At the end of 1969 season, a broadcaster mentioned that there would be a coin flip between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Chicago Bears to determine the first draft pick for 1970. This flip stemmed from the both the Steelers and the Bears having 1-13 records. The Steelers won the toss but the NFL should have let Pittsburgh have it with no hesitation.
On week eight of the 1969 season, the Chicago Bears (0-7) were home playing the 1-6 Steelers. A Chicago writer made derogatory remarks about the Bears, especially on defense. Linebacker Dick Butkus taped the newspaper to the wall and this, plus Butukus' hot determination, set the team on fire. The Chicago Bears led 29 to 0 and the Steelers had only 12 yards at halftime. The Bears kept the pressure on in the second half. With the score 38 to 0, the Steelers went on a touchdown drive against a prevent defense. Quarterback Dick Shiner completed a series of small passes. Earl Gros went in on a two yard touchdown run. The Bears won 38 to 7.
The statistics tell the story:
--in total yards, the Bears had 379 to 86 for Pittsburgh;
--the Bears sacked the two Steeler quarterbacks, Dick Shiner and Terry Hannraty, eight times for 48 yards;
--the Bears intercepted three passes and put up two safeties.
Three players stand out
--Gale Sayers carried 28 times for 112 yards and two touchdowns;
--Quarterback Bobby Douglas had one of his better days, completing nine of 16 passes for 123 yards and two touchdowns;
--Again Dick Butkus completely dominated the defense. He seem to be all over the field breaking up passes, tackling, and scoring one of the two safeties.
Their records were identical but this game showed who the better team was. Chicago 38 Pittsburgh 7.
Coin Flip for 1970 Went to the Right Team
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Re: Coin Flip for 1970 Went to the Right Team
Good point, although it would have been interesting to see what happened if the Steelers had the #2 pick.
In the book The Super 70's by Tom Danyluk, Art Rooney, Jr. basically indicated that they probably would have traded out of that pick if they couldn't get Bradshaw. They didn't want Mike Phipps.
The next year, they probably have a high enough pick to get Pastorini or Manning, but maybe one of the teams that would pick in the top-4 the next year trade up to get Phipps (and give up a 1971 first-rounder).
In the book The Super 70's by Tom Danyluk, Art Rooney, Jr. basically indicated that they probably would have traded out of that pick if they couldn't get Bradshaw. They didn't want Mike Phipps.
The next year, they probably have a high enough pick to get Pastorini or Manning, but maybe one of the teams that would pick in the top-4 the next year trade up to get Phipps (and give up a 1971 first-rounder).