logan
Jerry Logan

Jerry Don Logan is a former American football player. He played as a Safety for ten seasons in the NFL. He was a part of the History of the Indianapolis Colts Super Bowl V winning team....
Bill Baird
Bill Baird (athlete)

Bill Baird ReferencesSee also*List of American Football League players...
 
RS Rick Volk
Rick Volk

Richard Robert Volk is a former American football player. He attended Wauseon High School in Wauseon, Ohio. He played college football at the University of Michigan, where he was selected as a first-team All-American by the Sporting News in 1966....


Officials

  • Referee: Tom Bell
    Tommy Bell (American football official)

    Tommy Bell was an American football official in the National Football League . He officiated Super Bowl III in 1969 and Super Bowl VII in 1973....
     (NFL)
  • Umpire: Walt Parker (AFL)
  • Head Linesman: George Murphy (NFL)
  • Line Judge: Cal Lepore (AFL)
  • Field Judge: Joe Gonzalez (NFL)
  • Back Judge: Jack Reader (AFL)


Note: A seven-official system was not used until 1978

Game time and weather conditions

  • 3:00 p.m. EST
  • , overcast, threat of rain


See also

  • 1968 NFL season
    1968 NFL season

    The 1968 NFL season was the 49th regular season of the National Football League. As per the agreement made during the 1967 NFL season, the New Orleans Saints and the New York Giants switched divisions; the Saints joined the Century Division while the Giants became part of the Capitol Division....
  • NFL playoffs, 1968
    NFL playoffs, 1968

    The NFL playoffs following the 1968 NFL season determined who would represent the league in Super Bowl III....
  • American Football League playoffs
    American Football League playoffs

    From 1960 to 1968, the American Football League determined its champion via a single playoff game between the winners of its two divisions . In 1969, the final year of the independent AFL, Professional Football's first "Wild Card" playoffs were conducted....
  • NFL lore


Further reading

  • 1969: The Year Everything Changed
    1969: The Year Everything Changed

    1969: The Year Everything Changed is a narrative history book written by American author and editor Rob Kirkpatrick....
     by Rob Kirkpatrick
    Rob Kirkpatrick

    Rob Kirkpatrick is an American author and editor....
    . Skyhorse Publishing, 2009. ISBN 9781602393660.