After “Lam” Jackson (Lamar Jackson is now (1-2) in slots games and (2-3) in ‘offs games) accounted for four touchdowns, (2 rushing and 2 passing) in the Ravens (34-10) “ease job” (though tied at the half), vs Houston (Texans), the S.F. 49ers now (16-3) (our usual ode to Ron Perranoski ’63 when those #’s appear) in home slots games, needed much fortune and an eventual game winning 6 yard TD run by Christian McCaffrey, to (24-21) Green Bay.
The Texans fell to (0-5) in slots games, losing by a greater margin each time-7 to the Ravens in ’11 (I will try a “big gulp,”), 13 to the Pats in ’12, by 18 to them in ’16, by 20 dissipating a 24 point lead at the K,C, Chiefs in ’19 and by the above cited 24 point margin yesterday.
Both the Ravens, who will now host an AFC Title Game/NFL “semi” for the first time in their 28 years as the Ravens, and Niners, who will host an eleventh such “semi,” (12th if you count the unscheduled Western ‘off in ’57 vs Detroit (Lions), who are near TD favorites vs Tampa Bay (Buccaneers) to be the S.F. opponent in the later tilt next week. (All 11 Niners’ NFC title tilts were/will be in the later game and unopposed surely the ’57 ‘offs tilt won by Detroit en route to their last crown with nary a final round appearance and but one semi appearance since, was “late” at least in the East), were approximate 10 point “faves” yesterday.
Next week’s tilt vs today’s Bills/Chiefs Slot 4 game winner, will mark the third time a Baltimore team will host either an NFL (that was the “all the way, 7 years before the Supe and the last season before AFL play began, title tilt that was in and around in the excellent Barry Levinson directed film, “Diner” in ’59, a repeat victory vs the New York Giants) or AFC/NFL “semi” title tilt (in ’70 the Colts got a big John Unitas to Ray Perkins TD play in a win vs the then Oakland Raiders en route to the Supe crown).
S.F. as stated above is approaching a 180 degree term with an 11th time hosting such a tilt, after raising their “slots” mark to (19-7) with a very fortunate 5th straight ‘offs win vs the Pack (That ties the Steelers’ 5 straight wins vs the Colts for the most by one team vs another in consecutive fashion. I believe a major difference is that SF’s ‘offs advantage is (6-4) vs the Pack, while Pitts has won ALL 5 such tilts vs the Colts).
I think on You Tube, one can click and view Joe Montana’s TD pass to Dwight Clark that with “Toe” Wersching’s XP (Wersching is Ray) gave S.F. the lead in the final minute and to stay in a 1981 NFC Title Game win vs Dallas.
The Niners went on to win their first Supe crown, doing so in Pontiac, Michigan, vs the Cincinnati Bengals.
Last week, the Buffalo Bills scored a (31-17) victory Over the Pittsburgh Steelers, squaring the team’s all-time ‘offs record vs each other, at 2 games apiece.
I note that the winner of the three previous (before last “postponed from Sunday’s,” Monday Bills’ win, there had been three such games), Bills/Steelers ‘offs tilts, all played in Pittsburgh, won at least, their next ‘offs game.
In the case of the ’74 Steelers, who “slot 3’d” the Bills, in one O.J. Simpson’s lone ‘offs tilt, two wins followed, yielding the team’s first of six (tied with the Patriots of New England for the most such wins) Super Bowl crowns.
After a slot 1 win (then with the early Saturday afternoon start, I recall listening to Al “Grampa Munster” Lewis on WBAI “during”) vs Buffalo, the ’95 Steelers survived a near desperation/”Hail Mary” pass by the Colts’ Jim Harbaugh, he who finally titled as he coached 2023 Michigan, in the subsequent AFC Title game, before losing (covering the spread in defeat), vs the Dallas Cowboys in the Supe.
At that point, the Dallas team had won 3 of the previous 4 Super Bowls. This point in time relays they have not won as much as a “div round game since that ’95 season, going 28 seasons sans such a victory (’96-2023).
Conversely, from 1967-1995, a period of just one more season (29), Dallas achieved all 15 of their “slots”/div round victories, three coming in all 3 years the pre NFC/AFC configuration NFL had “quarters” (1967-1969).
In ’92, Buffalo won a slots 1 tilt at Pittsburgh and followed that with an AFC Title tilt win at Miami. They were obliterated (52-17) by you guessed it, Dallas in the subsequent Supe.
Quickly, tonight’s Green Bay at San Francisco clash will be the tenth ‘offs game contested between the Packers and 49ers. Only once after the previous nine, (the Pack in ’96) did the winner of such a game go on to a Super Bowl victory.
