Drew Pearson watched from a suite at Cowboys Stadium last weekend as his old team whipped the Eagles. As the game ended, he turned to Roger Staubach and said, "Get ready. We're going to be busy this week."
The Cowboys will face the Vikings on Sunday in the playoffs, meaning Minnesotans old enough to remember when frostbite constituted a home-field advantage were bound to relive one of the most devastating moments in franchise history.
Most remember it as "The Hail Mary." Vikings fans still call it "The Push-Off."
On Dec. 28, 1975, Staubach's 50-yard touchdown pass to Pearson in the last half-minute of a divisional playoff game on a cold afternoon at Met Stadium beat an excellent Vikings team 17-14. Reached at his home near Dallas this week, Pearson reminisced about the play in vivid detail and laughed about his former ownership of a business based in Hopkins.
"Of all the places in the world to end up, we ended up in Minnesota," he said. "I had over 100 employees there, they were all Vikings fans, and they used to give me a hard time every time I went up there. I used to joke that when I flew up there for meetings, I had to go in as Al Smith, because they wouldn't let Drew Pearson in."
Pearson almost shivered as he remembered the day. "It was about 10 degrees," Pearson said. "We go out for pregame warmups, and here come the Vikings with short sleeves and no gloves, and some of them not even wearing pads on their arms. They were pretty intimidating.
"We knew even with all those Super Bowl teams that this was probably their best team of all. It turned into one of the most physical games I ever played in. I said to myself, 'Man, this is pro football.' "
The Vikings, who finished the regular season 12-2, took a 14-10 lead. The Cowboys got the ball on their own 15 with 1:51 remaining. On fourth-and-16 from the 25, Staubach hit Pearson for 25 yards, as Pearson beat Vikings cornerback Nate Wright along the sideline.