1970 New York Giants season

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1970 New York Giants season
Owner
NFC East
Playoff finishDid not qualify
Pro BowlersQB Fran Tarkenton
RB Ron Johnson

The

NFC East, a game behind the Dallas Cowboys. They also finished only one game out of a wild-card playoff spot, won by the Detroit Lions
.

Probably more damaging to the Giants' playoff hopes than the loss to the Rams were losses to two of the NFL's weakest teams:

The Saints finished with the NFL's second-worst record at 2–11–1 (the Giants beat the NFL's worst team of 1970, the 2–12 Boston Patriots); the Eagles were barely better at 3–10–1. The Giants also lost at home to the 6-8 Chicago Bears.

This was the closest the Giants came to qualifying for the playoffs in the 1970s. The franchise enjoyed only one other winning season in the decade, going 8–6 in 1972. Big Blue did not return to the playoffs until

1963 NFL Championship
.

Offense

The 1970 Giants offense was led by Pro Bowl performers, quarterback Fran Tarkenton, and running back Ron Johnson. The team was in the top ten in several offensive categories including points, yards, and first downs. The team had over one hundred rushing yards in eleven of its fourteen games, including 202 yards in a week eight win against the Dallas Cowboys. The offense struggled when the team failed to run the ball well, as in the week fourteen loss to the Los Angeles Rams in which the Giants rushed for only 50 yards. When the team was able to run the ball and play defense they were able to win. In all their wins, they had at least 100 yards rushing. The leading passer was Fran Tarkenton, the leading rusher was Ron Johnson (the first Giant to rush for 1,000 yards in a season; 1,027), and the leading receiver was Clifton McNeil.[1]

Defense

The best defensive game by far for the Giants was the shutout of the

Boston Patriots
(2–12) in a week 5 victory. In that game, the Giants allowed only 155 total offensive yards against the team which finished the season with the league's worst record. The team leader in interceptions for the Giants was Willie Williams, who had six interceptions for 114 total interception yards.

The backbone of New York's defense was a stout front four, featuring ends

Spider Lockhart. First round draft pick Jim Files moved in at the starting middle linebacker spot for the departed Henry Davis, who moved on to Pittsburgh
.

Special teams

The kicker for the Giants that season was Pete Gogolak. Gogolak was a perfect 32 of 32 in extra points but hit only 25 of 41 field goals attempted on the year, with his longest being a kick of 54 yards in week eight vs. the Cowboys, a kick which came on the same day Tom Dempsey set an NFL record with a 63-yard field goal for the Saints vs. the Lions, and 43-year-old George Blanda hit a 53-yard field goal at the gun to lift Oakland over Cleveland 23–20.

Bill Johnson and Ernie Koy shared punting duties for the Giants, and each was average for the position. Bobby Duhon and Les Shy were the main kick and punt returners, though neither returned a kick for a touchdown.

Draft

1970 New York Giants draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
1 13 Jim Files  LB Oklahoma
4 97 Wes Grant  DE UCLA
5 117 Claude Brumfield 
OG
Tennessee St
6 142 Duane Miller  WR Drake
9 221 Pat Hughes  C
Boston
10 246 Matt Fortier  DE
Fairmont St
11 273 Alan Pitcaithley  RB Oregon
12 298 Larry Nels  LB Wyoming
13 325 Gary Inskeep 
OT
Wisconsin–Stout
14 350 Rodney Brand  C Arkansas
15 377 Warren Muir  RB South Carolina
16 402 Vic Notling  DB Xavier
17 429 Walter Breaux  DT Grambling
      Made roster    †   Pro Football Hall of Fame    *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

[2]

Roster

1970 New York Giants roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists
  • --
    IRTooltip Injured reserve)


Practice squad



Rookies in italics

Schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance
1 September 19 Chicago Bears L 16–24 0–1 Yankee Stadium 62,936
2 September 27 at Dallas Cowboys L 10–28 0–2 Cotton Bowl 57,236
3 October 4 at New Orleans Saints L 10–14 0–3 Tulane Stadium 69,126
4 October 11 Philadelphia Eagles W 30–23 1–3 Yankee Stadium 62,820
5 October 18 at Boston Patriots W 16–0 2–3 Harvard Stadium 39,091
6 October 25 St. Louis Cardinals W 35–17 3–3 Yankee Stadium 62,984
7 November 1 at New York Jets W 22–10 4–3 Shea Stadium 63,903
8 November 8 Dallas Cowboys W 23–20 5–3 Yankee Stadium 62,938
9 November 15 Washington Redskins W 35–33 6–3 Yankee Stadium 62,915
10 November 23 at Philadelphia Eagles L 20–23 6–4 Franklin Field 59,117
11 November 29 at Washington Redskins W 27–24 7–4 Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium 50,415
12 December 6 Buffalo Bills W 20–6 8–4 Yankee Stadium 62,870
13 December 13 at St. Louis Cardinals W 34–17 9–4 Busch Memorial Stadium 50,845
14 December 20 Los Angeles Rams L 3–31 9–5 Yankee Stadium 62,870

Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Standings

NFC East
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
Dallas Cowboys 10 4 0 .714 5–3 7–4 299 221 W5
New York Giants 9 5 0 .643 6–2 6–5 301 270 L1
St. Louis Cardinals 8 5 1 .615 5–3 6–5 325 228 L3
Washington Redskins 6 8 0 .429 3–5 4–7 297 314 W2
Philadelphia Eagles 3 10 1 .231 1–7 1–9–1 241 332 W1

Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.

Season summary

Week 1 vs Bears

Week One: Chicago Bears (0–0) at New York Giants (0–0)
Period 1 2 34Total
Bears 7 3 7724
Giants 10 3 0316

at

Bronx, New York

Game information

See also

References

  1. ^ "1970 New York Giants". Pro Football Reference. Retrieved March 12, 2008.
  2. ^ "1970 New York Giants". Database Football. Archived from the original on April 11, 2008. Retrieved March 12, 2008.