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RIP Len, But I Still Hate Your Cheating Chiefs
TRFMF ^ | 8/24/22 | Chuck Ness

Posted on 08/24/2022 5:59:06 PM PDT by OneVike

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Before I get into the reason for my commentary, I want to state for the record that Len Dawson was a decent God fearing man, a good QB, and a great American. Nothing I write is meant to discredit him nor his teammates. They played as professionals in a game that was manipulated by others behind the scenes to get the result they wanted regardless of how the men who played the game did their job.

Whether it be Justice, politics, or sports, it seem there are always those behind the scenes who try their best to get the result they want regardless of what is right or wrong. I often find myself praying that one day before I day I will see true justice, which should bring true results in elections, and fair outcomes in sports competitions. So many times after the last whistle is blown, the last point is scored, or the last second on the clock is struck, we then learn of something that was done to ensure an ending that just wasn't fair, and yet justice is never truly rendered.

Well, one day before I die I would like to see another Super Bowl were one team gets only water, while the other gets Gatorade. A game played outdoors where the humidity is a staggering 80% or higher. Imagine such a contest where one team is using plain water, while the other is downing electrolyte loaded energy drinks brought in by water boys between plays. Drinking down that important proven energy drink that replenishes a dehydrated system that is used to working at peak capacity?

Too bad such a drink didn't exist for the Minnesota Vikings on that fatal day back on January 11, 1970. Key phrase being, "for the Minnesota Vikings", because it did exist. It just that the magic elixir did not exist for the Vikings that day. It did exist for their opponent however, and they drank it like it was water.

in 1965 a team of scientists at the University of Florida College of Medicine, created a drink to specifically help athletes replace their body fluids lost during physical exertion. Their tests on College Athletes were positive, and soon their football team, the Florida Gators were wining games like never before. The football team even credited their new energy drink they dubbed, "Gatorade" as having contributed to their first ever Orange Bowl win over the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets in 1967. After the game, even the apposing Georgia Tech coach, Bobby Dodd, when asked why his team lost to what many considered an inferior Florida team, he responded, "We didn't have Gatorade. That made the difference."

Two years later around the time of the AFL playoffs, Lamar Hunt was approached by a close friend who was involved with the promotiomn of the Universicty of Florida's promotion of their energy drink. He convinced Lamar Hunt to use the Gatorade they created to help them promote it, and when his Chiefs faced the Vikings in the Super Bowl, a new drink was on the sideline for the Chiefs, but not on the sideline for the Vikings.

Just a week earlier the Vikings had defeated the Cleveland Browns for the last pure NFL Championship, in typical Minnesota freezing weather fashion. It was a game the Vikings had won by halftime. By doing so, they culminated a nine year struggle where they climbed out of the shadows of Lombardi's Packers to become the undisputed champions of the NFL. A struggle that was even more sweet for defensive tackle Alan Page, who as a young boy was hired as a laborer in his hometown of Canton to help build the future home of the NFL's Hall of Fame. A place where, today, his bust is on display as a member of the best of the best to ever play the game.

They finally won the title, but they could not bask in the glory too long, because in a week they had to take on the champion of the upstart AFL league, the Kansas City Chiefs. The next day they packed their equipment onto the bus and headed to New Orleans where they would play the last game of the long season. A game to decide which league is the best, before they merge as one. Mind you, the Super Dome was not yet built, so the game was played outdoors where there humidity was 87% on that day. Luckily for the √kings it never got above 65 degree's but if you ever lived down South when the humidity is high, it doesn't matter what the temperature is, it can be miserable.

Just so you understand, I personally understand what the Vikings faced when they got to New Orleans. I grew up in Duluth Minnesota, where Winters can come with wind chills that get down to minus 60 degrees. I remember going home for leave after I received a transfer order to Ft Benning GA. I spent Christmas with my family, and the average tempt during my visit was hovering around o degrees. My reporting date was January 13, 1975, which is just about the exact same time of the year the Vikings would have been in New Orleans to play Kansas a few years earlier. When I boarded the plane at 11:00 am to fly to Columbus GA, it was 14 degrees below in Duluth.

