Super Bowl Game time / Remembering Super Bowl 1 - Remembering the First Super Bowl
Super
Bowl 2012: What's in the Giants, Patriots, 49ers and Ravens'
Name?
When It Was Just a Game with a Different
Name
By Harvey Frommer
One of Commissioner Pete Rozelles suggestions for the name of the new
game was "The Big One." That name never caught on. Pro Bowl,
was another Rozelle idea. Had the name been adopted there would have been
confusion for that was the name used for the NFLs All Star
game. Another name was
floated World Series of Football. That died quickly. It was deemed
too imitative of baseballs Fall
Classic.
There
was no Super Bowl Committee. That some said was part of the problem. There
was also a game that had no location, that had no
name. That, too, was part of
the problem.
It was Rozelles idea to call the
contest, The AFL-NFL World Championship Game. That name for the game
was official; however, it never took
off. It was too cumbersome, a mouthful,
no good for newspaper
headlines.
BOYD DOWLER: We thought
it was kind of funny they called it the Super Bowl; that was a feature of
the media more than anybody else. But the AFL-NFL Championship Bowl Game,
yeah, thats a lot more words than necessary. Super Bowl is a lot more
practical.
SHARON
HUNT: The name AFL-NFL championship game was too unwieldy, hard to get
straight.
Two days after all the hullabaloo
over the
merger, New York
Times sports columnist Arthur Daley wrote about what the future
held in store: the new super duper football game for what amounts to
the championship of the
world."
The Los Angeles Times
reported
on September 4, 1966 that the game was being "referred to by some as the
Super Bowl."
The
New York Times sports sections lead story that same day headlined:
"NFL Set to Open Season That Will End in Super Bowl."
The Washington Post a week
later reported: "The brash upstarts who will tackle Goliath in professional
football's ultimate production, a highly appealing 'Super Bowl' that promises
extra pizzazz at seasons end."
LAMAR HUNT,
JR: My parents got divorced,
and my dad would come over and pick us up. And I remember showing him the
Super Ball, the whammy super ball and saying, Hey look,
this will bounce over the house, this ball.
You know my dad was not going to be
preoccupied with toys that were given to children. You know, he might have
bounced the ball. We just remember demonstrating
it.
But then what happened
going forward is my dad was in an owners meeting. They were trying
to figure out what to call the last game, the championship
game. I dont know if he
had the ball with him as some reports suggest.
My dad said, Well,
we need to come up with a name, something like the Super Bowl.
And then he said, Actually, thats not a very good name.
We can come up with something better.
But Super Bowl stuck in the media and word of
mouth.
It
kind of came out of my dads mouth. What do you want to call it? Power
of suggestion or just an idea or whatever, it stuck. And the inspiration
was that Super Ball. I feel blessed
to be the son of guy who really came up with the
name.
Super Bowl was probably inspired by his contact with the
Super Ball. I dont know if he had a ball with him at that owners
meeting as some have said.
BILL MCNUTT, III: I became very close friends with the Hunt children.
We would go over to Dallas and I would play with that ball with them. We
were just amazed at this ball. It was the most popular toy of its day.
The Wham-O Super Ball was introduced
in 1965.
Invented
by Norm Stingley, a chemical engineer at the Bettis Rubber Company in Whittier,
California, the ball was made of Zectron. The Super Ball could
bounce 6 times higher than any regular rubber ball. Millions of the balls
were sold and it remained a craze through the 1960s.
PAUL
ZIMMERMAN: The National Football League hierarchy frowned on the term
Super Bowl. But the fans and the media like it and used it and
Super Bowl would become the name to represent professional footballs
championship game.
SHARON
HUNT: It was something else that a toy a child was playing with could have
inspired the name
JERRY
IZENBERG: The afternoon of the merger the switchboard rang at the NFL offices,
and the guy said, I want 20 tickets for the title
game.
They said, We
dont even know where its going to
be.
And he said, I
dont care, I want to buy it right now!
(To be continued)
IN THE WORKS FOR FALL 2015:
Written by acclaimed sports author and oral historian Harvey Frommer,
with an intro by pro football Hall of Famer Frank Gifford, When It Was Just
a Game tells the fascinating story of the ground-breaking AFLNFL World
Championship Football game played on January 15, 1967: Packers vs. Chiefs.
Filled with new insights, containing commentary from the unpublished memoir
of Kansas City Chiefs coach Hank Stram, featuring oral history from many
who were at the gamemedia, players, coaches, fansthe book is
mainly in the words of those who lived it and saw it
go on to become the Super Bowl, the greatest sports attraction the world
has ever known. Archival photographs and drawings help bring the event to
life.