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Originally appeared in the Watauga
Democrat, July 6, 2005
By Steve Behr, sports editor
Reprinted in Remember
the AFL
My memories of Hank Stram are not necessarily
pleasant ones.
I can still picture him on Monday Night
Football back in 1974, walking the visitor’s sidelines
of Mile High Stadium. I can’t even remember why, but
the Denver crowd was booing like Ashlee Simpson had
just started singing.
And here was Stram, coach of the bully
Kansas City Chiefs, trying to quiet the crowd by putting
his hands in the air, game plan rolled up in one hand.
Yeah, like Hank Stram was going to silence
the Broncos’ crowd. That’s like a liberal trying to
silence Rush Limbaugh.
And that was one of the good days. Most
Denver fans remember Kansas City beating the Broncos’
brains out in the early days of the AFL.
Stram, the architect of two Denver disasters
a season for 15 years, died Monday at age 83 after battling
diabetes for a while. He was inducted into the Pro Football
Hall of Fame in 2003, about 15 years too late.
To a kid who knew more about the Broncos’
stats than his family’s birthdays, Stram joined John
Madden and Al Davis as charter members of the Axis of
Evil.
To an adult who has followed professional
football since those days as a kid, Stram is a pro football
legend who deserves his due.
It was Stram’s Kansas City Chiefs who
legitimized the AFL, at least in its skeptics’ eyes,
when they beat Minnesota 23-7 in Super Bowl IV. Just
three years earlier, Vince Lombardi’s Green Bay Packers
used three second-half touchdowns to bury the Chiefs
35-10 in the first Super Bowl, then known as the AFL-NFL
World Championship Game.
Just one year before Kansas City’s win
over Minnesota, the New York Jets beat the Baltimore
Colts 16-7 in one of the biggest upsets in sports history.
The AFL had arrived, according to fans of the league.
But....
Had Kansas City, which was a wild card
team that year (Oakland won the Western Division in
1969, but lost to the Chiefs in the AFL championship
game), not beaten the Vikings, the Jets’ win would have
likely been viewed as a fluke by non-believers.
After Otis Taylor’s touchdown reception
that sealed the win for the Chiefs, those skeptics could
only shrug their shoulders and accept the merger, like
it or not.
Few, except for Stram and the Chiefs,
felt they had a chance against the Vikings. However,
the Chiefs were the monsters of the AFL at the time
with their huge offensive and defensive lines. They
simply pushed and shoved the smaller Vikings all over
the field.
They did it with the “65 toss power trap,”
the play that Mike Garrett ran in from the 5-yard line
for the Chiefs’ first touchdown. Stram made the play
famous by yelling “Sixty-five toss power trap, it ought
to bust wide open, boys,” and when it worked he cheered,
“Sixty-five toss power trap, ha ha ha, yeah!”
They did it with defensive linemen like
Buck Buchanan, Jerry Mays, Curly Culp and Aaron Brown
delivering a physical beating to Vikings quarterback
Joe Kapp that, to Kapp’s credit, few quarterbacks then
or today could take.
They did it with a moving pocket that
was later used by many offenses in the 1970s. Quarterback
Len Dawson was able to “matriculate the ball” down the
field largely because of the moving pocket.
Stram also introduced fans to the sideline
in Super Bowl IV when he agreed to be miked. He showed
a sense of humor that may not have been known to fans
of either league.
“Did you see that pass?” Stram asked to
nobody in particular following a duck Kapp threw that
quacked incomplete. “And they call us
the other league.”
He built a team that could have won another
Super Bowl following the 1971 season had kicker Jan
Stenerud, who is also in the Hall of Fame, made another
field goal in regulation against the Miami Dolphins.
The Dolphins won the game after two overtimes and reached
the Super Bowl, but lost to Dallas 24-3.
The next year, Miami went 17-0 and became
world champs. The Chiefs never got another chance. Eventually,
the Chiefs got old and Stram, who was loyal to his players
to a fault, was fired following a 5-9 season in 1974.
Stram’s road to the Hall of Fame stalled
in New Orleans, where he had three mediocre years trying
to build a winner with a franchise that had never seen
one at that time. He ended up living the rest of his
life as an announcer who could predict plays just from
what he saw in formations and coverages.
He was in a wheelchair when he accepted
his induction into the Hall of Fame. He joined fellow
Chiefs inductees Buchanan, linebacker Bobby Bell, quarterback
Len Dawson, Stenerud and linebacker Willie Lanier.
Two years later, pro football mourns
one of the all-time greats. Even a kid whose heart was
broken by Stram several times can see that.
Originally appeared in the Watauga
Democrat, July 6, 2005
By Steve Behr, sports editor
Reprinted in Remember
the AFL
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