Super Bowl I January 15. The lost game video is found.

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http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/01/1...long-lost-footage-surfaces.html?intcmp=hplnws

The Super Bowl will air Friday night, and your money is safe if you take Green Bay and lay the 14 points.

The game airing at the end of this week on NFL Network was originally played Jan. 15, 1967, and pitted Vince Lombardi’s legendary Packers against the Kansas City Chiefs – a matchup of storied franchises still in the hunt to play in this year’s championship.


But even though that first Super Bowl aired on two television networks, no complete video version of the game existed until the network spliced one together using grainy film collected from dozens of sources.

“In an exhaustive process that took months to complete, NFL Films searched its enormous archives of footage and were able to locate all 145 plays from Super Bowl I from more than a couple dozen disparate sources,” the league said in a statement.

The CBS and NBC tapes were either lost or recorded over, although a full audio tape of NBC radio’s Jim Simpson and George Ratterman doing play-by-play and color commentary survived. That sound was dubbed over the video footage collected by the league network to produce a full game of future Hall of Famer Bart Starr leading the Packers to a 35-10 victory, aided by Jim Taylor’s running behind the vaunted offensive line that featured Fuzzy Thurston, Forrest Gregg and Jerry Kramer.

The game, which was played at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, saw the Packers take a 14-10 halftime lead before burying the Chiefs with three unanswered touchdowns in the second half. No less than a dozen future Hall of Fame players took part in the game, including Kansas City quarterback Len Dawson and defensive stars Buck Buchanan and Bobby Bell. For the Packers, Starr, Turner, and Gregg would go on to enshrinement in Canton, along with linebackers Ray Nitschke and Dave Robinson; defensive backs Herb Adderley and Willie Wood and defensive linemen Willie Davis and Henry Jordan.

Lombardi and Kansas City Coach Hank Stram are also in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Billed as “The Lost Game,” the airing of Super Bowl I will take place on January 15 at 8 p.m. ET on NFL Network. According to the league, the presentation will include wired sound from Lombardi, the hard-charging coach who would be dead of cancer just three years later.
 
Clem: "So! What we got here is a title game. First of its kind."

(pregnant pause)

Dirk: "Ayup"

(pregnant pause)

Clem: "Think somewhere along the lines we shoulda set up some of that there fancy shmancy recording quipment."

(pregnant pause)

Dirk: (turns with a wide-eyed stare) "Ayup"
 
I was going to watch it, but you just spoiled the ending. :mad:

That is pretty cool though.
 
The first few games wasn't called the SB. It was the AFL NFL championship game . It wasn't until Lamar hunt saw his grand daughter bouncing a SUPER ball. That he came up with the name Super bowl.
 
Lombardi: "They're killing me, Whitey. THey're killing me.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2PYJ_7Wngck

That was Lou Saban, Bills HC. And I believe, Nick's uncle.
I love that quote also, I used to say it at work to mess with guys all the time, especially if they were black. We had a cool department.

I would love to watch this game, just not sure I will get the chance and the DVR is pretty full.
 
Lenny Dawson during SB I, paving the way for the kale-enemas and vegan torture trials of health-conscious athletes to follow:

len-dawson-cig-super-bowl-01192014.jpg


(a beer would have made this perfection)
 
LOL that's great. I remember the Football Life on Stabler talking about he'd sit at his locker smoking or something like that.
 
Did anyone else here watch this? NFLN did a terrible job, IMO.

Len Dawson was the only commentator worth listening to--the rest of the commentary was just awful.
 
I heard the same sentiment on PFT by almost 100% of the posters there who watched it. It was UNIVERSALLY PANNED as a presentation. Too much new school blabbering not enough old school footage. I won't be DVRing it.
 
It is direct evidence of how contrived and packaged the new NFL is. It can't even broadcast a classic game without mucking it up.

The Sabols must be spinning.
 
I remember watching the original game - I had the NFLN show on kind of in the background - didn't realize we hadn't seen these recordings before. They seem to keep repeating themselves about how the Chiefs linemen were bigger.

Did they show Al Hirt perform at half-time? Lombardi in the locker room after the game saying bluntly that the Chiefs were not as good as the best NFL teams? That made quite an impression on me, that he would actually say that.
 
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