Inside the Chicago Stadium the Chicago Bears prepare to kick off to the Portsmouth Spartans. |
Seventy-one
years ago on December 18, 1932 the Chicago
Bears won the championship of the National
Football League in a playoff game
for the first time in league history.
But don’t call it, as lazy sport
writers sometimes do, the first National Championship Game. That didn’t come until the next year when the
league divided its teams into two divisions for the first time and had a post
season game between the leaders of the divisions.
The
’32 game was technically an extra regular season game hastily added to the
schedule by league officials after the Bears and Portsmouth Spartans each completed the season with identical
records of six wins, one loss and two ties—and the ties were in the two games
they had played with each other. Under
the rules which eliminated ties, each had a .857 winning percentage, topping Green Bay which had a 10-3 record and a
.769 winning percentage. A tying record was broken by the team with the best record against the
other. But in this case that was a
meaningless double tie itself. Are we dizzy yet?
League
officials were caught in a bind. Their
own rules, which mimicked the championship rules of collegiate conferences, forbade a post season playoff. So they decreed the teams would play a 14th
regular season game against each other, the winner taking home the championship
crown. The loser would slip below the Packers’s win percentage and officially
end up in third place.
The
game was scheduled at the Bears Wrigley
Field home, probably because it had twice the seating capacity of small the
small market Rhode Island team. If the game had been played there, it would
be relegated to a footnote in history, and the next year’s real Championship
Game, now hardly remembered, would get all of the attention.
But
fate, in the form of shitty Chicago weather, would intervene. The week before the big event was marked by blizzards and sub-zero temperatures. Although
players were expected to tough out any conditions, officials were worried about
the safety of fans, particularly after critical stories appeared in some of the
press.
They
frantically cast about for alternative venues.
There were really only two possible candidates after the Armory where polo matches were sometimes staged was eliminated for its small
seating capacity. The Coliseum on Wabash Avenue just south of the Loop had been the home of the Chicago
Blackhawks after the Civil War museum
housed within the walls of the old Confederate
Libby Prison reassembled on the spot
had closed years earlier. But the
Blackhawks had decamped to the new Chicago
Stadium on Madison Street west
of downtown. The new building had housed
both the Democratic and Republican national political conventions earlier in the
year.
The
newer building was available and had open dates allowing for the hasty creation
of a dirt playing field on the Stadium floor.
That floor was not big enough to accommodate a full football field. The game would be played on a field 80 yards
long and ten yard narrower than standard.
Seating ran right up to the side lines.
The goal posts were moved
from the rear of the end zone to goal line.
The
arrangement called for a bunch of special rules. All plays began between hash marks well
inside the sidelines to allow some room for maneuver instead of approximately where
the ball had been downed as in the college game. Whenever an offense crossed midfield, the
ball was set back to the 20 yard line to make up for the shortened field.
Confusing
new rules were not the only challenge players faced. The loose dirt field was hard to get footing
on, the iron cleats of regular football shoes rendered useless. Worse the incredible noise from the confined
crowd of 11,198 fans made hearing
play calls from the quarterback nearly
impossible.
Under
the circumstances neither team’s offence could get traction and the game went
scoreless through three quarters a defense dominated and turn-overs on downs
were frequent. Officials began to fear
that their worst nightmare would come true—a scoreless tie with no provision in
the rules for overtime play.
Then
in the fourth quarter two of the Bears most famous and ultimately iconic
players would team up to break the tie.
Quarterback Carl Brumbaugh handed
off the ball to the giant fullback
Bronco Nagurski. Instead of running
the ball, Nagurski faded back and lobbed a pass to Red Grange, the Galloping
Ghost himself, in the end zone.
Portsmouth
protested that Nagurski had not hurled the ball from five yards behind the line
of scrimmage as the collegiate rules in place required. With no film or re-play available, it is
impossible to know if he was indeed far enough back. But field officials, perhaps fearing that
tie, allowed the touchdown to stand.
After
scoring the point after, the Bears iced the game when the defense tackled Fay “Mule” Wilson in his own end zone
for a two point safety. The Bears won the championship 9-0.
After
the game, the League was astonished at the interest the game had
generated. A national radio broadcast
generated more listeners than had ever tuned into an NFL game. Newsreel
companies reported coverage of the game was the most popular feature of
their weekly sports films. The national
press paid more attention to a title deciding game than they ever did to a
championship determined on statistics.
Over
the winter, the NFL jettisoned, once and for all, the collegiate rule book and
began to put their own together.
Important rules changes were those first used in the ’32 game or
inspired by it—including the placement of the goal posts, the use of hash marks
to spot plays, and allowing a forward pass to originate anywhere behind the
line of scrimmage. Most important of all
was the change to Division play and an annual Championship Game. From that point on the professional league
which had struggled for identity and often played second fiddle to collegiate sports,
began its sure and steady climb to becoming a national obsession.
And
that first “real” Championship Game in 1933?
The Bears, with their ’32 squad largely intact, edged the New York Giants 23-21. And this time they played in Wrigley Field.
I see only one issue here, your article references "the small market Rhode Island team" however the Portsmouth Spartans were from Portsmouth Ohio.
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