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The year was 1966, and war was raging in professional football. It
was a bidding war for talent and it had been going on since
the American Football League came onto the scene in 1960 to
challenge the National Football League, 40 years its senior.
At first, the battles were for college players, and the AFL
scored an early victory when a court ruled in favor of the Houston Oilers over the NFL's Los Angeles Rams after both clubs had
signed Billy Cannon, the Heisman Trophy winning halfback at
Louisiana State. Although the leagues agreed to a "no tampering"
rule on existing player contracts, the stakes became high for
college talent. Bonuses went sky-high. The AFL's New York Jets
signed Alabama quarterback Joe Namath in 1965 to a $400,000
contract, the largest amount ever for a collegian. In 1966,
the NFL's Atlanta Falcons gave Texas linebacker Tommy Nobis
a $600,000 package and the Green Bay Packers forked over $711,000
to Texas Tech running back Donny Anderson. Meanwhile, veteran
players were settling for small raises on relatively small salaries.
For example, John Brodie, the San Francisco 49ers quarterback,
received $35,000 in 1965 and was asking for a raise to $65,000
after leading the NFL in completions, completion percentage,
yardage and touchdown passes.
Then
came a back-breaker. Buffalo place-kicker Pete Gogolak, who
had played out his option in 1965, signed with the NFL's New
York Giants. The "no tampering" code had been broken. The conflict
was in the open, and it was time for action. On April 7, 1966,
peacemaker Joe Foss resigned as AFL commissioner and the next
day Al Davis, general manager of the Oakland Raiders, took over.
Davis was a hawk in regard to the NFL, and he had a plan. Davis
organized an AFL war chest and urged owners to start talking
to established NFL stars. The NFL had bragged of its superiority
because of the caliber of its quarterbacks. Davis wanted to
sign those quarterbacks for the AFL. The Raiders quickly signed
Los Angeles quarterback Roman Gabriel to a commitment starting
in '67. Houston offered the 49ers' Brodie $75,000, spread over
10 years, to sign a five-year deal with the Oilers. Reportedly,
eight of the NFL's starting quarterbacks were dickering with
the AFL. The NFL had no choice. On June 8, 1966, two months
after Davis became the AFL commissioner, a merger agreement
was announced. There would be a common draft starting in 1967,
interlingua preseason games starting in '67 and regular-season
play combining the leagues in 1970. Territorial indemnification
of $18 million was to be paid to the 49ers and Giants over a
20-year period. Most important, from the standpoint of football
fans, was the immediate establishment of a championship game
between the leagues. This was the AFL-NFL World Championship
Game -- which was popularized as the Super Bowl from its inception.
Gabriel never went to the Raiders and Brodie never left the
49ers, but Brodie collected a million dollars on the agreement
he had made in his talks with Houston. Davis resigned as AFL
commissioner a month after the merger. He clearly had won his
battle.
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