1969 Kansas City Chiefs season

The 1969 Kansas City Chiefs season was the team's tenth, their seventh in Kansas City, and the final season of the American Football League (AFL). It resulted in an 11–3 regular season record and three postseason road victories, including a 23–7 victory in Super Bowl IV over the NFL's heavily favored Minnesota Vikings.

1969 Kansas City Chiefs season
OwnerLamar Hunt
General managerJack Steadman
Head coachHank Stram
Home fieldMunicipal Stadium
Local radioKCMO–AM 810
Results
Record11–3
Division place2nd AFL Western
Playoff finishWon Divisional Playoffs
(at Jets) 13–6
Won AFL Championship
(at Raiders) 17–7
Won Super Bowl IV
(vs. Vikings) 23–7
Pro Bowlers
AP All-Pros
The Chiefs topped the Raiders in the 1969 AFL championship game (left) and went on to defeat the Vikings in Super Bowl IV (right).

After two close losses to division rival Oakland in the regular season, the visiting Chiefs upset the Raiders in the final AFL Championship Game, claiming their third AFL title. The Chiefs were led by head coach Hank Stram, quarterback Len Dawson, and a powerful defense led by Bobby Bell, Willie Lanier, Buck Buchanan, Emmitt Thomas, Johnny Robinson, and Curley Culp. The Chiefs' defense became the fourth defense in the history of pro football to lead its league in fewest rushing yards, fewest passing yards and fewest total yards.[3] The Chiefs were the second AFL team to win the Super Bowl and last AFL team to do so before the AFL-NFL Merger in the following season.

The season was marred not only by an injury to quarterback Len Dawson, but also controversy surrounding Dawson and his purported involvement in a sports gambling ring. Back-up quarterback Mike Livingston and the Chiefs' stellar defense led the Chiefs back to the Super Bowl, this time, to win it all.

Along with owner Lamar Hunt, nine future Hall of Famers were members of the 1969 Chiefs, including QB Len Dawson, LB Willie Lanier, LB Bobby Bell, DT Buck Buchanan, DT Curley Culp, CB Emmitt Thomas, S Johnny Robinson, K Jan Stenerud, and head coach Hank Stram.

In 2006, the 1969 Kansas City Chiefs were ranked as the 18th greatest Super Bowl champions on the NFL Network's documentary America's Game: The Super Bowl Champions, the 1969 Kansas City Chiefs, with team commentary from Len Dawson, Willie Lanier and Jim Lynch, and narrated by Martin Sheen.[4]

In 2007, ESPN.com ranked the 1969 Chiefs as the seventh-greatest defense in NFL history,[5] noting "Hank Stram's 'Triple Stack' defense, which gave the linebackers lots of room to roam, was superb, holding five opponents to fewer than 10 points and giving up an average of less than two touchdowns a game.... Then they got serious. Against the [defending] Super Bowl champion Jets in the AFL divisional playoff game at Shea Stadium, the Chiefs held on for a 13–6 victory, thanks to a remarkable three-play goal line stand that stifled the Jets on the one. After losing twice to the Raiders during the regular season, the Chiefs allowed a single touchdown, in the first quarter, to win the AFL title over Oakland 17–7. The Chiefs defense then stifled the Vikings in the Super Bowl, allowing only two rushing first downs and picking off three passes in the fourth quarter to win 23–7. Total points against the Chiefs in the playoffs: 20." Kansas City is the only team in the Super Bowl era to win the title without allowing as much as 10 points in any postseason game.

The Chiefs did not return to or win the Super Bowl again until Super Bowl LIV in the 2019 season.

Offseason

1969 AFL Draft

In the first round of the 1969 AFL Draft, the Chiefs selected cornerback Jim Marsalis from Tennessee State. Marsalis became an immediate starter at cornerback alongside veteran Emmitt Thomas. He was the only Chiefs rookie to start for the 1969 team, as Ed Podolak and Bob Stein were benched, and Morris Stroud and Jack Rudnay sat out the season with injuries.