After an hour layover in Minneapolis, I was able to fly straight to Atlanta, where I had a two hour wait to fly to Columbus, where Ft Benning GA is located. I arrived in Columbus some time late afternoon, and the temperature wasn't bad, it was like about 70 degrees. However, the one thing I noticed the moment I walked down that ramp was the himidity. It felt like the humidity was 100%, but I would learn it was about 80%. I thought I could handle some humidity, but this stuff was like pea soup. It was so muggy my clothes seemed to be soaked.

In the first Month I was stationed there, I kept ending up in sick bay from passing out. I had no energy, I could not lift my M-16, let alone carry a 50 lb back pack on a 20 mile force March. I kept passing out, and was almost told I may end up with a medical discharge. I was in the best physical shape of my life, and I tried to tell them I wasn't used to such a mixture of heat and high humidity. Yet they were convinced there was something else wrong with me. Well, eventually my body acclimated, but it took a good Month to do so.

I share this so you can understand what the Viking players would have had to deal with. I can only imagine how the Vikings on that January day felt in that game. Now I don't know how many reading this ever played Football, but with all the equipment on, and in the middle of a football field, it seems a lot hotter, and now add in 87% humidity, and that will make you feel muggy, and sluggish.

OH I know the Chiefs also had to deal with it, but remember, then they had an new fairly untested energy drink, which would have been banned in today's NFL, as an enhancing drug. Even at that, they would have demanded both teams have the chance to use it. Hell, the players Union would have complained even. Gatorade which replaces the electrolytes the body desperately needs in physical competition is now understood so well that every sporting event in the World uses it. Something you cannot get from plain water. So here were the Vikings dragging it, trying to keep up, while the Chiefs were flying around like they were on steroids and speed. Yet all the Vikings had was plain old water, which equales no contest.

Like Joe Namath did against the Colts two years earlier, the Chiefs made history by handing the Vikings and their vaunted Purple People Eaters a devastating defeat. To the shock of the World, the Chiefs would make the Vikings look like a semi-pro team. This drink was still unknown in the professional World of sports, while at the college level it was making news. It would not be until after the Super Bowl, that professional athletes would become interested.

Well, the rest is history. Is it any wonder the Chiefs ran circles around the vaunted Purple People Eaters. Not with Gatorade. Everyone knew the Chiefs were using The fix was in. The Chiefs had to win, because the next year the two leagues merged.

OK, OK, I am still a bit upset 52 some years later. Yet I dare any sport league to try getting away with that today. Today they will fine a team millions and take away future draft picks for cheating. All the Vikings got was ridicule, followed by years and years of incorrect reporting about how much more superior the Chiefs were than them.

Rules in sports has always been, whatever one teams has as an advantage the other gets unless it is a drug, then it is outright banned. Well Gatorade may not have been designated a drug, but when you consider the effects it has on professional athletes, it should have been at the time. Or at least until the league fully understood its benefit to the body. After all, there are power drinks that are banned today in sports, but they are not drugs, they are strong energy drinks. No one ever considers the cheating involved in that game that day, yet to this day there is not a sporting event in the World where Gatorade is not on the sidelines. Go ahead and watch the game if you can find it, listen to the comments off the men in the booth of how energetic the Chiefs are and how tired the Vikings look.

History proves I'm right, and my personal beliefs is Lamar and his Chiefs were needed to win because of the big money involved in the merger. Some claim the papers were signed and the merger would have taken place anyway, well Lamar Hunt, the owner of the Kansas City Chiefs was also head of the merge committee, and knowing how deals are always made, someone must be sacrificed for the good of the bottom line. On that day, at that time, it was the Vikings who had to be sacrificed. For Lamar and his Chiefs, the trophy was the icing on the cake for helping all the owners to get richer with the merger, even if all the owners were not privy to the drug used to help his team win.

Like it or not, the fact remains, the game was rigged rom the outset, because there was enough evidence at the time from College games to know what Gatorade offered a team wanting a huge edge in a big game. Today, the Chiefs should have, at minimum, an asterisk next to their title in the record books. Fifty two years later I wish there was at least one honest sports reporter who would step up and write about the facts behind the day of the Big Steal for the last Big Game played out before the merger took place?

