The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

20 years later, Falcons quietly recall wild ride to Super Bowl

Team doesn’t acknowledg­e anniversar­y but players can’t, and won’t, forget.

- By D. Orlando Ledbetter dledbetter@ajc.com

The 20th anniversar­y of the Falcons reaching the franchise’s first Super Bowl passed quietly.

With Super Bowl LIII set to be played at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Feb. 3, several players from the 1998 Falcons team noticed that the Minnesota Vikings honored their 1998 team Sept. 10 during halftime of a home game.

“That was bizarre to me,” said kicker Morten Andersen, who’s a Pro Football Hall of Famer. “I don’t know what the reasoning was there. Maybe they didn’t have one. I’m not looking for that, but that was a special team, and if it’s 20 years ago, that should have been recognized. Whatever. Maybe they are waiting for the 25th.”

In a statement, the Falcons said: “As an organizati­on, we take great pride in the connection we have tried to cultivate with our Alumni. We engage them in community activities during the year and have an Alumni Day every year that coincides with a Falcon Home game. Last season we were introduced our Falcons Legends Ambassador­s Program to celebrate our former players who continue to embody our organizati­onal and community values. The program is made up of players who have spent four or more seasons with the Falcons, which includes over 200 alumni. We will continue to support all of our former players and teams by putting a tremendous effort behind our Legends Ambassador­s Program.”

Upset for the ages

The Falcons won 30-27 on a field goal in overtime by Andersen to upset the heavily favored Vikings for the NFC title on Jan. 17, 1999.

“When we saw they were celebratin­g, we saw they were celebratin­g a great moment at that time and them getting pretty far and close to a championsh­ip,” former Falcons defensive end Chuck Smith said. “I guess it really made me feel good that we were the team that beat them and they were celebratin­g being the second-best team in the NFC.”

The Falcons were founded in 1966 and before the 1998 run, the team had reached the playoffs just five times. It was the Falcons’ first appearance in the NFC Championsh­ip game. The five previous playoff teams — 1978, 1980, 1982, 1991 and 1995 — lost in the wild-card round or the divisional round.

“You’d think we would have celebrated it more with it being the 20th year,” former linebacker Jessie Tuggle said.

Some players got together during the season, but didn’t hold any formal ceremony on their own.

“Unfortunat­ely, just amongst ourselves, myself, Chuck Smith, Jamal (Anderson), and a few other guys,” Tuggle said. “We’d just sit and talk and reminisce about the good old days. It was really just amazing that 20 years went by that fast.”

The 1998 team had to overcome some incredible hurdles to reach the Super Bowl.

“It was just a great year,” said Dan Reeves, who was coach of the Falcons from 1997 to 2003. “We had a lot of things that happened with the team coming together and playing as well as it did. It started the year before with a good run.”

After a game against the Saints, Reeves complained of a burning sensation in his upper chest. He would have multiple-bypass surgery and miss some of the special season after a 12-2 start.

“With the health issues, the guys did a great job,” Reeves said. “I found out how much I was missed when I was away. They didn’t miss me at all (laughs).”

Reeves returned in three weeks to lead the team into the NFC Championsh­ip game.

“I was just glad to get back and be a part of it,” Reeves said. “It would have been nice if we could have beaten the team (Denver) that I’d coached to several Super Bowls, too. It just didn’t work out for us.”

Tuggle looks back on the 1998 season fondly.

“Right past the mid-season we started to think that we have a legit team and a legit chance to get to the Super Bowl,” Tuggle said. “But to get to the Super Bowl we had to beat the No. 1 offense in the NFL, which at that particular time was the Minnesota Vikings.”

The Falcons were heavy underdogs in the game.

“To go to Minnesota and to beat them when no one in the league thought we could do it,” Tuggle said. “Only our Falcons’ family thought that we could go up there and take them Dirty Birds and beat the Minnesota Vikings. “That’s what we did.” After Andersen’s 38-yard field goal sailed through the uprights, bedlam ensued.

“I can remember laying on the turf,” Tuggle said. “Chuck Smith was on top of me. I said, ‘I can’t believe we are going to the Super Bowl.’ There were some great memories.”

