1979 San Diego Chargers season

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1979 San Diego Chargers season
Owner
Eugene V. Klein
General managerJohnny Sanders
Head coachDon Coryell
Home fieldSan Diego Stadium
Results
Record12–4
Division place1st AFC West
Playoff finishLost Divisional Playoffs
(vs. Oilers) 14–17
Pro Bowlers
AP All-Pros
The Chargers attempting to rush the ball through the Oilers' defensive line during the 1979 AFC Divisional Playoff Game.

The 1979 San Diego Chargers season was the team's 20th season, and tenth in the National Football League. Despite them and the Steelers having identical 12-4 records (their best record during the Coryell era), the Chargers were awarded the top AFC seed because they beat the Steelers in the regular season. [3]

The 1979 Chargers finished in first place in the AFC West after having finished 9–7 in 1978. The Chargers made the playoffs for the first time in 14 years. Chargers quarterback Dan Fouts threw for 4,082-yard to break Joe Namath's NFL record of 4,007 in 1967 (albeit with the benefit of two extra regular season games). Wide receivers Charlie Joiner and John Jefferson both gained more than 1,000 yards receiving, the first NFL teammates to accomplish the feat since the Namath-led New York Jets' duo of George Sauer and Don Maynard.[3] The Chargers became the first AFC West champion to run more passing plays (541) then rushing (481).[4] Clarence Williams was the leading rusher with 752 yards and a club-record 12 touchdowns.

In contrast to much of the "Air Coryell" period, the Charger defense was as strong as the offense, ranking 2nd in the league in yards allowed. Eight players combined to snag 28 interceptions, with linebackers Woodrow Lowe and Ray Preston finishing with five each. Wilbur Young led the team with 12 sacks. Kicker Rolf Benirschke began the year well, making all four of his kicks, but collapsed on the plane home from the Week 4 game at New England.[5] He was diagnosed with ulcerative colitis and missed the rest of the season.[6] Three-time Super Bowl winner Roy Gerela was brought in as replacement, but made only one kick from seven before making way for Mike Wood, who finished 11 of 14, with all three misses coming from 50+ yards.

The season ended with a playoff loss to the Houston Oilers. It was the Chargers' first playoff game since the 1965 AFL Championship game loss to the Buffalo Bills.

As part of a marketing campaign, the Chargers created their fight song, "San Diego Super Chargers".[7]

The 2006 edition of Pro Football Prospectus,[8] listed the 1979 Chargers as one of their "Heartbreak Seasons", in which teams "dominated the entire regular season only to falter in the playoffs, unable to close the deal." Said Pro Football Prospectus of the team, "the creative [head coach] Don Coryell always designed potent offenses, but the San Diego defense didn't catch up until 1979. ... In their first playoff game, the Chargers hosted a Houston Oilers team missing running back Earl Campbell and quarterback Dan Pastorini and fell on their faces. Fouts threw five interceptions and no touchdowns, and the Chargers blew a third quarter lead and lost 17–14. The Chargers would not have the best record in the NFL again until the 2006 season. They would not have another top ten defense in points allowed until 1989. They would not win 12 games in a season until 2004. Their best shot at glory went horribly awry, thanks to the worst game in the illustrious career of Dan Fouts."

Offseason

NFL draft

1979 San Diego Chargers draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
1
13 Kellen Winslow *   Tight end Missouri From Cleveland
3 73 Cliff Thrift  Linebacker East Central
4 104 John Floyd  Wide receiver Louisiana–Monroe
8 210 Wilbert Haslip  Running back Hawaii
9 237 Alvin Garrett  Wide receiver Angelo State
10 265 Tony Petruccio  Defensive tackle Penn State
10 269 Al Green  Defensive back Louisiana State University Joined the
11 295 David Rader  Quarterback Tulsa Golden
12 321 Frank Duncan  Defensive back San Francisco State
      Made roster    †   Pro Football Hall of Fame    *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

Roster

1979 San Diego Chargers final roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists
  •  6
    IRTooltip Injured reserve)
  • 82
    IRTooltip Injured reserve)
  • 47
    IRTooltip Injured reserve)
  • 54
    IRTooltip Injured reserve)
  • 80
    IRTooltip Injured reserve)


Rookies in italics
, 5 practice squad

Preseason

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance
1 August 4 at San Francisco 49ers L 10–13 0–1 Candlestick Park 32,275
2 August 11 Minnesota Vikings W 19–0 1–1 San Diego Stadium 49,037
3 August 18 at New York Giants W 7–3 2–1 Giants Stadium 22,341
4 August 25 at Los Angeles Rams L 7–23 2–2 Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 50,089

