Very few football experts in January of 1969 thought the Jets could be competitive against Baltimore.
On January 11th, 1969, the thinking about the nearly officially named Super bowl was this. Baltimore was going to beat the New York Jets and the game would not be close. The National Football League would continue to show its superiority in the biggest game of them all, the Super Bowl. In 1967, Vince Lombardi’s Green Bay Packers easily beat the American Football League’s Kansas City and in 1968, Lombardi’s Packers defeated the American Football League’s Oakland Raiders. Of course, what was omitted in that thinking was that Lombardi’s Packers beat almost everyone and won NFL Championships in 1961, 1962, 1965, 1966 and 1967.
The AFL’s New York Jets-NFL’s Baltimore Colts game was the turning point in the popularity of the Super Bowl. The National Football League and most of the football media thought the old league would just be better all the time and that dominance was going to carry on well into the 1970s. There was a thought that somehow the NFL needed to come up with a new formula so that just NFL teams would appear in the Super Bowl. That would make the game more competitive and appealing.
The New York Jets franchise led by the owner Sonny Werblin was the free spending rebels from the rebel league although Werblin was gone as one of the Jets organization’s owners in 1968. New York quarterback Joe Namath had a large contract, wore long hair and played in white shoes. The Colts quarterbacks, Earl Morrall and Johnny Unitas both had crew cuts. Namath was known as Broadway Joe, a nickname given to him by former Colt and Jet offensive lineman Sherman Plunkett. Unitas was known as Johnny U and wore black high-top shoes.
Namath had a public perception of being a playboy who enjoyed New York life to its fullest and was a braggart. Unitas had little to say.
While the Jets coach Weeb Ewbank was studying films of the Colts and analyzing why the Chiefs and Raiders lost, Namath was talking and was ahead of his time as a trash talk pioneer. Except Namath only said two things and was probably only echoing what his coaching staff and teammates were thinking.
Namath said there were four quarterbacks in the AFL who were better than Morrall, the Colts starter and then said, “We are going to win this game. I guarantee it.”
Ewbank had to convince his Jets to keep quiet and play football and not say a thing about beating Baltimore. He was in one way seeking NFL respect but in another way laughing at the Super Bowl. Weeb knew his Jets could win and the AFL was a quality league.
“They weren’t giving the AFL anything,” he said years later. “I thought there were two great teams in Super Bowl I and II. They were fine ball clubs. I don’t think there has ever been much better material than they had at Kansas City. They had great athletes and the Raiders were a good football team.
“In both games, they let themselves get upset. In the first game, they had an interception in the third quarter and the Chiefs weren’t any good in the ballgame after that after Green Bay scored. Then the Raider game, they had a dropped punt and a recovery and then they weren’t in the game anymore.
“When we went into out game, we said no matter what happened, we weren’t going to let it upset us. Whether it be an official call, an interception, a fumble or what. Why we weren’t going to let that upset us. We were going to stick to the game plan.”
But one thing Ewbank didn’t count on was Namath sounding more like Muhammad Ali than the average football player.
Ewbank brought the Jets to Fort Lauderdale to work out prior to the game. The Jets stayed at the Galt Ocean Mile Hotel where Namath was given the same room that Vince Lombardi used the year before. The Jets trained at the New York Yankees Fort Lauderdale spring training complex and he was given Mickey Mantle’s locker. Twists of fate?
Maybe, but Namath broke the athlete’s code. He guaranteed a win. Ewbank was not amused.
“We had gone down there as 17 points underdogs which I liked,” he recalled. “I told the guys don’t pay any attention to what I say because I want to try to make it 21 if I can. Don’t you guys do anything to stir them up. Well, I could have shot Joe when he said that.”
But Namath and the Jets were confident and really believed they were better than the Colts.
“That’s true and I understood Coach Ewbank,” said Namath. “The next day I saw Coach Ewbank and he said my goodness these guys (the Colts) are overconfident and I have been working on that and here you are giving them fuel to get fired up for the game.
“I simply said, Coach if they need clippings to fire them up, then they are in trouble. That was that. He made me aware that he was very upset that I had said what I did and I felt badly about it after that. Fortunately we won.”
The Jets did go out and won 16-7. The AFL had arrived nearly 10 years after Hunt and Bud Adams decided to go ahead with their plan.
The Jets apparently didn’t think too highly of the Tiffany Trophy the organization received for winning the game. The team left it behind in Miami’s Orange Bowl in a backroom and returned to New York.
“The important thing was we won,” said Namath.
Namath, Ewbank and the rest of the Jets permanently etched the term Super Bowl into the American mindset. Namath, the quarterback, became a TV host, sex symbol, rebel, hero and salesman. The Jets victory that day might have been crushing for old line NFL owners and the sports media that fawned over the NFL, but NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle saw a silver lining. In the NFL Publication, The Super Bowl, Celebrating a Quarter of a Century of America’s Greatest Game, Rozelle admitted the Jets’ upset that day mushroomed interest in football.
An excerpt from the book “America’s Passion: How a Coal Miner’s Game Became the NFL in the 20th Century”.
Wilson gets over the line in final that was full of drama, but lacked the spark of their semi-final epics.
