1972 Kansas City Chiefs season

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1972 Kansas City Chiefs season
Head Coach Hank Stram
Home Field Arrowhead Stadium
Results
Record 8-6
Place 2nd AFC West
Playoff Finish Did not qualify
Timeline
Previous Season Next Season
1971 1973

The 1972 Kansas City Chiefs season began with the Chiefs moving into the newly constructed Arrowhead Stadium and ended with a 8-6 record and second place finish in the AFC West.

The Chiefs introduced the newly completed Arrowhead Stadium to the general public. The last original member of the 1960 Dallas Texans team departed on July 12 when safety Johnny Robinson announced his retirement at training camp. Meanwhile, starting quarterback Len Dawson ended speculation about his retirement by signing a two-year contract. Franchise owner Lamar Hunt became the first AFL figure to be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame on July 29.[1]

After two different construction strikes and a myriad of other delays, Arrowhead Stadium was officially dedicated on August 12 when the Chiefs registered a 24-14 victory against the St. Louis Cardinals. Running back Ed Podolak scored the first touchdown in the facility. Regular season ticket prices for the team's first season at Arrowhead were USD$8 for box seats and $7 for reserved seating.[1]

On September 17, the Chiefs lost a 20-10 decision against Miami in the first game at the new Arrowhead Stadium in front of a crowd of 79,829.[1] A standing-room-only crowd of 82,094 fans was in attendance for a 27-14 victory against Oakland on November 5, the largest “in-house” attendance total for an NFL contest in Arrowhead’s history.[1] After a 5-3 start, a three-game losing streak effectively eliminated the club from playoff contention. An 8-6 record was good enough for only a second-place finish in the AFC West behind Oakland. Linebacker Willie Lanier became the first Chiefs player to receive the prestigious NFL Man of the Year Award in the offseason.[1]

[edit] Offseason

[edit] NFL Draft

Main article: 1972 NFL Draft
Round Pick Player Position School/Club Team

[edit] References


1972 NFL season
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AFC East Central West NFC East Central West
Baltimore Cincinnati Denver Dallas Chicago Atlanta
Buffalo Cleveland Kansas City NY Giants Detroit Los Angeles
Miami Houston Oakland Philadelphia Green Bay New Orleans
New England Pittsburgh San Diego St. Louis Minnesota San Francisco
NY Jets Washington
1972 NFL DraftNFL PlayoffsPro BowlSuper Bowl VII