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Sure, we can say now that a team with Bono wasn't winning shit, but it was a much different league back then and Bono had a solid year. Bono put up 3,000+ yards and a better than 2-1 TD/INT ratio. Hell, didn't he make the Pro Bowl that season? In relation to his peers, he was no worse than Joe Flacco of today and the defense he had was absolutely rabid. Combine that with the fact that there was no high-powered Patriots offense back then and yeah, the Chiefs easily could have, and in my mind should have won the SB that year. Further, the Chiefs by the end of the year had become a far different team than the one that started the year. They truly believed they could beat anyone and that defense was otherwordly. It's easy to say in hindsight that you knew the 1995 team wasn't winning anything, but that wasn't the belief at the time at all. |
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And don't forget the Buffalo debacle, either..... |
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EDIT: Fuji was with Dallas at the time - **** you, Larry Johnson. |
1999 Buccaneers losing to the Rams in the NFC Championship was worse than that 79 game. We were better than those assholes.
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One coach HCed three of those losses.
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Super Bowl winners in the 90s: Phil Simms Mark Rypien Troy Aikman Steve Young Brett Favre John Elway Kurt Warner Steve Bono wasn't even on Rypien's level. We weren't winning shit with Bono, or the dogshit receivers we had on that team, and especially not against a team like the Cowboys. That 95 team was a total fluke squad that lucked into about 3 or 4 extra wins. |
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I was going to get to go to the super bowl that year if we had won. Still hurts. No wonder I haven't liked fish in a long time. |
Christmas Day 1971 blows the other games out of the water. People talking about other games are the little kids who think the world began the day they popped out of their mommy's puss.
If not for that game, the Chiefs would have probably been in 3 of the first 6 Super Bowls and won two of the three. Along with being the winningest team of the old AFL it would have cemented the early Chiefs as a true dynasty. |
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The question isn't 'most inexcusable', but rather 'most devastating'. In 1995 where you really thinking "Eh, we aren't winning shit with Steve Bono". Say it if you want, but I'll call you a liar. This town had lost its damn mind and everyone knew this was our year after not quite getting over the hump so many times prior. In hindsight it wasn't the worst of the losses, but it was absolutely devastating in real-time. For me, the only real contender to the crown here is the 1993 loss by the Montana-led Chiefs against the Bills. I thought the Bills were ready to get knocked off and after beating both the Steelers and, what appeared to be an absolute juggernaut Oilers team, I was dead certain we were due. We started off that 1st quarter moving the ball pretty well, only to stall both times. Didn't matter - all that proved was that we could move the ball when we needed to... ...then suddenly Joe Montana looked very very old all at once. And then he got concussed. Things looked so great and then in the span of maybe 20 minutes, the whole damn season just blew apart. All the excitement of Joe and Marcus, the dominance of Neil and Derrick...all of it just gone. For pure devastation, the 1993 and 1995 squads dwarf anything that's come afterward. |
3. The Drive
2. Red Right 88 1. The Fumble |
Anyone who thinks the '95 Chiefs could have beaten Dallas is on Methadone.
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I was 14 years old. I thought the Chiefs were the best team in the world. I had no objectivity. Now, I do. That team wasn't beating Dallas, and it's questionable whether they would have even gotten past Pittsburgh, because the next year the Steelers came to Arrowhead and held us to 7 points. Quote:
The 1997 Chiefs were the 2nd best team of the 90s. They were the 1995 squad with a better QB and a Pro Bowl receiver + Gonzalez. 2003 Chiefs probably would have made Bono score 35 to win. Doubt that happens. |
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In hindsight, sure. But in relief in '94 and as a starter in '95, Bono looked for all the world like a perfect fit for Marty's run-first, deep play-action passing style offense. By 1997 I'd become calloused by defeat so it didn't sting as badly. The Chiefs broke me down pretty quickly. |
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