1978 San Diego Chargers season

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

1978 San Diego Chargers season
Owner
Eugene V. Klein
General managerJohnny Sanders
Head coachTommy Prothro (resigned Sept. 25, 1–3 record)
Don Coryell (interim, 8–4 record)
Home fieldSan Diego Stadium
Results
Record9–7
Division place4th AFC West
Playoff finishDid not qualify
Pro Bowlers
AP All-Pros

The 1978 San Diego Chargers season was the team's 19th season, and ninth in the National Football League.

The Chargers improved on their 7–7 record in 1977. This season included the "Holy Roller" game. It was Don Coryell's first season as the team's head coach, replacing Tommy Prothro after four games, and the team's first 16-game schedule.

Said the 2006 edition of Pro Football Prospectus,[3] "The Chargers were one of the worst franchises in the NFL before they hired Don Coryell four games into the 1978 season. The Chargers were 1–3 at the time, but finished 8–4 under Coryell, winning seven of their last eight games for the franchise's first winning record since 1969. Blessed with Hall of Famer Dan Fouts, the creative Coryell always designed potent offenses, but the San Diego Defense didn't catch up until 1979...."

New head coach Coryell lost three out of his first four games before ending the season by winning seven out of the last eight.

Fouts had lost the starting job in Prothro's last game in charge, but grew in confidence as the season progress - 917 of his 2,999 passing yards came in the final three games alone. He had more attempts, completions, yards and touchdowns than in any of his five previous seasons in the NFL, and posted a league-leading 7.9 yards per attempts.[4] Rookie John Jefferson had a strong year, with 56 catches for 1001 yards. He also scored a league-leading 13 receiving touchdowns, tying a rookie record set in 1952 by Billy Howton.

San Diego brought in Lydell Mitchell to strengthen the running game; in each of the three previous seasons, he had rushed for over 1,000 yards with Baltimore. While less effective in a Charger uniform, he did post 820 yards, while adding 500 more on a team-leading 57 catches. Hank Bauer was used as a short-yardage specialist - 6 of his 9 touchdowns were runs of 1 or 2 yards.

The defense slipped slightly, from 6th to 8th in terms of yardage, but remained a solid unit. Fred Dean had 13.5 sacks, and Mike Fuller ran one of his four interceptions back for a touchdown. Second-year kicker Rolf Benirschke made 18 kicks out of 22; his success rate of 81.8% was the second best in the league.[5]

Offseason

NFL draft

1978 San Diego Chargers draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
1
14 John Jefferson *  Wide receiver Arizona State
2 41 Buddy Hardaway  Tackle Oklahoma State
3 71 Rickey Anderson  Running back South Carolina State
5 135 John Choma  Guard Virginia
7 180 Cliff Featherstone  Defensive back Colorado State
8 220 Gavin Hedrick  Punter Washington State
9 237 Henry Bradley 
Nose tackle
Alcorn State
9 248 Blake Whitlatch  Linebacker Louisiana State
10 264 Charles Price  Tight end Cincinnati
12 321 Kevin Bell  Wide receiver Lamar
      Made roster    *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

Early-season resignation of head coach Tommy Prothro and hiring of Don Coryell

The previous season Prothro had told team owner Gene Klein that he would coach for only one more year. After the team's third loss in a row, Prothro stayed at the stadium until almost midnight watching game films, and it was during this time that he decided to resign. In a public statement, he said, "I still believe this is a good football team and it is a playoff contender. However, after disappointing losses to Oakland and Denver and the disaster against Green Bay, I feel a fresh approach and a rude awakening may be what this team needs." Klein asked Prothro to stay on in an open-ended position to work in such areas as drafting and trading.[6]

The Chargers hired former St. Louis Cardinal Coach Don Coryell who had been asked to step down from an active role by St. Louis at the end of the last season. Because he still had two years left on his contract with St. Louis, the Chargers agreed to give St. Louis a third-round draft pick to fully release Coryell from the Cardinals. Coryell had previously coached at San Diego State University from 1961 to 1972 before going to St. Louis. He said, "I'm pleased with the opportunity to coach again in San Diego because it's like a dream come true."[6]

Roster

1978 San Diego Chargers final roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Rookies in italics

Preseason

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance
1 August 4 at Seattle Seahawks L 9–17 0–1 Kingdome 58,853
2 August 12 at Los Angeles Rams W 17–0 1–1 Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 45,497
3 August 19 New York Jets L 10–23 1–2 San Diego Stadium 42,100
4 August 26 at New York Giants W 17–6 2–2 Giants Stadium 37,652

