Super Bowl IV Mic'd Up: NFL Coaches React to Hank Stram & His Chiefs | NFL Films Presents
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- Опубліковано 10 лют 2025
- Fifty years ago Hank Stram donned a wire to give us the first ever Super Bowl "mic'd up." Join some of the league's biggest coaches as they react to this historic footage.
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“Just keep matriculating the ball down the field boys”
"Too much leakage on that last play, too much leakage:".
I love how it showed Giants Offensive Coordinator for Jason Garret.
Yeah
It's what he is now.
Peter Karel Kraus Surprisngly back when they filmed this, he wasn't💀
@@Tommuniqo123 They just released the video. The names and occupations don't automatically appear when each segment is recorded.😉
Wow. Feels good. Cowboy fan here
Hank's tie had to be straight at all times at all costs.
I think he kept adjusting the mic
and his hair or hairpiece.
Just keep enrolling into college down the field boys
Matriculate means advance not enroll into college. That dictionary definition was from simpletons.
Peter Karel Kraus it was a joke
@@funguy1453 I know.
@@PeterKKraus then I guess I'm just making my own advice up 😂
@@funguy1453 thankyou😂
“65 Toss power trap, YEAH (maniac screaming)!”
Yes, the maniacal laugh.
I'd love to see our Chiefs if in the redzone run 65TPT one time for Hank and the boys!
@@nincompoopscoop6296 that would be epic
I herd Len Dawson said that the last time they ran that play was 2 years earlier 1967 against Oakland and the defensive tackle didn’t move with the guard and the play lost yardage.
All hail 65 Toss Power Trap.
Bill O’ Brien: “I think it means be efficient.”
Texans fans: “I think it means not blowing a 24-point lead, then losing by 20!”
Why is he still employed anyway? Oh yeah their owner is spineless af
Was just officially name GM too. He's literally failing his way up the NFL ladder while his QB is tractor pulling his team into the playoffs every year.
Along with a semi-weak division in the AFC South
Houston sports are a dumpster fire.
@@johnperrigo6474 yup the sports gods punishing them for the astros sins
“Mr. Official, let me ask you something!...” that was the most polite roast of an idiotic call (or lack of call) that I’ve ever heard 😂
That and the clip of Bill Walsh politely, calmly telling an official "You guys made an error there that was a lateral"
Hank Stram is smiling down on his team right now
Classic NFL Films right here. Grainy footage at best for other leagues. We're lucky to have NFL Films tbh. Not only great footage but mic'd up as well? They were way before their time.
I agree stuff from 2001 is worse quality in NBA
@@marklikeshark Lol stuff from 2010 looks like it was filmed on a potato let alone 2001
Underrated statement
We have Ed Sabol to thank for that. He was a visionary.
I love how some things never change. I hope they preserve these old films and make copies just in case. Think of all the early movies we've lost.
Still the greatest thing NFL Films ever did. Hank Stram made the Super Bowl IV film iconic. THE MENTOR! Was that there, rats?
"Coach pumped it in there boys." They cut that out.
Sean Payton: "Sounds Like My Discussion with the Official in the Championship Game"
"That's a BAD CALL" LOL
The NFL's sense of humor is quite admirable LOLOLOLOL
Doug Pederson > belichick
As a Saints fan it hurts but it’s funny
@@Hornsupchris the worst call in the history of the game was the no call on a obvious DPI in the NFC championship game against the Rams...I have been watching NFL football since 1962 and have NEVER seen a call as bad as that at ANY level.....The NFL should be ashamed to put that kind of product on display in a championship game...absolutely pathetic to say the least!!!
@@mikeforte7585 Totally agree...worst call in NFL history. I put on my first real football uniform in 1960 in our city's Midget Football League. I was 12 years old, and I've been playing, and watching, and have been a fan of football ever since.
@@mikeforte7585 That would be a "no call" but your point is taken. Didn't call a personal foul either. I think it was it was helmet to helmet.
As a kid growing up in the 60's, the Chiefs were my team. Hank was a great coach. I loved the AFL. It was one of the few good things back then.
Same here, AFL all the way.
Stram wins the award of the best dressed coach. He is unique. Even his energy. Amazing it was 50 years ago. Timeless.
Even the team had to wear those Chiefs Jackets on the road, one player in Boston, a woman thought he was bellhop he made a few bucks carrying her bags.
