Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

OVERLOOKED EPIC

Packers’ 1966 title game vs. Cowboys rivals ‘Ice Bowl’

- GARY D’AMATO

Even Green Bay Packers fans born decades after the 1967 NFL Championsh­ip Game can recite facts about the “Ice Bowl,” which has attained near-mythic status as the pinnacle victory of the 1960s Packers.

The game featured unthinkabl­e cold, a back-and-forth struggle between Vince Lombardi’s proud but aging Packers and the upstart Dallas Cowboys and, of course, Bart Starr’s heroic game-winning plunge — the most famous play in franchise history then and now.

Grainy film footage of players slipping on the icy Lambeau Field turf and the Packers’ determined final drive, paired with the dulcet tones of NFL Films narrator John Facenda, helped turn the 21-17 victory into a romanticiz­ed symbol of Lombardi’s dynasty.

Three hundred sixty-four days earlier, however, those same two teams — in fact, better versions of

“The fans might not talk about it much but the players still do, I can tell you that. We remember.” BOB LONG, RECEIVER ON THE 1966 PACKERS

those teams — engaged in an epic battle that was every bit as dramatic and at least as important as the Ice Bowl.

Sunday will mark the 50th anniversar­y of the 1966 NFL Championsh­ip Game, which was played Jan. 1, 1967, before a sellout crowd of 74,152 at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas and broadcast to a national television audience by CBS.

Though Green Bay won, 34-27, behind an all-time great performanc­e by Starr, it’s safe to say most modern-day Packers fans know little, if anything, about the game.

“I tell people if you want to analyze all the great games in NFL history, you have to include that game in the Cotton Bowl,” said Bob Long, then a third-year wide receiver with the Packers. “(Linebacker) Dave Robinson and I get together all the time and we talk about that game.

“That was one game that I really think back upon. The fans might not talk about it much but the players still do, I can tell you that. We remember.”

The background

Dallas, an expansion team in 1960, never had a winning season until it went 10-3-1 in 1966 behind an explosive offense led by quarterbac­k Don Meredith and powered by all-purpose back Dan Reeves, fullback Don Perkins and receiver Bob Hayes, a former Olympic sprinter and the fastest man in the NFL.

“Bob Hayes in the slot, he was the scariest guy in the world,” said Zeke Bratkowski, Starr’s trusty backup. “They had a lot of other good people, too.”

The Cowboys were young in 1966, with only four players on the roster older than 30, and led the league in scoring at 31.8 points per game. An argument can be made that it was among the best offenses of the Dead Ball Era (pre-1978, when the league made rules changes to promote scoring).

The Packers went 12-2, losing only to San Francisco by one point and to Minnesota by three. With nine future Hall of Famers on a veteran-laden roster, Green Bay was aiming for its fourth NFL title in six years.

The ’66 season marked the end of the two-conference alignment used by the NFL since the initial championsh­ip game in 1933; realignmen­t into divisions and the first playoff games would occur in 1967.

It also was the beginning of the Super Bowl era, with the winner of Packers-Cowboys earning the right to represent the old guard against the American Football League’s champion in the first AFL-NFL Championsh­ip Game.

The Cowboys by then boasted a huge fan base spread across the Deep South and were on their way to becoming “America’s Team.” The NFL Championsh­ip Game at the Cotton Bowl was, at the time, the biggest profession­al sports event ever held in the South. The Packers had played in Dallas only one time previously, in 1964.

“I was a young kid, and playing in the Cotton Bowl was a big deal for me,” said Long, a two-sport standout at Wichita State. “For old-timers, that was one of the great stadiums. It still is.”

Lombardi took the Packers to Tulsa, Okla., in the week leading up to the game in hopes his team would get some quality work done in better weather. An ice storm scuttled that plan.

“We practiced at (the University of) Tulsa and they had to hook up something to the back of a Cadillac to get the ice off the field,” Bratkowski said. “(Kicker) Don Chandler was from Tulsa and everybody got on him about the ‘good weather.’ Then we went to Dallas and practiced where they had the exposition. We practiced inside on concrete floors, with a low ceiling.”

It was not the ideal way to prepare for the Cowboys, who had won five of their last six regular-season games and were brimming with confidence.

“We were not intimidate­d by the Packers,” said Hall of Fame cornerback Mel Renfro. “As a matter of fact, we felt very strongly that we were the better team.”

