Dayton Daily News

Alums reflect on ’88 ‘shuffle’ to Super Bowl

- By Mitch Stacy

C.J. Uzomah caught a touchdown pass in the Bengals’ wild-card playoff win and broke into the “Ickey Shuffle,” an endzone celebratio­n dance so famous there’s a Wikipedia page devoted to it.

Uzomah was paying homage to Ickey Woods, who starred as a rookie running back for the Bengals in 1988 and helped propel the team to the Super Bowl.

The Ickey Shuffle — a sideto-side, step-and-hop sort of thing — made its way into TV commercial­s and sitcoms while becoming a beloved slice of the history of endzone celebratio­ns.

The tribute by Uzomah on Jan. 15 led to a parade of fans busting out their versions of the “Shuffle” on social media. Woods, who lives in Cincinnati and goes to every Bengals home game, is enjoying a revival of his celebrity.

“I loved it, man,” Woods said. “I just wanted to tell that young guy thank you for

the shout-out and for honoring me. He got to be the ruler of the jungle.”

Woods, like every Bengals devotee, is fired up about the 2021 team earning a trip to the AFC championsh­ip game against the Kansas City Chiefs today, one step from another Super Bowl. Finally.

“Any time you make the AFC championsh­ip, man,

your city is going to be on fire,” he said. “And that’s what these guys are right now.”

Hall of Fame tackle Anthony Munoz, who went to the Super Bowl with the 1981 and ’88 Bengals, also lives in Cincinnati and can’t leave the house without hearing shouts of “Who Dey!”

“I see an excitement that

I haven’t seen in years,” Munoz said.

Woods recalls similar hysteria surroundin­g the ’88 Bengals as they prepared for the conference title game at Riverfront Stadium on Jan. 8, 1989. He rushed for two touchdowns in the 21-10 win over the Buffalo Bills, but the Bengals lost the Super Bowl to the San Francisco 49ers.

“They’re playing on a platform many of them hadn’t played on,” Woods said of the current team. “You’ve got a lot of guys on that team who came from championsh­ip (college) teams so they know what it’s like to win. They’ve bred that winning spirit into this team, and they’re getting it done. Joe Burrow said this is the norm for us now.”

Munoz, 63, noted that the 1988 Bengals were coming off a terrible season when they turned it around and went from worst to first in the division, just like the 2021 team.

Munoz credits then-coach Sam Wyche with fostering unity among the players by changing up roommate assignment­s and making players from different background­s live together.

“I remember going to camp and Sam saying, ‘We’re having a little change here. No more rooming with your buddy. We’re going white (with) Black, offense (with) defense, offensive linemen (with) defensive backs,’” Munoz said. “He did that purposely. And I really believe that brought the team together quickly in camp.”

Munoz said he recognizes that kind of chemistry in the current team fostered by coach Zac Taylor and his insistence on a culture of selflessne­ss.

“They’ve become a team,” he said. “You look at just what they do on the field. You’ve got three stud wide receivers, and if one gets it the other two guys are busting their tails to block for them. And it’s like everybody’s that way.

“The thing that I see are guys that have bought into believing in each other, talking about each other in a way that you see a team, not just a group of talented individual­s, but a team. And I think that’s been the key.”

Munoz also sees similariti­es in the leadership of the quarterbac­ks, Boomer Esiason in ’88 and Burrow in ’21, and their ultra-confident approach. “They believe they can win any game,” he said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ickey Woods (center) and teammates do their dance for the media Jan. 17, 1989, at Super Bowl Media Day in Miami. The Bengals lost the game to the 49ers.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Ickey Woods (center) and teammates do their dance for the media Jan. 17, 1989, at Super Bowl Media Day in Miami. The Bengals lost the game to the 49ers.

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