Saturday, January 2, 1999 AFC: Miami Dolphins 24, Buffalo Bills 17 The Dolphins forced five Bills turnovers, including Buffalo quarterback
Doug Flutie's fumble at the Miami 5-yard line with 17 seconds left in the game. Buffalo's wide receiver
Eric Moulds set an NFL postseason record with 240 receiving yards, including a 32-yard touchdown catch. The Bills had a great scoring chance when Moulds caught a 65-yard pass from Flutie on the first play from scrimmage, but
Terrell Buckley knocked the ball out of his hands and safety
Brock Marion recovered the fumble, returning it 17 yards to the Miami 29. Miami then drove 57 yards in 16 plays to score on kicker
Olindo Mare's 31-yard field goal. After forcing a punt, Miami went on another long field goal drive, this one covering 66 yards in 11 plays, including a 22-yard reception by
Ed Perry and two pass interference calls against Buffalo for a total of 26 yards. Mare's 40-yard field goal gave the Dolphins a 6–0 lead with over 10 minutes left in the second quarter, but a failed surprise onside kick attempt gave Buffalo the ball on the Dolphins 42. Moulds then caught a 37-yard pass to set up
Thurman Thomas' 1-yard touchdown run. Near the end of the half, Buffalo drove to the Dolphins 6-yard line, but Marion intercepted a pass from Flutie in the end zone with less than a minute left on the clock. Miami also blew a scoring chance as
Dan Marino completed a 52-yard pass to
Oronde Gadsden at the Bills 9-yard line on the next play, but Mare missed a 26-yard field goal on the last play of the half. In the third quarter, Miami got an early scoring chance when
Derrick Rodgers forced a fumble while sacking Flutie that linebacker
Zach Thomas recovered on the Bills 40-yard line. But the Bills defense only allowed three yards over the next three plays and forced a punt. Miami's defense then returned the favor by forcing Buffalo to punt after three plays, and
O. J. McDuffie returned
Chris Mohr's 39-yard kick 20 yards to the Dolphins 48-yard line. Miami went on to take a 14–7 lead with a 12-play, 52-yard drive to score on
Karim Abdul-Jabbar's 3-yard run (and
Stanley Pritchett's 2-point conversion). However, Buffalo stormed right back with a 4-play, 81-yard touchdown drive to tie the game, taking advantage of a pass interference call against
Patrick Surtain that gave them 29 yards. On the next play, Flutie's 23-yard completion to Moulds moved the ball to the Miami 32-yard line, and he ended up finishing the drive with a 32-yard touchdown completion to Moulds with less than a minute left in the quarter. On Miami's opening drive of the fourth quarter, Marino completed 5/5 passes for 54 yards on a 75-yard drive that ended with Mare's third field goal, giving the Dolphins a 17–14 lead. Then
Jerry Wilson forced a fumble while tackling
Andre Reed, and Buckley recovered the ball for Miami at midfield, leading to Marino's 11-yard touchdown pass to
Lamar Thomas that made the score a 10-point game at 24–14 with 3:42 left on the clock. With time running out in the game, Flutie completed a 31-yard pass to Moulds and then threw the ball to Reed, who was tackled on the Miami 1-yard line. Believing he had scored, Reed argued vehemently with the referee Steve Zimmer and bumped into him, drawing an unsportsmanlike conduct foul that got the receiver ejected from the game. It also pushed the Bills back 15 yards and left them facing second and goal from the 15 instead of the 1. Flutie's next two passes were incomplete, forcing the Bills to settle for
Steve Christie's 33-yard field goal with 1:47 left. Buffalo subsequently recovered an onside kick and drove 64 yards in 10 plays to the Dolphins 5-yard line. But as Flutie stepped up to make a throw, he lost the ball while being sacked by Miami's
Trace Armstrong and defensive tackle
Shane Burton recovered the fumble. "There wasn't any doubt he was in", Bills coach
Wade Phillips said about Reed's ejection after the game. "That game looks a lot different at the end. With Andre Reed in the game and us only down 3, we would have done some different things at the end." This was the fourth postseason meeting between the Bills and Dolphins. Buffalo won all three previous meetings.
