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MHR Broncos History Lesson -- Top 10 Greatest Games

Welcome to the sixth edition of MHR's Bronco History Lesson. I have decide to be a little unorthodox this week and compile a list of the greatest games in Bronco history. This is strictly my own humble opinion, so please feel free to voice your agreement or disagreement with my selections. I also have a very special guest writer who took time out of his day to write up a riveting account of one of his all time favorite games in Bronco annals.

There are many, many great games throughout Bronco history that could potentially make this list, but I mixed my own personal emotions while watching many of these games along with my knowledge of how certain games before my time changed Broncoland forever. So without further adieu, here is my Top 10.


Star-divide


#10: October 16, 1977 at the Oakland Raiders.

The Oakland Raiders were coming off a Super Bowl Championship and had won 17 straight games. The Denver Broncos on the other hand were still considered doormats by the rest of the league even though they had jumped off to a 4-0 start. The Broncos harassed Stabler all game long, intercepting him seven times as the Broncos and their Orange Crush defense steamrolled to a 30-7 victory.

This game makes the list simply because it was the first time in our franchise's history that we blew out the Raiders on their home turf. It also marked a turning point in the rivalry between the two teams. Neither team would dominate the other again until the Broncos recent twelve year dominance over the hated Raiders.

#9: September 9, 2007 at the Buffalo Bills

The Bronco offense charged up and down the field at will, yet found themselves down 14-12 late in the game. Jay Cutler took the field in the final minutes and converted two fourth downs and led the Broncos down the field into field goal range. With the clock ticking down they passed for one more play, but Javon Walker was tackled in the field of play. With no timeouts, the Broncos kicking unit rushed out onto the field with ten seconds left in the game yelling "TORO TORO TORO! and fielded the snap with no time left on the clock and kicked the winning field in what was to be the Broncos most exciting play of the year.

This was by far the Broncos most exciting victory since the retirement of John Elway. It makes this list only for the reason that I had never seen a finish like that in my lifetime. I am sure many of us lost our voices that day.

Click here for a slide show of this game.

#8: December 11, 1983 versus the Baltimore Colts

John Elway's rookie season was marred by struggles and doubt. Broncomania finally got a glimpse of what they had when Elway took command of the game against the Colts, down 19-0 in the second half. Elway came alive and fired three touchdown passes in the final half to lead the Broncos past the Colts, 21-19.

I was very young, but I've seen video of this game and what I remember most is the game announcer calling the last touchdown. "Wilhite to the goal line,...Wilhite touchdown! 4th and 2 and the Broncos get the go ahead Touchdown!" This game makes the list because of its importance in building the confidence of our quarterback and the importance for the fans to know they had something special in Elway.

Click here for a slide show of this game.

#7: January 17, 1988 versus the Cleveland Browns in the 1987 AFC Championship Game

In what became known as "The Fumble", John Elway led a game winning drive in the final minutes to give the Broncos a 38-31 lead over the Browns. The Browns however drove down the field poised to tie the game, when Earnest Byner fumbled the ball at the goal line. The Broncos recovered and Elway sealed the victory, 38-33.

This game was a roller coaster ride. The Broncos jumped out to a huge lead in the first half, but the Browns came back in the second half, forcing Elway to work his magic again. "The Fumble" has gone down as one of the greatest AFC Championship games in NFL history.

#6: October 4, 1992 versus the Kansas City Chiefs

This game embodied the ethos I have carried throughout my like as a fan. I've watched every Bronco game from start to finish(except the Super Bowl against the 49ers, I just couldn't) because I felt the Broncos always had a chance with Elway. The Broncos were down 19-6 at the two minute warning. John Elway threw two touchdowns in the final two minutes to give the Broncos their most daunting comeback in franchise history. Undoubtedly to never be repeated or matched in our lifetimes.

This game would have ranked higher on my list if the game had more meaning. We were a bad football team that year.

#5: January 1, 1978 versus the Oakland Raiders in the 1977 AFC Championship Game

The 1977 Cinderella season ended with a 12-2 record and the first playoff berth for the Denver Broncos organization. They dispatched the Pittsburgh Steelers in the Divisional Playoff game for their first ever playoff victory only to find themselves in the most important game in our history to that point against the hated Raiders. The game was hard fought and ended with the Broncos defeating their rivals 20-17, earning a berth in the Super Bowl.

This game proved to the world that the Denver Broncos were no longer a laughing stock. They were elite. Since 1973, the Denver Broncos have had a combined total of five losing seasons when not including the 1982 strike shortened debacle of a season. In a 21 year span from 1978 to 1999, the Broncos went to an NFL best six Super Bowls.

An elite organization was built on the backs of the 1977 team, therefore they earned the right to crack my top five.

Click here for a slide show of this game.

