On This Date in Sports October 4, 1987: Scab Games
In collaboration with the Sportsecyclopedia.com
After the cancellation of Week 3 due to a player’s strike, the NFL season resumes with replacement players. The NFL Players Association was fighting for the right to free agency. The replacement games were not well received by fans, as attendance plummeted, despite several star players, including Joe Montana crossing the picket line to play for the San Francisco 49ers. The regular players would return after three weeks, as the players returned to work on October 15th without a new CBA.
Since the 1982 strike ended, the NFL Players Association, now led by former Raiders lineman Gene Upshaw was looking to get the league to adopt free agency. The strike began following Week 2 once again as the New York Jets beat the New England Patriots 43-24 at the Meadowlands in the final game before the players left the job on September 21st. The strike caused the cancellation of Week 3, which hurt the Miami Dolphins more than any other team, as they were scheduled to play their first game at their new stadium against the reigning champion New York Giants. Not wanting to disrupt the season as much as the 1982 strike, NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle ordered the season to continue with replacement players in Week 4.
The replacement rosters were full of players cut in training camp and played in the USFL and CFL. Though cracks began forming in the union immediately, 15% of the NFL crossed the picket line to play with the scabs. Among the players who crossed the picket line were Howie Long of the Los Angeles Raiders, Tony Dorsett and Randy White each from the Dallas Cowboys, Mark Gastineau of the New York Jets, Doug Flutie of the New England Patriots, Steve Largent of the Seattle Seahawks and Joe Montana of the San Francisco 49ers. Despite their presence, the fan reaction to the scab games was overwhelmingly negative, as most games had less than 10,000 fans per game. Nowhere was the response worse than in Philadelphia, where the Teamsters and fans joined the NFLPA on the picket line and drove around Veteran’s Stadium honking their horns, as less than 5,000 fans attended the Eagles game against the Chicago Bears.
Some teams have players cross the picket lines, and other teams are made up of replacement players; some of the games were incredibly lopsided. In a Monday Night Game in Week 4, the Super Bowl Champion Giants, after starting the season with two tough losses to the Chicago Bears and Dallas Cowboys to open the season, lost to the San Francisco 49ers 41-21. The Giants would lose all three games with replacement players and became the first reign champion to start the following season 0-5. The Giants would finish in last place with a disappointing 6-9.
The replacement games continued in Week 5, as the Miami Dolphins finally opened Joe Robbie Stadium against the Kanas City Chiefs. Instead of Dan Marino throwing the first pass for Miami, it was Kyle Mackey. The Dolphins would blank the Chiefs 42-0, with Rickey Isom scoring the first touchdown in the Dolphins' new home. With more players crossing the picket line each week, the Players’ Association surrendered and agreed to end their strike on October 15th.
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Even though the players agreed to end their strike on October 15th, the NFL would continue using scabs in Week 6, as the truce was declared too late to have all the regulars in uniform. This set up one of the most dramatic moments of the replacement games, as the Washington Redskins, who had no players cross the picket line, facing the Dallas Cowboys, the team who had the most regulars in their lineup at Texas Stadium. The Redskins scabs would win the game 13-7 and helped provide a springboard to a second Super Bowl Championship, while the Cowboys finished with a losing record for the second straight year and began to look toward rebuilding. Despite their contribution, going 3-0, the Redskins replacement players never received a Super Bowl ring.
Among the notable players who appeared in replacement, games were former NCAA Coach Rick Neuheisel started at quarterback for the San Diego Chargers, while former New Orleans Saints Coach Sean Payton, who won guided the team to a Super Bowl Championship, was under center for the Chicago Bears. Meanwhile, playing two replacement games for the Los Angeles Rams was a Defensive End who played football at UNLV named Marion Knight. The defensive end, better known as Suge Knight, would become a world-famous record producer.