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Today In Patriots History September 9, 1979: Grogan throws 5 TDs; Patriots destroy Jets, 56-3

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Today in Patriots History
Grogan sets team record with 5 TD passes
Pats hand Jets worst loss ever, 56-3



Sun Sept 9, 1979 at 4:00
Week 2, Game 2 at Schaefer Stadium
New England Patriots 56, New York Jets 3
Head Coaches: Ron Erhardt, Walt Michaels
QBs: Steve Grogan, Richard Todd
Odds: New England favored by 8



The Patriots lost the season opener a week earlier, 16-13 to eventual Super Bowl champion Pittsburgh. The Steeler defense harassed Steve Grogan all game that day, limiting the quarterback to an 11-33-123 performance with one touchdown, two iinterceptions and five sacks.

To say Grogan and the Patriots bounced back would be a mile-deep understatement.

Grogan threw five touchdown passes - all for at least 28 yards - as Patriots annihilated division rival New York by the score of 56-3. The five TD passes equaled a franchise record set by Babe Parilli when the team played in the AFL (Nov 15, 1964 at Buffalo and Oct 15, 1967 versus Miami, in their second year of existence). That record would stand for nearly three decades, until Tom Brady threw for six at Miami when the 2007 Patriots offense was at its incredible peak.

The 56 points scored surpassed the franchise record of 55 set the previous season - also against the Jets. The 53-point margin of victory was also by far a team record. Both of those marks would hold for a full thirty years, until the Pats famously crushed Tennessee in the snow in 2009, 59-0.


In the first quarter Grogan connected on a 49 yard TD to Harold Jackson and a 37 yarder to Stanley Morgan before the Jets got on the scoreboard when they had to settle for a short field goal. Then in the second quarter Andy Johnson's 2-yard rush sandwiched between a 50 yard bomb to Morgan and a 44 yard strike to Jackson gave the Pats a commanding 35-3 lead,

Grogan connected with Jackson for his third TD reception on the day, this one for 28 yards, and Ron Erhardt decided it was time to let the backups get some playing time. Different jerseys, same results. Tom Owen threw a 14 yard TD to Don Westbrook, and Allan Clark finished the scoring with a one yard run.


The Patriots set a team record with 597 net yards of offense, another milestone that would last for thirty years until that Titans game. Grogan may not have been the most accurate passer of his era, but he was still one of the most proficient. Despite not playing in the fourth quarter, he completed 13 of 18 attempts for 315 yards - an incredible average of 17.5 yards per pass attempt. Owen and Matt Cavanaugh added another 60 yards on a combined 5-7 during garbage time. Grogan finished with a near-perfect passer rating of 153.9 on the day, though I'm not clear on what he should have done better. Had zero incomplete passes, I suppose?

It seemed like almost every pass to Morgan or Jackson turned into a touchdown - because that's exactly what was happening. All three of Jackson's receptions went for TDs, for a total of 121 yards. Morgan had two TDs on his three catches for 102 yards. Russ Francis also had five catches for 82 yards, Sam Cunningham (81 yards rushing) averaged 5.4 yards per carry and Mosi Tatupu averaged 6.3 yards per carry, for 50 yards.


As much fun as it was to watch the offense, the Patriot defense had a stellar day as well. The team combined for nine sacks on Todd and Pat Ryan, the most ever other than an unofficial count of 11 against the Raiders in 1963. There were also three interceptions, by Raymond Clayborn, Ray Costict and Prentice McCray, plus three fumble recoveries for a total of six turnovers - and a blocked punt as well.


And for good measure, this game goes down in history as the Jets worst loss ever, in terms of point allowed and margin of defeat. You have to look twice at some of the stats to believe it. The difference in total yardage was 597 for the Patriots, to 134 for the Jets. Net passing yards was a whopping 365 yards to 45 in favor of New England. Even with all those passing touchdowns, the Patriots still had a more than two-to-one advantage in rushing yards, 232 to 89. The Patriots owned a 30-12 advantage in first downs as well, despite all those long scoring plays.

In all, the Patriots broke or tied 27 team and individual records.