Nope. Tom Landry was best dressed. Wore a fedora, too.
This was so iconic they forgot to film the game.
While the good footage is on Hank Stram, there is black and white footage for the game, and it can be found on UA-cam.
@@aaronTGP_3756 NFL film cameras don’t shoot in the same positions as broadcast cameras. Which is why old time NFL highlights on NFL films are still in HD, but they are from weird angles. Broadcast cameras didn’t shoot in a resolution anywhere near what film was capable of until around the 2000’s (they also still don’t, but you wouldn’t be able to tell the difference unless you had a massive screen).
what a leader. What a man.
4:37 people forget Garret changed the game for coaches, his implementation of the C.L.A.P. technique will be praised by future coaches for who knows how long.
My Great Uncle Alvin walks in front of Coach Shram at 5:33, he was their Strength Coach during those days. Go Chiefs!
Oh really! I remember your uncle. My dad was team physician, Albert Miller.
@@WC3POchannel10A So cool!
Legendary Alvin Roy. 👍👏💪
Hank Stram touched his tie just as much as Rodney Dangerfield did.
But Hank got respect.
and his hairpiece also
Thank you for the Rodney Dangerfield reference. I was thinking the same thing.
That’s a guy who loves football right there. I agree with that statement all the way.
I've seen this but not Hank with the camera hitting him.
he looked pissed
Hank Stram is someone I wish I could of met. What a character!
I always heard 'matriculate' used in the sense of 'moving forward', as in 'going to college', 'moving forward in life', and 'moving on to the next stage in life.' No matter, you almost can't hear the word in any context without thinking of Hank Stram.
What a class act Hank Stram was.
Stram was also the first NFL coach to draft from black colleges that everyone else had ignored. His teams were the most integrated in their day. KC loved all of them.
Colts fan here. To put your text in some perspective, I really liked seeing Bobbi Bell giving the Lamar Hunt Trophy to Clark last year on the AFC Championship Game
We had a great scout in Lloyd Wells to go to the HBCUs and find greats like Otis Taylor and Buck Buchannon.
"65 toss power trap" The most famous mike'd up line in Superbowl history.
Along with
"bless his heart, he's gotta be the sickest man in America" (Jackie Smith in sb13
And of course
"no good, wide right", sorry bills fans
65 Toss Power Trap is the most Kansas City saying, even if another team uses it. Forever Kansas City.💛❤💛❤💛❤
NFL films made the early nfl legendary.
Really wish the Chiefs had called a "65 Toss Power Trap" the other night, for legacy's sake. Though if it's a choice between that and winning the game, I'll take the Super Bowl victory.
I'll take the spin play from the '48 Rose Bowl on fourth and one to make up for not running the 65 toss power trap. That play will become an instant classic in Super Bowl highlight reels for years to come.
@@1WillyK maybe they can work the 65 toss power trap in next year.
65👏🏻Toss👏🏻Power👏🏻Trap👏🏻
It cost NFL films quite a bit of money to get coach Stram miked up for that Super Bowl. He was very good at getting paid for what he is worth. He told NFL films that they would need to come up with some "coin of the realm" if he was going to wear their microphone. NFL films had to fork over $300 in order to get Stram to get "Mic'd Up".
65 toss power trap!!
You guys ready for the super bowl!
Go KC
Go Chiefs!
Chiiiefs
LETS GOO CHIEFFSSSS, LETS GOOOOO!!!!!! 😁😁😁😁😁
Let's go Niners!!!!
Yes sir, boys 😂
A KC legend....forever...65 Toss Power Trap....EVERYONE in this city knows what that is....
Most underrated coach ever
Legend has it Hank Stram is is still matriculating the ball down the field
I've never seen that footage of him running into the camera. that's awesome lol.
4:00 followed by "don't hurt him"
Absolutely love how he would refer to himself in 3rd person as "The Mentor"
Also how he called his players "Rats" because of the grey facemask!
I remember see this as a kid. I never forgot 65 toss power trap. When KC won the SB I thought of Hank Stram.
Len Dawson: " Hold my smokes coach?"
It’s too bad Hank wasn’t alive to see what the Chiefs did the other night
When did he die
@@paulespinoza1787 2005
The first game of the 2020 season for the Chiefs Andy Reid and his coordinators should dress a suit and a red tie. It could be awesome.
Lucas Ferreira u should contact the Chiefs about that, great idea!
