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More on the "Sea of Hands" comeback:
Raiders vs. Dolphins
Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum, December 21, 1974
Oakland 28, Miami 26
The venerable Curt Gowdy, NBC Sports top play-by-play telecaster for many years, called
the 1974 AFC Playoff Game between the Oakland Raiders and the Miami Dolphins "the greatest game I have
ever seen." Gowdy's long-time television partner, Al De Rogatis, agreed completely. The 52,817 present
at the pre-Christmas Sunday in the Oakland Coliseum knew they had witnessed an extraordinary event. Forty
million television viewers shared their opinion.
Under head coach Don Shula, the Miami Dolphins had been to the last three Super
Bowls—an NFL record at that time. They had won the last two Super Bowls. In 1974 the Dolphins had won
the AFC East title with an 11-3 record. The Raiders captured the AFC West crown with a league-best 12-2
record. In the eight games played against the Miami team since the series began in 1966, the Raiders were
presently 6-1-1. John Madden was 1-1 as head coach for the Raiders in league and postseason games against
the Miami Dolphins under Don Shula.
Don Shula and John Madden would become the only NFL head coaches to win 100 league games
in their first ten years on the job. But in this AFC Playoff Game only one of these outstanding coaches
could emerge victorious.
The radio station carrying the Raider games in the Bay Area had promoted the game as one
for which fans should wear black, carry black and wave black. The Coliseum was an ocean of black with kids
waving black pennants and towels, local priests waving black cassocks and even a few of the more fervent
female fans waving black bras in the breeze.
"I have never heard any louder cheering in the Coliseum than when we came out to be
introduced," said long time Raider executive Al LoCasale. "The stadium left the ground." But
the filled Coliseum went silent in an instant. Miami wide receiver Nate Moore took the short opening
kickoff on his own 11-yard line, starting up field, broke to his left and went unstopped and untouched to
the end zone.
Fifteen seconds off the clock, 89 yards on the field and Miami ahead, 7-0.
The score stayed that way until the Raiders got the ball for the second time in the
second quarter. Quarterback Ken Stabler opened with a nine-yard toss to wide receiver Fred Biletnikoff.
Marv Hubbard, out of the fullback spot, slammed inside for five. Next, Stabler passed over the middle to
Hubbard for nine more. Then halfback Clarence Davis went over left tackle for ten. The big powerful,
machine-like Raider offensive line of Art Shell, Gene Upshaw and Jim Otto—a trio of future Pro
Football Hall of Famers—plus George Buehler and John Vella, was taking it to the Dolphins. Three
plays later halfback Charlie Smith, a 9.4 sprinter as a collegian, streaking down the middle, pulled clear
of the man-to-man coverage of the outmatched Miami linebacker, reached up and pulled in a perfect pass from
Stabler to complete a 31-yard touchdown play. Raiders 7—Miami 7.
Staying primarily on the ground, with Larry Csonka, Jim Kiick and Benny Malone
alternating as ball carriers, Miami came right back to put three points on the board on a 33-yard field
goal by Garo Ypremian with 1:01 remaining in the half. Miami left the field leading 10-7 at the game's
midpoint.
Oakland began another march with 11:43 to go in the third quarter with Stabler to
Biletnikoff for the first 20 yards. On the next play, the "Snake" went long to Biletnikoff from
40 yards out. A marvelous leaping catch along the right sideline at the goal line, but the official on the
scene signaled, "out of bounds". The Raiders then moved in closer. From the 13, Stabler again
went wide right to Biletnikoff along the sidelines, just inside the endzone. Dolphins' corner Tim Foley was
draped all over Biletnikoff, but Fred reached up with one hand, fought off Foley, pulled the ball in and
stayed barely in bounds to record a brilliant touchdown for Oakland. Raiders 14—Dolphins 10.
A 29-yard interference call on the third-and-seven aided Miami's return when their
superb wide receiver, Paul Warfield, beat the coverage, going into the left corner for 16 yards and a
touchdown. But big defensive end Bubba Smith got a hand into the path of Ypremian's point-after attempt to
keep the score at Dolphins 16—Raiders 14.
At the start of the fourth quarter Miami again moved into Oakland territory. When
slowed, the Dolphins had to settle for a 46-yard field goal, upping their lead to five, at 19-14.
With 4:54 left in the game, the Raiders took possession on their own 17-yard line.
First Stabler went right side to Biletnikoff for 11 yards. Then came the big strike—a trademark of
the feared Raiders vertical passing game. Stabler passed to Cliff Branch on the left side on the Miami 27.
Branch went to the ground to make the catch, but being untouched by Dolphin defenders, Cliff popped upright
and ran away from the surprised defensive backs to complete a 72-yard scoring play. George Blanda was true
on the extra point. Raiders 21—Dolphins 19, with 4:37 to go. The Raiders had gone 83 yards in just 17
seconds.
Quarterback Bob Griese brought Miami back immediately, as the fans went bananas in the
Oakland Coliseum. With 2:08 remaining to play, Benny Malone swept right end, got free outside, ducked under
a couple of tackle attempts along the sideline and bounced 23 yards to give Miami the lead again 26-21.
Ron Smith brought the kickoff back 20 yards to the Oakland 32. Stabler went to the
Raider sideline during the mandatory two-minute warning time out to review strategy and options with coach
John Madden. The Raiders, trailing by five, needed a touchdown. They had 68 yards to travel, two minutes on
the clock to make the trip and all three time outs left. On first down Stabler went to tight end Bob Moore
for six. Plenty of time left—no reason to force the ball deep as of yet. After a short run, the
Raiders went back to Biletnikoff on two consecutive plays for 18 yards along the right sideline and 20
yards breaking across the middle from right to left. With just one minute to play, Stabler hit Branch on a
quick out to the right for four yards. Then reserve wide receiver Frank Pitts picked up a first over the
middle, bobbling the ball up in the air, but regaining possession before being downed on the Miami 14.
Clarence Davis ripped over left guard for six yards. The Raiders then used their final time out.
On first-and-goal from the eight, Stabler dropped back looking for Biletnikoff. At that
moment Fred was tightly bracketed. The Miami rush was closing in. Finally, with defensive end Vern Den
Herder clinging to his legs, pulling him down, Stabler looped the ball toward the left side of the front of
the end zone where running back Clarence Davis was working his way back to give his quarterback a target.
In a "sea of hands," Davis outfought a crowd of white-jersied Dolphin defenders to come down with
the ball and go to the turf clutching the football to his chest in clear, sole possession. The crowd went
wild, completely raving wild. Couples kissed for the first time in years. People pounded on their Coliseum
neighbors. It was a scene out of a movie script that would probably be rejected as "too
far-fetched." But this was reality. This was pro football at its best. This was Raiders
football—great players, great coaches, great plays and great games.
The Raiders were now ahead 28-26 with only 24 seconds left. On Miami's second play after
the subsequent kickoff, linebacker Phil Villapiano intercepted a last-gasp Bob Griese pass at the Oakland
45. Marv Hubbard used up the clock on two runs to the left. Final score: Oakland Raiders 28—Miami
Dolphins 26. The Raiders, classic comeback, had scored twice in the final four minutes and 37 seconds to
move forward to another AFC Championship Game.
"This has to be the toughest loss I've ever suffered," said Miami coach Don
Shula. "The Raiders are a great credit to professional football," he added. "They needed
touchdowns to win and they got them."
Source: Raiders.com
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