Also only two other times, hence three out of 9 with G.B. winning 2 subsequent games in ’96 making the teams (4-6) in ‘offs tilts subsequent to their ‘offs meeting, did the G.B./S.F. playoff game winner, prevail in its next game. (G.B. title tilted second year team Carolina (Panthers) and then New England coached by Bill Parcells in the ’96 ‘offs, the latter dropping Parcells to (2-1) in Super Bowl games. In ’12, S.F. under Jim Harbaugh, that man again, “slot 2’d” the Pack after Jim’s brother John, still in and the coach of the current AFC top seed, Baltimore Ravens pulled off a miracle win at Denver in slot 1, and followed that with a win at Atlanta (Falcons) in the title tilt/NFL “semi.” In the Supe that season John Harbaugh’s Ravens defeated Jim Harbaugh’s Niners. Finally in ’13, after S.F. “wild card rounded” G.B. they slot 3’d Carolina before losing the title tilt/semi at Seattle vs the Seahawks. All three SF ’13 season ‘offs tilts were played on the road).
Each team’s title game win vs the other, (Green Bay at S.F. in ’97 and S.F. vs G.B. in ’19) as well as one “slots” (Green Bay in ’95 and S.F. in 2021) and wild card game (S.F. on Young’s pass to Ter Owens with “Super” Summerall, i.e. Pat Summerall or is it AKA Pat Summerall? in ’99 and G.B. in overtime in ’02, the first year sans Mr. Summerall on NFC broadcasts) were followed by losses in said team’s next ‘offs tilt.
Alas, the Ravens/Niners Supe/ “Harbaugh Bowl” is maybe best known for the fact a power outage at the New Orleans Superdome, the game’s venue caused a delay.
Thus click above, to view the immensely talented Vicki Lawrence sing “The Night The Lights Went Out In Georgia.”
I could “say” more, but to “R.E.M.” it, I have “said too much,” but “maybe not enough.”
The collapse by Atlanta (located in Georgia) in the Supe 4 years later and Colin Kaepernick, the S.F. “Q.B.” vs the Ravens, anyone?!!
The 54th (ode to the great Chuck Howley, who finally made the Pro Football Hall last year) year of the NFL “slots”/divisional round/ “quarterfinals” (there were such (’67-’69), begin with a game (the 213th slots game) at Baltimore, where the first such game was played, a Colts’ win en route to the crown vs the Paul Brown coached, third year Cincinnati Bengals in 1970, with the Ravens hosting the Houston Texans.
I heard a “not quite there” quip that if the Houston Texans made the Supe, it would be rescheduled to the earlier Saturday “window.”
That use of exaggerated comedy, not even in the same stratosphere as that of Sid Caesar, would “apply” to the fact all 8 of the Texans’ wild card tilts were played in the earlier Saturday game/”window.”
However this will be the first of their 5 slots games to be played then.
Houston is (0-4) in previous such games, including a loss at Baltimore to the Ravens in the “Slot 3″/earlier Sunday game in 2011.
That was the Texans’ first such game.
Losses at New England (twice, in 2012 in the later Sunday slot 4 tilt and in ’16 on Saturday night in slot and in a “blown 24 point lead”/ (51-31) loss at K.C. , vs the eventual champion, Chiefs in slot 3 (earlier Sunday tilt), in 2019, followed.

A great actor, Robert Shaw is pictured above.
In addition to his prowess, I “cryptic” it with his “you FOLLA” more than once said in the superb film, “The Sting.”
The “Slots”/NFL Divisional Round is almost upon us, after 5 of 6 essentially not competitive wild card round games.
The top seeds (only they, starting in 2020 are afforded such) Baltimore (Ravens) and San Francisco (49ers) swing into action Saturday January 20, each a 10 point “fave” the former vs the Houston Texans and the latter vs Green Bay (Packers), who on the exact 56th anniversary of their repeat title/NFL/AFL Championship Game/Eventual Supe 2, triumph on 1/14/1968, won in Dallas, leading (27-0), as a touchdown plus underdog.
On Sunday, in the later game, the Buffalo Bills whose eventual (31-17) ‘offs tilt triumph, vs Pittsburgh (Steelers) was correctly postponed from Sunday to yesterday/Monday, will host the defending champion Kansas City Chiefs in what is a redux of a classic K.C. win, also in Slot 4 on a day now in “French Polynesia” Rivkah called.
