1951 NFL Championship Game

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1951 NFL Championship Game
1 2 3 4 Total
Cleveland Browns 0 10 0 7 17
Los Angeles Rams 0 7 7 10 24
Date December 23, 1951
Stadium Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles, California
Attendance 59,475
TV in the United States
Network DuMont
Announcers Harry Wismer & Earl Gillespie
Los Angeles is located in USA
Los Angeles
Los Angeles
Location in the United States

The 1951 National Football League Championship Game was the 19th NFL championship game, played December 23 at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles, California.

It was a rematch of the previous year's game in Cleveland, with the Los Angeles Rams (8–4) of the National Conference meeting the defending league champion Cleveland Browns (11–1) of the American Conference. In the league championship game for the third straight year, the Rams were seeking their first NFL title since moving to California in early 1946 (the Cleveland Rams won the 1945 title, then left a month later). The Browns were favored to win this title game on the road by six points.[1]

This was the first NFL championship game to be televised coast-to-coast,[2] and was blacked out by the league in the southern California area.[1] The DuMont Network purchased the championship game TV rights from the NFL in May for five years (1951–55) for $475,000.[3][4][5][6][7]

The home underdog Rams upset the Browns 24–17 for their first (and only) NFL championship as a California team, before a then-record crowd for the title game of 59,475.[8][9]

Game summary

The Rams were the first to score, with a 1-yard run by fullback Dick Hoerner in the second quarter. The Browns answered back with an NFL Championship record 52-yard field goal by Lou Groza. They later took the lead with a 17-yard touchdown pass from Otto Graham to Dub Jones, and the Browns led at halftime, 10–7.

In the third quarter, Ram Larry Brink landed a hard tackle on Graham, causing him to fumble the ball, which Andy Robustelli picked up on the Cleveland 24 and returned it to the two-yard-line. On third down from the one, "Deacon" Dan Towler ran the ball in for a touchdown to give the Rams a 14–10 lead.

Early in the fourth quarter, the Rams increased their lead with a 17-yard field goal by Bob Waterfield. The Browns answered back with an 8-play, 70-yard drive that ended with a 5-yard touchdown run by Ken Carpenter to tie the game at 17–17. Twenty-five seconds later late in the fourth quarter, Tom Fears beat defenders Cliff Lewis and Tommy James and received a Norm Van Brocklin pass at midfield and raced to the end zone for a 73-yard touchdown. It secured a Rams 24–17 win and the 1951 NFL title, their sole league championship in 49 years in southern California.

The next NFL title for the franchise came 48 years later, when the St. Louis Rams won Super Bowl XXXIV in January 2000.

Scoring summary

Sunday, December 23, 1951
Kickoff: 1 p.m. PST

  • First Quarter
    • no scoring
  • Second Quarter
  • Third Quarter
    • LA   – TD, Towler 1 run (Waterfield kick), 14–10 LA
  • Fourth Quarter
    • LA   – FG, Waterfield 17, 17–10 LA
    • CLE – TD, Carpenter 5 run (Groza kick), 17–17 TIE
    • LA   – TD, Fears 73 pass from Van Brocklin (Waterfield kick), 24–17 LA

Players' shares

The gross receipts for the game, including $75,000 for radio and television rights, was just under $326,000, the highest to date, passing the previous record of $283,000 five years earlier in 1946. Each player on the winning Rams team received $2,108, while Browns players made $1,483 each.[10]

References

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  2. MacCambridge, 2005, p. 73.
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  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.The Pittsburgh Press and Patton p. 35 incorrectly state it was for $75,000.
  7. Rader, 1984, p. 35.
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Bibliography

  • NFL Chronology: 1951. NFL.com. Retrieved September 17, 2006.
  • Brown, Paul; with Clary, Jack (1979). PB, the Paul Brown Story. New York: Atheneum.
  • Hession, Joseph (1987). The Rams: Five Decades of Football. San Francisco: Foghorn Press.
  • MacCambridge, Michael (2005). America's Game. New York: Anchor Books ISBN 978-0-307-48143-6
  • Powers, Ron (1984). Supertube: The Rise of Television Sports. New York: Coward-McCann. ISBN 0-698-11253-9
  • Rader, Benjamin G. (1984). In its Own Image: How Television Has Transformed Sports. New York: The Free Press. ISBN 0-02-925700-X pp. 83–99.
  • Riffenburgh, Beau, (1997). "Championships & Playoffs." Eds Silverman, Matthew, et al. Total Football II: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Football League. New York: HarperCollins. 178–262. ISBN 0-06-270174-6
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