The PFL Logo

1998 Season Recappppp

1998 FACTS

1998 FINAL STANDINGS
1998 SCHEDULES

PRESEASON FEATURES

MADDEN 99 PREVIEW
PRESEASON NEWS
WEATHER DEBATE
NEW WEATHER RULES
SWAMM'S 98 PREVIEW

SWAMMI REPORTS

GB/PITT PREVIEW
Wk. 1 SWAMMI REPORT
Wk. 3 SWAMMI REPORT
SWAMMI'S WK 7 TOP 10

MAJOR 98 STORIES

COMMISSIONER SLAPS THE CREATOR WITH A 2 GAME PENALTY

SITE UTILITIES

HELP
CONTACT
EMAIL the Commish!!!
Send Commissioner Allen all of your questions or comments concerning the PFL.

Waymon Gresham wins his first of back to back PFL Superbowls.

The Creator Emerges
Broncs Win "SUPER" Superbowl
After roaring through the AFC playoffs with almost no strain, the Broncs rolled into San Diego poised to closed the book on what had been the easiest novel ever written on winning a PFL championship. Little did they know however, that Alex Smolka and the New England Patriots were not ready to just hand over the PFL title to the Broncs. They too, as did Denver, made it to the big dance after clawing their way through the intensely competitive conference playoffs. So the stage was set for the two Cinderella's of both conferences to square off in what has been termed as the best SuperBowl ever. Of course it was only the second true SuperBowl for the PFL. Even so, it is hard to imagine that the future Super Bowls to come could be any better than this nail biter.

The slugfest began with the Patriots drawing first blood on a 44 yard touchdown pass to Terry Glenn to go up early 7-0. Denver came right back on a 11 play 75 yard drive highlighted by a 30 yard passing play from Elway to Rod Smith. Terrell Davis scampered in from two yards out to tie the game at 7. The two teams alternated possessions back and forth for most of the first quarter tied at 7 before John Elway connected with Shannon Sharpe from 38 yards out. Denver lead 14-7. After an Adam Vinatieri field goal made it a 14-10 game, Denver blew the game scoring 15 unanswered points to go up 29-10 late in the second quarter. With less than a half of a minute to go in the first half with the ball on the Bronco 47, Gresham opted to go on fourth down, and was stifled by the Patriot defense. New England got the ball back with 29 seconds to go in the half. Two plays into the drive, Drew Bledsoe connected with Ty Law on a 48 yard touchdown strike and the Pats were back in business at 29-17 with seconds remaining in the first half. The Broncs seemed unfazed by the Pats good fortunes and came right out and scored on theirng drive of the second half when Jason Elam kicked a 21 yd FG to send the Broncs up 32-17. Early in the third quarter, John Elway was knocked out of the game by a vicious Ted Johnson sack. But that didn't seemed to phase the Denver offense as Jeff Lewis came in replaced Elway and lead the Broncos on an 8 play 65 yard drive to ended in a 37 yard scoring strike to Willie Green to put Denver up 40-17.

Finally the Pats put together two great scoring drives and two great defensive stands to make the game close late in the second half. After Ted Johnson picked off a Jeff Lewis errant pass, Bledsoe marched his troops 44 yards for another score, this time to Sam Gash, cutting the lead to 40-24. With 8:12 remaining, the Vinateiri capped a 12 play 47 yard drive with an 32 yard FG to make it a 40-27. Ed McCaffrey scored on a 21 yd TD pass from Lewis to extend the Broncs lead back to 46-27. Back came the Pats. First Bledsoe to Glenn for 40 yards to set up Bledsoes fourth TD of the game to Ben Coates. The Pats were one step closer at 46-34. The Bledsoe, red hot hit Terry Glenn on a 25 yd scoring strike to make a game at 46-31. The Pats were back in it all of a sudden. After Waymon Gresham made another questionable fourth down decision to go for it on his own 48 yard line, the Pats defense once again rose to the occasion and stopped the Broncs on fourth down for the fourth time and took over on possessions inside Denver territory. Two plays later, the play that the Patriot fans will be thinking about all of the off season occurred. Drew Bledsoe pass was picked off by Michael Dean Perry. New England's comeback hopes for a SuperBowl title were washed suddenly washed away with 5:12 left in the game. Gresham, after so many questionable coaching decisions throughout the game, managed to prevail and win his first SuperBowl title after scoring late to make the final score 53-41.