Leon Hess, chairman of the board, and Marvin Powell, right offensive tackle, concurred. Both said the Jets played like a high school team today in losing to the New England Patriots, 56?3.​

The film will show in explicit detail how the Patriots gained 597 yards; how Steve Grogan passed for 315 of those yards and five touchdowns, three to Harold Jackson; how the Jets lost three fumbles, suffered nine sackings of their two quarterbacks, threw three interceptions and allowed a punt to be blocked.​

This was the most decisive defeat in the team's history. At the same time the Patriots set team records for most points scored, most yards gained, most touchdowns and most touchdowns by passing.​

At halftime the Patriots had 35 points, the Jets 3 and Grogan had completed nine of 12 passes for 238 yards. The Jets did not improve in the second half, even when Grogan was cooling out on the bench and with Tom Owen and then Matt Cavanaugh at quarterback for the Patriots.​

Last year the Jets were defeated here by 55?21, but three weeks later they extended the Patriots at Shea Stadium, losing by only 19?17. Ron Erhardt, the New England coach, remembered. “I'd like to bottle this one,” he said.​

Why was the Patriot passing game so terrific today? “We prepared several things against the coverages they had shown,” said Erhardt, “and we weren't hesitant to go deep against them. Sometimes things work for you, and sometimes they don't.”​



2:05 Highlight Video
9/9/1979 New York Jets at New England Patriots highlights, National Football League Week 2





Box Score and Stats:
 
That one was… uh…



…good.
 
Today in Patriots History
2018: Patriots 27, Texans 20
Belichick passes Landry on all-time win list



Sun Sept 9, 2018 at 1:00
Week 1, Game 1 at Gillette Stadium
New England Patriots 27, Houston Texans 20
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Bill O'Brien
QBs: Tom Brady, Deshaun Watson
Odds: New England favored by 6



New England kicked off its 2018 season with a defensive unit that looked completely different from a year ago. After allowing 33 points to the Houston Texans last season, the Patriots slammed the door shut and stifled quarterback Deshaun Watson in their regular-season opener.​

Tom Brady will always garner the headlines in Foxboro, but on Sunday, the defense was the main attraction in the Patriots' 27-20 win.​

On Sunday, that unit was markedly better than last season, when Watson threw 302 yards against the Pats. This time around, the quarterback was hit 12 times, sacked three times and intercepted once. He finished 16 of 30 for 162 yards and one touchdown. Trey Flowers (1.5 sacks, three hits) and Deatrich Wise (1.5 sacks, three hits), led the way for an impressive front seven.​

The defense’s first play of the game was a sign of things to come.​

On the first Houston offensive play, Watson fumbled a handoff to Lamar Miller. Dont’a Hightower jumped on the ball at 13:04 to give Brady the ball back at the 19-yard line. Brady (26/39 for 277 yards) turned that turnover into his first of three touchdowns. The quarterback hit Rob Gronkowski (seven catches, 123 yards for a 21-yard touchdown pass at 11:58 of the first.​



A muffed punt by New England's Riley McCarron with under five minutes left set up Watson's 5-yard TD pass to Bruce Ellington and cut the deficit to 27-20. But after getting the ball back at their 1 with 43 seconds left, the Texans failed to reach midfield.​

With Julian Edelman serving a four-game suspension, Phillip Dorsett caught seven passes for 66 yards, including a 4-yard TD pass in the closing seconds of the first half to make it 21-6. James White had four receptions for 38 yards, including a 12-yard score.​



It was the 27th regular-season 100-yard game of Gronkowski’s career, second most for a tight end in NFL history; Tony Gonzalez had 31. But Gronkowski also had four in the postseason, and Gonzalez had none. ... Patriots coach Bill Belichick earned his 251st regular-season win, passing Tom Landry for third on the NFL’s all-time list.​




Gronk catches a pass in front of DB Kareem Jackson (25) and LB Zach Cunningham (41), which he ran in for a 21 yard first quarter TD



8:39 Official NFL Highlight Video
Texans vs. Patriots Week 1 Highlights | NFL 2018





Box Score, Stats and Full Play-by Play:
 
Today in Patriots History
Pats open season with 34-3 rout over Titans
Stevan Ridley gains 152 yards from scrimmage



Sun Sept 9, 2012 at 1:00
Week 1, Game 1 at LP Field
New England Patriots 34, Tennessee Titans 13
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Mike Munchak
QBs: Tom Brady, Jake Locker
Odds: New England favored by 6½



The Patriots opened the season with a dominating 34-13 victory over the Tennessee Titans in Nashville. The Patriots fell behind 3-0, but then took control of the game to register an easy victory.​