#4: October 22, 1972 at the Oakland Raiders

Picture this, twenty consecutive losses against a despised divisional rival. A decade of humiliation. That all changed in my number four game of all time. The 1972 Broncos traveled to a powerhouse Raider team angry. They were angry over a heartbreaking loss the week before against the Minnesota Vikings. The Broncos played the Raiders tough all game long and came out with their first win against the Raiders in ten years, 30-23.

However, the game that personified the struggles of the Bronco teams of the 60's and early 70's was the game that took place the week before this historic victory. I have a special guest today who will be giving us his account of that game. He is firstfan, a great contributer to MHR and an original Broncomaniac. He's been a Bronco fan longer than many of us have been alive and he remembers the above Raider-Bronco game quite well. However, it was the Minnesota game the week before that he remembered the most.

Click here for a slide show of this game.



1972 Broncos v Vikings
Mile High Stadium
by firstfan


This game typifies the efforts of the Denver Broncos of the sixties and early seventies. In order to understand the atmosphere in which the Broncos played in this era one must have a feeling for the emotion which surrounded this team and the city of Denver. I am unaware of any other city that has ever loved a professional team to the degree that the people of Denver and Colorado and the Rocky Mountain area loved the Broncos. Even though the team had never even had a winning season in the entire twelve years of its existence, the support never wavered.

The '72 season had started out with a convincing win over Houston. Houston had finished the previous year with a record identical to Denver's and many thought this would be a good measuring stick to see if we were getting any better and the win over Houston gave everyone hope. The next three weeks saw us get crushed by San Diego on the road and Kansas City at home and smothered in Cincinnati. The next week we were home against one of the strongest teams in the entire NFL, the Minnesota Vikings. The Vikings were led by Fran Tarkenton and their defense was called the Purple People Eaters and was perhaps the best defense in the NFL. Minnesota had finished the year before at 11-3 and shared the best record with Dallas. Nobody outside of the Rocky Mountain area gave Denver even a ghost of a chance.

The start of the game went pretty much as most experts on the East Coast thought. The Viking defense just stuffed us. Some people were surprised that Minnesota was having a hard time moving the ball against our own defenders and this was about the time the moniker Orange Crush began to be used. Midway through the second period Minnesota had a 6-0 lead. We stopped them and forced a punt. John Ralston was the coach and he pulled our Quarterback Steve Ramsey and put in the wily old veteran Charley Johnson. Charley must have seen something in that defense that he thought he could exploit. He drove the Broncos to the 36 yard line. Ralston sent in a play from the sidelines. It was a run but Charley changed the play in the huddle to a screen to Floyd Little. Floyd caught the pass, got a couple of blocks, put on a few moves and then outran every Viking defender to the end zone. The fans went absolutely wild and Denver went into the locker room at half up 7-6.

This was a wake-up call to the Vikings and they came out after the half charged up and ready to kill the hapless Broncos. They put up 10 points in the third quarter and took control of the game. The Broncos seemed to have two traits in those days; both of which repeatedly broke your heart. They would start the season with a bang and give everyone hope; then fade away the second half of the season. They did this in games too. They would play close for the first half or even the first three quarters, but then loose in the end. This looked like a typical Bronco game until Minnesota fumbled.

Next came one of the most outstanding performances in the history of Bronco football. Floyd Little took a handoff and was immediately in the sights of Alan Page. That behemoth was ready to kill the 5'10' Little. Somewhere in the far distant future some archeologist working on a dig just north and east of the new Mile High Stadium is going to find Alan Page's jock strap because on that play Floyd Little faked him completely out of the one he was wearing. In escaping Page, Floyd ran directly into a linebacker and put another move on the backer. This guy came closer than Page but could only grab Little's jersey. Floyd dragged him for about five yards before he broke free. The stats showed it to be a 25 or 30 yard TD run but I think Floyd ran about sixty yards to the end zone counting all the cut backs and weaves. I don't know if it is true or not, but one writer said all eleven Vikings had an opportunity to tackle Floyd Little on that play and none could get him down. The fans went nuts and momentum had shifted back to the Broncos. We closed the gap to 16-14.

After an exchange of punts the Broncos got the ball back with less than eight minutes left in the game. We weren't much of a passing team in those days and Ralston orchestrated a time-gobbling twelve play drive. Charley Johnson executed it perfectly. With less than a minute to go Floyd Little scored his third touchdown of the day and the Broncos took a 20-16 lead. The fans went wild. Their beloved Denver Broncos were on the cusp of defeating one of the best teams in the NFC. Unfortunately Fran Tarkenton wasn't done. The hearts of the Bronco players and fans were ripped out once again as Tarkenton engineered a drive and scored with seconds left. The Broncos were defeated 20-23.

A lesser team would have been devastated by this disheartening loss, but not our Broncos. They went out the next week and beat the snot out of the oakland raiders, giving them one of only three losses the raiders would suffer that year.


