Skip to main content
Advertising

Kansas City Chiefs Official Team Website | Chiefs.com

A Christmas Story: Remembering the Final Game at Municipal Stadium

Lamar Hunt called 1971 team “the best we’ve ever had in Kansas City”

Christmas Day holds special interest to pro football enthusiasts and the teams they follow. NFL players often find themselves playing that day or preparing to play a day or so later. Feasting and family often come later only after the holidays.

Grow up in Kansas City in the 1950s and 1960s and you'll find many sports fans who recall the joy of Christmas morning, accompanied later by pain as they recall the Chiefs' Christmas Day game of 1971, the final game played at the city's old Municipal Stadium.

Oddly enough, to late Chiefs Founder Lamar Hunt, a deeply spiritual person in his own right and a generally positive one by most accounts, he considered that game to be a memorable one even though it ended in defeat.

Hunt made no bones about it. He said of that team: "1971 was the best team we've ever had in Kansas City," but ever the promoter of his beloved AFL, he recognized that the game's outcome also signaled "the emergence of the [Miami] Dolphins as a great team." The Dolphins had lost in the playoffs the previous year and went on to lose in the Super Bowl to Dallas after the win in Kansas City.

Kansas City's Ed Podolak (14) runs after the catch behind a good block by Jack Rudnay (58) during the Dec. 25, 1971 AFC divisional home playoff game against the Miami Dolphins.  The Chiefs lost  24-27 in double overtime. (AP Photo)

The 1971 Chiefs featured no less than 11 Pro Bowl players and the league's leading receiver in Otis Taylor (1,110 receiving yards). The defense was tops as was the kicking game with place kicker Jan Stenerud and punter Jerrel Wilson. The team was well respected that year having appeared and won two Monday Night contests when those games reigned as television's most watched programming.

There was no surprise that Kansas City was considered a favorite to return to the Super Bowl.

"The Christmas Day aspect is very vivid to me," Hunt remembered years later, "because there was a great hue and cry, the league was criticized for scheduling the game on Christmas Day."

The game turned out to be a rarity: a playoff hosted at Municipal. The Chiefs had never played a home playoff game at Municipal and would not host one again in Kansas City until 1991.

Hunt acknowledged that "it was a terrifically well-played game. Miami scored with about a minute left in regulation time (tying the game, 24-24), and Ed Podolak returned the kickoff 78 yards. We ran several plays, and Jan Stenerud attempted the field goal from the mid-20s and missed. He also missed on the first overtime (a 42-yarder that Miami's Nick Buoniconti blocked).

"The first one was real makable. Then, [Garo] Yepremian made his field goal in the sixth quarter [after 22:40 of overtime].

"I remember my son [now Chiefs Chairman & CEO] Clark, who was six, went with us very early that morning to Kansas City so we could watch the first [playoff] game, which would have been Dallas and Minnesota, and we kicked off our game at four. It was real warm, about 60 degrees.

"We were sitting in the old press box, which was very narrow and had a long, continuous table that you slid your chairs under.

"About the fifth quarter — it was already dark — Clark went to sleep, and he slept through the longest game. I didn't have the heart to wake him up.

"It was one of the three or four most memorable games I've been involved in. The other thing I remember about it is that it was the day that Curt Gowdy invented the expression 'sudden victory.' Unfortunately, it wasn't a sudden victory for us."

Willie Lanier and Jim Lynch leave the old Municipal Stadium together after a night game.

Without knowing it at the time, the game represented the closing of a chapter in team history that would forever be linked to the old American Football League and to Municipal Stadium.

A photo of linebackers Willie Lanier and Jim Lynch exiting the field under the dimming lights of Municipal was really symbolic, though no one noticed at the time. The Chiefs were aging just as the stadium had, and as the team took up residence in brand new Arrowhead the following year, an era was ending.

The players who represented the success the franchise had garnered when the AFL began, and had flourished following the move to Kansas City, had aged and began to slip away with many going the way of retirement as the decade wore on.

Advertising