Season finale tie-games
Posted: Thu Jun 02, 2016 6:40 pm
There are none that I can actually recall. Any that any of you can?
PFRA is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the history of professional football. Formed in 1979, PFRA members include many of the game's foremost historians and writers.
https://mail.profootballresearchers.org/forum/
https://mail.profootballresearchers.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=3696
Looks like there were three:74_75_78_79_ wrote:There are none that I can actually recall. Any that any of you can?
Just reading Larry D. Names' second volume on the Packer history and the '36 season is included. With two games left, both the Packers and Bears were at 9-1 and had split head-to-head meetings. By the time the Packers played the Cards in the season closer, the Bears had already dropped their second of the two remaining games, the final to the 3-6 Cards on 11/29. Lambeau rested his starters for the game with the Cards on 12/6 to prepare for the trip to NYC and the Giants in the championship game (the Names books are great so far, IMO; the scheduling of multiple games in a week, that for many years teams scheduled their own opponents, playing non-league teams as warmup or late season exhibition games is just one thing I did not know much about that he gets a bit into the weeds about ... to say nothing of bigger things in volume one).conace21 wrote:A few teams in the 1930's ended their seasons with scoreless ties.
1933: Boston Redskins and Chicago Cardinals.
1935: Boston Redskins and Brooklyn Dodgers.
1936: Green Bay Packers and Chicago Cardinals.
In 1941, the Packers and Cleveland Rams ended their seasons with a 13-13 tie.
This was a huge game. The previous week, the 9-3 Packers had leapfrogged the 9-2-1 Colts by winning 42-27 in Baltimore (Paul Hornung 17 touches, 176 yards, 5 TDs) and seemingly clinched their spot in the title game. Going into the final week of the season, the Packers would wrap up the conference by defeating the 49ers. The Niners turned the ball over 5 times yet Brodie and Co. managed the 24-24 tie. The Colts won their game, setting up the 1965 playoff game and culminating in the increase of the height of the goalposts.BD Sullivan wrote:1965: Packers @ 49ers 24-24