@@JustinCarr225 It would take the entire off season to make Andy Reid's blazer.
Hank Stram is one of the league's most underrated coaches of all time. AFL/NFL legend
The inventor of the play action pass.
The man is a legend, an icon, and was maybe unmatched as an ambassador for the NFL (and the game of football). Who can watch/hear that on the sidelines and not want to see more. RIP Coach Stram
Lmaoo the urban dictionary sample conversation 😂
Cininatti Chili Dog is also in the urban dictionary
Hank Stram was a hell of a coach but an even greater and more memorable character from 1960s football.
How the hell does anyone not like this?
Vikings fans
Kevin prendiville 😂
@@kevinprendiville9429 😂
Best dressed coach ! Very positive!!! Love him !!! He cones from an awesome era!
Hank Stram is a legend.
The best footage I’ve seen of the old mentor in this game. I wish the NFL would release all of Coach Stram in Super Bowl IV. One thing that they didn’t add is when Joe Kapp throw his interception to Johnny Robinson Coach said he thrown the ball like he had helium in it
"You can't float those balls in our league." "They can't can't cover that in a million years." "That's like stealing. We gotta do more of it." "WAAAHHAA OTIS!"
Hank Stram was the greatest!......and wore his rug like a champ.
Wonder if Patrick Mahomes will try 65 Toss Power Trap.
It might pop wide open.
Love to see a defense's reaction if Mahomes said 65 toss power trap at the line that became a 50 yard td pass.
Nope. Switch Rose Bowl right-Parade.
Patrick Mahomes used 2-3 jet chip wasp, and 49er's got stung.
He used the huddle Len Dawson used when Len passed away.
As of now, the closest we have gotten to 65 toss power trap.
I lived in Grandview & was 8 yrs old. The game was played 1 week before I turned 9. Dad had purchased a 24" Zenith colored TV a yr earlier. It was a great time being a KC Chief fan. Live in KC 3 yrs earlier & watched the Chiefs lose to Green Bay. Moved to St. Louis '67 thru June of '69. Got to experience the Cardinals win WS IN '67 & lose in '68. Moved to Grandview in '69. I was on a roll! A Sports Illistrated story asked Andy Reid about running 65 T P Trap. He replied he'd love to but it's a complicated play. Stram became, my opinion, the best ever Monday Night radio broadcaster with Jack Buck.
Henry Stram stole the show that day.
top notch first class coaching stuff!!!
Thanks coach!.. You're the best!! (I was 9yrs old watching the game. on TV that day..)....
Hank Stram was the real deal of the Chiefs head coach always look so fresh and clean and swaggy as he was then to now
Hank Stram and Jack Buck put me to sleep once a week. I had a 2in x 2in AM red radio I placed by my ear as a child. I usually fell asleep halfway through the 4th quarter. I still listen to old broadcasts on nights I can’t sleep. Vin Scully, Verne, ect. Magic through the airwaves. Doesn’t matter I know the outcomes. Their voices put me in comfort
He fiddles with his tie like Pierce Brosnan as James Bond.
BEEN A CHIEFS FAN BACK THEN . YOUR THE BEST RIP HANK.
This is a great voice from the past. He works that suit like he s going to be in court latter.
Was awesome in Super Bowl LIV that Clark Hunt and others in the Chiefs front office wore the same blazer those coaches did in Super Bowl IV.
Upon receiving the Lombardi Trophy, Clark Hunt paraphrased his father's words when he was awarded the AFL-NFL Championship Trophy 50 years earlier. The championship trophy was only named the Vince Lombardi Trophy after Vince's death, at the suggestion of Lamar Hunt.
Hank Stram was purely one of a kind! I don't think we'll see anything or anyone close
GOAT!!
Stram was also responsible for mining the black colleges for players. A photographer by the name of Wells (can't remember his first name) is the man who went to the south & found gold. Buck Buchanan (hall of fame) was the 1st black player ever drafter 1st. Same yr Bobby Bell out of Minnesota (hall of fame). '64 Emmitt Thomas (hall of fame), '66 Mike Garrett (Heisman winner), '67 the greatest ever middle lineback, Mr. Contact, Willie Lanier (hall of fame), '69 Curly Culp (hall of fame). 6 other players from this team are in the Hall Of Fame.