1969 Kansas City Chiefs Draft
Round Selection Player Position College Notes
1 23 Jim MarsalisDefensive backTennessee State
2 48 Ed PodolakRunning backIowa
3 61 Traded to Denverfrom Boston
76 Morris StroudTight endClark
4 101 Jack RudnayCenterNorthwestern
5 126 Bob SteinLinebackerMinnesota
6 155 John PleasantRunning backAlabama State
7 179 Tom NettlesWide receiverSan Diego State
8 204 Clanton KingTacklePurdue
206 Maurice LeBlancDefensive backLouisiana Statefrom Oakland
9 231 Dan KlepperGuardOmaha
10 257 John SpoonheimerDefensive tackleCornell
11 282 Skip WupperDefensive endC.W. Post
12 309 John LavinLinebackerNotre Dame
13 335 Rick PilandGuardVirginia Tech
14 360 Al BreamDefensive backIowa
15 388 Leland WinstonOffensive tackleRice
16 413 Eural JohnsonDefensive backPrairie View
17 438 Ralph JenkinsDefensive backTuskegee

Personnel

Staff

1969 Kansas City Chiefs staff
Front office

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

  • Offensive backfield - John Beake
  • Offensive ends – Darrel Brewster
  • Offensive line – Bill Walsh
Defensive coaches
  • Defensive backs - Tom Bettis
  • Defensive assistant – Tommy O'Boyle
  • Defensive line – Tom Pratt



1969 Kansas City Chiefs final roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists


Practice squad Complete team roster
Rookies in italics
Starters in bold
Positions in parentheses
Rookies in italics
53 active, 10 inactive, 7 practice squad

Schedule

Preseason

Week Date Opponent Time TV Result Record Game Site Attendance Recap
1 August 2 vs. Oakland Raiders 8:00 p.m. CDT KMBC-TV W 23–17 1–0 Legion Field (Birmingham) 21,000 Recap
2 August 9 Detroit Lions 8:05 p.m. CDT KMBC-TV W 38–13 2–0 Municipal Stadium 38,000 Recap
3 August 16 vs. Cincinnati Bengals 8:00 p.m. CDT KMBC-TV W 23–7 3–0 Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium (Jackson) 24,513 Recap
4 August 23 at Los Angeles Rams 10:00 p.m. CDT KMBC-TV W 42–14 4–0 Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 58,306 Recap
5 August 29 at St. Louis Cardinals 8:00 p.m. CDT KMBC-TV W 31–21 5–0 Busch Memorial Stadium 48,006 Recap
6 September 6 Atlanta Falcons 8:05 p.m. CDT KMBC-TV W 14–10 6–0 Municipal Stadium 37,273 Recap

Preseason Game summaries

Week P2 (Saturday, August 9, 1969): vs. Detroit Lions

Week P2: Detroit Lions at Kansas City Chiefs – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Lions (0–1) 6 0 0713
Chiefs (2–0) 11 17 01038

at Municipal StadiumKansas City, Missouri

  • Date: August 9, 1969
  • Game time: 8:05 p.m. CDT
  • Game attendance: 38,000
  • TV: KMBC-TV
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
DET Passing
Rushing
Receiving
KC Passing
Rushing
Receiving
  • Time of Game:
Lions Game Statistics Chiefs
First downs
Rushes–yards
Passing yards
Passes
Sacked–yards
Net passing yards
Total yards
Return yards
Punts
Fumbles–lost
Penalties–yards
Time of possession

Week P3 (Saturday, August 16, 1969): vs. Cincinnati Bengals

Week P3: Cincinnati Bengals vs. Kansas City Chiefs – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Bengals (0–2) 0 0 077
Chiefs (3–0) 7 6 7323

at Mississippi Veterans Memorial StadiumJackson, Mississippi

  • Date: August 16, 1969
  • Game time: 8:00 p.m. CDT
  • Game attendance: 24,513
  • TV: KMBC-TV
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
CIN Passing
Rushing
Receiving
KC Passing
Rushing
Receiving
  • Time of Game:
Bengals Game Statistics Chiefs
First downs
Rushes–yards
Passing yards
Passes
Sacked–yards
Net passing yards
Total yards
Return yards
Punts
Fumbles–lost
Penalties–yards
Time of possession