Regular season

Schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance Recap
1 September 2 at Seattle Seahawks W 33–16 1–0 Kingdome 62,887 Recap
2 September 9 Oakland Raiders W 30–10 2–0 San Diego Stadium 50,255 Recap
3 September 16 Buffalo Bills W 27–19 3–0 San Diego Stadium 50,709 Recap
4 September 23 at New England Patriots L 21–27 3–1 Schaefer Stadium 60,916 Recap
5 September 30 San Francisco 49ers W 31–9 4–1 San Diego Stadium 50,893 Recap
6 October 7 at Denver Broncos L 0–7 4–2 Mile High Stadium 74,997 Recap
7 October 14 Seattle Seahawks W 20–10 5–2 San Diego Stadium 50,077 Recap
8 October 21 at Los Angeles Rams W 40–16 6–2 Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 64,245 Recap
9 October 25 at Oakland Raiders L 22–45 6–3
Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum
53,709 Recap
10 November 4 at Kansas City Chiefs W 20–14 7–3 Arrowhead Stadium 59,353 Recap
11 November 11 at Cincinnati Bengals W 26–24 8–3 Riverfront Stadium 40,782 Recap
12 November 18 Pittsburgh Steelers W 35–7 9–3 San Diego Stadium 51,910 Recap
13 November 25 Kansas City Chiefs W 28–7 10–3 San Diego Stadium 50,078 Recap
14 December 2 Atlanta Falcons L 26–28 10–4 San Diego Stadium 50,198 Recap
15 December 9 at New Orleans Saints W 35–0 11–4
Louisiana Superdome
61,059 Recap
16 December 17 Denver Broncos W 17–7 12–4 San Diego Stadium 51,906 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 0 13 101033
Seahawks 3 7 0616

at

Seattle, Washington

Game information

The defense sparked San Diego to an impressive opening day win with six takeaways. Seattle quarterback Jim Zorn was victimized for the majority of these, with 3 interceptions and two fumbles lost.

The first half was evenly contested, with Clarence Williams scoring from a yard out and San Diego leading 13-10, but the Seahawks had five consecutive possessions terminated by turnovers starting from midway through the 3rd quarter. Firstly, Fred Dean's second fumble recovery of the game set up a Rolf Benirschke field goal. On the next play, Zorn was intercepted by Ray Preston; a running into the punter penalty prolonged the subsequent Charger drive, and Williams ran in another touchdown. Seattle later tried a pass on 4th and 3 at the Charger 9, but Pete Shaw intercepted it to snuff out the threat. A fumble recovery by Wilbur Young and Preston's second interception would later set up a Mike Thomas touchdown run and Benirschke's 4th field goal.

Week 2: vs. Oakland Raiders

Week Two: Oakland Raiders at San Diego Chargers – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Raiders 0 3 7010
Chargers 14 7 2730

at

San Diego, California

  • Date: September 9
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m.
    PDT
  • Game weather: 73 °F (22.8 °C) relative humidity 82%, wind 9 mph
  • Game attendance: 50,255
  • Referee: Bob Frederic
  • TV announcers (NBC): Jim Simpson and John Brodie
  • Box score
Game information

A clean performance by Dan Fouts led to an easy win. John Jefferson and Bob Klein took passes in for touchdowns of 24 and 54 yards, and it was already 14-0 after a single quarter. Following a Raider field, San Diego wasted a red zone opportunity when Fouts fumbled the snap, but Woodrow Lowe picked off a Ken Stabler pas only three plays later and ran it back 32 yards for a game-breaking score. The Charger defense stuffed Stabler on a 4th and 1 from the 3 as the half came to a close.

The Raiders closed to within 11 in the 3rd quarter, but the Chargers rebuilt their lead. First, Greg McCrary blocked a Ray Guy punt out of the end zone for a safety; a couple of possessions later, rookie tight end Kellen Winslow caught his first career touchdown pass. Oakland had three subsequent trips into San Diego territory, but turned the ball over on downs each time.

Fouts finished 15 of 30 for 216 yards, 3 touchdowns and no interceptions.

Week 3: vs. Buffalo Bills

Week Three: Buffalo Bills at San Diego Chargers – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Bills 6 6 7019
Chargers 7 6 7727

at

San Diego, California

  • Date: September 16
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m.
    PDT
  • Game weather: 79 °F (26.1 °C) relative humidity 64%, wind 8 mph
  • Game attendance: 50,709
  • Referee: Fred Silva
  • TV announcers (NBC): Merle Harmon and George Kunz
  • Box score
Game information

A record-breaking performance by Clarence Williams maintained the Chargers' unbeaten start. In a back-and-forth game, Buffalo led 6-0 before San Diego had back-to-back touchdown drives of 80 and 73 yards, featuring a combined 16 runs against only 1 pass - Williams capped both of these with short scoring runs. The Bills pulled to within a point shortly before halftime, then took the lead when running back Curtis Brown took a short pass 84 yards for a touchdown.

Williams responded with his third touchdown only two plays later, heading around left end for a 55-yard run and a 20-19 lead. After a Gary Johnson sack helped snuff out a Bills threat, Dan Fouts found Mike Thomas for gains of 26 and 27 yards, and San Diego drove 80 yards in 8 plays, Williams scoring his fourth rushing touchdown to provide some breathing room; Buffalo posed little threat thereafter.

Williams finished with 18 carries for 157 yards and 4 touchdowns, setting a Charger record for rushing touchdowns in a game and tying Lance Alworth, who had four receiving touchdowns in 1968.

Week 4: at New England Patriots

Week Four: San Diego Chargers at New England Patriots – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Chargers 0 14 0721
Patriots 17 3 0727

at

Schaefer Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts

Game information