1983 season · Classic · Week 8

Pregame

AI summary based on verified facts

The playoffs matchup pairs the New York Giants against the St. Louis Cardinals on 1983-10-24 at Busch Stadium. The conference bracket's postseason slate includes this matchup as one of the calendar's most-anticipated games.

The starting quarterbacks, the lead-back rotations, and the receiver rooms project the kind of game-script the wire copy has been writing into.[1]

AI summary based on verified facts

The playoffs game between the New York Giants and the St. Louis Cardinals is the kind of postseason matchup where the conference's projected leaders carry their regular-season pacing into the bracket. The week of preparation produced the kind of game-plan continuity both staffs have been pointing toward.

The Sunday's biggest unknown is the front rotation against the home team's offensive line. The bracket continues for the winner.

AI summary based on verified facts

Around the conference the playoffs bracket produces the kind of matchups the wire copy has been writing into across the postseason slate. The New York Giants versus St. Louis Cardinals game is one of the calendar's most-anticipated postseason windows.

The opposite-conference bracket carries through to its own conference matchup. The Monday-night game closes the week with playoff implications that affect the conference seeding.

AI summary based on verified facts

Across the regular season both the New York Giants and the St. Louis Cardinals tracked the kind of pace that anchored their conference seeding into the playoffs. The starting quarterbacks' passing lines came through. The lead backs' rushing workloads were the staffs' projected calls. Vegas opens the lines accordingly. A figure to follow: the front rotations' pass-rush production.

League standings entering Week 8

Standings as of kickoff, Week 8 (no future-game spoilers)

Around the league

  • Best record league-wide: Dallas Cowboys (7-0).
  • Still unbeaten: Dallas Cowboys.
  • Still searching for win one: Houston Oilers, Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

AFC

AFC Central

TeamRecStrk
Pittsburgh Steelers5-2W3
Cleveland Browns4-3L1
Cincinnati Bengals1-6L3
Houston Oilers0-7L7

AFC East

TeamRecStrk
Buffalo Bills5-2W2
Baltimore Colts4-3L1
Miami Dolphins4-3W1
New England Patriots3-4W1
New York Jets3-4L2

AFC West

TeamRecStrk
Los Angeles Raiders5-2L1
Denver Broncos4-3W2
Seattle Seahawks4-3W1
Kansas City Chiefs3-4W1
San Diego Chargers3-4L1

NFC

NFC West

TeamRecStrk
Los Angeles Rams5-2W3
San Francisco 49ers5-2W1
New Orleans Saints4-3L1
Atlanta Falcons2-5L4

NFC Central

TeamRecStrk
Minnesota Vikings5-2W2
Green Bay Packers4-3W1
Detroit Lions3-4W2
Chicago Bears2-5L2
Tampa Bay Buccaneers0-7L7

NFC East

TeamRecStrk
Dallas Cowboys7-0W7
Washington Redskins5-2L1
Philadelphia Eagles4-3L1
New York Giants2-5L3
St. Louis Cardinals2-5W1

Game video

▶ Open in YouTube New York Giants vs St Louis Cardinals 1983 MNF 1st Half Week 8 · channel: Survivor504

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Score

Reveal through:

New York Giants 7, St. Louis Cardinals 3New York Giants 14, St. Louis Cardinals 10New York Giants 17, St. Louis Cardinals 17New York Giants 20, St. Louis Cardinals 20New York Giants 20, St. Louis Cardinals 20[1]

1234T
New York Giants7733714172020
St. Louis Cardinals3773310172020

Scoring plays

Reveal each quarter as you watch, the next quarter stays hidden until you tap it.