Week P4 (Saturday, August 23, 1969): at Los Angeles Rams

Week P4: Kansas City Chiefs at Los Angeles Rams – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Chiefs (4–0) 7 7 72142
Rams (1–2) 7 7 0014

at Los Angeles Memorial ColiseumLos Angeles, California

  • Date: August 23, 1969
  • Game time: 10:00 p.m. CDT
  • Game attendance: 58,306
  • TV: KMBC-TV
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
KC Passing
Rushing
Receiving
LA Passing
Rushing
Receiving
  • Time of Game:
Chiefs Game Statistics Rams
First downs
Rushes–yards
Passing yards
Passes
Sacked–yards
Net passing yards
Total yards
Return yards
Punts
Fumbles–lost
Penalties–yards
Time of possession

Week P6 (Saturday, September 6, 1969): vs. Atlanta Falcons

Week P6: Atlanta Falcons at Kansas City Chiefs – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Falcons (2–3) 0 0 7310
Chiefs (6–0) 0 7 7014

at Municipal StadiumKansas City, Missouri

  • Date: September 6, 1969
  • Game time: 8:05 p.m. CDT
  • Game attendance: 37,273
  • TV: KMBC-TV
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
ATL PassingBruce Lemmerman9/23, 79 YDS, 1 TD, 1 INT
RushingJim Butler14 CAR, 91 YDS
ReceivingPaul Flatley4 REC, 44 YDS
KC PassingLen Dawson11/19, 116 YDS, 1 TD
RushingRobert Holmes15 CAR, 53 YDS
ReceivingRobert Holmes3 REC, 25 YDS
  • Time of Game:
Falcons Game Statistics Chiefs
First downs
Rushes–yards
Passing yards
Passes
Sacked–yards
Net passing yards
Total yards
Return yards
Punts
Fumbles–lost
Penalties–yards
Time of possession

Regular season

The Chiefs began the regular season with four consecutive road games for the only time in team history, due to a scheduling conflict with the Kansas City Royals about usage of Municipal Stadium.[6] After a decisive 27–9 win at San Diego (9/14), the club posted a 31–0 shutout at Boston (9/21), but QB Len Dawson sustained a knee injury against the Patriots. The once-optimistic picture for the Chiefs went from bad to worse the following week when backup QB Jacky Lee went down with a broken ankle in a 24–19 loss at Cincinnati (9/28). That injury left the team's most crucial position in the hands of second-year QB Mike Livingston, who took just five snaps as a rookie in ‘68.[6]

However, Livingston engineered a five-game winning streak, while getting plenty of help from the club's defense. The team's home opener at Municipal Stadium was played in a daylong deluge referred to as a "frog-strangler" by Chiefs radio broadcaster Bill Grigsby. The Chiefs and Oilers combined for 14 fumbles in a 24–0 Kansas City victory (10/12).[6]

Dawson returned to the starting lineup in a 27–3 win vs. San Diego (11/9) and guided the club to three wins in the season's next four games. Denver Broncos coach Lou Saban was infuriated following the Chiefs 31–17 win vs. Denver (11/27). Trailing 24–17 late in the game, Denver attempted an onside kick that was recovered by LB Bobby Bell, who promptly returned that kick for a 53-yard TD. Mike Livingston started the following week vs. Buffalo (12/7) for an again-injured Dawson, who returned for the regular-season finale at Oakland (12/13). A 10–6 loss vs. the Raiders gave the Chiefs an 11–3 record, good for second in the division behind Oakland (12–1–1).[6]

Schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance Recap
1 September 14 at San Diego Chargers W 27–9 1–0 San Diego Stadium 47,988 Recap
2 September 21 at Boston Patriots W 31–0 2–0 Alumni Stadium 22,002 Recap
3 September 28 at Cincinnati Bengals L 19–24 2–1 Nippert Stadium 27,812 Recap
4 October 5 at Denver Broncos W 26–13 3–1 Mile High Stadium 50,564 Recap
5 October 12 Houston Oilers W 24–0 4–1 Municipal Stadium 45,805 Recap
6 October 19 Miami Dolphins W 17–10 5–1 Municipal Stadium 49,809 Recap
7 October 26 Cincinnati Bengals W 42–22 6–1 Municipal Stadium 50,934 Recap
8 November 2 at Buffalo Bills W 29–7 7–1 War Memorial Stadium 45,844 Recap
9 November 9 San Diego Chargers W 27–3 8–1 Municipal Stadium 51,104 Recap
10 November 16 at New York Jets W 34–16 9–1 Shea Stadium 63,849 Recap
11 November 23 Oakland Raiders L 24–27 9–2 Municipal Stadium 51,982 Recap
12 November 27 Denver Broncos W 31–17 10–2 Municipal Stadium 48,773 Recap
13 December 7 Buffalo Bills W 22–19 11–2 Municipal Stadium 47,112 Recap
14 December 13 at Oakland Raiders L 6–10 11–3 Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum 54,443 Recap
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Regular Season Game summaries

Week 1

1 234Total
Chiefs 3 1077 27
Chargers 3 060 9

[7]

Week 2 (Sunday, September 21, 1969): at Boston Patriots

Week 2: Kansas City Chiefs at Boston Patriots – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Chiefs (2–0) 14 7 10031
Patriots (0–2) 0 0 000

at Alumni StadiumChestnut Hill, Massachusetts

TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
KC Passing
Rushing
Receiving
BOS Passing
Rushing
Receiving
  • Time of Game: 2 hours, 15 minutes
Chiefs Game Statistics Patriots
First downs
Rushes–yards
Passing yards
Passes
Sacked–yards
Net passing yards
Total yards
Return yards
Punts
Fumbles–lost
Penalties–yards
Time of possession

Week 3 (Sunday, September 28, 1969): at Cincinnati Bengals

Week 3: Kansas City Chiefs at Cincinnati Bengals – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Chiefs (2–1) 6 7 0619
Bengals (3–0) 7 3 01424

at Nippert StadiumCincinnati, Ohio

TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
KC Passing
Rushing
Receiving
CIN Passing
Rushing
Receiving
  • Time of Game:
Chiefs Game Statistics Bengals
First downs
Rushes–yards
Passing yards
Passes
Sacked–yards
Net passing yards
Total yards
Return yards
Punts
Fumbles–lost
Penalties–yards
Time of possession

Week 4 (Sunday, October 5, 1969): at Denver Broncos

Week 4: Kansas City Chiefs at Denver Broncoss – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Chiefs (4–0) 3 6 31426
Broncos (2–2) 0 3 01013

at Mile High StadiumDenver, Colorado

TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
KC Passing
Rushing
Receiving
DEN Passing
Rushing
Receiving
  • Time of Game: 2 hours, 42 minutes
Chiefs Game Statistics Broncos
First downs
Rushes–yards
Passing yards
Passes
Sacked–yards
Net passing yards
Total yards
Return yards
Punts
Fumbles–lost
Penalties–yards
Time of possession

Week 5 (Sunday, October 12, 1969): vs. Houston Oilers

Week 5: Houston Oilers at Kansas City Chiefs – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Oilers (3–2) 0 0 000
Chiefs (5–0) 14 10 0024

at Municipal StadiumKansas City, Missouri

TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
HOU Passing
Rushing
Receiving
KC Passing
Rushing
Receiving
  • Time of Game:
Oilers Game Statistics Chiefs
First downs
Rushes–yards
Passing yards
Passes
Sacked–yards
Net passing yards
Total yards
Return yards
Punts
Fumbles–lost
Penalties–yards
Time of possession

Week 6 (Sunday, October 19, 1969): vs. Miami Dolphins

Week 6: Miami Dolphins at Kansas City Chiefs – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Dolphins 0 0 3710
Chiefs 7 10 0017

at Municipal StadiumKansas City, Missouri

TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
MIA Passing
Rushing
Receiving
KC Passing
Rushing
Receiving
  • Time of Game: 2 hours, 40 minutes
Dolphins Game Statistics Chiefs
14 First downs 17
23–83 Rushes–yards 27–105
192 Passing yards 308
21–45–3 Passes 17–34–1
4–39 Sacked–yards 1–10
153 Net passing yards 298
236 Total yards 403
Return yards
Punts
1–0 Fumbles–lost 2–1
3–35 Penalties–yards 5–57
Time of possession

