1979_Buffalo_Bills_season

1979 Buffalo Bills season

1979 Buffalo Bills season

20th season in franchise history


The 1979 Buffalo Bills season was the franchise's 10th season in the National Football League, and 20th overall.

Quick Facts Buffalo Bills season, Owner ...

Head coach Chuck Knox spent his second season with the Bills in 1979, improving on 1978's record by two games. The Bills were 7–6 with three games left to play, but they lost their final three games to finish with a losing record. (Even if Buffalo had won their final three games, they still would have lost the head-to-head tiebreaker to the Miami Dolphins (who finished 10–6) for the division title.)

Buffalo's loss to Miami in Week Seven was their 20th straight loss to the Dolphins, an NFL record.

The 1979 Bills were dead-last in rushing yards in the NFL, with only total 1,621 yards on the ground.[1] Buffalo's 268 points scored was 23rd of the league's 28 teams.[2]

Offseason

NFL draft

Three of Buffalo's first four picks made at least one Pro Bowl: wide receiver Jerry Butler, nose tackle Fred Smerlas, and linebacker Jim Haslett. Haslett was named 1979 AP Rookie of the Year. Smerlas made five Pro Bowls in 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983 and 1988.

Defensive end Ken Johnson, center Jon Borchardt, and defensive backs Jeff Nixon and Rod Kush all played for the Bills for six years from 1979 to 1984.

= Pro Bowler[note 1]
More information Round, Selection ...

Tom Cousineau

Ohio State linebacker Cousineau was drafted first overall in the 1979 NFL Draft by the Bills, who acquired the pick from San Francisco in a trade for O. J. Simpson. Cousineau never played a game with the Bills. He instead signed with the Canadian Football League's Montreal Alouettes where they offered double the money that the Bills originally offered. Cousineau became a star there, becoming the Grey Cup Most Valuable Player in the 1979 season. Cousineau wanted to return to the NFL, and in 1982 the Houston Oilers attempted to sign him, but the Bills (who still held Cousineau's NFL rights) matched the offer. He was then traded from the Bills to the Cleveland Browns for a first-round draft choice (14th overall) in the 1983 NFL Draft,[3] which would be used on future Hall of Fame quarterback Jim Kelly. Cousineau signed a five-year contract for 2.5 million dollars, the most ever for a Cleveland Brown player at the time.[5]

Undrafted free agents

More information Player, Position ...

Personnel

Staff/coaches

1979 Buffalo Bills staff
Front office

Coaching staff

Offensive coaches

  • Offensive coordinator / offensive line – Ray Proschaska
  • Quarterbacks coach - Kay Stephenson
  • Wide receivers coach – Jack Donaldson

Defensive/special teams coaches

  • Defensive coordinator / linebackers coach - Tom Caitlin
  • Defensive line – Willie Zapalac
  • Defensive backs – Jim Wagstaff
  • Special teams – Steve Moore

Roster

1979 Buffalo Bills roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists


Practice squad



Rookies in italics

Regular season

Schedule

More information Week, Date ...

Standings

More information AFC East, W ...

Season summary

Week 11

More information Total ...

Week 13 at Patriots

More information Period, OT ...
More information Game information ...
Week Thirteen: Buffalo Bills (6–6) at New England Patriots (8–4)

at Schaefer Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts

  • Date: November 25
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: 63 °F or 17.2 °C
  • Game attendance: 60,991
  • Box Score

Notes

  1. Players are identified as a Pro Bowler if they were selected for the Pro-Bowl at any time in their career.

References

  1. Pro-Football-Reference.com: 1979 NFL Standings, Team & Offensive Statistics The Bills rushed for 101.3 yards per game; the league average for rushing yards was 135.6 yards per game.
  2. Sports People; Browns Get Cousineau from the New York Times archives, retrieved March 8, 2006

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