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Date | Sunday, June 27, 1999 | ||||||||||||||||||
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Stadium | Rheinstadion, Düsseldorf, Germany | ||||||||||||||||||
MVP | Andy McCullough, Wide receiver | ||||||||||||||||||
Referee | Pete Morelli | ||||||||||||||||||
Attendance | 39,643 | ||||||||||||||||||
TV in the United States | |||||||||||||||||||
Network | Fox | ||||||||||||||||||
Announcers | Sam Rosen, Matt Millen and Bill Maas | ||||||||||||||||||
World Bowl '99 (also referred to as World Bowl VII) was the seventh championship game of the NFL Europe League. It was held at Rheinstadion in Düsseldorf, Germany on Sunday, June 27, 1999. The game was between the 6–4 Frankfurt Galaxy and the 7–3 Barcelona Dragons. 39,643 fans were in attendance for the match-up, as they witnessed Pat Barnes, Jake Delhomme (future Carolina Panthers quarterback) and the Galaxy avenge last year's World Bowl loss with a 38–24 victory over the Dragons. Galaxy wide receiver Andy McCullough captured MVP honors with six receptions for 151 yards and three touchdowns, with his longest reception at 45 yards.
Background
The Dragons won the regular season series against the Galaxy, 21–15 (overtime) in Barcelona and 28–26 in Frankfurt.
Game summary
With the help of Dragon, Admiral, and Fire fans, Barcelona was able to go deep into Galaxy territory on their opening drive, but Frankfurt's defense managed to hold its ground, limiting the Dragons to a 38-yard field goal by Jesus Angoy. The Galaxy had their fans in the game after Ralf Kleinmann's 25-yard field goal tied the game at 3–3. However, the Dragons managed to take advantage of a defensive pass interference penalty, eventually setting up running back Lawrence Phillips' four-yard touchdown run. However, the touchdown would come at a price. Phillips injured his hamstring shortly after the play and he would have to leave the game. This would put the Dragons in the passing lane, rather than their normal running game. In the second quarter, the Galaxy would respond to Barcelona's touchdown by having Galaxy quarterback Pat Barnes connect with wide receiver Andy McCullough on an 11-yard touchdown pass. When Frankfurt got the ball back, Barnes and McCullough hooked up with each other again, with a 32-yard touchdown pass. After both teams each had two failed drives, the Galaxy entered halftime, leading 17–10. In the third quarter, the Dragons got back in the game by recovering a fumble and then, capping off an eight-play, 25-yard drive with Dragons quarterback Todd Bouman throwing a five-yard pass to Brian Finneran. However, Frankfurt responded with a seven-play, 40-yard drive that ended with a three-yard run by Rene Ingoglia. Near the beginning of the fourth quarter, Galaxy quarterback Jake Delhomme concluded a 14-play, 98-yard drive with an eight-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Mario Bailey. Down 31–17, the Dragons had to get a lot of points really fast. They responded with a two-yard touchdown run by Mario Grier. However, the Galaxy managed to put the game away, with Barnes leading a nine-play, 80-yard drive that ended with MVP Andy McCullough catching a seven-yard touchdown pass. With their victory, the Frankfurt Galaxy managed to become the very first NFL Europe team to win two World Bowls.
Scoring summary
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
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Frankfurt | 3 | 14 | 7 | 14 | 38 |
Barcelona | 10 | 0 | 7 | 7 | 24 |
- Barcelona – FG Angoy 38 yd 7:10 1st
- Frankfurt – FG Kleinmann 25 yd 11:41 1st
- Barcelona – TD Phillips 4 yd run 14:39 1st
- Frankfurt – TD McCullogh 11 yd pass from Barnes 2:20 2nd
- Frankfurt – TD McCullogh 32 yd pass from Barnes 7:34 2nd
- Barcelona – TD Finneran 5 yd pass from Bouman 4:50 3rd
- Frankfurt – TD Ingoglia 3 yd run 8:29 3rd
- Frankfurt – TD Bailey 8 yd pass from Delhomme 2:34 4th
- Barcelona – TD Grier 2 yd run 6:02 4th
- Frankfurt – TD McCullogh 7 yd pass from Barnes 11:42 4th