The beauty of the PFL was evident, proving that the games must be played before a champion can be crowned. How could a 7-9 team be considered a 9 point favorite to win the SuperBowl over a 10-6 team? And why wasn't the 12-4, & 11-5 teams in the big game? Why? Because it's the PFL, and in the PFL anything can happen.....I mean anything. Denver deserved their crowning achievement. After such a horrific start, they found the will to win when it counted. As for New England, everybody's good guy, Alex Smolka, just couldn't pull it off in the end. One pass, one error away from what seemed to be destiny. But as we watched and viewed these two gladiators go head to head, everyone stood proud. Because in the end, it was not about the Denver Broncos vs. the New England Patriots, or the SuperBowl Champs, or the AFC vs. the NFC. No, it is much deeper than that. It was about the PFL. The best SuperBowl EVER was the crowning jewel for a LEAGUE that shines brighter and brighter each season. Can you wait until next year?

Greshams Journey To Title Miraculous
The story of the PFL Denver Bronco season is nothing short of a slight miracle. Why slight, why miracle? Because Waymon Gresham started the year off as unpredictable as one could imagine. After a successful season as coach of the St. Louis Rams, Gresham upgraded his chance at a title by leaving St. Louis, a team with average to below average talent for the Denver Broncos, a marquee franchise. After having a banner first year with the likes of Tony Banks, Lawrence Phillips and Isaac Bruce, Gresham went from steak to filet mignon in John Elway, Terrell Davis and Shannon Sharpe. So with that, everyone figured Gresham would be a strong contender in the AFC to win the title, right? Wrong! At least after 6 weeks. You see, at preseason, the Broncos looked as though they would challenge long time nemesis Kevin Fox for a shot at the AFC championship. But after a horrific start, which included being slapped with a two game forfeit for LEAGUE violations, the Broncs started a dismal 3-7. Green Bay and San Francisco looked to be a lock to repeat last year's exhibition conference title game, and Kansas City was earning its respect as the season progressed.

Denver had become an after thought, counted out of the post season party invites. But somewhere and some how, Gresham found a way to resurrect a dismal season at just the right time. The Gresham everyone saw at preseason, the brash, cocky, confident coach, had now become the quiet confident one. What happened to trigger such a change in Waymon's approach to the game suddenly? Gresham credits it to the discovery of a whole new game plan both offensively and defensively. He quietly and mildly predicted he would win the SuperBowl if he could defeat the Green Bay Packers. The Packers seemed to be the Mike Tyson of the PFL. Although they did loose a couple of games, four to be exact, many considered Green Bay the best team in the PFL. 10 consecutive weeks they were ranked number one in the coaches poll from week 6 until the end of the regular season.

But Gresham set an ambush for his long time nemesis that only Mike Shanahan could be proud of. Gresham admitted to Fox and THE LEAGUE that "Fox owns him." He went on to say, "I can't beat him. I just can't beat him (Fox)." The cleverly spun web was perfect for the over confident Fox. This apparent idolatry towards the Packers caused Fox to fail to prepare appropriately for the AFC title game which thus lead to Gresham's 52-17 drubbing of Fox and the seemingly invincible Packers, the worst loss Fox had ever received in official LEAGUE play. The Packer franchise reached an all time low when Fox pulled his team off the field late in the third quarter as Gresham proceeded to tear him apart as he did Wayne Allen 71-45 the week before.

What made Gresham's run special was that his ball club peaked at the right time. It was already rather strange to have a team with a losing record in the playoffs, but to make it to the SuperBowl, BE INSTALLED A 9 POINT FAVORITE over a 10-6 team, and WIN....... well, it's almost miraculous. Supposed someone presented the above mentioned scenario to you before the season began. Don't you think you would have suggested psychiatric evaluation for that person.

Now its time to began to think about next year. Of course we don't know what next year holds. But we do know that the Broncos will be one of the more talented teams in the PFL. We do know that Gresham will be back in Denver to defend his title. But what we don't know is if Gresham gets into a similar slump, if he could bring himself out a second time. Or will he dominate the conference throughout the year, only to loose in the playoffs as both Green Bay and San Francisco has the past two title games. One thing is certain. Nothing is guaranteed in the PFL. It certainly seemed as though it would Dallas & San Francisco in 1997. And looked as thought it was going to be Pittsburgh and Green Bay in 1998. BUT.......I guess that's why they play the games.

1998 Playoff Brackets | 1998 Final Standings |

Archives Home


1998 TEAM FEATURES

PFL SUPERBOWL II

PREGAME STORIES

PATS CINDERELLA STORY CONTINUES

POST GAME RECAPS

Gresham Take The High Road To Glory

Complete Superbowl II Statistics

Patsng Scoring Drive Chart

Bronco's Winning Scoring Drive Chart

Final 98 Playoff Re

 

 

thePFL.com -- Ft. Lauderdale/Miami Based Madden League Sitemap