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1978 Washington Redskins season

47th season in franchise history, collapse after 6-0 start


47th season in franchise history, collapse after 6-0 start

FieldValue
teamWashington Redskins
year1978
record8–8
division_place3rd NFC East
coachJack Pardee
ownerEdward Bennett Williams
presidentEdward Bennett Williams
off_coachJoe Walton
def_coachDoc Urich
general_managerBobby Beathard
stadiumRFK Stadium
playoffsDid not qualify
shortnavlinkRedskins seasons

The ** Washington Redskins season** was the franchise's 47th season in the National Football League (NFL) and their 42nd in Washington, D.C. The team failed to improve on their 9–5 record from 1977, finishing 8–8.

This was the first of Jack Pardee's three seasons as head coach of the Redskins. This was also the first season in which the NFL expanded from a 14-game season to a 16-game schedule. The Redskins started the season 6–0 and got to 8–3 but ended the season with a five-game losing streak and missed the playoffs. The losing streak began with a loss to a Cardinals team which had started 0–8. The Cardinals would not win again at RFK Stadium until 1993, their sixth season in Arizona. Quarterback Billy Kilmer, who served as backup to Joe Theismann, retired following the season.

Offseason

NFL draft

Main article: 1978 NFL draft

RoundSelectionPlayerPositionCollege6159820282199243102701129712324
Tony GreenRBFlorida
Walker LeeWRNorth Carolina
Don HoverLBWashington State
John HurleyQBSanta Clara
Scott HertensteinDEAzusa Pacific
Mike WilliamsDBTexas A&M
Steve McCabeGBowdoin

Personnel

Staff

  • Majority Owner / Vice President – Jack Kent Cooke

  • Minority Owner / President – Edward Bennett Williams

  • General manager – Bobby Beathard

  • Executive assistant to the President – Bobby Mitchell

  • Assistant general manager – Joel Margolis

  • Assistant general manager – Dick Meyers

  • Director of player personnel – C.A. Temerario

  • Director of pro scouting – Kirk Mee

  • Director of college scouting – Dick Daniels

  • Scouts – Mike Faulkiner

  • Head Coach – Jack Pardee

  • Special Assistant to Head Coach – Bob Bowser

  • Offensive Coordinator – Joe Walton

  • Running Backs – George Dickson

  • Tight Ends / Wide Receivers – John Hilton

  • Offensive Line – Ray Callahan

  • Defensive Coordinator/Defensive Line – Doc Urich

  • Linebackers – George Dickson

  • Defensive Secondary – Richie Petitbon

  • Special Teams Coach – John Hilton

Final roster

Regular season

Schedule

Washington Redskinsyear=1978border=2}}"WeekWashington Redskinsyear=1978border=2}}"DateWashington Redskinsyear=1978border=2}}"OpponentWashington Redskinsyear=1978border=2}}"ResultWashington Redskinsyear=1978border=2}}"RecordWashington Redskinsyear=1978border=2}}"VenueWashington Redskinsyear=1978border=2}}"AttendanceWashington Redskinsyear=1978border=2}}"Recap12345678910111213141516
September 3at New England PatriotsW 16–141–0Schaefer Stadium55,037Recap
September 10Philadelphia EaglesW 35–302–0RFK Stadium54,380Recap
September 17at St. Louis CardinalsW 28–103–0Busch Memorial Stadium49,282Recap
September 24New York JetsW 23–34–0RFK Stadium54,729Recap
Dallas CowboysW 9–55–0RFK Stadium55,031Recap
October 8at Detroit LionsW 21–196–0Pontiac Silverdome60,555Recap
October 15at Philadelphia EaglesL 10–176–1Veterans Stadium65,722Recap
October 22at New York GiantsL 6–176–2Giants Stadium76,192Recap
October 29San Francisco 49ersW 38–207–2RFK Stadium53,706Recap
at Baltimore ColtsL 17–217–3Memorial Stadium57,631Recap
November 12New York GiantsW 16–138–3RFK Stadium53,271Recap
November 19St. Louis CardinalsL 17–278–4RFK Stadium52,460Recap
November 23at Dallas CowboysL 10–378–5Texas Stadium64,905Recap
December 3Miami DolphinsL 0–168–6RFK Stadium52,860Recap
December 10at Atlanta FalconsL 17–208–7Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium54,178Recap
Chicago BearsL 10–148–8RFK Stadium49,774Recap
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Week 2

  • Referee: Fred Silva
  • TV Network: CBS
  • Announcers: Lindsey Nelson, Paul Hornung, Roman Gabriel It was an exciting contest, and the fireworks began early as the Eagles' Wilbert Montgomery opened the scoring with a great 34-yard touchdown run in the first period, but back came the Redskins as Joe Theismann who was to have another good game scores from the 4 to even the game. But the Eagles came back as a field goal by Nick Mike-Mayer from 32, but then it was the Redskins offensive show as the Redskins scored 21 unanswered points to take a commanding 28-10 lead. For the day Theismann passed for 226 yards and 3 touchdown passes. Then both teams traded touchdowns to make it a 35-16, the last one was a flea flicker touchdown pass from 37 yards from Joe Theismann to Jean Fugett. But back came the Eagles who in the 3rd year of the Dick Vermeil era became a competitive team. Just after the Skins scored the Eagles came back as Montgomery first scored from 8 yards and then on the next possession scored from 5 yards. The Eagles also drove deep as Montgomery scored form 5 yards but was brought back due to a holding penalty and on the next play Mike Curtis intercept a Ron Jaworski pass ending the drive and with it the Redskins come away with a win and sole possession of first place in the NFC East.

Week 5

Standings

References

References

  1. "Washington Redskins 1978 Press Guide".
Info: Wikipedia Source

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