30th Anniversary of the Greatest Shootout in Jets History

Green Jets & Ham

King Of All Draftniks
Jet Fanatics
30 YEARS AGO, WHEN THE JETS AND DOLPHINS SET RECORDS AND RUINED PENCILS

By Rich Cimini



"Oh, Jeez, 30 years already?"

The voice on the other end of the phone belonged to Wesley Walker, who scored a walk-off touchdown in the wildest game in New York Jets history. On Sept. 21, 1986, before pass-oriented offenses and fantasy football were the rage, the Jets and Miami Dolphins defied the era with a futuristic display of offense.

It was Jets 51, Dolphins 45, in overtime. Ken O'Brien and Dan Marino passed for a combined 884 yards, an NFL record that stood until 2011. The teams racked up 1,066 total yards between them, still a single-game record for a Jets game. It was such a back-and-forth contest -- we're talking 13 touchdowns -- that Fred Smith, a member of the Jets' stats crew, went through four pencils instead of the usual two.

Yes, kids, there was a time when we survived without computers.

"It was like a track meet," Walker recalled. "It was Marino, (Mark) Duper, me, Kenny, Al Toon -- and we were all on a buzz."

Jets Nation was aglow last Thursday night when the team scored four touchdowns, 37 points, and generated 493 total yards to defeat the Buffalo Bills, but that was a mere bottle rocket compared to the full fireworks display from 30 years ago. The '86 gang also scored four touchdowns.

In the second quarter.

Football has evolved over the decades into a wide-open sport, dominated by high-scoring offenses, which made the 51-45 game a marvel. At the time, it was the third highest-scoring game since the 1970 merger, according to ESPN Stats & Information. Since then, it has been passed by four other games, but the mere fact that it still ranks among the seven highest-scoring games in history is crazy.

Only two future Hall of Famers played in the game -- Marino and his center, Dwight Stephenson -- but so many played at a Hall-of-Fame level, none more than Walker. He scored on the final play of regulation, a 21-yard catch with no time on the clock, and again in overtime, hauling in a 43-yard strike from O'Brien. The Jets' young quarterback was magnificent, throwing for a career-high 479 yards and four touchdowns. Walker finished with six receptions for 194 yards and four touchdowns -- the game of his life.

And he almost didn't play.

Walker was nagged by a groin injury and he was "pissed" because coach Joe Walton wasn't featuring him in the offense. He was so frustrated that he almost bailed out before the game. He learned a life lesson, and he has shared it many times over the years while speaking to students in the New York area, where he lives.

"I always tell the kids, 'Never, never, never give up, because I almost did and it would've cost me the best day of my career,'" said Walker, 61, who enjoyed a terrific career despite being legally blind in one eye.

A funny postscript: Walker almost wasn't in the game on the final play in regulation. Noticing Walker wasn't included in the personnel package, O'Brien barked, "Wes, get in there right now!'" And so he did. Walker hasn't forgotten. Whenever he's asked to pick the best quarterback of that era -- a question that comes up constantly -- he always picks O'Brien over Marino, John Elway, et al. That's called loyalty.

It was a memorable game for so many, including the five-man stats crew. In those days, they recorded everything manually, using pencils, erasers and pocket calculators. The play-by-play was typed on a Smith-Corona typewriter. There was correction tape and a spare ribbon, just in case. And, of course, there was a pair of binoculars.

Smith, who hasn't missed a home game since 1980, was in charge of tabulating the passing and receiving stats, meaning he was on the hot seat that day.

"It was frenetic," said Smith, recalling that he double- and tripled-checked his numbers as the game progressed.

The hunger for stats is greater than ever, especially with the growth of fantasy football, but modern technology has turned it into a key-punching industry. On Sept. 21, 1986, it was all about five people, their pencils, a portable typewriter and two teams that challenged their number-crunching skills.

"When the extraordinary game was over," Smith said, "I believe I heard some cheering in the press box -- and it wasn't only coming from the stats crew."
 

