The 1967 Green Bay Packers season was their 49th season overall and their 47th season in the
National Football League (NFL) and resulted in a 9–4–1 record and a victory in
Super Bowl II. The team beat the
Dallas Cowboys in the
NFL Championship Game, a game commonly known as the "Ice Bowl," which marked the second time the Packers had won an
NFL-recordthird consecutive NFL championship, having also done so in
1931 under team founder
Curly Lambeau. In the playoff era (since
1933), it remains the only time a team has won three consecutive NFL titles.
The Packers were led by ninth-year head coach
Vince Lombardi and veteran quarterback
Bart Starr, in his twelfth season. Green Bay's victory in Super Bowl II over the
Oakland Raiders was the fifth world championship for the Packers under Lombardi and the last game he coached for the Packers.
The 1967 Packers became the first team in NFL history to win three consecutive championship games, and the second team in NFL history to three-peat as champions to the 1929-1931 Green Bay Packers. No team has won three championships in a row since.
With the expansion
New Orleans Saints entering the league in
1967, the Packers had to leave 11 players unprotected for the
expansion draft. One of the players that Lombardi left unprotected was a future
hall of famer,
halfbackPaul Hornung. Lombardi was distraught when the Saints selected Hornung in the draft.[2] In later years, Hornung revealed that he spoke to Saints coach
Tom Fears prior to the draft. Fears was a former assistant in Green Bay and Fears felt that Hornung would help sell tickets in New Orleans.[2] Several weeks later, the Saints also signed
Jim Taylor, the Packers
fullback. Taylor, a
Louisiana native and future
hall of famer, had felt underpaid and underappreciated under Lombardi.[3] While Taylor did see action for the Saints, Hornung never did play a single down for New Orleans due to a neck injury he sustained the previous year and retired during the team's inaugural training camp.
The Packers finished the regular season 9–4–1. The
1967 NFL season saw the addition of a sixteenth team and the two conferences of eight teams each were subdivided into two divisions. The Packers played in the Western Conference and in the
Central Division, with the Lions, Bears, and Vikings; each division foe was played twice, and each team in the Century Division and Coastal Division was played once (and no teams in the Capitol Division). Each of the four division winners advanced to the
playoffs.
The Packers clinched the Central division title at
Wrigley Field on November 26 at 8–2–1, with three games remaining, as the second-place
Chicago Bears fell to 5–6.[10][11][12] With the rotational system (in place until
1975), they had home field advantage for the playoffs in 1967, with the first round (conference) scheduled at Milwaukee against the Coastal division champion.[13][14]
GB – Travis Williams 3-yard run (Don Chandler kick) – Packers 28–7
The Green Bay Packers defeated the
Los Angeles Rams 28–7 on December 23, 1967, at
Milwaukee County Stadium, in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin.The Packers scored four touchdowns, including two touchdown runs by Travis Williams. With the win the Packers advanced to the NFL Championship game.
The Packers advanced to the NFL Championship game and faced the
Dallas Cowboys in the NFL Championship Game. The game was played on December 31, 1967, at Lambeau Field in
Green Bay, Wisconsin. The official game-time temperature was −13 °F (−25 °C), with a wind chill around −48 °F (−44 °C). The bitter cold overwhelmed Lambeau Field's new turf heating system, leaving the playing surface hard as a rock and nearly as smooth as ice. The officials were unable to use their whistles after the opening kickoff when a whistle stuck to a referee's lips.
Early in the game, the Packers jumped to a 14–0 lead with a pair of touchdown passes from
Bart Starr to wide receiver
Boyd Dowler. Green Bay committed two costly turnovers in the second quarter that led to ten Dallas points. Neither team was able to score any points in the third quarter, but then on the first play of the final period, the Cowboys took a 17–14 lead with running back
Dan Reeves' 50-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver
Lance Rentzel on a
halfback option play.
Starting from his own 32-yard line with 4:54 left in the game, Starr led his team down the field to the one-yard line. Running back
Donny Anderson attempted two runs into the end zone, but fell short. Facing a third down with sixteen seconds left in the game, Starr executed a
quarterback sneak behind center Ken Bowman and guard
Jerry Kramer's block through defensive tackle
Jethro Pugh, scoring a touchdown that gave the Packers a 21–17 win and their unprecedented third consecutive NFL championship.
OAK – Bill Miller 23-yard pass from Daryle Lamonica (George Blanda kick) – Packers 33–14
After beating the Cowboys in the NFL Championship game, the Packers advanced to the
AFL-NFL World Championship Game to face the American Football League champions, the
Oakland Raiders. The Packers scored early with two field goals from kicker
Don Chandler. Later in the second quarter, quarterback Bart Starr threw a 62-yard touchdown pass to receiver
Boyd Dowler to give the Packers a 13–0 lead. Oakland struck back on their next possession when quarterback
Daryle Lamonica completed a 23-yard touchdown pass to receiver Bill Miller. At the end of the half, Don Chandler added another field goal, making the score 16–7.
In the second half, Starr completed a 35-yard pass to receiver Max McGee, which was the last reception of McGee's career. The pass helped set up
Donny Anderson's two-yard touchdown run. Early in the fourth quarter, Chandler kicked his fourth field goal, making the score 26–7. After the field goal, Starr was injured on a sack and was replaced by
Zeke Bratkowski. Later in the fourth quarter, Packers defensive back
Herb Adderley intercepted a Raiders pass and returned it 60 yards for a touchdown, making the score 33–7. The Raiders managed to score a second touchdown on a 23-yard touchdown pass from Lamonica to Bill Miller late in the fourth quarter. The Packers went on to win the game 33–14. Coaching his last game for the Packers, Vince Lombardi was carried off the field in victory.