Kyren Wilson has won the 2026 Masters, defeating John Higgins 10-6 to claim the Triple Crown invitational event at the third time of asking.
To be blunt, it was a match low on quality, aside from two frames at the end of the afternoon session when Wilson fired in back-to-back centuries. Elsewhere, even the simplest pots became a struggle as both players failed to find any rhythm, with Higgins later describing his own performance as “useless.”
But Wilson will care little, having finally added a second Triple Crown title to sit alongside his 2024 World Championship triumph.
The win will be all the sweeter after admitting he nearly suffered a mental breakdown in his first round defeat in last Month’s Uk Championship first round.
👑 𝗞𝗜𝗡𝗚 𝗞𝗬𝗥𝗘𝗡 𝗖𝗥𝗢𝗪𝗡𝗘𝗗 𝗔𝗧 𝗧𝗛𝗘 𝗣𝗔𝗟𝗔𝗖𝗘
Kyren Wilson is a Masters champion!
Having been runner-up twice before, Wilson defeats John Higgins 10-6 to lift The Paul Hunter Trophy for the first time in his career.#snookerpic.twitter.com/iYC54a788R
— Totally Snookered – Snooker news and fan community (@totalsnookered) January 18, 2026
Wilson finishes scrappy afternoon session in style
First Session: Kyren Wilson 5 – 3 John Higgins
The 2026 Masters final began with Higgins taking the opening frame with a break of 58, before Wilson levelled by clearing with his own 58, after Higgins made errors on two reds when 51 points ahead.
Another missed chance from Higgins allowed Wilson to edge in front, before he quickly claimed the fourth frame to take a 3–1 lead into the interval after the Scot failed to cut a red into the middle pocket.
The two frames that followed the interval were very much ones for the purists, as the final descended into a safety-laden battle with attritional play the order. It suited Higgins however, who ground out both frames to haul himself back on level terms at 3–3.
Sensing he may be in trouble if he allowed his opponent to dictate the rhythm of the match, Wilson unshackled himself to produce back-to-back centuries of 103 and 111, taking his tournament tally to eight and, more importantly, establishing a 5–3 lead at the midway point.
Wilson gets over the line in scrappiest of sessions
Second Session: Kyren Wilson 10 – 6 John Higgins
The evening session began with Wilson looking to carry on the momentum from his double-century finish to the afternoon. However, he missed three decent chances to edge further ahead, and Higgins kept his composure to reduce the arrears to a single frame with a break of 71. Wilson then responded make it 6-4, but it was the following frame that proved to be the match in a microcosm.
Higgins missed a routine black with the frame seemingly at his mercy, triggering a nerve-riddled twenty-minute spell of snookers, massive misjudgements and high tension, before a foul from Wilson on a tricky pink allowed Higgins to finally complete a job that should have been done much earlier.
Wilson took a 7–5 lead into the interval despite making further basic mistakes earlier in the frame, and both players would surely have been glad to step away from the table after a scrappy four-frame spell.
The interval appeared to benefit neither player, but Kyren Wilson edged further ahead after a frankly poor frame, with John Higgins in particular looking as though his confidence had been shot to pieces.
Kyren Wilson pounced with a break of 78 after another error from a fading John Higgins, moving 9–5 ahead and to within one frame of the title.
With nothing to lose, John Higgins finally found some fluency, pulling a frame back with a break of 70. It proved only a brief reprieve, as Kyren Wilson wrapped up the win in another low-quality frame that prompted the new champion to admit mid-frame, “I hate this game sometimes.”
INGLEWOOD, CALIFORNIA – JANUARY 09: The College Football Playoff National Championship trophy is displayed on the field before the College Football Playoff National Championship game between the Georgia Bulldogs and the TCU Horned Frogs at SoFi Stadium on January 09, 2023 in Inglewood, California. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images)
The 2025 college football season opened in Ireland. It now ends in South Florida with Indiana facing Miami for the national championship. Indiana enters as the clear No. 1 team. Miami seeks its first national title since 2001.
Indiana’s Rise Under Curt Cignetti
Indiana has transformed under Curt Cignetti. The Hoosiers were once the losingest program in FBS history. Cignetti changed everything in only two seasons. Indiana now stands 15‑0 and one win from a historic title. The program has never won a national championship.
Miami’s Return to National Prominence
Miami once dominated college football for two decades. The Hurricanes have not won a title since 2001. Mario Cristobal returned to rebuild his alma mater. Four years later, Miami is back in the championship spotlight. The Hurricanes enter the game with a 13‑2 record.
Key Team Metrics Entering the Title Game
Indiana averages 42.6 points per game. The Hoosiers allow only 11.1 points per game. Miami averages 31.6 points per game. The Hurricanes allow only 14 points per game. Both defenses rank among the nation’s best.
Three Battles That Could Decide the Game
This matchup features two elite defensive units. Indiana leads the nation in tackles for loss. Miami counters with a massive offensive line. The Hurricanes’ linemen outweigh Indiana’s front by 53 pounds per player. This trench battle may determine the game’s tone.
