1965 American Football League Championship Game

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1965 American Football League Championship Game
1 2 3 4 Total
Buffalo 0 14 6 3 23
San Diego 0 0 0 0 0
Date December 26, 1965
Stadium Balboa Stadium, San Diego, California
Attendance 30,361
TV in the United States
Network NBC
Announcers Curt Gowdy, Paul Christman, and Charlie Jones[1]
 San Diego is located in USA
 San Diego
 San Diego
Location in the United States

The 1965 American Football League Championship Game was the sixth AFL championship game, played on December 26 at Balboa Stadium in San Diego, California.[2][3]

It matched the Western Division champion San Diego Chargers (9–2–3) and the Eastern Division champion Buffalo Bills (10–3–1) to decide the American Football League (AFL) champion for the 1965 season.

The defending champion Bills entered the game as 6½ point underdogs;[2] the Chargers had won the regular season meeting on October 10 by a convincing 34–3 score.[4]

In favorable 60 °F (16 °C) conditions on the day after Christmas,[2] the Bills shut out the Chargers and repeated as champions, scoring two touchdowns in the second quarter, one on a punt return. They added three field goals in the second half to win 23–0.[2][5] Of the ten AFL title games, this was the only shutout.

This was the last AFL Championship to end the season; the first Super Bowl followed the 1966 season.

Game summary

1 2 3 4 Total
Bills 0 14 6 3 23
Chargers 0 0 0 0 0

at Balboa Stadium, San Diego, California

Officials

The AFL still had five game officials in 1965; the NFL added a sixth official this season, the line judge. The AFL went to six officials in 1966, and the seventh official, the side judge, was added in 1978.

Referee Jim Barnhill died less than three months after this game; while officiating a high school basketball playoff game in Wisconsin, he collapsed and died at age 45.[6]

Players' shares

The winning Bills players were allocated $5,189 each, while the Chargers players received $3,447 each.[5] This was twice as much as the previous year and about 70% of the players' shares for the NFL championship game.

The attendance was nearly 10,000 lower than 1964, but the television money was increased with NBC.

Aftermath

This game marked the last time that a final pro football championship was decided in December, within the same calendar year as the regular season games. The following season would conclude with the first Super Bowl played in January 1967.

This is the last professional American football championship game to have been won by a team from Buffalo, New York, as well as the last of any major league team from the city. Indeed, the fortunes of both teams, and for that matter both cities, would go southward since then. The Bills would not appear in another championship game until Super Bowl XXV when the infamous Wide Right occurred, and would also proceed to lose the next three Super Bowls. The Chargers meanwhile would not appear in another championship until Super Bowl XXIX, which they lost to the San Francisco 49ers, 49-26. Both San Diego and Buffalo presently as of 2015 have the second and third longest championship droughts respectively for any city that has at least two major sports franchises.[7]

Marty Schottenheimer, a rookie linebacker for the Bills, went on to a long coaching career in the NFL, including leading the Chargers as head coach from 2002-2006. He, too, would not win another championship in his career until the 2011 UFL Championship Game.

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1965 NFL-AFL Commentator Crews Archived December 11, 2008 at the Wayback Machine
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  7. Champs or Chumps - Longest Championship Droughts

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Preceded by Buffalo Bills
American Football League Champions

1965
Succeeded by
Kansas City Chiefs
1966 AFL Champions