This was the ninth meeting between teams from
Chicago and
New York City for a major professional sports championship. This previously occurred in three World Series (
1917,
1932,
1938), and five previous NFL Championship games (
1933,
1934,
1941,
1946,
1956). The Giants, coached by
Allie Sherman, were known for their powerful offense, which scored 448 points in 14 games. They were led by
quarterback Y. A. Tittle who threw 36 touchdown passes during the season, then an NFL record. Other contributing players on offense were
Pro Bowlers
Del Shofner and
Frank Gifford. Wide receiver Shofner caught 64 passes for 1,181 yards and 9
touchdowns. Flanker Gifford had 42 receptions for 657 yards and 7 touchdowns. Formerly a star halfback, he had switched to the flanker position in
1962, having sat out the
1961 season following a devastating hit by linebacker
Chuck Bednarik in November
1960. The Giants also used a plethora of players at running back, with the main two being
Phil King and
Joe Morrison. Although neither one had significant individual statistics, they combined for 1,181 rushing yards and 6 touchdowns. The Giants defense allowed 280 points, ranking fifth overall in the 14-team NFL. This group was led by future
Pro Football Hall of Fame linebacker Sam Huff. Other contributing players on defense were
defensive linemen,
Jim Katcavage, and
John LoVetere; linebacker
Tom Scott; and
defensive backs Erich Barnes and
Dick Lynch. Meanwhile, the Bears were known for their defense, nicknamed the
Monsters of the Midway. Led by
defensive coordinator George Allen, this unit yielded 144 points in 14 games. The defensive line consisted of
Ed O'Bradovich,
Fred Williams,
Stan Jones, and future hall of famer
Doug Atkins. The linebacking corps was led by
Joe Fortunato,
Bill George, and
Larry Morris, while the defensive backs were led by
Richie Petitbon and
Rosey Taylor. Accomplishments by the Bears defense during the regular season included making 36 pass interceptions, surrendering only 1 touchdown in two games versus the
Green Bay Packers, and not allowing any passing touchdowns in its two games against quarterback
Johnny Unitas and the
Baltimore Colts. Writers in New York were especially fearful of the trio at linebacker, stating that Tittle had yet to see a group like them all year. Chicago's offense did not come close to the Giants' in terms of points scored or yards gained. The group only scored 301 points, ranking 10th out of the league's then-14 teams. The offense was led by quarterback
Bill Wade, the first overall pick of the
1952 NFL draft. Wade ran a simplified game plan, nicknamed "three yards and a cloud of dust," in which they would play it safe by running the ball or tossing short passes to the ends or backs instead of risking giving up an interception. Wade threw almost as many passes as Tittle in 1963 - 356 vs. 367 - but Y.A. favored longer throws, as evidenced by 8.6 yards-per-attempt vs. Wade's 6.5. Wade's favorite targets were
tight end Mike Ditka and wide receiver,
Johnny Morris. The Giants entered the title game as slight favorites. ==Game summary==