1978 Dallas Cowboys season
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1978 Dallas Cowboys season | |
---|---|
Head Coach | Tom Landry |
Home Field | Texas Stadium |
Results | |
Record | 12-4 |
Place | 1st in NFC East |
Playoff Finish | Lost Super Bowl XIII (Steelers) |
Timeline | |
Previous Season | Next Season |
1977 | 1979 |
The 1978 Dallas Cowboys season was their 19th in the NFL. For the third consecutive season, the Cowboys finished in first place in the NFC East. The Cowboys scored 384 points, which ranked first in the NFC, while the defense only gave up 208 points. Twice, the Cowboys appeared on Monday Night Football. The club became the first team to appear in five Super Bowls.
Contents |
[edit] NFL Draft
Pick # | NFL Team | Player | Position | College |
---|---|---|---|---|
28 | Dallas Cowboys | Larry Bethea | Defensive End | Michigan State |
[edit] Regular Season
The defending Super Bowl champions were again led by quarterback Roger Staubach. Staubach finished the season as the top rated passer in the NFL (84.9) by throwing 231 out of 413 completions for 3,190 yards and 25 touchdowns, with 16 interceptions. He also rushed for 182 yards and another touchdown. Wide receivers Drew Pearson and Tony Hill provided the deep passing threats, combining for 90 receptions, 537 yards, and 7 touchdowns. Tight end Billy Joe Dupree contributed 34 receptions for 509 yards and 9 touchdowns. Running back Tony Dorsett had another fine season, recording a total of 1703 combined rushing and receiving yards, and scoring a total of 9 touchdowns. Fullback Robert Newhouse and halfback Preston Pearson also contributed from the offensive backfield, combining for 1,326 rushing and receiving yards, while Newhouse also scored 10 touchdowns. The Cowboys also had a superb offensive line, led by Herbert Scott and 12-time Pro Bowler Rayfield Wright
The Cowboys' "Doomsday Defense" finished the season as the top ranked defense in the league against the run by only allowing 107.6 yards per game. Pro Bowl linemen Ed "Too Tall" Jones, Harvey Martin and Randy White anchored the line, while linebackers Bob Breunig, D. D. Lewis and Thomas "Hollywood" Henderson provided solid support. Their secondary, led by safeties Cliff Harris and Charlie Waters, along with cornerbacks Benny Barnes and Aaron Kyle, combined for 16 interceptions.
The Cowboys started the regular season slowly, winning only six of their first ten games. Both the offense and the defense played ineffectively, including giving up interceptions and fumbles. Dallas finished strong, winning their last six regular season games to post a 12-4 record.
[edit] Season Standings
[edit] Season Schedule
- Week 1 Sep 4 W 38-0 vs Baltimore Colts
- Week 2 Sep 10 W 34-24 at New York Giants
- Week 3 Sep 17 L 27-14 at Los Angeles Rams
- Week 4 Sep 24 W 21-12 vs St. Louis Cardinals
- Week 5 Oct 2 L 9-5 at Washington Redskins
- Week 6 Oct 8 W 24-3 vs New York Giants
- Week 7 Oct 15 W 24-21 at St. Louis Cardinals (OT)
- Week 8 Oct 22 W 14-7 vs Philadelphia Eagles
- Week 9 Oct 26 L 21-10 vs Minnesota Vikings
- Week 10 Nov 5 L 23-16 at Miami Dolphins
- Week 11 Nov 12 W 42-14 at Green Bay Packers
- Week 12 Nov 19 W 27-7 vs New Orleans Saints
- Week 13 Nov 23 W 37-10 vs Washington Redskins
- Week 14 Dec 3 W 17-10 vs New England Patriots
- Week 15 Dec 10 W 31-13 at Philadelphia Eagles
- Week 16 Dec 17 W 30-7 at New York Jets
[edit] Roster
Dallas Cowboys 1978 roster | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Quarterbacks
Running Backs
Wide Receivers 88 Drew Pearson | 80 Tony Hill Tight Ends 89 Billy Joe Dupree |
Offensive Linemen
67 Pat Donovan | 68 Herbert Scott | 62 John Fitzgerald | 64 Tom Rafferty | 70 Rayfield Wright Defensive Linemen 79 Harvey Martin | 63 Larry Cole | 54 Randy White | 72Ed "Too Tall" Jones |
Linebackers
50 D.D. Lewis | 53 Bob Breuning | 56 Thomas "Hollywood" Henderson Defensive Backs 31 Benny Barnes| 25 Aaron Kyle | 43 Cliff Harris| 41 Charlie Waters Special Teams Punter 11 Danny White Placekicker 1 Rafael Septien Practice Squad
|
[edit] Postseason
[edit] NFC Divisional Playoff
- Dallas Cowboys 27, Atlanta Falcons 20
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Falcons | 7 | 13 | 0 | 0 | 20 |
Cowboys | 10 | 3 | 7 | 7 | 27 |
at Texas Stadium, Irving, Texas
- TV: CBS
Dallas' "Doomsday Defense" limited Atlanta quarterback Steve Bartkowski to only 8 completions in 23 attempts and intercepted him 3 times en route to victory. After the Falcons led 20-13 at halftime, the Cowboys scored 14 unanswered points in the second half.