Tom Brady completed 23 of 31 passes for 236 yards, including one touchdown pass each to his dynamic tight end duo of Aaron Hernandez and Rob Gronkowski.​

Second-year running back Stevan Ridley had an outstanding game, rushing for 125 yards on 21 carries while showing a shiftiness that makes him dangerous and adds an element missing from last year’s offense.​

The Patriots defense took Titans running back Chris Johnson out of the game, holding him to a ridiculous four yards on 11 carries. Tennessee only gained 20 yards rushing.​

Patriots first-round draft picks Chandler Jones and Dont’a Hightower combined on a big play that reflected their high selections. Jones sacked Titans quarterback Jake Locker and forced a fumble. Hightower scooped it up and returned it six yards for a touchdown that gave the Patriots a 14-3 lead.​



The Titans couldn't match Brady's efficiency and had to settle twice for field goals of 28 and 24 yards by Rob Bironas. Locker did find Washington on a 29-yard TD in the third quarter even with Patriots defensive end Chandler Jones grabbing the quarterback.​

Brady missed connecting with Brandon Lloyd for a would-be TD on the opening drive. That was among his few misses.​

He put the Patriots up 7-3 with a 23-yard touchdown pass to Aaron Hernandez late in the first quarter, capping a 67-yard drive. It was Brady's 301st career pass, surpassing John Elway for fifth in TD passes in NFL history. It also marked his 33rd straight game with a TD pass. He found Rob Gronkowski on a 2-yard TD pass just before halftime for a 21-3 lead.​

The Patriots' work boosting their defense through the draft showed early dividends. Jones sacked Locker and forced a fumble that Hightower ran in for a 14-3 lead in the second quarter.​



New England even knocked Locker out of the game in the fourth quarter. He hurt his left shoulder tackling safety Patrick Chung on a fumble return officials should have whistled dead as an incomplete pass to Titans receiver Nate Washington, who also was hurt on the play. Matt Hasselbeck replaced Locker.​

The best Tennessee could do was bloody Brady's nose when defensive end Kamerion Wimbley sacked the two-time NFL MVP in the second quarter.​

The Titans weren't happy at the failure of the replacement officials on three different passes into the end zone they thought deserved flags for pass interference.​

The first came on the opening drive when Devin McCourty helped break up a pass to Damian Williams in the end zone. The second wound up an interception by Patriots rookie Tavon Wilson on a pass to Washington. The third came with Chung defending Jared Cook in the fourth quarter that left the Titans tight end pleading his case to an official.​

And officials needed replay to overturn the on-field ruling of an interception by McCourty in the third quarter that squirted out when he hit the ground.​



2:22 NFLN Highlight Video
Patriots vs Titans 2012 Week 1




Box Score, Stats and Full Play-by-Play:
 
Today in Patriots History
2007: Patriots shoot down Jets, 38-14
Randy Moss goes wild, catching 9 passes for 183 yards in Pats debut



Sun Sept 9, 2007 at 1:00
Week 1, Game 1 at Giants Stadium
New England Patriots 38, New York Jete 14
Head Coaches: Bill Belichick, Eric Mangini
QBs: Tom Brady, Chad Pennington
Odds: New England favored by 6½



Moss was amazing
Nine catches, 183 yards, including a jaw-dropping 51-yard TD with three Jet defenders surrounding him.​

"That's the way Randy plays," Belichick deadpanned.​

He caught everything thrown his way, showed breakaway speed, and was the type of on-field presence that made him a star during his early years in Minnesota.​

"I didn't want to let my team down," Moss said in front of his locker afterwards. You certainly didn't, Randy. As he predicted the day he was traded to New England back in April, the Moss of old is back.​

"I threw it as far as I could throw it," Brady admitted in his post-game press conference. "Randy just ran away from the defense. It's not how we drew it up, but maybe we should," he added with a laugh.​

13:33 Highlight Video
Randy Moss' FIRST Patriots Game! (Patriots vs. Jets 2007, Week 1)


Brady may never have had as much time to throw the ball as he did Sunday. He wasn't sacked, and only was pressured a couple of times, at most. There were times he was standing still for so long, scanning the entire field, it looked like the play had been blown dead.​

Unlike last season, when the Jets beat New England here in Foxboro by getting in Brady's face all day, New York didn't have the luxury of blitzing at will this time.​

With multiple wide receivers shuffling in and out after every play and RBs Laurence Maroney and Sammy Morris running effectively, the Jets were forced to sit back and try to cover all of the Patriots options. They just couldn't do it. There always seemed to be someone open.​

And when a running lane closed down, Maroney and Morris made good reads, cutting back to find openings elsewhere.​





Box Score, Stats and Full Play-by-Play:



3:54 Highlight Video
Patriots vs Jets 2007 Week 1 Highlights



1:44:25 Full Game
NFL 2007 week 1 Patriots @ Jets




Of course the euphoria did not last long. The very next day Eric Mangini and the Jets complained to the NFL, and the rest is history.

