1980 Buffalo Bills season

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1980 Buffalo Bills season
Owner
Rich Stadium
Results
Record11–5
Division place1st AFC East
Playoff finishLost Divisional Playoffs
(at Chargers) 14–20
Pro BowlersRB Joe Cribbs
WR Jerry Butler
NT Fred Smerlas
AP All-ProsNT Fred Smerlas (1st team)
G Joe DeLamielleure (2nd team)

The 1980 Buffalo Bills season was the franchise's 11th season in the National Football League, and the 21st overall. Their 11–5 record was tied for best in the AFC.

The Bills' defense allowed only 260 points in 1980, third-best in the league, whilst their 4,101 total yards surrendered was best in the NFL in 1980. Buffalo's defense was well represented on the

nose tackle Fred Smerlas and linebacker Jim Haslett – two-thirds of Buffalo's "Bermuda Triangle" with linebacker Shane Nelson – were named to the 1st team All-AFC. Defensive end Ben Williams
was named to the second team.

Although Buffalo's offensive statistics were not as impressive as its defense, four offensive players were named All-AFC:

Cribbs rushed for 1,185 yards and made his first Pro Bowl. Jerry Butler and Fred Smerlas also were selected to play in the annual all-star game.[2]

Breaking "The Streak"

The Bills had not beaten the Miami Dolphins in the entire decade of the 1970s, a streak of twenty straight losses, the longest in NFL history. The last time the Bills had defeated Miami was 1969.

The Bills had been outscored 565 (28.5 points per games) to 299 (14.5) during the 1970s by the Dolphins, failing to score more than ten points in over a third of the contests (7). They were shut out three times. Conversely, the Dolphins were held under twenty points just four times, and scored 45 points on the Bills twice. The domination was so thorough that the Bills only lost by one score or less five times, and Don Shula had never lost to Buffalo since taking over as Dolphins coach in 1970. The Bills only held a lead at any point in eight of the games, and only twice in the fourth quarter.[3] Joe Ferguson had lost to the Dolphins 14 straight times.

On opening day of the 1980 season, Miami visited

Rich Stadium, attempting to extend the streak to 21 games. At the end of three quarters, Miami led 7–3. In the fourth quarter, running back Roosevelt Leaks scored the go-ahead touchdown to make the score 10–7. Joe Cribbs added a second touchdown to extend the lead to 17–7, and Jeff Nixon intercepted his third pass of the game with only 36 seconds left, breaking the streak at 20 games.[4][5]

A rowdy crowd of 79,000 fans celebrated, and many stormed the field to tear down the goal posts, carrying them around the field.[6] Joe Cribbs contributed 131 combined yards of offense for the triumphant Bills.[7]

The rivalry continued well into the 1990s, but with different results: from 1986 to 1996—the years in which Bills quarterback Jim Kelly and Dolphins quarterback Dan Marino played at the same time—the Bills won 14 of 22 match-ups between the teams.[8]

Offseason

NFL draft

North Carolina State's Jim Ritcher became an anchor of the Buffalo offensive line for the next 14 years; he was the starter for all four Buffalo Super Bowl teams, and was second-team All-Pro in 1991.

Running back Joe Cribbs was Buffalo's starting running back from 1980–1983, and again in 1985 (after returning from one year in the USFL).

Tight end Mark Brammer played for the Bills for five seasons. Greg Cater was Buffalo's starting punter from 1980 until 1983.[9]

1980 Buffalo Bills draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
1 16 Jim Ritcher *  Guard North Carolina State
2 29 Joe Cribbs *  Running back Auburn
2 37 Gene Bradley  Quarterback Arkansas State
3 67 Mark Brammer  Tight end Michigan State
3 71 John Schmeding  Guard Boston College
4 93 Ervin Parker  Linebacker South Carolina State
5 119 Jeff Pyburn  Defensive back Georgia
5 129 Keith Lee  Defensive back Colorado State
8 202 Todd Krueger  Quarterback Northern Michigan
9 231 Kent Davis  Defensive back Southeast Missouri State
10 259 Greg Cater  Punter Chattanooga
11 286 Joe Gordon  Defensive tackle Grambling State
12 316 Roger Lapham  Tight end Maine
      Made roster    *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