Also on Sunday, the Detroit Lions, after their (24-23) first ‘offs win since ’91, ending a 9 game ‘offs loss skein, vs the L.A. Rams, will host the Tampa Bay Buccaneers who capped the defending NFC Champion Philly Eagles’ incredibly bad “free fall,” ripping them (32-9) as field goal underdogs, last night.

A true great, Boyd Dowler who wore #86 and is 87 years old, caught what was his 5th and final post-season touchdown pass, all from the so great, Bart Starr, in the Pack (33-14) win vs the then Oakland Raiders in that aforementioned, eventually called second Super Bowl.
Once, long ago, 61 years and 3 weeks (those #’s evoke Roger (Maris) and “The Babe” (Ruth) before yesterday, when both the Kansas City Chiefs nee Dallas Texans and the 2003 NFL expansion team, Houston Texans scored wild card round, home victories vs the Miami Dolphins and 1999 NFL expansion team, Cleveland Browns, the then Dallas Texans won the AFL crown, riding a Tom Brooker second overtime field goal, to a victory at Houston’s Jeppesen Stadium (for the record a high school venue) vs the Oilers, who had copped the first two AFL titles in 1960 and 1961.
The current Texans, now (5-2) in wild card round tilts, all, somewhat incredibly, but not all that much, if you think about it, in the earlier Saturday wild card round slot and more incredibly all at home defeated the Browns (45-14), dropping that franchise’s (the NFL allots them the old and once glorious Cleveland Browns’ records/statistics) road ‘offs record to (3-16), the reverse and negative of Ron Perranoski’s 1963 pitching mark, –even the great Otto Graham’s teams were only (1-2) in such, Jim Brown’s (0-3) (the current Browns proudly and prominently displayed Jim’s #32 and had a fine “reg,” but apparently sans “anything” commemorating Dr. Frank Ryan, were trounced in the ‘offs, evoking past “scoring 14 points in an ‘offs tilt,” in which they were routed.
Two of those Browns’ rout losses were even more “points decisive” than yesterday’s. The first was in Jim Brown’s first season (1957), at Detroit vs the Lions (59-14), the other 10 years later, at the famed Cotton Bowl in Dallas, a (52-14) trouncing at the hands of the Dallas Cowboys.
In 10 AFL seasons the Chiefs, who eased (26-7) at frigid Arrowhead Stadium in K.C. , vs the Miami Dolphins yesterday, played all 7 of their ‘offs tilts, either on the road (5) or at neutral Super Bowl venues.
The Chiefs’ AFL title tilts: the aforementioned ’62 AFL title tilt at Houston, the ’66 with a berth in what became the first Supe on the line, AFL title clash at Buffalo, where the Chiefs would go if the double digit favorite Bills prevail in the moved to Monday’s 95th anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King’s berth game vs the Pittsburgh Steelers, the ’69 last AFL game/title game at Oakland vs the Raiders.
That list of 7 includes 2 Supes, a loss vs Green Bay in ’66 and an historic win vs the Minnesota Vikings in 1969.
In ’69 the Chiefs defeated the defending champion New York Jets, who had pulled off an even greater and more historic Supe win and upset, the year before, in a “cross-over” division round game in the lone and last year the AFL had such or existed.
Finally in their lone “within the AFL” ‘offs setback, the Raiders routed the Chiefs in an unscheduled playoff for the AFL west crown in 1968.
The Chiefs, who now have played 14 straight home ‘offs tilts, (also 3 Supes–oddly in one their opponent Tampa Bay (Buccaneers) with Mr. Brady (Robert Reed got a “Mannix gig” after being Mr. Brady on “The Bunch”) played at home), were (1-7, (0-5) at home in slots/”div” round games before winning such games the last 5 seasons, all at home.
Miami (Dolphins), which last won the Supe 50 years ago with not so arguably a greater team albeit with 2 reg losses, than the undefeated title team of same calendar 1972 into 1973, has now lost 6 straight ‘offs games, not having won one since 2000.
They have lost 12 of their last 13 road playoff games, the lone win at Seattle (Seahawks), then in the AFC, in a wild card round game in 1999.

Patrick Mahomes, the brilliant Chiefs “Q.B.” pictured above, has played at home in all 12 of his post-season games (2 wild card round games, both wins, 5 slots/”div” round games, going (5-0) and 5 AFC title tilts/NFL “semis” with a (3-2) mark).
Certainly, there has been much news concerning Nick Saban (the big surprise), Bill Belichick (as expected and noting his nice jacket at the announcement–what you expected, a so called “hoodie?!”) and Pete Carroll (a mild surprise), moving on.