 
Today in Patriots History
1990: Marino Pulls Off 4th Quarter Comeback
Dolphins edge Pats, 27-24



Sun Sept 9, 1990 at 4:00
Week 1, Game 1 at Foxboro Stadium
Miami Dolphins 27, New England Patriots 24
Head Coaches: Rod Rust, Don Shula
QBs: Steve Grogan, Dan Marino
Odds: Miami favored by 1½



Behind two Steve Grogan touchdown passes, New England led 21-6. But Miami future Hall-of-Fame quarterback Dan Marino authored one of his many furious comebacks, capped by a 7-yard scoring pass to fullback Tony Paige with 1:46 remaining. The game featured the best performance in the career of 1989 Dolphins first-round pick Sammie Smith. The running back from Florida State rushed for a career-high 159 yards that day, including a 3-yard touchdown in the third quarter.

The Dolphins held a massive 432-265 advantage in total yards, but the Patriot defense kept the score close with four turnovers. Ronnie Lippett was the star of the game for the Pats, returning two picks 81 yards and also recovering a fumble. Johnnie Rembert also had an interception off Marino.

Grogan went 17-28 for 217 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions, spreading the ball around to nine different players. Irving Fryar had three receptions for 79 yards with a 22-yard TD, and John Stephens rushed for 70 yards and one score.


Dan Marino, who has spent some of his most frustrating afternoons in the NFL in Foxboro Stadium, looked as if he were in for yet another one until the closing minutes.​

Miami dominated play against the Patriots Sunday, rolling over 400 total yards before they finally converted when it counted, pulling out a 27-24 triumph over New England.​

New England had built a 21-6 first-half edge via a couple of Marino interceptions that halted Dolphin drives. After that, Miami came charging back for the win.​

Marino moved the Dolphins 65 yards in 4 plays in only 50 seconds, hitting Tony Martin on a 35-yard pass to cut the deficit to 21-13 with 23 seconds left in the first half.​

The Dolphins scored on their opening drive of the second half, covering 71 yards in eight plays. Sammie Smith capped the drive with a 3-yard plunge, narrowing the deficit to 21-20.​

After the Patriots struck right back with Jason Staurovsky kicking a 42- yard field goal to make the score 24-20, Marino was set for his late- game heroics.​

Leading 14-6, New England converted on Miami's second costly turnover of the first half.​

Johnny Rembert picked off Marino's floating pass in the right flat. Three plays later, Grogan hit Marv Cook over the middle for a 35-yard score, moving the Patriots ahead 21-6 with 1:13 left in the half.​



2:33 ESPN SportsCenter Highlight Video
Chris Berman, Robin Roberts
Dolphins vs Patriots 1990 Week 1





Box Score and Stats:
 
Today in Patriots History
1984: Pats turn the ball over five times
Miami wins 28-7



Sun Sept 9, 1984 at 1:00
Week 2, Game 2 at the Orange Bowl
Miami Dolphins 28, New England Patriots 7
Head Coaches: Ron Meyer, Don Shula
QBs: Steve Grogan, Dan Marino
Odds: Miami favored by 6
Miami advances to 2-0; Pats drop to 1-1



Statistically this was a close game, except for one important factor. The Patriots turned the ball over five times. while Miami did so twice. The Patriots went into halftime tied 7-7 on a 9-yard TD from Steve Grogan to Lin Dawson. But Dan Marino threw two third quarter touchdown passes to Mark Clayton to make it 21-7, and the Dolphins sealed it with a long fourth quarter pick six.

Grogan went 20-42 for 217 yards with four interceptions and the one TD. Derrick Ramsey caught five passes for 70 yards, and Tony Collins gained 100 yards from scrimmage on 20 rushes for 87 yards, plus 13 yards receiving.