#3: January 11, 1987 at the Cleveland Browns in the 1986 AFC Championship Game

This game was John Elway's coming out party. I won't cover this too much as I just wrote about this game last week. That article can be found here. Suffice to say, the Broncos and Elway pulled off what would become known in NFL lore as The Drive - winning 23-20 in overtime.

This game ranks no higher or lower on my list than third. It was a fantastic game and one for the ages.

Click here for a slide show of this game.

#2: January 25, 1998 versus the Green Bay Packers in Super Bowl XXXII

This was the Denver Broncos fifth Super Bowl appearance. As double digit underdogs, this Denver team stymied and harassed Brett Favre and the Packers much of the game in a classic back and forth duel between two great football teams. Locked in a 24-24 tie, Elway took command of the field with just under four minutes left in the game. He led the Broncos down the field and a Terrell Davis touchdown with 1:57 left on the clock gave the Broncos a 31-24 lead they would not surrender. Brett Favre's 4th and 6 incomplete pass sent the Mile High City a Mile High as the Broncos won their first Super Bowl title.

I lived a mile away from Qualcomm when this game took place. I could see the stadium from my third story condo balcony. It is a day I will never forget and the tears I shed that day I know were shared with millions of other Broncomaniacs who had waited so long to be Champions! Elway was right when he said, "The Broncos will win more this, but it'll never be like that first Super Bowl win."

Click here for a slide show of this game.

#1: January 4, 1992 versus the Houston Oilers in the 1991 AFC Divisional Playoff Game

For three quarters of this game, the Broncos were dominated by Warren Moon and the Houston Oilers. Elway fought back hard late and closed the gap to one, 24-23. Then a punt was downed at the one and a half yardline at the two minute warning. Here comes Act II of The Drive. Except this time, the Broncos have no timeouts and are in need of a field goal for a win. The first pass gets Elway out of a hole and up to his own twenty-four yard line.

Three plays later Elway is faced with a 4th down and six. Flushed out of the pocket, Elway scrambles for six and a half yards for the first down. Time is ticking down now after three straight incomplete passes. Faced with another 4th down, this time ten, Elway is again flushed out of the pocket. This time he lobs an ugly pass out to Vance Johnson who nabs it and takes it down for a huge gainer, setting up the winning field goal attempt.

Gary Kubiak takes the snap for the field and nearly doesn't get the ball in place, but miraculously gets the ball down just as David Treadwell boots it through for the game winner. The Broncos win 26-24 in the most exciting finish in Elway's career.

 



There you have it. My top ten of all time. Thank you again, firstfan, for you invaluable contribution to this article.

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PS
Sorry for an undue lag associated with my slideshows. I just had too many darn pictures to share for this piece.

by Zappa on Apr 19, 2008 12:08 PM MDT   0 recs

Ok, I found a better way to code the article.
Sorry folks, still learning here. I think having links to the slide shows makes it much easier to read. In any case, I still had fun with this one. Hope you all enjoyed! :)

by Zappa on Apr 20, 2008 1:04 AM MDT to parent up   0 recs

My top 10
First not to be a dick, but that KC game referenced above was in 1992. And the 1983 game was against the Baltimore Colts. I am NFL history buff.
  1. 10/22/73 Vs Oakland first ever MNF game even though it was a tie, put Denver on the map.
  2. 10/16/77 @Oakland Denver won 30-7 vs. the Defending world champs and snapped the raiders 17 game home win streak
  3. 12/24/77 vs. Pittsburgh: the playoffs come to Mile Hi! Denver won 34-21 and TJ has a couple of picks
  4. 11/11/83 vs the Colts: Elway brings the Broncos back from a 19-0 defict, all 21 points in the 4th Qtr
  5. 1/4/97:Beating KC in KC when they had home field advantage, and it being the Broncos first road playoff win since the Drive
  6. 1/4/88 vs Houston Oilers, coming back from a 21-6 defict at home. The getting a deja vu with Elway staring at his own 2 and overcoming 2 4th downs to win 26-24.
  7. 1/14/06 Patriots. Ne coming in had won 10 straight playoff games and the World Champs. Denver with Plummer as QB beat them and Gave Brady his first ever playoff loss. It only took one more week for Shanny to lose total confidence in Plummer
  8. 1/1/78 vs. Oakland. 1977 AFC Title game. Who could ever forget Morton to Moses for 74 yards. Denver running out the clock in for the last 4 mins. Denver after never making the playoffs in 17 previous seasons were playoof bound
  9. 1/11/87 The Drive. Nothing more for me to add
  10. 1/25/98 Super Bowl XXXII: Finally winning the Super Bowl!!!! I will never forget this game for as long as I live. TD played great for 3 qtrs, Atwater was simply awesome in that game. Especially knocking himself, Robert Brooks,and randy Hilliard out before the 4th down play. Mobely knocking down the pass intended for Chumura. And of course the Helicopter!!!!
I may have missed some other awesome games.