[edit] NFC Championship Game
- Dallas Cowboys 28, Los Angeles Rams 0
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cowboys | 0 | 0 | 7 | 21 | 28 |
Rams | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles
- TV announcers (CBS): Pat Summerall and Tom Brookshier
- Referee: Ben Dreith
[edit] Super Bowl XIII
Super Bowl XIII can arguably be called the greatest collection of NFL talent ever to gather for a game. In additions to Coaches Noll and Landry, 14 players would go on to enshrinement in the Hall of Fame: 9 from Pittsburgh (Bradshaw, Harris, Swann, Stallworth, Webster, Greene, Lambert, Ham, and Blount), and 5 from Dallas (Staubach, Dorsett, White, Wright, and Jackie Smith).
Much of the pregame hype surrounded Super Bowl XIII centered around Cowboys linebacker Thomas "Hollywood" Henderson. Henderson caused quite a stir before the NFC Championship Game by claiming that the Rams had "no class" and the Cowboys would shut them out. His prediction turned out to be very accurate; the Cowboys did shut them out, aided by Henderson's 68-yard interception return for a touchdown.
In the days leading up the Super Bowl, Henderson began talking about the Steelers in the same manner. He predicted another shutout and then made unfriendly comments about several Pittsburgh players. He put down the talent and the intelligence of Bradshaw, proclaiming "Bradshaw couldn't spell 'cat' if you spotted him the 'c' and the 'a'". But the Steelers refused to get into a war of words with Henderson. Greene responded by saying the Steelers didn't need to say they were the best, they would just go out on the field and "get the job done".
[edit] Scoring summary
- PIT - TD: John Stallworth 28 yard pass from Terry Bradshaw (Roy Gerela kick) 7-0 PIT
- DAL - TD: Tony Hill 39 yard pass from Roger Staubach (Rafael Septien kick) 7-7 tie
- DAL - TD: Mike Hegman 37 yard fumble return (Rafael Septien kick) 14-7 DAL
- PIT - TD: John Stallworth 75 yard pass from Terry Bradshaw (Roy Gerela kick) 14-14 tie
- PIT - TD: Rocky Bleier 7 yard pass from Terry Bradshaw (Roy Gerela kick) 21-14 PIT
- DAL - FG: Rafael Septien 27 yards 21-17 PIT
- PIT - TD: Franco Harris 22 yard run (Roy Gerela kick) 28-17 PIT
- PIT - TD: Lynn Swann 18 yard pass from Terry Bradshaw (Roy Gerela kick) 35-17 PIT
- DAL - TD: Billy Joe DuPree 7 yard pass from Roger Staubach (Rafael Septien kick) 35-24 PIT
- DAL - TD: Butch Johnson 4 yard pass from Roger Staubach (Rafael Septien kick) 35-31 PIT
[edit] Awards and Records
- Led NFL in Sacks
- Led NFL, Fewest Rushing Yards Allowed (1,721)
- Led NFL, Most Rushing Yards (2,783)
- Led NFL, Points Scored (384)
- Roger Staubach, NFL Passing Leader
- Roger Staubach, NFC Leader, Touchdown Passes (25)
[edit] Milestones
- Tony Dorsett, Second Consecutve 1,000 Yard Rushing Season, (Finished season with 1,325 yards, third in NFL)
[edit] References
|
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 | Seattle | Washington | Tampa Bay | ||||
1978 NFL Draft • NFL Playoffs • Pro Bowl • Super Bowl XIII |