1988 San Francisco 49ers season

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1988 San Francisco 49ers season
Head Coach Bill Walsh
Home Field Candlestick Park
Results
Record 10-6
Place 1st NFC West
Playoff Finish Super Bowl Champions
Timeline
Previous Season Next Season
1987 1989
49ers Uniform, 1988
49ers Uniform, 1988

The San Francisco 49ers 1988 season was their 43rd season in the National Football League. The season was highlighted by their third Super Bowl victory. In 1988, the 49ers struggled. At one point, they were 6-5 and in danger of missing the playoffs but rose to defeat the Washington Redskins on a Monday night, eventually finishing the season at 10-6. They gained a measure of revenge by thrashing the Minnesota Vikings 34-9 in the first round. The 49ers then traveled to Chicago's Soldier Field, where the chill factor at gametime was 26 degrees below zero. They defeated the Chicago Bears 28-3 in a NFC Championship game upset.

For the 49ers, it was their first Super Bowl appearance since they defeated the Miami Dolphins in Super Bowl XIX. They had made the playoffs in the three seasons between Super Bowl XIX and Super Bowl XXIII, but were eliminated each time in the first round, primarily because of the poor performances by their offensive stars in those games; quarterback Joe Montana, receiver Jerry Rice and running back Roger Craig all failed to produce a single touchdown.

Contents

[edit] NFL Draft

Round # Pick # Player Position College
33 San Francisco 49ers Danny Stubbs Outside Linebacker Miami
39 San Francisco 49ers Pierce Holt Defensive Tackle Angelo State
80 San Francisco 49ers Bill Romanowski Outside Linebacker Boston College
102 San Francisco 49ers Barry Helton Punter Colorado
191 San Francisco 49ers Kevin Bryant Linebacker Delaware State

[edit] Regular Season

In the 1988 season, San Francisco won the NFC West with a 10-6 regular season record, but it was a long uphill battle. The team had a quarterback controversy with Montana and Steve Young each starting at quarterback during the season. But after a 6-5 start, Montana led the 49ers to win 4 of their final 5 regular season games.

Montana finished the regular season with 238 completions for 2,981 yards and 18 touchdowns, and also added 132 rushing yards. His favorite target was Rice, who recorded 64 receptions for 1,306 yards (a 20.4 yards per catch average) and 9 touchdowns. Craig was also a key contributor with a total of 2,036 combined rushing and receiving yards and 10 touchdowns, earning him the NFL Offensive Player of the Year Award. Fullback Tom Rathman also made a big impact, rushing for 427 yards and catching 42 passes for 387 yards. The 49ers defense was led by defensive backs Ronnie Lott, Eric Wright, Jeff Fuller, and Tim McKyer, who recorded a combined total of 18 interceptions. McKyer led the team with 7, while Lott recorded 5. Linebacker Charles Haley was also a big contributor with 11.5 sacks and 2 fumble recoveries.

[edit] Season Standings

NFC West
Team W L T PCT PF PA
San Francisco 49ers 10 6 0 .625 369 294
Los Angeles Rams 10 6 0 .625 407 293
New Orleans Saints 10 6 0 .625 312 283
Atlanta Falcons 5 11 0 .313 244 315
Qualified for playoffs

[edit] Regular season schedule

Week Date Opponent Result
1 September 4, 1988 @ New Orleans Saints W 34-33
2 September 11, 1988 @ New York Giants W 20-17
3 September 18, 1988 vs Atlanta Falcons L 17-34
4 September 25, 1988 @ Seattle Seahawks W 38-7
5 October 2, 1988 vs Detroit Lions W 20-13
6 October 9, 1988 vs Denver Broncos L 13-16 (OT)
7 October 16, 1988 @ Los Angeles Rams W 24-21
8 October 24, 1988 (Mon) @ Chicago Bears L 9-10
9 October 30, 1988 vs Minnesota Vikings W 24-21
10 November 6, 1988 @ Phoenix Cardinals L 23-24
11 November 13, 1988 vs Los Angeles Raiders L 3-9
12 November 21, 1988 (Mon) vs Washington Redskins W 37-21
13 November 27, 1988 @ San Diego Chargers W 48-10
14 December 4, 1988 @ Atlanta Falcons W 13-3
15 December 11, 1988 vs New Orleans Saints W 30-17
16 December 18, 1988 vs Los Angeles Rams L 16-38