by broncfanstuckinsd on Apr 19, 2008 1:57 PM MDT   0 recs

You are right. The KC game was a typo, but
the Indianapolis was just a slip of the brain. ;) As for your top ten, I thought about including the MNF game where Denver tied Oakland, but I thought the previous years upset was more impressive. JustBy the way, the Houston Oiler playoff game took place on Jan 4, 1992, not 1988. :) Other than that, I definitely see a lot of merit in your top ten!

by Zappa on Apr 19, 2008 5:59 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

btw
Thanks for pointing that out for me. I go over these things several times, but I never fail to miss the obvious. lol

by Zappa on Apr 19, 2008 6:15 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

you are right
I guess it helps to have my ducks in a row when pointing out errors in others.
On that oakland game in 1972, I agree was huge, but I guess I put the 1973 game in there was because it was the first ever MNF game for the Broncos and it was a classic game. I almost put it the Steeler game from 1974 the 35-35 tie in the first ever ot game in NFL history. That Steeler defense was awesome, ask the Vikings in that years Super Bowl, and the Broncos scored 35.

by broncfanstuckinsd on Apr 20, 2008 2:21 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

I missed all those classic game...
my damn parents were still teenagers. The NFL also has all their old games locked away forever so no fan can get access to any of them. :( I'd like to watch those old games from start to finish...it's not fair.

by Zappa on Apr 20, 2008 2:27 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Atwater
          If Atwater wouldn't have dropped that INT in the beginning of the 3rd quarter after Davis fumbled when he came back from the migraine, he would have been MVP. I have that game, and they said he could have scored if he held on. That game is his biggest masterpiece in what should be a Hall-of-Fame career.

by PABlzrfn on Apr 19, 2008 3:10 PM MDT   0 recs

Hahaha
I have friends who weren't real into football until recently, and I showed them SB32 and I kept pointing out Atwater (my second favorite Bronco ever) everytime he was doing something. It dawned on me during the game that he was an absolute MONSTER. I mean, a true manbeast. He was EVERYWHERE that game, even plays he shouldn't have been part of, you'd see this blue jersey go streaking through and it was like "There goes Atwater again." The play where he obliterated Randy Hilliard and himself while Brooks avoided most of the damage is still my favorite Atwater hit not involing a Nigerian Nightmare.

by SlamDunkTheFunk on Apr 19, 2008 6:52 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

I had the pleasure to watch Atwater throughout
his entire career. In Super Bowl 32 he WAS everywhere. I almost seemed like no one on either team wanted that trophy more than Steve Atwater. He was the MVP of our defense that day in my opinion. That hit on third down at the end of the game was freaking incredible. I remember getting sick to my stomach when I realized we had 3 starters from our secondary out of the game on that 4th down play. I was so happy when Favre threw that short pass over the middle. Emotionally, that day was the greatest moment I've ever had as a Bronco fan. It should have been #1 on my list, but its hard to argue against that '92 Divisional Playoff game against Houston. ;)

by Zappa on Apr 19, 2008 7:57 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Atwater.
He's probably my favorite Bronco of all time.  For come reason, I've always liked DB (if I could pla footall, I'd play DB) and especially awesome safeties.  My favorite Gator of all-time is Reggie Nelson, which is why I will forever hate the fact hat we didn't take him in last year's draft.  Oh well...

by ejruiz on Apr 20, 2008 5:00 AM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Ask Christian Okoye
I was in the USN at the time and was sationed in Japan and us guys on our ship were watching the MNF game against KC when Atwater just crushed Okoye. It was awesome. That was one of the few highlights for that 1990 season. But for a few years Denver had the hardest hitting safeties ever. Atwater and Dennis Smith. Man, could those two lay the wood!

by broncfanstuckinsd on Apr 20, 2008 3:07 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

another KC game
Hey Zapp,

So I don't have my own list, but would including a Broncos loss be too sacrilegious?  ;)

The game I would include would be the MNF KC game, Montana vs Elway, where the two legends pretty much single-handedly dueled back and forth for the entire game and the QB with the ball last pretty much was guaranteed the win, which unfortunately, was Montana... Still, it was one of the greatest games I have ever witnessed.

I would also be tempted to add a game based on one single play.  That Seahawks game in Seattle, the Broncos are at the 50, a Seahawks LB comes flying up the middle untouched, Elway at the last second ducks causing the LB to go flying over the top of him, jumps up and fires one of the most beautiful bombs ever, to Sharpe, on the dead run at the goal-line.  /getting chills right now

Ah... good ol nostalgia...  =)

-tunga.

by tunga77 on Apr 20, 2008 8:56 AM MDT   0 recs

I so almost put that game on my list too
but I despise Montana so much that I didn't. lol Everyone always likes to say that Montana out dueled Elway, but in reality Elway didn't get the ball last. I should have done an honorable mentions section. That '73 MNF tie with the Raiders and that classic game Montana-Elway matchup. I believe Elway WON the other match up that year with Montana.

by Zappa on Apr 20, 2008 9:35 AM MDT to parent up   0 recs

ME too
Yes he did, it was 20-17 in and got Denver to 7-6 after that 0-4 start. But Elway got hurt and missed the final 3 games that season. I cant put losses in my top games, because to me those are not memorable to me anyway. I also wanted to put in the 1995 MNF game against the Raiders in Denver when Shanny faced Oakland at Mile Hi and shut them out 27-0

by broncfanstuckinsd on Apr 20, 2008 2:25 PM MDT   0 recs

I agree on #1
Even though it was "only" a divisional round game, I still think that game was probably Elway's best masterpiece. I'm amazed how Elway's other comebacks get more respect than that game with Houston. Converting on both of those 4th downs was amazing.