As an added note, I used to be a huge fan of the HBO show, “Inside the NFL”, with Len Dawson and Nick Buoniconti. I'll readily admit that I disliked both men, when they played football. Once they retired I liked them, but as players they were the enmy of my team. However, it was more difficult for me to like Len, but not Nick. See, Nick's team the Dolphins beat my Vikings in the "72" Super Bowl, but his team did it fair and square. By the time the Vikings played the Dolphins most teams, including the Vikings and the Dolphins had Gatorade on the sidelines. Today every NFL, NBA, NHL, NBA, MSL, WNBA, NASCAR, and even professional golf players have Gatorade available to them.

Mind you, a similar theft of the Super Bowl took place again in 2009. During the playoffs the fix was in for the Saints to go all the way to make the fans of New Orleans feel batter about the devastation Hurricane Katrina visited on New Orleans. Instead of locking up the mayor who was to blame for most the misery, the NFL, and the sports media conspired to help the Saints go all the way. In their run to their Super Bowl the Saints pretty much ended the careers of Kurt Warner and Bret Favre, while Payton Manning had to go overseas to get a new procedure done on his neck before he could play again.

We know what the Saints did was allowed, because in the 2009 playoffs the referees were ignoring the illegal hits on the QBs. The next year an investigation proved what every fan at home, other than Saint fans, complained about. The defensive coordinator had contracts on the QBs. He was paying defensive players extra money for QB sacks and or knock downs. If they were able to take out one of the three future Hall of Fame QB's the player was promised an even bigger check. The mock trial ended with the Saints head coach and the defensive coordinator both being suspend for a year and fined for the contract scandal. Yet the NFL let them keep the trophy and their still is no asterisk next to the Saints, nor the Chiefs for the Super Bowls they won by cheating.

On that thought, could someone tell me why Armstrong had to surrender his seven trophies for winning the Tour de France Bicycle races? After all, if professional leagues learn a team cheated, but then do not take the tile away, why did Armstrong have to relinquish his when he was finally busted for cheating?

Inquiring minds want to know.


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Conspiracy; History; Sports
KEYWORDS: boohoo; chiefs; nfl; superbowls; vikings
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1 posted on 08/24/2022 5:59:06 PM PDT by OneVike
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To: OneVike

Len Dawson

Boiler Up!

RIP


2 posted on 08/24/2022 6:03:28 PM PDT by nascarnation (Let's Go Brandon!)
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To: OneVike

How many times did the Vikings get to the Super Bowl when they played in their dome?


3 posted on 08/24/2022 6:06:32 PM PDT by Boiler Plate ("Why be difficult, when with just a little more work, you can be impossible" Mom)
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To: Boiler Plate

Not relevant to the commentary.

That’s like asking how many times did the patriots beat the giants in the Super Bowl, so Brady is not as good and Manning’s little brother.


4 posted on 08/24/2022 6:08:44 PM PDT by OneVike (Just another Christian waiting to go home)
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To: OneVike

It reminds me of when the Eagles played the Cowboys and the Eagles consumed pickle juice before the game and went on to destroy the Cowboys. What’s the difference here? Should the game been thrown out because the Cowboys didn’t consume pickle juice?


5 posted on 08/24/2022 6:09:10 PM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: OneVike

Really? So some teams introduced Gatorade, a drink that helped with replacing electrolytes. Sigh. Maybe the Vikes should not have been beat on the line all game. Or maybe Dawson smoking a cig at halftime, while drinking a Fresca, gave him an extra edge.


6 posted on 08/24/2022 6:13:03 PM PDT by KC_Conspirator
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To: dfwgator

Last I read, pickle juice has not been proven to enhance the physical stamina of an athlete.

Gatorade is proven to do it.

I ask again. You name me the sport that does not have Gatorade for athletes to drink.

They even have it for auto racers.


7 posted on 08/24/2022 6:13:21 PM PDT by OneVike (Just another Christian waiting to go home)
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To: KC_Conspirator

Again, irrelevant.

Because they weren’t.

The point being Gatorade is a proven enhancer for the stamina of athletes.


8 posted on 08/24/2022 6:14:58 PM PDT by OneVike (Just another Christian waiting to go home)
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To: nascarnation

(Boiler Up!)2

\https://purduesports.com/news/2022/8/24/football-purdue-legend-len-dawson-passes-away-at-87.aspx


9 posted on 08/24/2022 6:15:22 PM PDT by 103198 (It's the metadata stupid...)
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To: OneVike

The humidity easily gets beyond 80% in Duluth Minnesota. The Vikings could’ve drunk Coca-Cola?