Week 7 (Sunday, October 26, 1969): vs. Cincinnati Bengals

Week 7: Cincinnati Bengals at Kansas City Chiefs – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Bengals (3–4) 0 12 7322
Chiefs (6–1) 7 14 71442

at Municipal StadiumKansas City, Missouri

TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
CIN Passing
Rushing
Receiving
KC Passing
Rushing
Receiving
  • Time of Game:
Bengals Game Statistics Chiefs
First downs
Rushes–yards
Passing yards
Passes
Sacked–yards
Net passing yards
Total yards
Return yards
Punts
Fumbles–lost
Penalties–yards
Time of possession

Week 8 (Sunday, November 2, 1969): at Buffalo Bills

Week 8: Kansas City Chiefs at Buffalo Bills – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Chiefs (7–1) 0 3 32329
Bills (2–6) 7 0 007

at War Memorial StadiumBuffalo, New York

TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
KC Passing
Rushing
Receiving
BUF Passing
Rushing
Receiving
  • Time of Game:
Chiefs Game Statistics Bills
First downs
Rushes–yards
Passing yards
Passes
Sacked–yards
Net passing yards
Total yards
Return yards
Punts
Fumbles–lost
Penalties–yards
Time of possession

Week 12 (Thursday, November 27, 1969): vs. Denver Broncos

Week 12: Denver Broncos at Kansas City Chiefs – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Broncos (4–7–1) 0 3 01417
Chiefs (10–2) 3 14 01431

at Municipal StadiumKansas City, Missouri

TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
DEN Passing
Rushing
Receiving
KC Passing
Rushing
Receiving
  • Time of Game: 2 hours, 38 minutes
Broncos Game Statistics Chiefs
First downs
Rushes–yards
Passing yards
Passes
Sacked–yards
Net passing yards
Total yards
Return yards
Punts
Fumbles–lost
Penalties–yards
Time of possession

Week 13 (Sunday, December 7, 1969): vs. Buffalo Bills

Week 13: Buffalo Bills at Kansas City Chiefs – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Bills (4–9) 3 0 10619
Chiefs (11–2) 7 6 3622

at Municipal StadiumKansas City, Missouri

  • Date: December 7, 1969
  • Game time: 12:30 p.m. CST
  • Game attendance: 47,112
  • TV announcers (NBC): Curt Gowdy (play-by-play) and Kyle Rote (color commentator)
  • [16]
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
BUF Passing
Rushing
Receiving
KC Passing
Rushing
Receiving
  • Time of Game:
Bills Game Statistics Chiefs
First downs
Rushes–yards
Passing yards
Passes
Sacked–yards
Net passing yards
Total yards
Return yards
Punts
Fumbles–lost
Penalties–yards
Time of possession

Standings

AFL Western Division
W L T PCT DIV PF PA STK
Oakland Raiders 1211.9237–1377242W6
Kansas City Chiefs 1130.7865–3359177L1
San Diego Chargers 860.5712–6288276W4
Denver Broncos 581.3853–5297344W1
Cincinnati Bengals 491.3083–5280367L5

Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings of the AFL.

Stats

Passing

Passing
Player Pos G GS QBrec Cmp Att Cmp% Yds TD TD% Int Int% Y/A AY/A Y/C Y/G Lng Rate Sk Yds NY/A ANY/A Sk% 4QC GWD
DawsonQB975–2–09816659.0132395.4137.8558.05.513.5147.069.913897.36.894.6311
LivingstonQB966–0–08416152.2112342.563.7937.05.813.4124.867.4111246.45.814.7001
LeeQB310–1–0122060.010915.015.0315.54.29.136.370.62389.13.232.09
McVeaRB1101333.350133.300.05016.723.350.04.5121.5000.016.6723.33
FloresQB5011100.0331100.000.03333.053.033.06.6158.3000.033.0053.00
Team Total 14 11–3–0 196 351 55.8 2638 16 4.6 20 5.7 93 7.5 5.9 13.5 188.4 71.4 26 251 6.9 6.33 4.79 1 2
Opp Total 14 200 426 46.9 2491 10 2.3 32 7.5 5.8 2.94 12.5 177.9 42.1 48 419 10.1 4.4 1.8