NFC: Arizona Cardinals 20, Dallas Cowboys 7 Quarterback
Jake Plummer passed for 213 yards and two touchdowns as he led the Cardinals to their first playoff victory since 1947, ending the longest playoff win drought in NFL history. Their victory was especially satisfying against the Cowboys, who defeated them twice during the season (38–10 on opening day and 35–28 in week 11). Arizona running back
Adrian Murrell rushed for 95 yards and caught two passes for 16 yards and a touchdown, while their defense sacked Cowboys quarterback
Troy Aikman four times (twice by linebacker
Jamir Miller and two more by
Andre Wadsworth) and intercepted three of his passes (two by cornerback
Aeneas Williams). Dallas had a chance to score on their second drive when
Tyrone Hughes returned an Arizona punt 11 yards to the Cowboys 38. Aikman then led the team to the Cardinals 19-yard line, but the drive ended there and
Richie Cunningham missed a 36-yard field goal attempt. On the first play of the Cardinals' following possession, Plummer completed a 59-yard pass to receiver
Frank Sanders, setting up Murrell's 12-yard touchdown catch a few plays later. In the second quarter, the Cowboys got another scoring opportunity when cornerback
Kevin Mathis picked off a pass from Plummer on the Dallas 37. Dallas went on to drive to the Cardinals 7-yard line. On fourth and 1, the Cowboys tried to convert with a run by
Emmitt Smith, but he was stopped by linebacker
Mark Maddox, who broke through the line and dropped him for a 1-yard loss. Dallas' three remaining drives of the half would result in an interception by Williams and two punts, the second which was returned 10 yards to the Cardinals 38 by running back
Eric Metcalf with less than two minutes left in the half. Plummer then completed a 15-yard pass to receiver
Rob Moore and a 20 yarder to Metcalf, setting up a 37-yard
Chris Jacke field goal that gave Arizona a 10–0 lead going into halftime. On the second play of the second half, Murrell took off for a 74-yard run to the Cowboys 3-yard line. It was the longest postseason run ever surrendered by the Cowboys in their 52-postseason game history. On the next play, Plummer threw a 3-yard touchdown pass to fullback
Larry Centers, making the score 17–0. On the first play of the fourth quarter, Williams recorded his second interception from Aikman, setting up a 46-yard field goal by Jacke. Now desperate for points, Dallas tried to convert a fourth and 1 deep in their own territory, only to have Aikman get sacked by Miller for a 10-yard loss. An interception by
Darren Woodson prevented Arizona from scoring, but with only ten minutes remaining on the clock, there was little hope for a comeback. All Dallas could do was avoid a shutout when
Deion Sanders' 41-yard punt return set up Aikman's 6-yard touchdown pass to
Billy Davis with 3:33 left in the game. It was the last time ABC aired a game between these two teams, after six games on
Monday Night Football. ESPN finally aired a game between these two in
2017 (though they did meet on
Sunday night on ESPN once). It was the last playoff game at Texas Stadium until
2007. Arizona ended a nine-game losing streak at Texas Stadium; their previous win was during the
Cowboys' 1–15 season of 1989. This was just the Cardinals' second victory vs. the Cowboys in the previous 18 meetings, the other being a 25–22 overtime victory in week two of 1997 at
Sun Devil Stadium. Arizona lost its last four visits to Texas Stadium between 1999 and 2005, and finished with an all-time mark of 5–27 in the facility. This was the first postseason meeting between the Cardinals and Cowboys.
January 3, 1999 AFC: Jacksonville Jaguars 25, New England Patriots 10 Running back
Fred Taylor ran for 162 yards and a touchdown as the Jaguars won their first home playoff game in team history. Jacksonville kicker
Mike Hollis contributed four field goals. Patriots running back
Robert Edwards, who rushed for 1,115 yards and nine touchdowns during the season, was held to 28 yards on 17 carries. The Patriots, playing without starting quarterback
Drew Bledsoe, receiver
Terry Glenn and linebacker
Ted Johnson due to injuries, could not score any points in the first half. Hollis opened up the scoring with two field goals. The second one was set up by a 46-yard run by Taylor and followed two overthrown passes by quarterback
Mark Brunell to receiver
Keenan McCardell and running back
George Jones, who were both wide open in the end zone. Brunell struggled throughout most of the game, finishing with just 14 of 34 completions for 161 yards. Later in the second quarter, Taylor's 21-yard run gave his team a first down on the Patriots 34-yard line. Four plays later, he scored on a 13-yard touchdown run, giving his team a 12–0 lead after a failed 2-point conversion attempt. Jacksonville got another chance to score when cornerback
Aaron Beasley recovered a fumble from Edwards on the Jags 49-yard line. But New England's defense managed to force a turnover on downs at the Patriots 23-yard line, and the score would remain 12–0 going into halftime. In the third quarter, Patriots quarterback
Scott Zolak managed to spark a rally. First he led New England 85 yards, including a 21-yard completion to
Troy Brown on third and 9, on a drive that consumed 8:48 off the clock and ended with a 1-yard touchdown run from Edwards. Their defense quickly forced a punt, and Brown returned it 17 yards to the Patriots 46-yard line, where the team proceeded to drive to the Jacksonville 9. Following a dropped pass by tight end
Lovett Purnell on third down,
Adam Vinatieri's 27-yard field goal cut it to 12–10. But on the Jaguars ensuing possession, Brunell threw a pass to receiver
Jimmy Smith, who managed to break past cornerback
Ty Law and make a 37-yard touchdown catch in the back of the end zone. After a punt from each team, Jacksonville defensive end
Joel Smeenge forced a fumble while sacking Zolak that defensive end
Tony Brackens recovered on the Patriots 25-yard line, setting up Hollis' third field goal. He added a fourth field goal to close out the scoring after the Patriots turned the ball over on downs deep in their own territory on their next possession. Then on New England's final play, Zolak was intercepted by safety
Chris Hudson. This would be the Jags' only victory against the Patriots, in either the regular or postseason, until Week 2 of the 2018 regular season. It would also be the Patriots' last playoff loss until 2005 and the last Wild Card loss until 2009. This was the second postseason meeting between the Patriots and Jaguars. New England won the only prior meeting.