His name was Lloyd C.A. Wells, aka "Judge" according to wikipedia
Hank stram is the best to ever do it lol
Loved Stram but gotta say Lombardi takes that title
Used to luv hank strams NFL radio game broadcasts as well TV broadcasts as a commentator many times with Charlie jones, don cirque, dan fouts, john madden.
And jack buck on the radio who did the tv play by play when the Chiefs won SBIV...50 years later, the Chiefs SBLIV victory was tv play by played by joe buck....jacks son....can't make this stuff up...on 02-02-2020....andy Reid's 222 win....
At least Jack got where he was on merit.
How cool would it be to have Andy Reid of the Chiefs mic'ed up for this year's SB and him say '65 toss power trap'?
I would cry if it "popped right open there"....
I Was thinking the very same thing! Lol
With a smush
@@CruxSynk Got to have the smush. Heehee
@@CruxSynk and calling people rats
"Matriculate" in a university context often refers to the advancement of a group of students from one level to the next: students matriculate from freshman to sophomore after the end of their second semester. So the dictionary definition isn't wrong, but it is incomplete. Pretty sure that's why Shram used the term there.
Crayton Caswell And it kind of makes sense with football...advancing the ball down the field
100% right Crayton!
Why Dictionary.com isn’t my go-to for definitions
3:40
Dan Quinn and Hank Stram would be good as a coaching Duo. Dan is good with the owners and Hank is good with the players 😂😂
I love Stram's KC blazer. Dapper!
He didn’t even use a paper
I think he coached offense, defense, and special teams as well, if I remember correctly.
@@007robotchicken yes. He never had a coordinator for offense or defense, also never had a special teams coach
You can hear the Chicago in his voice.
Offense: can we move the ball 10 yds.?
Defense: no, how bout 4 yds.?
Offense: 6 yards.?
Defense: Deal.
(Negotiating the ball down the field)
When coaches knew what they were doing
You need to update this with Andy Reid’s victory. Go Chieeeeeeeeeeeeeefs!!!
"Just keep matriculating the ball down the field boys...with a smush!" And if you happened to be near the Chiefs sideline back in the day you might hear: "our squad," "kicking team," "atta baby rats," and God only knows what else. As a kid who got into Chiefs games with Huddle Club tickets, I used to sneak over and up into the Wolfpack seats at Municipal Stadium, then from time to time I'd walk down the stairs to the wooden walkway behind the benches. Stram's voice was clearly audible, as were the voices of other Chiefs players. It was a unique and special time in Chiefs history and I was exceptionally fortunate to have been part of it.
The Chiefs have so much legacy
A short guy with a expensive suit, high pitch voice, a big ring, no headphones or play sheets and a perfectly aligned hair as a HC for the dirtiest game in the world. This is football at its best.
The hair wasn't really his, but I'll agree with the rest
The Chiefs were big underdogs but with Hank Stram coaching that way there was no way in hell they were going to lose that game.
Nick Foles you want Philly Philly? Coach Doug Pederson Yea let's do it that results in a super bowl win 0:27
He is dressed like he is in the mafia ! He's very dapper looking! ❤
This is the only football game in which the entirety of the highlight reel took place on the sideline
One of the best.
The original on NFL Films Hank Stram,, way to go boys.....
Can't wait to drop a million Hank Stram quotes at the Super Bowl party. 65 Toss Power Trap is my fantasy team name. Go CHIEFS!
65 toss power trap, priceless. The mentor.
His spirit animal would be a chinstrap penguin
Fantastic post!!🙏
6:27 Belichicks scream😂😂
Hank was rocking that toupee!!!
"Who'd a'd thunk it???World Champion boys!!!"..."Broadway Joe"and the Jets had the same euphoria a year earlier.AFC back to back!!!
IV was the most brutal Super Bowl of all time. It was also the most intellectually interesting, apparently.
65 Toss power trap is the most famous play in Chiefs history!!
I think 2-3 jet chip wasp moved in first place.
Remember watching that game with my father.......matriculation
Nothing has change since year 1970.
If the NFL was still like that, I’d still watch
Jon Gurden Super Bowl XXXVII that's awesome and funny running on the sideline 0:06
The Mentor!
I love how they used Sean Payton in this clip.
Great coaching, NFL Films lol
The was a TV advertising campaign in Kansas City after Super Bowl IV that stated that roll of papers Coach Stram was waving was a Burstein-Applebee Catalog.