Indiana’s Dominant Playoff Run
Indiana crushed Alabama and Oregon in the playoff. The Hoosiers won those games by an average of 34.5 points. Their offense overwhelmed both opponents. Their defense controlled every quarter. If that trend continues, Indiana could secure its first title.
Miami’s Path to an Upset
Miami’s best chance comes from its pass rush. Hard Rock Stadium offers a familiar environment. The Hurricanes went 7‑1 at home this season. Their defense thrives on crowd energy and pressure. A strong start could create real chaos for Indiana.
Indiana’s One Close Call This Season
Indiana struggled against Ohio State in the Big Ten title game. The Buckeyes slowed Indiana’s rushing attack. Indiana produced only two explosive runs on 31 attempts. Miami owns a top‑seven rushing defense. This matchup could again limit Indiana’s ground game.
Miami’s Defensive Stars Could Shift the Game
Miami defensive ends Rueben Bain Jr. and Akheem Mesidor are game‑changers. Both can disrupt plays instantly. Indiana’s offensive line is solid but not elite. The Hoosiers rank No. 25 in pressure rate allowed. If Miami creates early pressure, the game could swing fast.
Final Thoughts on the Championship Clash
Indiana seeks its first national title. Miami aims to reclaim its historic identity. Both teams bring elite defenses and powerful storylines. This matchup promises intensity, physicality, and high stakes. The 2025 season ends with a showdown worthy of the moment.
John Higgins and Kyren Wilson will contest the final of the 2026 Masters as they both won out in final frame deciders in a semi-final day that will live long in the memory.
Higgins overcame deficits on two occasions against Judd Trump to prevail with a performance of pure granite, before Kyren Wilson looked all but out until a missed red from tournament debutant Wu Yize in the tenth frame opened the door and sparked Wilson’s charge to victory.
Wilson will now look to win the Masters on his third appearance in the final, and second in succession after last year’s defeat to Shaun Murphy, while John Higgins, at 50, will aim to become the oldest Triple Crown winner of all time.
Evergreen Higgins into final with another epic comeback
John Higgins 6 – 5 Judd Trump (best of 11 frames)
If John Higgins is to win his first major title since the 2011 World Snooker Championship, no one will doubt that he has earned it after coming from behind again to claim a last-frame victory over world number one Judd Trump.
Higgins, who came from 5–3 down against reigning world champion Zhao Xintong in the quarter-finals, repeated the feat by recovering from 3–0 and then 5–3 down to break Trump’s resolve and earn a place in the showpiece final at Alexandra Palace.
Trump, who had won his previous seven meetings with the Scot, eased into a 3–0 lead without having to work hard, as Higgins appeared off the pace, much as he had been in his quarter-final.
But lightning struck twice, and when his opponent failed to capitalise on chances to extend the lead, Higgins pounced to close the gap, heading into the mid-session interval trailing 3–1.
Higgins repeats the comeback magic
Higgins emerged from the interval with renewed purpose, firing in a stunning 104 clearance. Errors then crept into the game on both sides as the next two frames were shared, before a missed red allowed Trump to move 5–3 ahead, the final now tantalisingly close.
But just as it seemed Trump had one foot in the final, he missed a routine brown in the ninth frame, allowing Higgins to extend the match. And just as in the previous round, Higgins took full advantage, sealing victory with breaks of 70 and 57 to reach his first Masters final in five years.
Trump looked stunned but was gracious in defeat, while Higgins punched the air in triumph, soaking up the adulation of a crowd that will surely be willing the oldest Triple Crown finalist of all time to lift the Paul Hunter Trophy on finals day.
Warrior Wilson shows the spirit that could finally make him champion
Kyren Wilson 6 -5 Wu Yize (best of 11 frames)
Kyren Wilson showed every ounce of his fighting spirit against Wu Yize as he came from behind to earn a place in his second successive Masters final.
Wilson missed a pair of routine reds early in the first frame, and Wu showed no nerves in punishing the errors, clearing up with a composed break of 75 to take control.
A less-than-fluent exchange followed in the next two frames, with multiple visits and missed chances on both sides, but Wilson first squared the match before edging back in front after finally dropping the pink in another scrappy frame.
Wu then responded with a solid break of 69 to leave the match level at 2–2 at the mid-session interval.
After the interval, Wilson returned with calm, measured play, compiling breaks of 76 and 74 to open up some daylight over Wu, who looked to have lost composure.
An error-strewn seventh frame went Wu’s way as he sank a long pink to compile a nerve-settling break of 74 and pull back to 4–3.
A free-flowing Wu then levelled the match with a stunning 87 break before moving 5–4 ahead, one frame from the final, aided by a composed 58 despite some anxious safety exchanges.
Wu stood on the brink of victory, but a shocking miss on a red gave Wilson a reprieve, and he held his nerve to force the second final-frame decider of the semi-finals.
A miss by Wu allowed Wilson in, and he produced his best, screaming ‘Come on’ as he claimed the win and his place in the final with a stunning break of 117.
The FinalSession Times
The 2026 Masters final, played over two sessions in a best of 19 frames finish, will start at 1pm GMT (8am Eastern) with the second session at 7pm GMT (2pm Eastern)