Green Jets & Ham

King Of All Draftniks
Jet Fanatics
NY TIMES

JETS AND O'BRIEN OUTDUEL MARINO AND DOLPINS, 51-45

By GERALD ESKENAZI

September 22, 1986


The Jets and the Dolphins stretched football to the breaking point today, and when it seemed nothing zanier or more dramatic could happen, it did.

Toying with the emotions of the fans, testing the limits of the scoreboard and their talents, the clubs produced the second highest-scoring overtime game in National Football League history before the Jets finally won, 51-45, at Giants Stadium.

First, the Jets tied the game with no time showing on the clock when Wesley Walker rolled into the end zone as the fourth quarter expired with a 21-yard pass from Ken O'Brien safely in his hands. Pat Leahy booted the extra point to tie the game at 45-45.

Then, after only 2 minutes 35 seconds of overtime, Walker snared his fourth touchdown pass of the game from O'Brien - this one of 43 yards - and the Jets had an electrifying victory.

Record Passing Yardage

It marked the end of the longest day defenses had ever had against passing attacks: The teams combined for 884 net yards passing, breaking by 1 yard the N.F.L. record set by the Chargers and the Bengals in 1982. The only N.F.L. overtime game in which more points were scored was played on Nov. 27, 1983, when Seattle beat Kansas City, 51-48.

The day also had Dan Marino losing while throwing six touchdowns and amassing 448 yards on 30 completions out of 50 attempts.

Meanwhile, O'Brien - with the finest offensive-line protection he has enjoyed since joining the Jets -gained 479 yards, completing 29 of 43 attempts.

The 93 passes in the game victimized virtually everyone on defense, but especially cornerbacks. The Dolphins managed to post a 12-4 record last year while suiting up the 23d-ranked defense in the league. They have not been able to get away with that this year, though. They were routed in the season opener by the Chargers, 50-28.

The Jets' total today was the most ever scored against a Don Shula-coached Miami team.

The Jets' defense was riddled, too, especially the secondary, which was staffed with injured or new players. 'It Was Unbelievable'

''It was unbelievable,'' said Ted Banker, the left guard who had not been a regular until this season. ''The greatest game I've ever seen and ever played, and I was proud to be a part of it.''

The decision propelled the Jets into a tie at 2-1 with the Patriots atop the American Conference Eastern Division.

Yet, Walker was a dejected performer late in the fourth quarter. With the teams tied at 38-38 and less than four minutes remaining, Walker fumbled after catching an 8-yard pass when Don McNeal hit him. Jackie Shipp recovered on the Jets' 27.

From there, Marino needed three plays to produce a touchdown with Mark Clayton. That gave the Dolphins a 45-38 lead with less than three minutes remaining.

It was not an exceptionally quick score as none of Miami's six touchdown drives - covering 67, 88, 13, 62, 25 and 27 yards - required more than six plays.

After the sixth touchdown and after the Jets' offense stalled, Marino and the Dolphins were held to three plays and a punt. On the drive, the Jets saved their final timeout when Matt Monger knocked Joe Hardy out of bounds with 71 seconds left. With 64 seconds remaining in regulation time, the Jets got the ball back and suddenly the fans halted on their way to the exits.

Now, O'Brien - whose career has been overshadowed by Marino's, even though O'Brien was drafted ahead of him in 1983 - had work to do.

That he was even playing at this point was remarkable. For with a little over two minutes remaining, he had been hit in the groin attempting to pass. O'Brien remained in the game thanks to a time out that allowed him to recover. ''Once I caught my air, I was O.K.,'' he said later.

Indeed he was. He hit Mickey Shuler for a 5-yard gain and then scrambled for 8 more. A Trick Play

Coach Joe Walton decided on a trick play at that point. O'Brien passed over the middle to Shuler. The tight end grabbed the pass 7 yards downfield, then pitched the ball back to a trailing Johnny Hector who rambled for another 21 yards. Finally, the Jets got down to the Dolphins' 21-yard line with five seconds remaining.