Regular season

Schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance Recap
1 September 3 at Seattle Seahawks W 24–20 1–0 Kingdome 55,778 Recap
2 September 10 Oakland Raiders L 20–21 1–1 San Diego Stadium 51,653 Recap
3 September 17 at Denver Broncos L 14–27 1–2 Mile High Stadium 74,983 Recap
4 September 24 Green Bay Packers L 3–24 1–3 San Diego Stadium 42,755 Recap
5 October 1 at New England Patriots L 23–28 1–4 Schaefer Stadium 60,781 Recap
6 October 8 Denver Broncos W 23–0 2–4 San Diego Stadium 50,077 Recap
7 October 15 Miami Dolphins L 21–28 2–5 San Diego Stadium 50,637 Recap
8 October 22 at Detroit Lions L 14–31 2–6 Pontiac Silverdome 54,031 Recap
9 October 29 at Oakland Raiders W 27–23 3–6
Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum
52,612 Recap
10 November 5 Cincinnati Bengals W 22–13 4–6 San Diego Stadium 43,639 Recap
11 November 12 Kansas City Chiefs W 29–23 (OT) 5–6 San Diego Stadium 41,395 Recap
12 November 19 at Minnesota Vikings W 13–7 6–6 Metropolitan Stadium 38,859 Recap
13 November 26 at Kansas City Chiefs L 0–23 6–7 Arrowhead Stadium 26,248 Recap
14 December 4 Chicago Bears W 40–7 7–7 San Diego Stadium 48,492 Recap
15 December 10 Seattle Seahawks W 37–10 8–7 San Diego Stadium 49,975 Recap
16 December 17 at Houston Oilers W 45–24 9–7
Houston Astrodome
49,554 Recap

Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Game summaries

Week 1: at Seattle Seahawks

Week One: San Diego Chargers at Seattle Seahawks – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Chargers 7 3 7724
Seahawks 6 7 0720

at

Seattle, Washington

Game information

Rookie wide receiver John Jefferson had a successful debut as the Chargers won their opener. Two of Jefferson's three receptions went for touchdowns, and the Chargers led 17-13 after three quarters. A fumbled snap by Seattle quarterback Jim Zorn then gave San Diego a chance to increase their lead, but Fouts was picked off in the end zone when he looked for Jefferson once more. Seattle soon reached a 1st and 10 at the Charger 45, whereupon defensive tackle Gary "Big Hands" Johnson made his first career interception, picking off an ill-advised cross-field pass from Zorn and running it back 52 yards for the game's crucial touchdown. By the time Seattle scored again, only 6 seconds remained.

Week 2: vs. Oakland Raiders

Week Two: Oakland Raiders at San Diego Chargers – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Raiders 0 7 01421
Chargers 0 13 0720

at

San Diego, California

Game information

San Diego began on the front foot, seeing a short Benirschke field goal blocked before Pat Curran opened the scoring when he grabbed a deflected Fouts pass in the end zone. Oakland soon tied the scores, but a pair of Hank Bauer runs put the Chargers up 20-7 early in the 4th quarter (Benirschke missed the extra point after the first of these). Ken Stabler had been kept in check up to this point, throwing three interceptions, including two snagged by Glen Edwards on consecutive 3rd quarter attempts. However, he threw his second touchdown of the game with 8:26 to play, then led his team to a 2nd and 10 at the San Diego 14 with 10 seconds to play.

From there, Oakland won the game with the controversial "Holy Roller" touchdown.[7]

Week 3: at Denver Broncos

Week Three: San Diego Chargers at Denver Broncos – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Chargers 0 14 0014
Broncos 7 0 61427

at

Denver, Colorado

Game information

A strong 2nd quarter proved insufficient for the Chargers. They trailed 7-0 early in the 2nd, when Dan Fouts hit Charlie Joiner for 42 yards down to the Denver 13. An interception foiled that threat, but Fouts rebounded with consecutive touchdown drives, scoring himself on the first and hitting Jefferson from 20 yards for the second. San Diego led 14-7 at the break, and it was still 14-13 late in the game. However, Rick Upchurch returned a punt 75 yards for the winning score with 3:17 on the clock. Denver then stopped the Chargers on downs and added an insurance touchdown.

Week 4: vs. Green Bay Packers

Week Four: Green Bay Packers at San Diego Chargers – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Packers 0 7 10724
Chargers 0 0 303

at

San Diego, California

Game information