NFC: San Francisco 49ers 30, Green Bay Packers 27 The 49ers defeated the Packers, who had eliminated them from the playoffs in each of the past three seasons, in one of the wildest back-and-forth games in league history in what would be the last hurrah in the 49ers dynasty. Both teams took advantage of each other's turnovers and mistakes throughout the game. In the first quarter, Green Bay safety
Pat Terrell's recovery of a fumble from receiver
Terrell Owens set up a 48-yard drive that ended with a
Ryan Longwell field goal. But later in the quarter,
Chris Doleman recovered a fumble from
Dorsey Levens on the Packers 17-yard line. Two plays later,
Steve Young threw a 1-yard touchdown pass to tight end
Greg Clark, giving San Francisco a 7–3 lead. The Packers offense responded by driving 62 yards in nine plays, and Levens made up for his miscue with a 22-yard run to the 49ers 2-yard line on fourth down and 1. On the next play, quarterback
Brett Favre finished the drive with a 2-yard touchdown pass to
Antonio Freeman four seconds into the second quarter. Later in the second quarter, 49ers cornerback
R. W. McQuarters returned a punt 19 yards to the 47-yard line. Running back
Garrison Hearst then rushed three times for 28 yards on a 37-yard drive that ended with a field goal by
Wade Richey, tying the game at 10. But before the half ended, the Packers retook the lead with a 9-play, 83-yard drive, aided by two 15-yard penalties against San Francisco. Levens finished the drive with a 2-yard touchdown run, giving Green Bay a 17–10 halftime lead. Early in the third quarter, 49ers linebacker
Lee Woodall intercepted a pass from Favre and returned it 17 yards to the Packers 33-yard line. Four plays later, Owens dropped a pass in the end zone, but Young threw his second touchdown pass to Clark on the next play, tying the score at 17. Then after forcing a punt, they took the lead by driving 48 yards and scoring with a 48-yard field goal by Richey. In the fourth quarter, the Packers drove 60 yards in 11 plays, featuring a 33-yard reception by fullback
William Henderson, and scored a 37-yard field goal to tie the game. But on the 49ers ensuing drive, a 34-yard completion for Young to Owens set up another Richey field goal to put them back in the lead, 23–20. With 6:16 left in the game, 49ers cornerback
Darnell Walker intercepted a pass from Favre and returned it to the Packers 40-yard line, giving his team a chance to put it out of reach. But after two runs by Hearst failed to make a significant gain, Owens dropped a potential first-down catch, his fourth drop of the day, and San Francisco had to punt. Taking the ball back at their own 11-yard line with 4:19 remaining, Favre led the Packers back to retake the lead on a 15-yard touchdown pass to Freeman at the end of an 89-yard drive, featuring a 47-yard completion to seldom-used rookie receiver
Corey Bradford. But San Francisco responded with an equally impressive drive, in which
Jerry Rice visibly fumbled on his first reception of the game, but was ruled down by contact even though replays appeared to show the ball came out before his knee hit the ground. The use of instant replay challenges was not in effect until the following year, allowing the drive to continue behind Young, who completed seven of nine passes on a 76-yard drive for the winning score. Owens, who had dropped four passes and lost a fumble, caught the 25-yard winning touchdown pass with three seconds left in the game. Hearst finished the game with 128 rushing yards and three receptions for 15 yards. Levens rushed for 116 yards, caught six passes for 37 yards, and scored a touchdown. Favre threw for 292 yards and two touchdowns, while Young passed for 182 yards and three scores. Both Young and Favre were intercepted twice. Packers receiver
Roell Preston set a postseason franchise record with 198 kickoff return yards. This game was later featured on the NFL's Greatest Games as
The Catch II. This was the fourth postseason meeting between the Packers and 49ers as well as the fourth year in the row they had played each other in the postseason. Green Bay won all three previous meetings. ==Divisional playoffs==