10 posted on 08/24/2022 6:15:29 PM PDT by JmyBryan
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To: OneVike

11 posted on 08/24/2022 6:17:22 PM PDT by nascarnation (Let's Go Brandon!)
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To: KC_Conspirator
That was Superbowl 1 They lost to the Packers, 35-10.


12 posted on 08/24/2022 6:19:33 PM PDT by gundog ( It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen. )
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To: OneVike

Nice to see you have followed through and made a nicely written, and reasoned, vanity about the issue we discussed.

I still will share with this thread as someone who watched the Chiefs from ‘63 onward and lived in the Kansas City area for 64 of my years, I never heard anyone mention this supposed controversy. Other Kansas City fans can chime in as to whether or not they ever heard that this was a bone of contention with Minnesota fans — but I never heard it and I probably attended 70 games over the years and saw another 200.


13 posted on 08/24/2022 6:22:10 PM PDT by KC Burke (If all the world is a stage, I would like to request my lighting be adjusted.)
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To: OneVike

Gatorade is cheating? How about the 1999 NFC championship game between St Louis and Tampa Bay? Dierdorf during his opening monologue said “Does anybody think the NFL is going to let TB win given that the Titans won the AFC game earlier today?” When the Emmanuel catch was ruled a drop Dierdorf went on to claim “The fix is in!” Sure they cheat when big money is involved.


14 posted on 08/24/2022 6:25:09 PM PDT by 03A3 (If we can defund the police, we sure as hell can defund the FBI)
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To: nascarnation

The great Len Dawson at Super Bowl halftime...

https://twitter.com/SkyyHighTy/status/1562408303178973185/photo/1


15 posted on 08/24/2022 6:26:14 PM PDT by 103198 (It's the metadata stupid...)
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To: OneVike
This is for the person who left an anonymous comment on my blog that I am wrong about the humidity in January for GA. This screen image was taken just about 5 minutes ago. It is as of today, and it covers various cities in the state of GA. So anonymous, you would be wrong. You can follow the link below to see how it changes by the minute usually.


Current results weather and science fact


16 posted on 08/24/2022 6:27:15 PM PDT by OneVike (Just another Christian waiting to go home)
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To: KC Burke

Well you know. A lot of religious scholars looked into the Prophets writings at the time Jesus walked the earth and could not see any reference to HIM being who HE claimed.

I offer this just to say, just because no one noticed before, does not mean I am wrong.

It is easy to prove me wrong.

I offer it aa a reasonable argument, one that deserves a response.

Tell me please, what sport team is willing to go into a competition with another team and only allow their players to drink water, while the players for the opposing teams can drink as much gatorade as they so desire?

If I am wrong on the effect it had, then all one has to do to prove me wrong is try my experiment in a true completion.

Hell, I do not know of a player that would agree to it.

Yet my challenge stands, and it’s an easy one to disprove.

IF I am wrong.


17 posted on 08/24/2022 6:35:48 PM PDT by OneVike (Just another Christian waiting to go home)
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To: gundog

Gatorade was not even invented until 1967, it was not given to Kansas City until a week before the Super Blow.


18 posted on 08/24/2022 6:37:56 PM PDT by OneVike (Just another Christian waiting to go home)
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To: KC_Conspirator

FYI Gatorade was not the first. Mead Johnson pharmaceuticals of Evansville, Indiana, introduced Lytren, an electrolytic solution in the nineteen fifties. Hardly used in America (although salesmen begged unsuccessfully that it be advertised to athletic teams), it saved thousands of children in underdeveloped countries who suffered from infant diarrhea.


19 posted on 08/24/2022 6:39:50 PM PDT by Bookshelf
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To: OneVike

Au Contraire. As you well know Minnesota Winters are brutal. Teams not acclimated are not going to play as well in the playoffs when Minnesota has home field advantage. Simply the reverse of what you are crying about.
In 5 Super Bowl runs Minn only played one playoff game away.

Still trying to blame a 23-7 loss on Gatorade is a little far fetched.


20 posted on 08/24/2022 6:41:35 PM PDT by Boiler Plate ("Why be difficult, when with just a little more work, you can be impossible" Mom)
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