The game

Contrary to popular belief, the Packers did not have a good rushing game in 1966. Aging fullback Jim Taylor led the team with 705 yards but averaged just 3.5 yards per carry. Elijah Pitts averaged 3.4 and Paul Hornung, playing less and less because of a damaged shoulder, averaged 2.6.

Lombardi knew it would be difficult to run against the Cowboys’ gapping defense, led by Hall of Fame tackle Bob Lilly and coached by Tom Landry, one of the greatest defensive innovators in NFL history. So he shelved his signature play, the power sweep, and put the

game in Starr’s hands.

“Coach Lombardi, his philosophy was to take what they give you,” said receiver Carroll Dale. “If they came up eight in the box, he would throw on every down if he needed to.”

Said Bratkowski, “We had probably the best game plan I’ve ever seen and we executed it extremely well. It was nothing extravagan­t, but the things we did, we did very well.”

On the first play from scrimmage, Pitts broke loose for a 32-yard run on a misdirecti­on play the Cowboys had not seen on film. A few plays later, Pitts scored on a 17-yard pass from Starr. Then Renfro fumbled the ensuing kickoff and rookie fullback Jim Grabowski picked up the bouncing ball on the 18yard line and ran in untouched. Just like that, it was 14-0.

“I just flubbed it,” Renfro said. “I returned kickoffs for three or four years and that’s the only one I fumbled.”

But the Cowboys weren’t finished. Far from it. Before the first quarter was over, they had stormed back to tie the score on Reeves’ 3-yard run and Perkins’ 23-yard burst.

The Packers broke the tie on the third play of the second quarter, when Starr connected with Dale for a 51-yard touchdown over the head of cornerback Cornell Green.

“Cornell Green was an outstandin­g defensive back,” Dale said. “He was hard to get behind. On that play, I ran a post pattern, made it look like I was going outside and then went down the middle. Bart had to guess and anticipate where I was going to be. Green recovered sufficient­ly and went for the ball and it glanced off his arm. It kind of hit me in the crook of my right arm and just stuck. I never broke stride.”

Dallas responded with a 68-yard drive to the Packers’ 4 but had to settle for a field goal by Danny Villanueva. In the third quarter, Cowboys defensive back Warren Livingston recovered a fumble by Pitts, and Villanueva kicked another field goal to cut the Packers’ lead to one point, 21-20.

But on Green Bay’s next drive, Starr completed a 40-yard pass to Dale and then threw a 16-yard touchdown pass to Boyd Dowler to make it 28-20. Late in the final period, Starr completed a 16-yard pass to Taylor on third and 12, then threw a 28-yard touchdown pass to Max McGee on third and 19. Lilly blocked Chandler’s extra point but the Packers led, 34-20.

“Then they put Frank Clarke in and went to the spread,” Robinson said. “He was a tight end and we didn’t adjust. Instead of bringing (cornerback Bob)

 ?? NEIL LEIFER / SPORTS ILLUSTRATE­D / GETTY IMAGES ?? Sunday is the 50th anniversar­y of the 1966 NFL Championsh­ip Game where Packers quarterbac­k Bart Starr had 304 yards, four touchdowns and no intercepti­ons in Green Bay’s 34-27 victory over the Dallas Cowboys at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas on Jan. 1, 1967.
NEIL LEIFER / SPORTS ILLUSTRATE­D / GETTY IMAGES Sunday is the 50th anniversar­y of the 1966 NFL Championsh­ip Game where Packers quarterbac­k Bart Starr had 304 yards, four touchdowns and no intercepti­ons in Green Bay’s 34-27 victory over the Dallas Cowboys at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas on Jan. 1, 1967.
 ?? NEIL LEIFER / SPORTS ILLUSTRATE­D / GETTY IMAGES ?? Packers quarterbac­k Bart Starr went 10-1 in postseason games, including the 1966 NFL Championsh­ip Game, and he remains the only quarterbac­k to have won five NFL titles.
NEIL LEIFER / SPORTS ILLUSTRATE­D / GETTY IMAGES Packers quarterbac­k Bart Starr went 10-1 in postseason games, including the 1966 NFL Championsh­ip Game, and he remains the only quarterbac­k to have won five NFL titles.

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