Rushing

Rushing
Player Pos G GS Att Yds TD Lng Y/A Y/G A/G
GarrettRB14141687326344.452.312.0
HolmesRB14141506122254.143.710.7
McVeaRB1101065007804.745.59.6
HayesRB140622084113.414.94.4
LivingstonQB96151020396.811.31.7
LoweHB7010330183.34.71.4
PittsWR14145280115.62.00.4
DawsonQB9713033.00.30.1
LeeQB3113033.01.00.3
ArbanasTE141411011.00.10.1
FloresQB5010000.00.00.2
TaylorWR1172–2010–1.0–0.20.2
Team Total 14 522 2220 19 80 4.3 158.6 37.3
Opp Total 14 314 1091 6 3.5 77.9 22.4

Receiving

Receiving
Player Pos G GS Rec Yds Y/R TD Lng R/G Y/G Ctch%
GarrettRB14144343210.02413.130.90.0%
TaylorWR1174169617.07793.763.30.0%
PittsWR14143147015.22512.233.60.0%
HolmesRB14142626610.23331.919.00.0%
RichardsonWR1372338116.62391.829.30.0%
ArbanasTE14141625816.10441.118.40.0%
HayesRB1409647.10170.64.60.0%
McVeaRB11077110.10220.66.50.0%
Team Total 14 196 2638 13.5 16 79 14.0 188.4
Opp Total 14 200 2072 10.4 10 14.3 148.0

Kicking

Kicking
Games 0–19 20–29 30–39 40–49 50+ Scoring
Player Pos G GS FGA FGM FGA FGM FGA FGM FGA FGM FGA FGM FGA FGM Lng FG% XPA XPM XP%
StenerudK140996486963235275477.1%3838100.0%
Team Total 14 9 9 6 4 8 6 9 6 3 2 35 27 77.1% 38 38 100.0%
Opp Total 14 27 15 55.6% 17 16 94.1%

Punting

Punting
Player Pos G GS Pnt Yds Lng Blck Y/P
WilsonP14068302262044.4
Team Total 14 68 3022 62 0 44.4
Opp Total 14 82 3050 37.2

Kick Return

Kick Return
Player Pos G GS Rt Yds TD Lng Y/Rt
McVeaRB1101331804024.5
MitchellDB140717803625.4
PodolakRB40716502623.6
LoweHB70511603023.2
SmithWR60412503731.3
HayesRB14028104540.5
HolmesRB141425403627.0
BellLLB141415315353.0
Team Total 14 41 1090 1 53 26.6
Opp Total 14 59 1431 0 24.3

Punt Return

Punt Return
Player Pos G GS Rt Yds TD Lng Y/Rt
MitchellDB140131010357.8
SmithWR60910706411.9
GarrettRB14148280103.5
SellersDB140215087.5
Team Total 14 32 251 0 64 7.8
Opp Total 14 43 502 0 11.7

Sacks

Interceptions

Fumbles

Tackles

Scoring Summary

Team

Quarter-by-quarter

Quarter-by-quarter
Team 1 2 3 4 T
Chiefs 81 117 50 111 359
Opponents 29 45 36 67 177

Postseason

Schedule

Round Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance Recap
Divisional December 20 at New York Jets W 13–6 1–0 Shea Stadium 62,977 Recap
AFL Championship January 4, 1970 at Oakland Raiders W 17–7 2–0 Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum 53,564 Recap
Super Bowl IV January 11, 1970 vs. Minnesota Vikings W 23–7 3–0 Tulane Stadium 80,562 Recap

Playoff Game summaries

Divisional

1 234Total
Chiefs 0 337 13
Jets 3 003 6

In the 1969 AFL Divisional Playoff Game at the New York Jets (12/20), Kansas City rode its dominating defense which produced a crucial goal-line stand en route to a 13–6 win over the defending Super Bowl champions to set up a rematch with the Raiders in the final AFL Championship Game.[6]

[17]

AFL Championship

1 234Total
Chiefs 0 773 17
Raiders 7 000 7

[18]

