United States Football League 1983 The matchup between the Arizona Wranglers and
George Allen's Chicago Blitz that occurred Saturday, March 12, 1983, is widely considered the greatest upset in league history. The Wranglers opened their initial season with two rookies competing for the starting quarterback job. Risher and fellow rookie quarterback Todd Krueger of Northern Michigan had both played poorly in the teams' 24-0 opening loss to the Oakland Invaders, combining for 140 total yards passing on 32 attempts. Wrangler coach
Doug Shively decided to go with Risher as the starter in week 2, vs. the league's preseason title favorite, the
Chicago Blitz. NFL veteran head coach
George Allen had stocked his Blitz team with NFL vets and CFL all-stars. Most media experts saw the Blitz as "NFL caliber" and thought the team would dominate the league. Some even questioned whether the Blitz would lose a game after seeing the team destroy the
Craig James-led
Washington Federals in week one, 28–7. The Wranglers, on the flipside, were assumed to be the league's worst team. For three quarters, the matchup between the Blitz and Wranglers played to expectations. With 11:23 left in the fourth quarter Blitz quarterback, longtime NFL vet
Greg Landry, hit TE Paul Ricker with a 15-yard TD pass to put the Blitz up 29–12. After the ensuing kickoff, Risher brought his team to life. He drove his team 85 yards down the field hitting
FSU Rookie WR
Jackie Flowers on a 10-yard TD pass. The team successfully went for two, when Riser connected with
University of Arizona Rookie TE
Mark Keel, cutting the lead to 29–20. The Wrangler defense stiffened up and stopped the Blitz on the next series, forcing a punt. After a short punt, Risher started on the Blitz 45 yard line and quickly took the team in for another score, this one a 9-yard pass to
BYU rookie WR
Neil Balholm. The kick was good and with 2:48 left in the game, the score was 29-27 Chicago. The Wranglers' Defense came up with another stop and after another punt, Risher and the offense had the ball on the Arizona 42 with 1:06 to play. Risher guided the team into field goal range and with one second left Wranglers kicker Jim Asmus kicked through the game winner. The Wranglers improbable 30-29 come from behind victory over Chicago is considered by most to be the biggest upset in league history and one of that league's most important moments. The outcome of the game gave viability to the other teams in the league early in the season and told football fans that there was nothing inevitable about any USFL game's outcome. Fueled by their comeback win, the young Wranglers flourished. Risher started the next 4 games and led the team to a 3–3 record putting the team in a 4-way tie for the Pacific Division lead. Risher struggled in week 7, giving way to Krueger after 2 Interceptions in an ugly 44–23 loss to the potent
Johnnie Walton-led
Boston Breakers. Risher came back to start the following week, throwing three touchdowns and playing an error free game, leading the Wranglers back into a tie for first in the division with a 24–3 victory over their Division rivals, the
Denver Gold. From here the season collapsed for Risher and his 4-4 Wranglers. They would finish with a USFL record 10 straight losses. Although, Riser, Keel, Balholm, and Flowers would all end the season among the league leaders, the team was legitimately among the youngest and least talented in the league. The defense and offense were both inconsistent. As the rest of the league rounded into midseason form, the offense struggled and the Wrangler D had difficulties keeping the games within reach. Talent and depth shortfalls, the "Arizona heat", the young team collectively hitting a "rookie wall", and bad coaching are listed as possible factors credited with the collapse of the 1983 Wranglers. Risher was generally solid if unspectacular down the stretch, but had one truly awful game --- in the Wranglers 20–14 loss to the Tampa Bay Bandits in week 11, throwing 4 INTs in a very winnable game. In weeks 14–16, Risher was repeatedly yanked from the game by Coach Doug Shively. Risher did not play in weeks 17 and 18. In spite of the team's finish, Risher would finish the season as the league's 6th ranked quarterback in 1983. He then started for the Green Bay Packers strike team in 1987, posting a career rating of 80.0 in the NFL in leading the team to a 2–1 record. ==Career stats==