There were eight defensive backs wearing Miami uniforms on the field, but Walker slanted to his left once he got over the middle and O'Brien rifled the ball to him. Walker caught it on the 1 and rolled in.

Dwight Stephenson, the Dolphins' center, was given the call at the coin flip for the overtime period. As he always does, he called ''heads.'' It was tails.

Two passes to Al Toon and runs by Tony Paige and Hector moved the ball to the Dolphins' 43. The Jets were now in a position to go for a short pass to set up a field goal for Pat Leahy, whose 32-yarder earlier had given him 15 straight over two seasons.

One-on-One Coverage

''They're trying to stop you from making field goals,'' explained the Jets' offensive coordinator, Rich Kotite. ''We got Wesley one-on-one with McNeal.''

Because the Miami defense was playing at medium depth, Walker was alone with McNeal and outsprinted him as O'Brien unloaded his final pass of the game. Walker cradled the ball near the end zone and stormed in for the winner.

The throw ended the most productive game of O'Brien's brief career, and his total of 479 yards passing is eclipsed in Jet history only by a 496-yard game by Joe Namath.

And with his catch, Walker became the first Jet - rusher or receiver -ever to score four touchdowns in a game.

''As a team, we're going to have to get better real soon or else we're going to lose a lot of games,'' said Marino.

But to Walton, still perspiring 15 minutes after it ended, ''This was the best I've ever been in. The most exciting.''

High for Walker

Wesley Walker's total of 194 yards receiving was a career high.
 
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Green Jets & Ham

King Of All Draftniks
Jet Fanatics
Its also fun to look back at the Miami perspective.

SUN SENTINEL

6 Tds Are Not Enough as Dolphins Die Suddenly -- 51-45 To Jets

September 22, 1986

By ANDY COHEN, Staff Writer


Dan Marino throws six touchdown passes.

And the Dolphins lose.

Crazy. Absurd. Unthinkable.

But it happened.

It happened because the Dolphins can`t play defense. It happened because the New York Jets kept coming until the Dolphins could do nothing else but walk off the field, heads down, confidence in shreds, seeing a season turn sour.

In one of the wackiest, most exciting games you`ll ever see, the Jets got touchdown passes from Ken O`Brien to Wesley Walker on both the final play of regulation and with 2:35 elapsed in overtime Sunday to pull out a 51-45 victory.

The teams combined to pass for 884 net yards, the most since the NFL opened shop 67 years ago.

``This is the best game I`ve ever been in,`` Jets coach Joe Walton said after dancing off the field, hugging his players and saluting the crowd of 71,025 at Giants Stadium.

A few minutes later, Don Shula sat in his coach`s cubicle, trying to figure out what happened, what hit his team, now 1-2 with San Francisco coming to the Orange Bowl next Sunday.

``This is so hard to take,`` he said. ``We thought we had the game won, and then it all came apart.``

But the Dolphins lost more than the game. Linebacker Hugh Green, Miami`s most talented defensive player, injured a kneecap -- it`s believed to be ligament damage -- and is expected to miss at least two months. X-rays were inconclusive, and more were to be taken Sunday night at Miami`s Mercy Hospital.

It was a day in which the Dolphins reached way down to attain a new low. Never had a Miami team given up as many net passing yards, 449. The previous low had been 427 yards in a 1967 game against -- who else? -- the Jets.

But the defensive ineptitude that offset Marino`s passing brilliance (30 of 55 for 448 yards) goes on. The Jets, 2-1 and tied with New England for first place in the AFC East, gained 581 total yards, the second most given up by a Dolphins team.

The 51 points is the most surrendered by the Dolphins since Shula`s arrival in 1970, and the second most in team history, replacing the 50 scored by San Diego in the season opener.

Three games, 111 points. Maybe the Miami defense should apply for an NBA franchise.