Super Bowl IV (Sunday, January 11, 1970): vs. Minnesota Vikings

Super Bowl IV: Minnesota Vikings vs. Kansas City Chiefs – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Vikings (2–1) 0 0 707
Chiefs (3–0) 3 13 7023

at Tulane StadiumNew Orleans, Louisiana

TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
MIN PassingJoe Kapp16/25, 183 YDS, 2 INTs
RushingBill Brown6 CAR, 26 YDS
ReceivingJohn Henderson7 REC, 111 YDS
KC PassingLen Dawson12/17, 142 YDS, 1 TD, 1 INT
RushingMike Garrett11 CAR, 39 YDS
ReceivingOtis Taylor6 REC, 81 YDS, 1 TD
  • Point spread: Chiefs +13½
  • Time of Game: 2 hours, 40 minutes
Vikings Game Statistics Chiefs
13 First downs 18
19–67 Rushes–yards 42–151
199 Passing yards 142
17–28–3 Passes 12–17–1
3–27 Sacked–yards 3–20
172 Net passing yards 122
239 Total yards 273
80 Return yards 60
3–37.0 Punts 4–48.5
3–2 Fumbles–lost 0–0
6–67 Penalties–yards 4–47
25:27 Time of possession 34:33

The fourth annual AFL-NFL Championship Game, now officially known as the "Super Bowl", was played on January 11, 1970, at Tulane Stadium in New Orleans, Louisiana. The AFL champion Kansas City Chiefs defeated the NFL champion Minnesota Vikings, 23–7.

Even though the Vikings were 13-point favorites coming into the game, the Chiefs defense dominated the game by limiting the Minnesota offense to only 67 rushing yards, forcing 3 interceptions, and recovering 2 fumbles. The victory by the AFL evened the Super Bowl series with the NFL at two games apiece.

Kansas City's Len Dawson became the fourth consecutive winning quarterback to be named Super Bowl MVP. He completed 12 of 17 passes for 142 yards and one touchdown, with 1 interception. Dawson also recorded 3 rushing attempts for 11 yards.

The Vikings began the game by taking the opening kickoff and marching from their own 20-yard line to the Kansas City 39-yard line, but were forced to punt. The Chiefs then drove 42 yards in 8 plays to score on kicker Jan Stenerud's Super Bowl record 48-yard field goal. (According to Dawson, the Vikings were shocked that the Chiefs would attempt a 48-yard field goal. "Stenerud was a major factor", he said.)[20] Minnesota then managed to reach midfield on their next drive, but were forced to punt again.

On the first play of their ensuing drive, Chiefs quarterback Len Dawson threw a 20-yard completion to wide receiver Frank Pitts, followed by a 9-yard pass to wide receiver Otis Taylor. Four plays later, on the first play of the second quarter, a pass interference penalty on Vikings defensive back Ed Sharockman nullified Dawson's third down incompletion and gave Kansas City a first down at the Minnesota 31-yard line. However, on third down and 4 at the 25-yard line, Vikings cornerback Earsell Mackbee broke up a deep pass intended for Taylor. Stenerud then kicked another field goal to increase the Chiefs lead to 6–0.

On the second play of their next drive, Vikings wide receiver John Henderson fumbled the ball after catching a 16-yard reception, and Chiefs defensive back Johnny Robinson recovered the ball at the Minnesota 46-yard line. But the Vikings made key defensive plays. First defensive tackle Alan Page tackled running back Mike Garrett for a 1-yard loss, and then safety Paul Krause intercepted Dawson's pass at the 7-yard line on the next play.

However, the Vikings also could not take advantage of the turnover. Quarterback Joe Kapp's two incompletions and a delay of game penalty forced Minnesota to punt from their own 5-yard line. The Chiefs then took over at the Viking 44-yard line after punter Bob Lee's kick only went 39 yards. A 19-yard run by Pitts on a reverse play then set up another field goal by Stenerud to increase the Chiefs' lead to 9–0.