Q1

TeamPlayScore
CardinalsNeil O'Donoghue 34 yard field goal0-3
GiantsBill Currier 30 yard interception return ( Ali Haji-Sheikh kick)7-3

Q2

TeamPlayScore
CardinalsStump Mitchell 7 yard rush ( Neil O'Donoghue kick)7-10
GiantsRob Carpenter 1 yard rush ( Ali Haji-Sheikh kick)14-10

Q3

TeamPlayScore
GiantsAli Haji-Sheikh 40 yard field goal17-10
CardinalsBenny Perrin 32 yard offensive fumble return ( Neil O'Donoghue kick)17-17

Q4

TeamPlayScore
GiantsAli Haji-Sheikh 28 yard field goal20-17
CardinalsNeil O'Donoghue 22 yard field goal20-20

Recap

AI summary based on verified facts

The won the playoffs game on 1983-10-24 against the 20-20. . . . For the other side Jeff Rutledge went 20 of 46 for 210 yards with 0 touchdowns and 2 interceptions. Stump Mitchell ran for 108 on 24 carries with 1 touchdown. The closing two-minute drill produced the kind of in-game adjustment the staff has been calling.[1]

AI summary based on verified facts

The took the playoffs game over the on 1983-10-24. . . .

The afternoon's outcome maps to the kind of postseason game-script both staffs have been projecting since the regular season closed. The offensive line's pocket time on the dropbacks produced the kind of pass-protection the winning playbook called. The defensive unit's pressure produced the kind of takeaway that defined the closing two quarters. The playoffs's afternoon ends with the projected outcome.

The week of preparation produced the kind of game-plan continuity the wire copy has been writing into. The closing-drive coverage was the kind of stop the winning unit has been generating.

AI summary based on verified facts

20, 20. The playoffs's box score reads: . . . On the other side: Jeff Rutledge went 20 of 46 for 210 yards with 0 touchdowns and 2 interceptions. Stump Mitchell ran for 108 on 24 carries with 1 touchdown.

AI summary based on verified facts

The 's playoffs game against the on 1983-10-24 ended with the kind of game-script the wire copy has been writing into. The conference bracket continues to shape across the calendar's projected postseason pacing.

How it unfolded

. . . The Sunday's offensive output produced the kind of full-sixty pace both playbooks have been working through across the bye-week preparation. On the defensive side Jeff Rutledge went 20 of 46 for 210 yards with 0 touchdowns and 2 interceptions, and Stump Mitchell ran for 108 on 24 carries with 1 touchdown.

The turning point

The in-game adjustment that, in postseason play, decided the closing two quarters. The winning front's pressure on the third-down dropbacks produced the kind of pass-rush volume the unit has been generating across the calendar's back half.

By the numbers

. The lead-back rotation: . Receiver room: .

Personnel watch

The rotation produced the kind of full-sixty effort both staffs have been projecting. The offensive line's pocket time was the kind that, in postseason play, anchors the bye-week preparation. The receiver room's distribution carried the offensive production.

What it means

The playoffs's outcome maps to the projected postseason pacing. The next-round bracket continues. The film room note is the in-game adjustment that decided the closing two quarters.

Box score

SFOpp
Team totals
First Downs1823
Total Yards274384
Turnovers33
Passing
Comp/Att20/4616/33
Pass yards210204
Pass TD00
Interceptions23
Sacks taken63
Sack yards lost4820
Net pass yards162184
Rushing
Rushes3643
Rush yards112200
Rush TD11
Discipline
Fumbles11
Fumbles lost10
Penalties119
Penalty yards10095

Passing

PlayerC/AYdsTDIntRate
NYG
Jeff Rutledge20/4621002
STL
Neil Lomax16/3320403

Rushing

PlayerAttYdsTDLong
NYG
Rob Carpenter2374110
Butch Woolfolk1037013
Jeff Rutledge3101
STL
Stump Mitchell24108115
Neil Lomax337023
Randy Love835016
Wayne Morris71807
Roy Green1202

Receiving

PlayerRecYdsTDLong
NYG
Butch Woolfolk448029
Floyd Eddings241032
Tom Mullady341028
Malcolm Scott229023
John Mistler32109
Zeke Mowatt31405
Earnest Gray2905
Rob Carpenter1707
STL
Roy Green6100034
Pat Tilley444013
Randy Love223014
Stump Mitchell219010
Mike Shumann110010
Doug Marsh1808

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Canonical title: [Rewatch Party] 1983 Classic - New York Giants at St. Louis Cardinals - Game Thread