I type “moving on” as retirements often are “un’d.”
While Belichick did not retire, he is out as New England Patriots’ coach after 24 seasons (2000-2023), 6 that resulted in Supe wins and 9 that yielded Super Bowl/NFL Final appearances.
Carroll won a national title and shared another, also winning a Super Bowl and would have at least approached Belichick and Saban (by a slight margin over Belichick, I opine Saban as “the best for last”) were it not for two crucial play calls gone wrong, one in the exponentially less heralded and important run failure with over a TD lead in the 2005 national title tilt loss to Vince Young and Texas, and that one I need not detail, manifesting in a Mal Butler interception and a 4th crown, first in 10 years for Belichick and New England in the 2014 season Super Bowl/NFL Final.
Saban, an assistant to Belichick with the last original Browns’ ‘offs team, in what was their penultimate year in Cleveland in ’94, won 6 undisputed national crowns with Alabama and shared one as LSU coach with Carroll’s 2003 USC team.
He also had by far the best 2023 season, among the three.
In 2003, all three men won or shared crowns. Both Belichick and Carroll won titles in 2004, Carroll with U.S.C.
Only in Saban’s “share year” of 2003 did Belichick and Saban win titles in the same season.
Their other 11 combined crowns came in different seasons, amounting to that many, in 20 combined seasons from (2000-2020).
One thing for sure each coach, Carroll and the “titles record holding,” Saban and Belichick created history in their years on the job, which clearly, and I believe unfortunately, may not be completely in the “rear view.”
Two women I knew and liked/like, one deceased, claim they started the ripped jeans “thing” 50 years ago. I am not against it.
However, Mr. Saban’s perspective on what is the last decade or less trend toward ripped jeans is minimum, somewhat sensible and I think among other things, humorous.
The first of six NFL wild card round games matches the two most recent NFL additions, the Cleveland Browns (added in 1999) and the Houston Texans, whose first season was 20 years back, in 2003.
Only three ‘offs meetings between the then two most recent NFL additions, the Dallas Cowboys (1960) and the Minnesota Vikings (1961), had less years between the teams entering the league and meeting in the ‘offs, than the upcoming Browns/Texans clash.
In 1967 the league added its 16th team, the New Orleans Saints and went to four divisions (remember the “C’s”: Century, Capitol, Central and Coastal Divisions).
A year earlier, the Atlanta Falcons came aboard and by the time (1991 Saturday wild card round game won by the visiting Falcons) they met in the playoffs, the Seattle Seahawks then in the AFC and Tampa Bay Buccaneers of the NFC, were the two most recent NFL additions.
Four years later in 1995, the Jacksonville Jaguars and Carolina Panthers were added and incredibly, each made its conference’s title tilt/NFL semi the next season.
The fact those pair of teams were in separate conferences, meaning they could only have a playoffs clash in the Super Bowl/NFL final round, made/makes such an event less likely to happen, especially for expansion teams.
That second year rise by both the Jags (they just fired their coach Doug Pederson, who won it all with the Philadelphia Eagles in ’17 and have never made the Supe) and Panthers (they lost NFL final round tilts/Super Bowls in both ’03 and ’15 and just fired their coach Ron Rivera, the ’15 team coach) remains an astounding, unlikely feat.
So now 20 years later, the same conference Browns and Texans meet in the ‘offs.
The Cowboys and Vikings met thrice in the playoffs while being the league’s two newest teams, not counting the AFL expansion teams.(Those were the Miami Dolphins whose first season was 1966, with Joe Auer returning the opening kickoff for a ” ‘Phins TD, in their first ever tilt and Cincinnati Bengals, who played in the AFL’s last 2 seasons 1968 and 1969, each of which culminated in an AFL team pulling a huge upset win in the Super Bowl, perhaps justifying the 1966 NFL/AFL merger)
All three of those Cowboys/Vikings such tilts were won by the road team, Dallas winning slots/div round games at Minne in ’71 and ’75 while the Vikings won the ’73 NFC Title Game/NFL “semi” at Dallas.
Above, I cited Mr. Auer’s first Dolphins’ play kickoff return touchdown in 1966 now click below for two videos of John Gilliam, later a Vikings’ touchdown maker in the above cited 1973 NFC Title Game win at Dallas as he gathered in a Fran Tarkenton pass, scoring a touchdown via kick return on the New Orleans Saints’ first play, that on same calendar 1967/1968 2023/2024, on September 17, 1967.
Each video has the superb TV football broadcaster Don Criqui’s opening audio with one including the “hard to hear” culmination of Gilliam’s TD return.
