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- <text id=93TT2381>
- <title>
- Feb. 01, 1993: The Quest for Redemption
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 01, 1993 Clinton's First Blunder
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPORT, Page 61
- The Quest for Redemption
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Both Dallas and Buffalo carry special burdens into the Super
- Bowl, along with a sense of mission
- </p>
- <p>By PAUL A. WITTEMAN
- </p>
- <p> The Super Bowl is often a game in search of a theme.
- Hundreds, perhaps thousands will be proposed before the official
- kickoff at 3:18 p.m. PST this Sunday at the Rose Bowl in
- Pasadena. Can the coach who was a Phi Beta Kappa at Coe College
- (Buffalo's Marv Levy) outsmart the good ole boy who once
- presided over the obstreperous hired guns at the University of
- Miami (Dallas' Jimmy Johnson)? Can the American Football
- Conference ever win another Super Bowl, having lost 10 of the
- past 11 to the National Football Conference? Will the half-time
- show be a total bore, Michael Jackson's participation
- notwithstanding? The correct answers are maybe, maybe and
- absolutely.
- </p>
- <p> But one central theme of this Super Bowl No. 27 (enough of
- the Roman numerals!) is obvious: redemption. The Buffalo Bills
- have played in the Super Bowl for the past two years, expecting
- to win both times. Instead, they lost by a hair to the New York
- Giants, then were scalped by the Redskins. After the Bills
- thumped the Miami Dolphins 29-10 last week to earn their third
- straight trip to "the Show," as players prefer to call it, there
- was little euphoria. Instead, there was a sense of mission. "I
- don't think we want to celebrate yet," said nose tackle Jeff
- Wright.
- </p>
- <p> The Dallas Cowboys' quest to redeem themselves actually
- qualifies as full-blown resurrection. When owner Jerry Jones
- bought the team in 1989 and fired coaching legend Tom Landry in
- favor of Johnson, some Texans were ready to run Jones and
- Johnson all the way to the Arkansas border. And when Johnson
- posted a woeful 1-15 record in his rookie season, hanging was
- held to be too humane a fate for the interlopers.
- </p>
- <p> But while Buffalo was fighting its way to the Super Bowl,
- Dallas was losing and stockpiling blue-chip draft choices like
- running back Emmitt Smith, quarterback Troy Aikman and wide
- receiver Michael Irvin. All of which proves the axiom that
- losing in the Super Bowl is actually worse than going 1-15. If
- you finish last, you at least get to pick first in the draft.
- Defeat in the Super Bowl, on the other hand, is a bitter bone
- to chew with nothing but snowbanks and February staring you in
- the face.
- </p>
- <p> Dallas got a taste of that on a January afternoon in San
- Francisco's Candlestick Park back in '82, when the hometown
- 49ers upset the mighty Cowboys 28-27 in the N.F.C. championship
- game. The grainy replays still haunt the faithful: Joe Montana
- throwing in the final minute, Dwight Clark leaping in a corner
- of the end zone, then "the Catch" that propelled the 49ers to
- the top of the N.F.L. pyramid--a position they were to hold,
- more or less, through much of the subsequent decade.
- </p>
- <p> For those who revered the Cowboys as America's Team, it
- was the beginning of a decade of galling frustration. They were
- to have precious few playoff opportunities to put on their
- ten-gallon hats and lizard-skin boots, pose by their pickups and
- act nasty. Or ogle the Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders as they
- sashayed their postseason routines across the hallowed
- petroleum-byproduct turf at Texas Stadium. Instead, there was
- Sunday upon Sunday filled with ignominy and gloom. No divisional
- championships. No Super Bowls.
- </p>
- <p> When Dallas again took the field against the 49ers in the
- rain last week, not a single Cowboy remained from that
- transitional instant in franchise history. Perfect symmetry was
- denied the victors as Smith scored the winning touchdown in the
- end zone at the opposite end of the field from Clark's '82
- catch. But the pass he caught was delivered by a young
- quarterback, Aikman, who executed a game plan as masterfully as
- Montana once did. For his part, Smith made the 49er defensive
- team, gifted athletes all, look like rejects from a Pop Warner
- tryout, so often did they bounce off his Teflon body or flat-out
- miss him.
- </p>
- <p> Some Buffalo fans turned off their TVs and fell into a
- despairing coma with the Bills trailing the Houston Oilers 35-3
- in the third quarter three weeks ago, but it's long since time
- they woke up and smelled the coffee. Since that juncture in
- wild-card weekend, the Bills have outscored their three
- opponents (Houston, the Pittsburgh Steelers and Miami) 91-16.
- The team looks like the most attractive underdog the Super Bowl
- has seen since Joe Namath and the Jets swaggered onto the field
- against the Baltimore Colts in 1969, during pro football's
- Mesozoic Era.
- </p>
- <p> Dallas brings youth to the party, as well as the
- conviction that they've already defeated the best team in the
- tournament, the 49ers. Buffalo arrives immune to the hoopla that
- often undoes first-time participants. They also realize that if
- starting quarterback Jim Kelly goes down, backup Frank Reich,
- who engineered the miracle against Houston, can get the job
- done. Dallas may have to wait another year to achieve Super Bowl
- grace.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-