Miami got on the scoreboard on a 35-yard double pass from Jim Jensen to Mark Duper, who had four receptions for 66 yards. Clayton had five catches for 75 yards, and Marino went 16-27-234 with two interceptions to go along with his two TDs.


The Miami Dolphins' imaginative passing game stung another team today. Jim Jensen, the quarterback-turned-wide receiver, threw for one touchdown and Dan Marino, the regular quarterback, threw for two, as the Dolphins defeated the New England Patriots, 28-7.​

The Dolphins now have nine touchdowns in two games, and eight of them have come from passes. The ninth score came in the fourth quarter today, when Mike Kozlowski intercepted a pass from Steve Grogan, returned it 26 yards and then lateraled to William Judson, who ran 60 yards more for the final score.​

The Dolphins have now defeated the Patriots 17 consecutive times in the Orange Bowl, after losing to them in 1966, Miami's first season in the National Football League.​

Today's victory was aided in no small part by a Dolphin defense that intercepted four Grogan passes, sacked him twice and kept pressure on him throughout the game. But it was the touchdown play involving Jensen, when 5 minutes 37 seconds remained in the first half, that started things off.​

At the time, both teams were struggling offensively. Neither had scored, and interceptions had ended each team's previous drive.​

With a first down at the New England 35-yard line, the Dolphins lined up with Jensen wide to the left and Nat Moore wide to the right. Jensen was sent into motion before the snap, and then he waited 9 yards behind the line of scrimmage for a lateral - a backward pass - from Marino. Jensen then threw a high, arching pass toward the middle of the end zone. Mark Duper, who had caught two of Marino's five touchdown passes last week, raced under the ball and outjumped the cornerback Raymond Clayborn and the free safety Rick Sanford to get it.​

The Patriots tied the score on their next series, when the tight end Lin Dawson caught a 9-yard pass from Grogan with 56 seconds left in the half. But in the space of 1:36 early in the third quarter, the Dolphins took the lead for good, as Marino connected twice with Mark Clayton, on scoring plays that covered 38 and 15 yards.​

On his first touchdown catch, he took advantage of a mistake in the coverage that Marino noticed. With Clayton and Duper both lined up on the same side, a deployment the Dolphins used frequently in the victory over the Redskins, Duper found himself covered by Clayborn, who admitted later he should have stayed in zone coverage. That left Clayton with only Sanford to beat, and a free safety is generally no match for a wide receiver who can run a 4.4-second 40-yard dash, as Clayton can.​

On the second catch, Clayton just beat the cornerback Ronnie Lippett to the ball in the far left corner of the end zone.​



3:52 Highlight Video
1984 Wk 02 Miami Rips New England 28-7; Highlights With Radio Call



20:46 Extended Highlights - with a young Bob Costas
1984 Miami Dolphins - 40 Years Ago This Week - Week 2 - PATRIOTS at DOLPHINS - with Radio PBP



2:29:59 Full Game
1984 Week 2 - New England at Miami





Box Score & Stats:
 
Today in Patriots History
1967: Chargers come back in second half
San Diego 28, Patriots 14



Sat Sept 9, 1967 at 4:00
Week 2, Game 2 at San Diego Stadium
San Diego Chargers 28, Boston Patriots 14
Head Coaches: Mike Holovak, Sid Gillman
QBs: Babe Parilli, John Hadl
Odds: San Diego favored by 1
Chargers advance to 1-0; Patriots drop to 0-2



In the first half the Patriots led 14-7 on Babe Parilli touchdown passes of 30 yards to Jim Whalen and four yards to Art Graham, but the Chargers tied the score going into halftime on a 28-yard TD pass from John Hadl to TE Willie Frazier. In the fourth quarter Hadl connected with Frazier on another TD pass, and the Chargers sealed the victory on a 68-yard pick-six for the final score.

Somerville native Graham was a force, with nine catches for 116 yards and the TD in the loss for the Patriots. The Pats defense shut down San Diego HB Paul Lowe, but three-time AFL all-star Willie Frazier led San Diego with five receptions for 105 yards and two TD.