The University of Michigan went (15-0) and won their first unanimous national crown since 1948 (they shared the title with Nebraska in 1997), defeating (14-1) Washington University (34-13) in last night’s title tilt.
Michigan, which really did not trail all year in any up for grabs tilt, save the late comeback win in the semis vs Alabama, never trailed in the title tilt, jumping (7-0) and (14-3) on a pair of 40 plus yard(s) touchdown runs by Donovan Edwards.
Blake Corum, who joined “Der” Henry of Alabama as the only players in college football annals with touchdown runs in all or even as many as 15 games in a season, added 2 in the 4th quarter when Michigan extended 7 and 14 point leads into the 21 point margin of victory.
The Michigan defense was superb, stifling “Wash” quarterback Michael Penix Jr. and allowed but 3 touchdowns in the two playoff victories that finally yielded an “all the way” crown for Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh.
I cite both Will Johnson and Mike Sainristil from that defense, each of whom had interceptions, the former on a great deflected catch on the second half’s first play which set up the second of James Turner’s field goals (ode to another title winning kicker, Jim Turner, who had 3 in the Jets’ long ago Supe win vs the Colts) and the latter racing 81 yards with an “int” that set up Corum’s second touchdown and the final margin.
A big play was a catch and run by Colston Loveland of 41 yards on the 71 yard TD drive that gave “Mich” a (27-13) lead with 7:09 left in the game.

Blake Corum #2 with the football, pictured above.
Last night the Houston Texans, a 2002 NFL expansion team, clinched their first playoffs appearance since 2019, winning (23-17) at Indianapolis, vs the Colts.
The game’s result manifests in the Colts being eliminated from ‘offs contention and now if homestanding Tennessee, a mid sized underdog, upsets Jacksonville, the Texans would win the AFC South, be the “4” seed and host “5” seed Cleveland (Browns) next week in a wild card round game.
The (23-17) score evokes memories of not so arguably the NFL’s most important game, its first overtime game, making then commissioner Bert Bell so happy, the 1958 Baltimore Colts’ Title game win at Yankee Stadium, vs the New York Giants.
Earlier in the day, the Pittsburgh Steelers 18 for 18 (with one crown) in attaining better than break even seasons under coach Mike Tomlin, kept their ‘offs hopes alive with a (17-10) win at Baltimore vs the Ravens, who clinched the AFC top seed for just the second time last week.
The Steelers now need either a Tennessee win vs “Jax” or a Dolphins win vs the Bills to qualify for the 2023 season “NFL Tournament”/Playoffs.
“Balti” quarterback, Lamar Jackson, who did not play vs the Steelers (why would he?), will almost certainly be the league MVP for the second time.
There will be big “pressure” on him and the team, when the Ravens host a division round/”quarterfinal” playoff game either Saturday January 20th or the next day, January 21st.
In ’19 with Jackson as their quarterback, the Tennessee Titans won a Saturday night/second slot “div” game at Baltimore, eliminating the Ravens.
The city of Baltimore has won 5 NFL titles, (only Green Bay, Chicago, New York and Boston, the latter all under Bill Belichick, who might be coaching in his last Pats game, a meaningless one vs the New York Jets today), three with the Colts who now are in Indianapolis and two with the Ravens (2000 and 2012).
Both Ravens’ crowns occurred with the team playing and winning 4 ‘offs games, as each time they needed to win home wild card games in addition to the requisite three, for example they or the NFC top seed S.F. 49ers must win this year to win it all.
It was the (Baltimore) Colts, in the first year (1970) of the AFC/NFC configuration, that played, I believe the lone Saturday regular season final week game, a home victory, vs the Jets, who had “Suped” them 2 years earlier, in a game that makes the discussion as to which was pro football’s most important.
A week later, the Colts played in the first of what will 2 plus weeks hence, be 216 “slots”/”div” round games in the AFC/NFC configuration, on a Saturday, (The 2006 title winning Indianapolis Colts’ Jeff SATURDAY, an offensive center, scored a touchdown on an endzone fumble “pick up,” in Indy’s stirring comeback win vs the Patriots, in the AFC Title Game. These are notes, I cite/”tangent” the fine center, Jeff Van Note) and won in route to the ’70 crown, vs the Cincinnati Bengals.

It was a day NFL Commissioner Bert Bell thought he would never see, now 65 years and a week plus ago, that an NFL game first went into overtime, that (23-17) score in a game that eliminated the Indianapolis Colts last night and was the final tally in the Baltimore Colts’ first title game win on December 28, 1958.