On the ensuing kickoff, Vikings returner Charlie West fumbled the ball, and Kansas City's Remi Prudhomme recovered it at Minnesota 19-yard line. Defensive tackle Jim Marshall sacked Dawson for an 8-yard loss by on the first play of the drive, but then a 13-yard run by running back Wendell Hayes and a 10-yard reception by Taylor gave the Chiefs a first down at the 4-yard line. Two plays later, running back Mike Garrett's 5-yard touchdown run gave Kansas City a 16–0 lead. The play call was “65 Toss Power Trap”, which became a classic play call in NFL history. It was heard because head coach Hank Stram was wearing a microphone for NFL Films, making him the first person to ever do that.[4]

West returned the ensuing kickoff 27 yards to the 32-yard line. Then on the first play of the drive, Kapp completed a 27-yard pass to Henderson to advance the ball to the Kansas City 41-yard line. However, on the next 3 plays, Kapp threw 2 incompletions and was sacked by defensive tackle Buck Buchanan for an 8-yard loss. Then on fourth down, kicker Fred Cox's 56-yard field goal attempt fell short of the goal posts.

In the third quarter, the Vikings managed to build some momentum. After forcing the Chiefs to punt on the opening possession of the second half, Minnesota drove 69 yards in 10 plays to score on fullback Dave Osborn's 4-yard rushing touchdown to cut the lead, 16–7. However, Kansas City responded on their next possession with a 6-play, 82-yard drive to score on Dawson's 46-yard touchdown completion to Taylor three minutes later.

The Chiefs would then go on to shut out the Vikings in the fourth quarter, forcing three interceptions on three Minnesota possessions, to clinch the 23–7 victory. The defeat was total for the Vikings, as even their "Indestructible" quarterback Joe Kapp had to be helped off the field in the fourth quarter after being sacked by Chiefs defensive lineman Aaron Brown.

Garrett was the top rusher of the game, recording 11 carries for 39 yards and a touchdown. He also caught 2 passes for 25 yards and returned a kickoff for 18 yards. Taylor was the Chiefs' leading receiver with 6 catches for 81 yards and a touchdown. Kapp finished the game with 16 of 25 completions for 183 yards, with 2 interceptions. Henderson was the top receiver of the game with 7 catches for 111 yards.

This was the last game where the winner was awarded the World Championship Game Trophy, as later that fall the trophy was renamed the Vince Lombardi Trophy due to Lombardi's death and the AFL-NFL Merger.

AFL All-Star Game

The Chiefs sent nine players to the American Football League All-Star game to represent the AFL West.[21]

References

  1. "1969 AFL Pro Bowlers". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  2. "1969 NFL All-Pros". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  3. The Best Show in Football:The 1946–1955 Cleveland Browns, p.294, Andy Piascik, Taylor Trade Publishing, 2007, ISBN 978-1-58979-360-6
  4. America's Game: The 1969 Kansas City Chiefs Archived January 1, 2007, at the Wayback Machine KCChiefs.com December 7, 2006.
  5. The List: Best NFL defense of all-time, 2007
  6. Chiefs History: 1960's Archived April 21, 2007, at the Wayback Machine KCChiefs.com, retrieved January 1, 2007.
  7. Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved 2013-Dec-21.
  8. Pro Football Reference; Kansas City Chiefs at Boston Patriots – September 21, 1969
  9. Pro Football Reference; Kansas City Chiefs at Cincinnati Bengals – September 28, 1969
  10. Pro Football Reference; Kansas City Chiefs at Denver Broncos – October 5, 1969
  11. Pro Football Reference; Houston Oilers at Kansas City Chiefs – October 12, 1969
  12. Pro Football Reference; Pro-Football-Reference.com Miami Dolphins at Kansas City Chiefs – October 19, 1969
  13. Pro Football Reference; Cincinnati Bengals at Kansas City Chiefs – October 26, 1969
  14. Pro Football Reference; Kansas City Chiefs at Buffalo Bills – November 2, 1969
  15. Pro Football Reference; Denver Broncos at Kansas City Chiefs – November 27, 1969
  16. Pro Football Reference; Buffalo Bills at Kansas City Chiefs – December 7, 1969
  17. Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved 2013-Dec-21.
  18. Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved 2013-Dec-21.
  19. Pro Football Reference; Super Bowl IV – Minnesota Vikings vs. Kansas City Chiefs – January 11, 1970
  20. Dawson, "Super Bowl IV"
  21. 1969 Kansas City Chiefs on Pro Football Reference
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