``Bonehead errors,`` secondary coach Mel Phillips said.

``We didn`t make one play all day long,`` muttered cornerback Don McNeal, the man beaten on Walker`s game-winning, 43-yard catch.

Then there was Marino, who had done enough to win two games, standing by his locker trying not to point his finger at the defense.

``We`ve got to play much better real, real quick or we`re not going to win many games,`` he said.

It is impossible to blame one or two Miami defenders. This was a team effort. Lousy pass rush. Lousy pursuit by the linebackers. Lousy pass defense.

O`Brien hit Walker for four touchdowns: 65 and 50 yards in the first half, 21 yards on the final play of regulation and 43 in overtime. Johnny Hector, replacing the injured Freeman McNeil, scored on runs of 1 and 8 yards; Dennis Bligen ran over from 7 yards; and Pat Leahy added a 32-yard field goal. Walker finished with 194 yards on six catches. O`Brien passed for 29 of 43 for 479 yards.

Marino`s six touchdown passes was a personal best and tied the team record set by Bob Griese against St. Louis on Nov. 24, 1977.

In order, Marino`s Super Six went: 6 yards to James Pruitt, 1 yard to Dan Johnson, 13 yards to Mark Duper, 46 yards to Duper, 1 yard to Bruce Hardy and 4 yards to Mark Clayton. Fuad Reveiz added a 44-yard field goal.

The pass to Clayton, who caught eight for 174 yards, one catch and 20 yards better than Duper`s numbers, gave Miami a 45-38 lead with 2:56 left.

The Dolphins were a happy bunch. They had overcome two 10-point deficits -- 17-7 and 31-21 -- and a 28-point second-quarter explosion by the Jets. Helped by two turnovers forced by linebacker Mark Brown, they had scored 17 third-quarter points to take a 38-31 lead, then saw the Jets tie it on Bligen`s 7-yard run midway through the fourth period.

None of that seemed to matter when Clayton put them on top 45-38. All they had to do was stop the Jets.

But that was too much to ask.

Taking over at their 20-yard line with 1:04 left, the Jets drove 80 yards on seven plays. They borrowed a page from Miami`s playbook to do it, using a flea-flicker that gained 28 yards. O`Brien passed to tight end Mickey Shuler for seven yards, and he lateraled to Hector for 21 more. The play gave the Jets a first down at the Miami 39.

``We were playing a prevent defense,`` safety Bud Brown said, ``but we didn`t prevent a thing.``

With no timeouts left, O`Brien hit Shuler on passes of 5 and 13 yards. Both times the Dolphins could have kept him in bounds but failed.

O ' Brien took the final snap in regulation with five seconds left. The Dolphins were in a zone. Walker split it in half, catching the ball with Lyle Blackwood, Bud Brown and Paul Lankford surrounding him. Walker fell into the end zone as the clock hit zero. There had been no pass rush to hurry O`Brien.

``The play was to Wesley all the way,`` Walton said. ``We sent Al Toon over the middle to confuse the defense, and we just hoped Wesley could find a crack. It was beautiful.``

The Jets won the coin toss. The way Miami`s defense was playing, it could have gone home right then. Maybe it should have.

Michael Harper returned the kickoff 19 yards and appeared to fumble as he hit the ground. The Dolphins recovered, but the officials had ruled the play dead.

From there it was easy. O`Brien hit Toon for 13 and 12 yards. Tony Paige ran for 6 and Hector for 4 to the Miami 43. O`Brien then found Walker a step ahead of McNeal.

``We were in man-to-man coverage,`` McNeal said. ``I thought I could get to the ball. No luck.``

Said Shula, ``We never challenged in overtime. They took it and marched down the field. It`s something we`re going to have to live with.``

Another Miami failure not to be overlooked was a rushing attack that gained 50 yards on 17 carries. New York`s Hector gained more than that (82 yards) by himself.

