NFL: Remembering the First Super Bowl
Super
Bowl 2012: What's in the Giants, Patriots, 49ers and Ravens'
Name?
Football Names and How They Got That Way / Who Dat? / Football Names and How They Got That Way - Part 3
REMEMBERING SUPER BOWL ONE
By Dr. Harvey Frommer
''The
most fun thing was watching the development of the Super Bowl because the
game is what it's all about. I really felt a high at every Super Bowl with
all the glitz and the spectacular halftime shows.'' Pete
Rozelle
The Super Bowl is an invention of American
business. It is American
business.
- Roger
Angell
The merger of the American
Football League and the National Football League led to the need for a
championship game. The first contest was played on January 15, 1967. The
NFLs Vince Lombardi Green Bay Packers squared off against the AFLs
underdog Kansas City Chiefs coached by Hank Stram.
That first Super Bowl was played at the Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles
before 61,946. Yes, there were empty seats the first and only time
the legendary event failed to sell out
even with ticket prices that topped out at
$12.
The contest was officially
known as the AFL-NFL World
Championship;however,
its unofficial name - the Super Bowl - was used by media, fans and players.
The
name stuck.
One theory for how the high
flying name came about is that at an owner's meeting centered on what to
call the game, one of the moguls had a "super ball"
in his pocket that he had appropriated from his youngster earlier in the
day. Not too taken with the long and ordinary sounding suggestions for what
would become professional football's ultimate game, Lamar Hunt suggested
the name Super Bowl. His suggestion was not greeted with much enthusiasm
by the assembled group. Nevertheless, he mentioned the name to a reporter
who loved it and, as they say, the rest is history.
The first Super Bowl witnessed
the first dual-network, color-coverage simulcast of a sports event in history,
and attracted the largest viewership to ever see a sporting event up to that
time. The Nielsen rating indicated that 73 million fans watched all or part
of the game on one of the two networks, CBS or NBC.
In actuality, the game was
a contest between the two leagues and the two networks. CBS' allegiance was
to the NFL. NBC's loyalty was to the AFL - a league it had virtually created
with its network dollars.
The networks charged $42,000 for a 30 second
commercial. Frank Gifford was a sidelines reporter
for CBS.
Ray
Scott handled the
CBS play-by play
for the first half
while
Jack
Whitaker took over
in the second
half.
Curt
Gowdy and Paul
Christman handled the
NBC telecast.
There
were many oddities and talking points about that first
game.
Two jetpack pilots
shook hands at the 50 yard line after landing there. Commercials for
McDonald's (then boasting of "Over Two Billion Served") and Muriel
cigars ("So much more cigar for just 10 cents") were all the rage.
According
to NFL Films President Steve Sabol, Commissioner
Pete Rozelle had wanted to call the game "The Big
One." That never came to be.
Neither did Pro Bowl, another name the NFL head man
favored.
From
the start (but not in that first game) there were unique
features to the Super
Bowl including its designation with a Roman numeral rather than by a year
- a move attributed to NFL Commissioner Pete
Rozelle to give the game class and continuity.
Max McGee of the Packers became
an interesting footnote to Super Bowl history.
"I knew I wouldn't play unless
(Boyd) Dowler got hurt," he said
later. So McGee went out on the
town the days (and nights) prior to the game. Curfews, it seems, were there
for him to break. Then, the
unimaginable happened. Dowler suffered a separated
shoulder throwing a block on the opening series.
In came McGee who had caught
only four passes all season. He snared 7 passes for 138 yards, hauling in
the
first touchdown
in Super Bowl historya 37-yard pass from Green Bay's Bart Starr. He
caught another at the
end of the third quarter
for a 13-yard touchdown. Elijah Pitts ran for two other scores. The Chiefs'
10 points came in the second quarter, their only touchdown on a 7-yard pass
from Len Dawson to Curtis McClinton.
McGee stole the show and set
a pattern that would be part of the ultimate game's history of unlikely heroes,
strange twists of fate, footballs taking a wrong bounce for some teams, the
right bounce for others.
Quarterback Bart Starr was the first Most Valuable
Player
leading the Packers to a 35-10 victory over KC. Starr completed
16-of-23 passes for 250 yards and three touchdowns.
Today more Americans watch
the Super Bowl than vote in presidential elections. Municipalities vigorously
and ruthlessly compete for the rights to host a game and then work with the
NFL, advertising and talent agencies, merchandisers, security personnel,
and celebrity party planners more than a year in advance fine tuning myriad
details. A couple of million
large-screen TVs are purchased weeks before the game.
The grandest and gaudiest
annual one-day spectacle
in American sports,
Super Bowl Sunday has become an unofficial American
holiday with bragging rights
to millions of parties, betting
pools, excessive consumption of food and
drink. TV networks charge as
much as $2.5 million for a 30-second spot. Many viewers do not even watch
the game itself, content to partake of the elaborate pre-game or halftime
entertainment.
The
2012
Super Bowl drew a television viewership of 111.3 million.
It is all a mind boggling situation very different from 1967 when
the Chiefs and the Packers clashed. And soon Super Bowl XLVII in New Orleans
will be upon us. Watch out.
(to be continued)
***Harvey Frommer
is at work on REMEMBERING SUPER BOWL ONE: AN ORAL AND NARRATIVE HISTORY.
He welcomes hearing from anyone with memories, perceptions, leads,
memorabilia
for his newest book.
****