Originally published on Oct. 19, 2022
By Zane
Miller
On Tuesday,
November 6th, 1934, the Philadelphia Eagles took down the Cincinnati
Reds 64-0, a score which remains the largest margin of victory in a shutout in
the NFL’s regular season history. While this is certainly one of the strangest
games in the league’s history for multitude of reasons, the primary one is that
the Cincinnati Reds football team ceased operations immediately following this
contest, ending on about the sourest note possible. However, we need to go back
and see how we got to this point to begin with.
The Reds
entered the league in 1933, owned by former player and coach Mike Palm. Palm
had spent two seasons in the league as a running back for the New York Giants,
playing in the team’s inaugural season in 1925 as well as 1926 before retiring
to focus on his coaching career. However, in 1933, Palm would end his
seven-year hiatus as a player to rejoin the Reds on the field. Not only that,
he would take over as the head coach halfway through the season, achieving the
rare player-coach-owner feat.
Unsurprisingly
given the midseason coaching change, the Reds were near the bottom of the
standings, particularly thanks to an anemic offense which had failed to score a
single touchdown through their first six games of a 10-game season and would
only score a paltry 38 points in total for the season. While the team was able
to put together an impressive late-season run, winning three of their last four
matchups to end their debut year at 3-6-1, any positive goodwill they had going
would come crashing down once the 1934 season went underway.
While 1933
was about what you would expect from a brand new team, where they didn’t set
the world on fire but at least were able to get a few victories, the 1934
campaign was a disaster from the start. Somehow, the Reds’ offense got even
worse, only managing one touchdown in their first seven games, while the
defense, which had been a relative bright spot, dropped to the worst in the
league with 179 points allowed.
Not only
that, while the team had been able to play in a stable facility in Crosley
Field in their debut year, in 1934 the team was split between playing their
home games at Crosley, Corcoran Stadium (the home of the Xavier University
football team), Triangle Park in Dayton, and Universal Stadium in Portsmouth,
which, by the way, is over 100 miles east of Cincinnati. With every one of
their home games being played at a different stadium, the already challenging
task of gaining fan support and ticket sales was made next to impossible. Keep
in mind that all of this is going on in the middle of the Great Depression, so
it should not come as a shock that the Reds were hemorrhaging money at this
point.
Sitting at an 0-7 record, the team traveled to Philadelphia to
face the Eagles, who, like the Reds, were in just their second season of
existence. On paper, it looked as though the game would be a close one, with
the Eagles holding a similarly disappointing 1-5 record after going 3-5-1 in
1933.
While the
contest was originally supposed to be played on Sunday at Shibe Park, the
Eagles’ regular home stadium, heavy thunderstorms in the area pushed the game
back to Tuesday, making it the first NFL game to be played on that day of the
week since 1929. With Shibe Park already being booked for a high school
football game that day, the Reds-Eagles matchup was relocated to Temple
University’s football field, further adding to the pre-game weirdness. However,
the biggest news bombshell in the leadup to the game was yet to come.
As mentioned
before, the Reds were in dire financial trouble, so much so that they were
unable to pay the administrative fees required to stay in the league. With
that, it was decided the morning of the game that the Reds would suspend
operations effective the next day. Word of the news quickly spread to the
players, presumably sinking the team’s morale in what had already been a
demoralizing season. Nonetheless, there was still a game to be played, and a
chance for the Reds to win in their final game as franchise was on the table. Needless to say, this did not come to fruition.
After
fullback Ed Storm opened the scoring for the Eagles with a 36-yard touchdown
run, the rout was on as wingback Swede Ellstrom ran for another touchdown and
Ed Matesic picked off a Reds pass for a 44-yard touchdown return. Halfback
Swede Hanson ran for a 46-yard score to wrap up the first quarter, giving the
Eagles a 26-0 lead.
Despite this
hot start, the Philadelphia offense would cool down significantly in the second
and third quarters, as the Cincinnati defense seemed to get their footing.
While Joe Carter caught a pair of touchdown passes to go along with another
touchdown grab from Red Kirkman, the Eagles entered the final frame up 44-0.
While it was a next to insurmountable advantage, especially by 1930’s NFL
standards, this game would not have its place in the history books if not for
what happened in the fourth quarter.
After
Ellstrom and Matesic had their turn in the passing game, combining for three
touchdown throws, backup Reds Weiner took over to torch the team which shared
his name. He quickly found Carter for his third touchdown catch of the day,
before Hanson claimed his second rushing score to go up 58-0, just four points
behind the previous shutout record set in 1922 by the Akron Pros. This record
would fall soon after, though, as Weiner found Hanson for a 20-yard touchdown
pass, ending the blowout at 64-0 and setting a shutout scoring record which has
yet to be matched. It’s worth noting that this margin of victory could have
still been even bigger, as the Eagles missed six extra points throughout the
contest.
After the
Reds departed the league following this game, their remaining schedule was
taken on by the independent St. Louis Gunners, which purchased the Reds for
about $25,000. In fact, a few of the former Reds players came over to join the
Gunners, which would go on to finish at a 1-2 showing before also folding at
season’s end. The city of Cincinnati would have to wait 36 years for another
NFL team, until the Cincinnati Bengals joined the league for the 1970 season.
Despite the
convincing victory, the Eagles ended the 1934 campaign with a losing record,
going 4-7. Regardless, the team was able to put together one of the most
dominating performances the NFL has seen to this day, authoring the most
convincing shutout in league history.
No comments:
Post a Comment