The 20-19 win over KC was a great game for me to watch. I was watching it with a friend of mine of 20 years, who just happens to be a Chiefs fan. I still bust his chops over that and the Okoye hit.

by dpurvis on Apr 20, 2008 3:55 PM MDT   0 recs

The Fumble and one more

I was in Mile High Stadium when Byner fumbled that ball. Our seats were in the North endzone and The Fumble happened in the south. It was so quick none of us knew what had happened. We were watching it live on the Jumbo screen and the South Stands just started going nuts so we all chimed in. When we realized what had happened it was pandemonium and the first time I ever high-fived a complete stranger.

In 1992 (I think it was, my teenage years are fuzzy) I went to the season opener at Mile High against the LA Raiders. I remember the Broncos played HORRIDLY and I thought I was about to witness the Broncos losing a game I attended (I was 2-0 at that point so it was significant to me). Again the details are fuzzy but I do remember the last play of the game from the Raider’s 2 yard line (I believe Elway had driven the ball 60 yards and looked like a completely different QB then he had been the entire game. It was a Split left with (I think) Greg Lewis at full back and Reggie Rivers at RB. Elway faked the dive to Lewis, turned and gave the ball to Rivers sprinting to the weak side and Rivers went untouched into the endzone. For any of you who ever got the chance to watch a game at the original Mile High Stadium you remember the place was basically a giant tinker toy construct so when the crowd got going the thing actually moved! We almost tore the stadium down! It was also the first time I ever got hugged by a woman I never met before (that wasn’t an aunt that is) and since I was a teenager at the time that was very cool. This game probably doesn’t belong on your list, Zappa, but it was a great one for me. Being IN Denver when the Broncos beat the Raiders is something every Bronco fan should try to experience.

Elway is in, Zimm is in but don't forget: Randy Gradishar, Steve Atwater & Terrel Davis

by BlueNOrangeNIdaho on Apr 21, 2008 8:59 AM MDT   0 recs

I agree.

I can’t wait for my first experience of watching a Bronco-Raider game in Mile High(not the old one unfortunately). Thus far, I’ve only enjoyed the Bronco-Charger match ups down in San Diego. ;)

Thank you for sharing your memories. I love hearing about experiences of other people. We’ve all travelled different paths into Broncomania. ;) I only hope I can cajole my wife into travelling with me to a Bronco home game in the dead of winter…I like the cold, she hates it. I tell her she can wear my clothes, I only need orange paint!!!!

Your account about Elway playing horribly throughout the whole game has been replayed in many of the top #10 games on my list…he is proof that a QB only needs to keep the game close in order to win it at the end. ;)

by Zappa on Apr 21, 2008 11:33 AM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Oh and I actually

remember that second AFC Championship game better than I do the first. I guess I started retaining memories better at age 9 than I did at age 8. ;) I was watching the game on television and even then we didn’t know what was going on. I just saw a bunch of Broncos defensive players running down the feild celebrating so I started cheering too from my living room. lol

by Zappa on Apr 21, 2008 12:43 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

tinker toy construct

You make some good points BlueNOrangeNIdahoe. I am trying to get Zappa to collaborate with me on a piece about the sixties and seventies. One of the big things about going to those games was the stadium itself. When that place started shaking it was more than just the noise. Opposing teams were intimidated! Being an active 12th man bonded all of the fans in a magical kind of way.

by firstfan on Apr 21, 2008 2:42 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

I recall a MNF...

It was the season Dennis Miller was a commentator and it may have been a Raider game but I can’t recall. You could see the place was rocking because of the signiture “wide angle camera tremble” that would occur as the fans stomped their feet to make “Rocky Mountain Thunder.” It was Miller’s first time brodcasting from the stadium and first you heard him say “Whoa!” Then he says to Al Michaels “Are we safe up here?” You could really feel the effects in the upper level. While Invesco is a muche “nicer” stadium it doesn’t have the good old blue collar feel that Mile High had.

I’m not sure but I think I might have a COLOR photo of the old brown and yellow uniforms in one of my dad’s old Broncos books. It’s probably black and white and I’m just remembering it in color but I’ll look. I don’t know what kind of copyright issues you might have but I’d be happy to scan it (if it exists) and let you use it for any feature you do for the 60’s.

