In the final seconds of the 1967 NFL Championship Game, the famous Ice Bowl at Green Bay, Pugh was blocked by Packers' guard Jerry Kramer for the game-deciding touchdown. Kramer's block cleared the way for Bart Starr to score on a 1-yard quarterback sneak with 16 seconds remaining, lifting Vince Lombardi's team to a 21–17 victory and an unprecedented third consecutive title game win in −15 °F (−26 °C) weather at Lambeau Field.[14] It was the second consecutive season that Dallas had fallen to the Packers in the championship game; the previous year was a close game in the Cotton Bowl. Always a team player, Pugh carried on through the 1971 season with a case of appendicitis and delayed his surgery until the offseason, by taking shots of penicillin.[15]
Even though he was a physical player against the run, his athleticism enabled him to become an excellent pass rusher for a defensive tackle.[2]
While quarterback sacks were not an official NFL statistic during his career, Pugh is unofficially credited with a career total of 95.5. He led the Cowboys in sacks each season from 1968 to 1972 with a high mark of 15.5 in 1968,[3][17] a team record that stood until 2010 when DeMarcus Ware reached six straight seasons, eventually leading the Cowboys in sacks from 2005 to 2012.[18][19] Pugh averaged 12½ sacks, during one amazing stretch of his career (1968–1972)[20] and currently ranks sixth on the Cowboys all-time sacks list with 95.5.[21]
Following the 1978 season and Super Bowl XIII, in which he did not play due to injury, Pugh retired on January 29, 1979,[22] after helping the Cowboys win two Super Bowls (and playing in four), five NFC Championships, qualify for the NFL post-season in 12 out of 14 seasons, and played in a then league record 23 playoff games.[23]
Personal life
Pugh showed financial acumen from an early age, when he had the Cowboys defer part of his compensation, which was in the hundreds of thousands of dollars by the time he retired.[2] Pugh owned a number of western-themed gift shops at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport in Texas.[24] He later partnered with The Parodies Shops which had businesses across the U.S. and Canada.[2] He also hosted an annual Jethro Pugh Celebrity Golf Tournament in Dallas to raise funds for the United Negro College Fund. On January 7, 2015, he died at the age of 70 in Dallas, Texas.[2][25]
References
^"Jethro Pugh became known". Reading Eagle. Pennsylvania. Associated Press. January 30, 1979. p. 24. Retrieved September 7, 2022.