[edit] Postseason

[edit] NFC Divisional Playoff

  • San Francisco 49ers 34, Minnesota Vikings 9
1 2 3 4 Total
Vikings 3 0 6 0 9
49ers 7 14 0 13 34

January 1, 1989 at Candlestick Park, San Francisco

[edit] NFC Championship Game

  • San Francisco 49ers 28, Chicago Bears 3
1 2 3 4 Total
49ers 7 7 7 7 28
Bears 0 3 0 0 3

January 8, 1989 at Soldier Field, Chicago

[edit] Super Bowl XXIII

  • San Francisco 49ers 20, Cincinnati Bengals 16
1 2 3 4 Total
Bengals 0 3 10 3 16
49ers 3 0 3 14 20

January 22, 1989 at Joe Robbie Stadium, Miami, Florida

The game is remembered for the 49ers' fourth-quarter game-winning drive. Down 16-13, San Francisco got the ball on their own eight yard line with 3:10 on the clock and marched 92 yards down the field in under three minutes. They then scored the winning touchdown on a Joe Montana pass to John Taylor with just 34 seconds left in the game.

49ers wide receiver Jerry Rice was named the Super Bowl MVP. He caught 11 passes for a Super Bowl record 215 yards and one touchdown, while also rushing once for 5 yards.

This was also the final NFL game coached by the 49ers' Bill Walsh. This was also the final Super Bowl that Pete Rozelle presided over as NFL Commissioner.

[edit] Scoring summary

  • SF - FG: Mike Cofer 41 yards 3-0 SF
  • CIN - FG: Jim Breech 34 yards 3-3 tie
  • CIN - FG: Jim Breech 43 yards 6-3 CIN
  • SF - FG: Mike Cofer 32 yards 6-6 tie
  • CIN - TD: Stanford Jennings 93 yard kickoff return (Jim Breech kick) 13-6 CIN
  • SF - TD: Jerry Rice 14 yard pass from Joe Montana (Mike Cofer kick) 13-13 tie
  • CIN - FG: Jim Breech 40 yards 16-13 CIN
  • SF - TD: John Taylor 10 yard pass from Joe Montana (Mike Cofer kick) 20-16 SF

[edit] Roster

San Francisco 49ers roster
view  talk  edit
Quarterbacks

Running Backs

Wide Receivers

Tight Ends

  • 84 Brent Jones
  • - John Frank
Offensive Linemen

Linebackers

Defensive Linemen

  • - Larry Roberts
  • 95 Michael Carter
  • - Kevin Fagan

Defensive Backs

Special Teams

Reserve Lists
  • Currently vacant

[edit] Awards and Records

  • Mike Cofer, Led NFC, 27 Field Goals
  • Mike Cofer, Led NFC, 121 Points
  • Roger Craig, Offense, UPI NFC Player of the Year
  • Roger Craig, Led NFC with 2068 total yards
  • Jerry Rice, Most Valuable Player, Super Bowl XXIII

[edit] References

1988 NFL season
v  d  e
AFC East Central West NFC East Central West
Buffalo Cincinnati Denver Dallas Chicago Atlanta
Indianapolis Cleveland Kansas City NY Giants Detroit LA Rams
Miami Houston LA Raiders Philadelphia Green Bay New Orleans
New England Pittsburgh San Diego Phoenix Minnesota San Francisco
NY Jets Seattle Washington Tampa Bay
1988 NFL DraftNFL PlayoffsPro BowlSuper Bowl XXIII
Preceded by
Washington Redskins 1987
Super Bowl Champions
San Francisco 49ers

1988 and 1989
Succeeded by
New York Giants
1990