The Jets gave every player a game ball. Maybe Shula could give every player a copy of the game film and order him to watch it several times.

==

JETS HIGHLIGHTS

-- 581 yards of total offense (132 rush, 449 pass) tied the team record set vs. Tampa Bay in 1985 (202, 379).

-- 28 points scored in second quarter tied team record set vs. Boston, Oct. 27, 1968 (4th).

-- 449 net yards passing is second highest team total behind 490 vs. Baltimore, Sept. 24, 1972.

-- Wesley Walker set a team record with 4 TD receptions, finishing with 6 catches for 194 yards.

DOLPHINS HIGHLIGHTS

-- Dan Marino completed 30 of 55 pass attempts for 448 yards.

-- Marino threw six touchdown passes to tie Bob Griese`s Miami Dolphins record, set against St. Louis on Nov. 24, 1977.

Marino had touchdown passes of 6, 1, 13, 46, 1 and 4 yards.

-- Mark Clayton caught eight passes for 174 yards and one touchdown.

-- Mark Duper caught seven passes for 154 yards and two touchdowns.

-- The Dolphins had 485 yards in total offense and 27 first downs, 24 of them by passing.

DOLPHINS RECORDS SET

-- Most points, both teams -- 96.

-- Most points second quarter, both teams -- 42.

-- Most points opponent, second quarter -- 28.

-- Most net yards, both teams -- 1066.

-- Most net yards allowed, passing -- 449.

-- Most gross yards allowed, passing -- 479.

DOLPHINS RECORDS TIED

-- Touchdown passes, game -- 6 by Dan Marino.

-- Most first downs, both teams -- 59.

-- Most net yards passing -- 435.

-- Most touchdowns opposing receiver -- 4.
 

Green Jets & Ham

King Of All Draftniks
Jet Fanatics
Somebody posted the entire Second Half of this Game on YouTube

Unfortunately you don't get to see the 4 TD's the Jets scored in the 2nd Qtr, but you get the thrilling 4th Qtr

Some Great Calls by Dick Enberg - OH MY!!! :global (45):

 
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Jet Fan RI

Pro Bowl 1st Team
Jet Fanatics
That game was a helluva lot of fun to watch. And Dick Enberg's "Oh My!" calls pumped me up.
 

gastineau

Transition Tagged
Jet Fanatics
I remember watching that GREAT game in Alaska & thinking...wow if Jets only Drafted Marino & with Jets Defense, how many Super Bowls we would have won? I think 3-4 Super Bowls wins for our JETS. Jets would have won 2nd Super Bowl with rookie QB Dan Marino & def won 2 more in next 4-5 years after. Makes me sick thinking about the Draft & after. Even today Jets are clueless when it comes to drafting QB's. We just wasted a 2nd pick on a inaccurate passing QB. Why do Jets like Inaccurate QB's like Geno & current rookie?
 

hobson54

Transition Tagged
Jet Fanatics
i was at that game. i used to go to 1 game a year as my dad (a giants fan, but also rooted for the jets) got tickets once a year from his colleague who had season tickets. i remember my dad wanted to leave before the game ended to beat traffic out of the lot (lived on LI so a long trip back). the guy sitting behind us said after miami went up late "you can bet your house on it these bums will lose" and he left. my dad wanted to do the same.

thankfully, i convinced him to stay and we saw the late magic.
 

Jet Fan RI

Pro Bowl 1st Team
Jet Fanatics
i was at that game. i used to go to 1 game a year as my dad (a giants fan, but also rooted for the jets) got tickets once a year from his colleague who had season tickets. i remember my dad wanted to leave before the game ended to beat traffic out of the lot (lived on LI so a long trip back). the guy sitting behind us said after miami went up late "you can bet your house on it these bums will lose" and he left. my dad wanted to do the same.

thankfully, i convinced him to stay and we saw the late magic.

Given the history of this team, you can hardly blame him. This win was a good as the Miracle in the Meadowlands. Same two teams, too.
 
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