Elway is in, Zimm is in but don't forget: Randy Gradishar, Steve Atwater & Terrel Davis

by BlueNOrangeNIdaho on Apr 21, 2008 3:30 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

I was at that game!

It was the final MNF game in the old stadium. I got to see Ian Gold block a punt and take it for a TD! I couldn’t speak for a week and my ears were ringing from the noise and the bitter cold.

fader nation is a conquered nation

by mdierk on Apr 21, 2008 3:53 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Was that the game against the 49ers?

I still have that game on tape somewhere. Back when Cable and Satelite companies hadn’t yet installed the blockers to keep people from using video tapes to tape their favorite shows. That game was bittersweet for me. I was glad we destroyed the 49ers, but I was deeply saddended to know that I would never get the chance to go to a Bronco home game in the original stadium. I drove by it once when I was in 2nd grade on a trip to Denver with my grandmother back in the 80’s…but at least they saved “Bucky”.

by Zappa on Apr 21, 2008 4:13 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

The game I went to was against

the faders. It was the final monday night game. They did finish the season that year against the 49ers at the old home.

I was lucky. I was able to see 3 games there, 2 of them with Elway.

fader nation is a conquered nation

by mdierk on Apr 21, 2008 4:30 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

opps...I misread your post..

I missed the final “MNF” game. Hope the move is going well dude…I hate moving. I vowed not to move again until it was into a home I owned(or at least owned by the bank that I paid my mortage rent too). :P

by Zappa on Apr 21, 2008 4:51 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Wasnt that against the radiers

I remember that game the Broncos came from behind, that was when I liked Brian Griese.
Played the 4th quarter with that separated shoulder. Elam kicked the game winner! What a way to close out Mile Hi a win over the Raiders!

by broncfanstuckinsd on Apr 22, 2008 8:41 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Floyd Little

Would you be willing to add Floyd Little to your signature? Some day I will post compelling reasons to add Floyd to the HOF.

by firstfan on Apr 21, 2008 9:29 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

The Franchise

I absolutely love Floyd Little. I actually met him at DIA in on one of the concourse trains in 1998. I was in Denver to watch the Broncos absolutely torture the Dallas Cowboys and Davis rushed for something like 201 yards. Little is such a great guy. He shook my hand and introduced me to his wife. My Dad shook his hand and said “My mother loves you. You should be in the hall.” I’m paraphrasing that but it was along those lines. Little was in town because the Broncos were honoring the franchise’s all time greats. The stadium erupted when Floyd walked out on the field. He retired as the 7th leading rusher all-time and the six who were ahead of him are all in despite the fact that the era 10k RBs has, for the most part, buried their stats. You’re absolutely right. He should be in the HOF and I will add him to my sig and I look forward to your article.

Elway is in, Zimm is in but don't forget: Randy Gradishar, Steve Atwater & Terrel Davis

by BlueNOrangeNIdaho on Apr 22, 2008 9:46 AM MDT to parent up   0 recs

There is a website...

...I think I’ve seen it posted here before, where you can sign a petition to support Floyd Little’s induction. I went there and signed but can’t remember where it is. Maybe somebody out there can help.

I’ve said this so many times I think I’m becoming a bore but it isn’t a hall of fame until, at the barest minimum, Floyd Little is inducted.

by Trinidad Jack on Apr 22, 2008 2:09 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

I think I found it...

I think this might be the link you were referring too.

by Zappa on Apr 22, 2008 3:58 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Also Gradashar

Its a travesty that Floyd and Randy isnt in the Hall. Only 2 Broncos and they have been to 6 super bowls. I also think Rich Jackson should be in, along with Billy Thompson who in 1969 led the AFL in punt return and kick return average. Never been done since. Simon Fletcher I think is borderline, the true sack master. Lionel Taylor should be also the firtst WR to catch 100 passes in 1961. The first star on those horrible 1960’s Broncos

by broncfanstuckinsd on Apr 22, 2008 8:45 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Preachin' to the choir buddy.

Gradishar, Floyd, and Lionel Taylor would have been in the Hall if they had played for any other team. TD and Rod Smith will most certainly get in, but it will be years or decades before that happens. The only certain HOF entry that will come will be Shannon Sharpe next year.

by Zappa on Apr 22, 2008 8:57 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

I thought maybe Reeves hated Fletcher.

I mean, here was a guy, Fletcher, who practically invented the position of superfast but smallish defensive end/linebacker. He was another one of those tweener’s like Sharpe, who didn’t fit either position in a traditional way. But like Sharpe, he revolutionized the position. He was just too fast for stodgy old tackles to handle and too strong for backs to block.

Reeves really should have been promoting him for All-Pro every year but he didn’t seem to make much of a fuss over Fletcher. The Broncos owe Reeves a lot. In his way he was an excellant coach, but sometimes he got strange about some issues and people.

by Trinidad Jack on Apr 22, 2008 10:24 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

I am definitely game for that collaboration!

