Since it's been over two weeks since my last post, I was looking for something I could re-post from several years ago. Originally, my intention was to find a post from a previous May 17, but in the process of looking for one, I came across this nostalgic story, which originally ran on May 13, 2010.
I've previously written about my fascination with the 1982 Milwaukee Brewers,
but the first team other than one of my own that captured my interest
was the 1977 Denver Broncos. Not surprisingly, it was their "Orange
Crush" defense that really caught my attention, which included five Pro
Bowlers—defensive end Lyle Alzado, linebackers Randy Gradishar and Tom
Jackson, and defensive backs Bill Thompson and Louis Wright.
For some reason, though, my favorite player was explosive punt returner
Rick Upchurch, who led the league in 1976 with 4 TDs and 13.7 yards per
return. His 1977 wasn't quite as spectacular, but he still led the NFL
in return yards while averaging 12.8 yards a pop. Whether true or not, I
always felt Upchurch was overshadowed by Billy "White Shoes"
Johnson. He certainly didn't have as great a nickname. Incidentally,
both players rank in the top ten all-time in punt return yards and
touchdowns, while neither is in the top ten in number of punt returns.
The fact I developed an interest in the Broncos in 1977 probably
points more to my frustration with the Giants than to some early
interest in Cinderella stories. I had become a fan while Big Blue were in
the midst of an 18-year drought of not making the playoffs. They had
gone 3-11 in 1976, didn't show many signs of impending improvement, and
frankly, I was spoiled by the Yankees' recent success.
As had become tradition, our family visited my Uncle
Joe and Aunt Kay on New Year's Day of 1978. Uncle Joe and Aunt Kay
weren't really my aunt and uncle, but they were basically my dad's family,
since he didn't have much of a real family. His father had
abandoned he and his mother when he was just a little boy, and my grandmother wasn't really up for the role of raising him on her own, so Dad ended up being passed around from family to family during his childhood.
As a result, I had three grandmothers, with the longest
surviving being my dad's godmother, with whom he lived for six of his
childhood years.
Uncle Joe was about 10 years older than my father, and he had taken him
under his wing during his young adult years. Dad worked at Uncle Joe's
service station and rented an apartment in Joe and Kay's house for some
time. Needless to say, Joe was like the older brother my father—who
was an only child—never had, so the fact my sister and I called
him Uncle Joe was for much greater reason than because he didn't want to be
referred to as Mister.
On New Year's Day 1978, the Broncos defeated the defending Super Bowl
Champion Oakland Raiders in the AFC Championship, while the Dallas
Cowboys earned the trip to their fourth Super Bowl by dominating the
Minnesota Vikings in the NFC title game. The year before, Uncle Joe and I
had begun a practice of betting a quarter on the Super Bowl. Of course,
he let me pick my team, and I usually did so with my heart and not my head.
I chose correctly for Super Bowl XI, picking Oakland over Minnesota, but
this year I was picking the overwhelming underdog. I had
faith, however. After all, I was 10 years old.
As you probably know, Dallas defeated Denver rather handily, 27-10. But,
I wasn't convinced the superior team had won. So, when I mailed
Uncle Joe the quarter I owed him, accompanying it was a note outlining
all the "what-ifs" that, had they happened differently, would have
resulted in a completely different outcome.
Uncle Joe sent the quarter back, with his own note explaining why he
couldn't accept my "tear-stained quarter." I was upset, of course, because I had
lost the bet fair and square. I may have been making excuses for why my
team had lost, but in no way was I trying to renege on the wager.
Uncle Joe died several years ago. Sitting in the funeral home, waiting for
my turn to pay my last respects, an idea popped into my head. I reached
into my pocket and found not just any coin, but a 1977 quarter. That
tear-stained quarter will spend eternity in the breast pocket of the
suit Uncle Joe was laid to rest in.
Turkey Bowl XXX in Princeton
2 weeks ago
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