Box Score and Stats:
 
Today in Patriots History
1961: Red Zone Failures Doom Pats
New York Titans 21, Boston Patriots 20



Sat Sept 9, 1961 at 1:00
Week 1, Game 1 at Boston University Field (later renamed Nickerson Field)
New York Titans 21, Boston Patriots 20
Head Coaches: Lou Saban, Sammy Baugh
QBs: Babe Parilli, Al Dorow
Odds: Patriots favored by 19



AFL All-Star WR Don Maynard caught seven passes for 86 yards, and his fourth quarter 37-yard TD reception was just enough to give the Titans an upset victory on the road over the Patriots. Gino Cappelletti scored 14 out of 20 points for the Patriots with a 10-yard touchdown reception, two field goals and an extra point. Babe Parilli had an off day, passing for just 92 yards on an 11-26 day.


The New York Titans opened their American Football League campaign successfully tonight by outlasting the Boston Patriots, 21 -- 20, at Boston University field.​





Box Score and Stats:
 
Today in Patriots History
1960: The AFL's first ever regular season game
Denver Broncos 13, Boston Patriots 10



Friday Sept 9, 1960 at 8:00
Week 1, Game 1 at Boston University Field (later renamed Nickerson Field)
Denver Broncos 13, Boston Patriots 10
Head Coaches: Lou Saban, Frank Filchock
QBs: Butch Songin, Frank Tripucka
Odds: Patriots favored by 16



The Boston Patriots opening game did not go as planned or envisioned. The Pats lost what most thought would be an easy victory, based on 1960 exhibition games. On August 5 in week two of the preseason, the Patriots had no problem with Denver at all, winning 43-6 at Mount Pleasant High School Stadium in Providence.

This game was a polar opposite. The Broncos ran the ball 44 times for 149 yards while limiting the Patriots to 79 yards on 25 carries. Denver's scoring came on two huge chunk plays: a 59-yard touchdown pass, and a 76-yard punt return.




It would be easy. A cakewalk perhaps.​

Sure it was the inaugural game in team history, but that was true for the opponent - the Denver Broncos - as well. After shuffling 350 or so bodies in and out of training camp out in Amherst, Mass., the upstart Boston Patriots were ready to kick things off for real on Sept. 9, 1960.​

Five preseason games were in the books and four of them were Boston wins while Denver was a dismal 0-5. With Butch Songin at quarterback and taskmaster Lou Saban prowling the sidelines, these Patriots seemed as ready as any team in the newly formed American Football League.​


One of those preseason wins, incidentally, came against the very same Broncos that would travel east a second time to kick off the AFL's first season at Boston University Field. Just 35 days after the Patriots had annihilated the Broncos, 43-6, in an exhibition affair, the two teams would meet again.​

Boston, not surprisingly, lit the scoreboard first. Following a Denver punt, the Patriots took over on their own 29-yard line and went to work. Aided by a roughing call on fourth-and-11, the Patriots drove to the Broncos 27, from which Gino Cappelletti booted a 34-yard field goal for the team's first official points.​

Denver answered on the first play of the second quarter when Frank Tripuka tossed a short pass in the right flat to Al Carmichael, who reversed field and scampered 41 yards for a touchdown.​

Boston mounted a drive midway through the quarter, but the Denver defense held on a fourth-and-two play from the Broncos 33 and the Patriots went to halftime trailing 7-3.​

Late in the third, though, another big play extended Denver's fragile advantage. This one came on special teams when Gene Mingo returned a Tommy Greene punt 76 yards along the right sideline for a touchdown.​

Thinks looked bleak when Boston's Jim Colclough lost a fumble on the Denver 38, but Chuck Shonta turned the tables two plays later, intercepting a Denver pass at the Patriots 30 and returning it to the Broncos 10-yard line. One play later, Songin found Colclough on the right side of the end zone for a touchdown, which cut Denver's lead to 13-10 at the end of three quarters.​

Boston looked to be driving to a lead midway through the fourth quarter following a muffed punt, which helped the Patriots retain possession. With a first down at the Denver 13, the Patriots hoped to escape with at least a tie. After a seven-yard loss on a second down screen pass, Songin was intercepted on the Denver two-yard line.​




The Patriots never saw the ball again. Denver ran off 16 straight plays to close the game.​

The game was not without controversy though. It was rumored that Denver Head Coach Frank Filchock, while on a walk from his team hotel the day before the opener, strolled into the stadium to watch the Patriots practice and knew his opponent's game plan. It certainly seemed so on this day.​












1:27 Highlight Video
9/9/1960 Denver Broncos at Boston Patriots highlights First American Football League game! Historic!



2:04 Highlight Video
Denver Broncos First Ever Game Highlights




Box Score and Stats:
 
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