[10]

Undrafted free agents

1980 Undrafted Free Agents of note
Player Position College
Dan Conway Fullback Boston College
Jay Edwards Defensive back San Jose State
Gray Nord Tight end Louisville
Steve Otts Linebacker Michigan State
Larry Reed Fullback Michigan
Paul Rogind Kicker Minnesota

Personnel

Staff/Coaches

1980 Buffalo Bills staff
Front office

Coaching staff

Offensive coaches

Defensive/special teams coaches

Special assignments'

Roster

1980 Buffalo Bills roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists
  • --
    IRTooltip Injured reserve)
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    IRTooltip Injured reserve)
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    IRTooltip Injured reserve)
  • 38
    IRTooltip Injured reserve)
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    IRTooltip Injured reserve)
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    IRTooltip Injured reserve)
  • 65
    IRTooltip Injured reserve)


Practice squad



Rookies in italics

Regular season

Paul Zimmerman wrote about the Bills' 1980 season, "It was a euphoric kind of year for Buffalo. Chuck Knox and his defensive coordinator, Tom Catlin, built the defense into No. 1 in the NFL with virtually the same people who had been lousy in '79. The Bills even beat Miami for the first time in a generation. And then Quarterback Joe Ferguson picked exactly the wrong time of year to sprain his ankle – the playoffs. And San Diego ended the dream."[11]

Schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Recap
1 September 7 Miami Dolphins W 17–7 1–0
Rich Stadium
Recap
2 September 14 New York Jets W 20–10 2–0
Rich Stadium
Recap
3 September 21 at New Orleans Saints W 35–26 3–0
Louisiana Superdome
Recap
4 September 28 Oakland Raiders W 24–7 4–0
Rich Stadium
Recap
5 October 5 at San Diego Chargers W 26–24 5–0
San Diego Stadium
Recap
6 October 12 Baltimore Colts L 12–17 5–1
Rich Stadium
Recap
7 October 19 at Miami Dolphins L 14–17 5–2 Orange Bowl Recap
8 October 26 New England Patriots W 31–13 6–2
Rich Stadium
Recap
9 November 2 Atlanta Falcons L 14–30 6–3
Rich Stadium
Recap
10 November 9 at New York Jets W 31–24 7–3 Shea Stadium Recap
11 November 16 at Cincinnati Bengals W 14–0 8–3 Riverfront Stadium Recap
12 November 23 Pittsburgh Steelers W 28–13 9–3
Rich Stadium
Recap
13 November 30 at Baltimore Colts L 24–28 9–4
Memorial Stadium
Recap
14 December 7 Los Angeles Rams W 10–7 (OT) 10–4
Rich Stadium
Recap
15 December 14 at New England Patriots L 2–24 10–5
Foxboro Stadium
Recap
16 December 21 at San Francisco 49ers W 18–13 11–5 Candlestick Park Recap

Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.[12]

Standings

AFC East
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
Buffalo Bills(3) 11 5 0 .688 4–4 8–4 320 260 W1
New England Patriots 10 6 0 .625 6–2 9–3 441 325 W2
Miami Dolphins 8 8 0 .500 3–5 4–8 266 305 L1
Baltimore Colts 7 9 0 .438 5–3 6–8 355 387 L3
New York Jets 4 12 0 .250 2–6 3–9 302 395 W1

Game summaries

Week 1 vs Dolphins

Week One: Miami Dolphins (0–0) at Buffalo Bills (0–0)
Period 1 2 34Total
Dolphins 0 0 707
Bills 0 3 01417

at

Game information

Week 2 vs Jets

Game information

Week 3 at Saints

Week Three: Buffalo Bills (2–0) at New Orleans Saints (0–2)
Period 1 2 34Total
Bills 7 7 71435
Saints 0 19 0726

at

New Orleans, Louisiana

Game information

Week 4 vs Raiders

Game information

Week 5 at Chargers

Game information