I am selfishly jealous of those of you who were fans back then. I feel like the big man upstairs somehow cheated me out of something by having me being born in ‘78. I guess it could be worse…at least I got to see Elway work his magic. The Bronco organization is probably the only organization that saw its popularity grow while the team itself was a league doormat. You don’t see teams like the Lions or Cardinals or any other recent NFL pariah make significant gains in popularity or actual fanatism like the Broncos succeeded in doing with Broncomania in the mid to late 60’s and early 70’s. I am surprised that no major universities out there have ever conducted any research into this strange phenomena. ;) Is it possible for MHR to turn people into really hardcore fans? I thought of myself as hardcore before, but I think I am borderline mental now. :)

by Zappa on Apr 21, 2008 4:25 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

In its last incarnation...

...I think the old mile high was a remodel of a remodel. It started out as a stadium for the Denver Bears and was configured for baseball. Then it was expanded a couple of times. Anybody who feels like correcting me chime in but as I recall the east stands could actually be moved out for baseball and in for football. They would slide along over a thin film of water. It was considered quite an engineering feat at the time.

And oh my my was that stadium loud, the loudest in the NFL, including places like Arrowhead and that stadium in Cleveland. And like some of the others said, it did intimidate visitors. And then throw in real intimidators like Rich “Tombstone” Jackson and Lyle Alzado and it was no wonder other teams really were afraid to come. I don’t think the new stadium is half as loud and I’ve never seen another Bronco hit as hard as Jackson, incluing those should be in the hall of fame (de-emphasisi added) DB’s Smith and Atwater and Lynch.

by Trinidad Jack on Apr 22, 2008 9:12 AM MDT to parent up   0 recs

You're right

The East deck could slide in and out to accomodate both field configurations. It was origionally named Bears stadium until the City bought it in 1965 (I think) and renamed it. I’m not sure but I think it was originally expanded in order to lure a MLB team to Denver but the owners ended up settling for an AFL team instead! Not sure about the water thing but it sounds good.

Elway is in, Zimm is in but don't forget: Floyd Little, Randy Gradishar, Steve Atwater & Terrel Davis

by BlueNOrangeNIdaho on Apr 22, 2008 9:59 AM MDT to parent up   0 recs

There are a lot of Broncos...

from the 60’s, 70’s and 80’s who commanded our love and respect and have now been forgotten. A little bio on many of those guys could be a good thing.

by Trinidad Jack on Apr 22, 2008 2:14 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Good idea.

I recall trying to do something like that a month or so ago, but it ended up being a vast recolllection of past Broncos from the early 60’s.

by Zappa on Apr 22, 2008 4:01 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Maybe we could call it Forgotten Broncos...

...and anybody could log in and provide a great Bronco whose been lost in the shadows.

by Trinidad Jack on Apr 22, 2008 7:58 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Ok.

What do you think of a weekly bio of a player from the old days. Whether it may be Floyd Little or Austin “Goose” Gonsoulin. ;) I just read a few minutes ago that one of our younger fans didn’t know who Floyd Little was. I think you “Forgotten Broncos” idea could be a good way to retell the great stories of the 60’s and 70’s to the younger fans.

I can honestly say that I’ve learned more about the history of the Broncos organization since I started writing about it than I did from 23 years of being a fan. I always knew the general outline of our teams history, but I am now learning about the actual history of this team.

I’ll be coming out with a personal interview of firstfan himself a few weeks after the draft…and I must tell you that the first few stories I’ve heard from him are real good. I can’t wait to post it, but I also can’t wait to talk about the draft this week and next. ;)

I’m thinking a bio on Floyd Little would be perfect change of pace in the middle of next week…after all, he was the first #1 pick ever to sign with the Broncos. I emailed firstfan to find out what his plans our…I’d want to make sure this gets posted on the front page.

By the way, the title of Forgotten Broncos would be a perfect segment that could be included in the overall MHR Broncos History Lesson topic. Do you mind if the MHR crew makes that an official part of the MHR Broncos History Lesson in the near future? Perhaps even beginning with any Floyd Little article firstfan writes up?

by Zappa on Apr 22, 2008 9:38 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

That would be great!

That way someday I could tell my grand kids about my little contribution to MHR. But it’s not like that would be in some distant future. I could tell them tomorrow. lol.