B ut th e Vikings had t heir 20-year celebratio­n.

“They sure did,” Tuggle said. “It was a little disappoint­ing why we didn’t do it here in Atlanta. I don’t know why the organizati­on didn’t celebrate the 20th year. But I did see that Minnesota did celebrate although they lost the championsh­ip and we won it.

“I thought that was pretty ironic, but it was just weird like that. It is a memory that will last a lifetime that I have and that’s the most important thing.”

Super Bowl letdown

The trip to Super Bowl ended with a 34-19 loss to the Broncos on Jan. 31, 1999.

“We couldn’t put it in the end zone,” Andersen said. “It’s not something that I like to talk a lot about. As great as the NFC championsh­ip was, the Super Bowl was the polar opposite.”

The Falcons’ win over the Vikings helped to usher in a new era in the NFC.

Before that win, the NFC had been dominated by the NFC East and San Francisco for the previous decade. Three NFC East teams — Dallas (three), Washington (one) and the New York Giants (one) — won NFC titles. San Francisco won three and Green Bay two.

“At the time there was no parity,” Smith said. “It was always Dallas or San Francisco. … It gave the Rams hope. It gave Tampa hope. … Before we got there no one would have dreamt the Saints would ever win a Super Bowl. Never. No one could even dream that Tampa could (win a Super Bowl). When we went, I think it opened up a lot of eyes.”

The Falcons had major swagger as the “Dirty Bird” dance was sweeping the nation.

“I was talking to Isaac Bruce (of the St. Louis Rams), and he said ‘when we realized that we could compete with you, even though you beat us, we knew we had a shot to get there,’” Smith said. “So, the ‘Greatest Show on Turf,’ we motivated those guys by whipping them, and they came back and whupped us.”

Instead of the Dirty Ram, they picked the “Bob and Weave” for the touchdown celebratio­n.

“The point that I’m real proud about is at the time the organizati­on went out and did whatever it took to get the right players ... but the real blessing of that ’98 team was that team was built and it came together,” Smithsaid. “It came together over lots of years, lack of success, shortened success, we’d have some success, then we wouldn’t have success. But there are a lot of reasons why that team was special because it took years of friendship­s and drafts.

“It was really an awesome time with friends and guys who wanted to bring a championsh­ip to Atlanta. We brought the NFC championsh­ip here.”

While the Falcons are still in search of the franchise’s first Super Bowl title, the 1998 team is awfully proud of the breakthrou­gh season from 20 years ago.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILE ?? Falcons quarterbac­k Chris Chandler (12) and safety Eugene Robinson hold the trophy after winning the NFC Championsh­ip game against the Minnesota Vikings on Jan. 17, 1999, at the Metrodome in Minneapoli­s.
GETTY IMAGES FILE Falcons quarterbac­k Chris Chandler (12) and safety Eugene Robinson hold the trophy after winning the NFC Championsh­ip game against the Minnesota Vikings on Jan. 17, 1999, at the Metrodome in Minneapoli­s.
 ?? BEN GRAY / AJC FILE PHOTO ?? ◄ Falcons running back Jamal Anderson struts his stuff in the end zone as he does the “Dirty Bird” dance after scoring his second touchdown against San Francisco in a Jan. 9, 1999, playoff game at the Georgia Dome.
BEN GRAY / AJC FILE PHOTO ◄ Falcons running back Jamal Anderson struts his stuff in the end zone as he does the “Dirty Bird” dance after scoring his second touchdown against San Francisco in a Jan. 9, 1999, playoff game at the Georgia Dome.
 ?? AJC FILE PHOTO ?? ▲ An emotional Falcons head coach Dan Reeves at a Dec. 18, 1998, press conference held at Piedmont Hospital. Reeves was released from the hospital after having undergone bypass surgery earlier in the week.
AJC FILE PHOTO ▲ An emotional Falcons head coach Dan Reeves at a Dec. 18, 1998, press conference held at Piedmont Hospital. Reeves was released from the hospital after having undergone bypass surgery earlier in the week.

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