But seriously, I’d be honored if you used the name. I’m looking forward to firstfan’s article. He seems pretty sharp for an old guy. lmao. (I love this computer lingo stuff.)

by Trinidad Jack on Apr 22, 2008 10:11 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Hopefully, I'll have a long long time

before my daughter has kids. 20+ years I hope. ;)

Thank you, and if you think about it that is about as perfect a title for that theme of an article anyhow. I hope firstfan does the article, I did send him the article Guru wrote about Floyd Little last year…but maybe he can just write one about his own perspective having seen him in person. Stats and General Information can only give people a small inkling of an idea of what a player meant to an organization. Floyd Little was “The Franchise” long before John Elway switched from RB to QB in pop warner football!!

by Zappa on Apr 22, 2008 10:18 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

That would be great

There are a lot of fans out there that dont know anything about the guy who laid the foundation. Man, Little was the first #1 draft pick the Broncos ever signed. I just wish he could have stayed around for 2 more seasons and been a part of the 1977 team. He deserved it. He was the Broncos for so long. Plus to, me its still hard to believe that Goose Gonsoulins’ interception record of 11 still stands. I mean he set that in 1960.
Maybe the player profiles could start with the ring of fame guys!

by broncfanstuckinsd on Apr 23, 2008 12:54 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

I've got to throw in the "Blizzard".

October 15th, 1984. Monday Night Football. It probably shouldn’t make the top ten but it was special for me. The snow started falling earlier in the day. My best buddy and I drove up from Pueblo. I don’t recall for sure but I think when the whole thing was done, somewhere around two feet fell that night. It was one of those games where the grounds keepers gave up trying to clear the field and concentrated on the major yard lines. Free safety Steve Foley, another one of those forgotten Broncos we owe a lot to, takes back two balls for touch downs. Majkowski, the Packers QB, hits Sterling Sharpe, Shannon’s brother, on several key passes and brings the Packers back but a Rich Karlis field goal provides the winning edge.

Afterwards it took us two days to get home and I have never been so cold, before or since.

by Trinidad Jack on Apr 21, 2008 5:25 PM MDT   0 recs

Wasn't Don Majkowski nicknamed Magic or something?

1984 was before my memory, but I didn’t realize that Sterling was in the NFL in the early 80’s. I guess it would make sense that he retired in the mid 90’s, for some reason I assumed his career was cut short or something. Big age difference between the brothers though.

I believe the only tie Elway was ever involved with was against the Packers in the 80’s. I think it was in 1987 though.

by Zappa on Apr 21, 2008 6:05 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

I remember 3 packer games

Of course the Super Bowl. Then the tie game in 1987 right before the 24 day strike. When Rick Karlis missed a fg at the end of OT. But that was a sloppy field and the Broncos should have killed the Pack. Also the game in 1984 on MNF it was a blizzard and The Broncos scored to defensive TD’s on the first to plays of the game. But our defense held on for dear life. It was Lynn Dickeys best game ever. I think he threw for over 400 yards. Of course Reeves ran the ball and rarely threw it. When Denver needed first downs Elways arm was too cold. If that game would have lasted one more possesion the Broncos would have lost

by broncfanstuckinsd on Apr 21, 2008 8:47 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

That sounds like typical Reeves

play calling. He wasn’t very smart holding Elway on a short leash all those years. Elway would be a caged animal until the Broncos needed a miracle, then Reeves let Elway do whatever he wanted. No wonder no other QB is even in the same stratosphere for game-winning comebacks. That record might never be broken.

by Zappa on Apr 22, 2008 7:51 AM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Was it Lynn Dickey?

I could swear it was Majkowski. But you may be right. Sometimes those things get foggy in my memory. I do remember the defense holding on for dear life. It wasn’t like Green bay wasn’t used to that kind of weather. I wouldn’thave minded being in that bar in Achorage sharing a beer with firstfan. Still, it was exciting to be a part of it all. My wife said she saw me and my buddy on TV wrapped in blankets way up in the top section of the north stands. We were the last to leave and sneak down lower. By the end of the game we had field side seats on the 50 yard line.

by Trinidad Jack on Apr 22, 2008 8:43 AM MDT to parent up   0 recs

BTW...

...his nick name was “Magic”. At the time I thought this was going to be one of those games for the ages because of the epic conditions and the duel between two great quarterbacks. Two out of three ain’t bad.

by Trinidad Jack on Apr 22, 2008 8:46 AM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Majik

If I am correct I think he was drafted in 1987. I always hated Reeves for keeping the leash on Elway until there was about 5 minutes or so left and he was forced to come from behind. I remember a lot of hair raising Sundays! The best part of that Blizzard game was we knew there was no school that next day!

by broncfanstuckinsd on Apr 22, 2008 12:15 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

I lived in Pagosa Springs, CO back in

84-87…and I loved snow days. I recall only one truly amazing blizzard…the snow levels were up to the eves of our roof and I got to tunnel out of the front door. For some reason kids don’t feel the cold like adults do. :)

by Zappa on Apr 22, 2008 1:28 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Thanks for the assist,

you know us old guys need a hand every once in a while.

by Trinidad Jack on Apr 22, 2008 2:02 PM MDT to parent up   0 recs

Blizzard

I was in Alaska during that game but was able to get to a bar to watch. It was colder in Denver than Anchoarge that Monday night!

by firstfan on Apr 21, 2008 9:26 PM MDT   0 recs