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1981 NFL season

1981 National Football League season

1981 NFL season

1981 National Football League season

FieldValue
year1981
NFLchampion[San Francisco 49ers](1981-san-francisco-49ers-season)
regular_seasonSeptember 6 – December 21, 1981
playoffs_startDecember 27, 1981
AFCchampion[Cincinnati Bengals](1981-cincinnati-bengals-season)
NFCchampion[San Francisco 49ers](1981-san-francisco-49ers-season)
sb_nameXVI
sb_dateJanuary 24, 1982
sb_sitePontiac Silverdome, Pontiac, Michigan
pb_dateJanuary 31, 1982
The 49ers playing against the Bengals in Super Bowl XVI.

The 1981 NFL season was the 62nd regular season of the National Football League. The season ended with Super Bowl XVI when the San Francisco 49ers defeated the Cincinnati Bengals 26–21 at the Pontiac Silverdome in Michigan.

Draft

The 1981 NFL draft was held from April 28 to 29, 1981, at New York City's Sheraton Hotel. With the first pick, the New Orleans Saints selected running back George Rogers from the University of South Carolina.

New referee

Cal Lepore, the line judge for Super Bowl III and referee for the Miracle at the Meadowlands, retired after the 1980 season. He would later become supervisor of officials in the United States Football League and a replay official in the NFL when it was adopted in 1986. Tom Dooley, who was assigned Super Bowl XV as line judge at the end of the 1981 season, was promoted to referee to replace Lepore.

Major rule changes

  • It is illegal for any player to put adhesive or slippery substances such as the product "Stickum" on his body, equipment or uniform. This rule is known as both the "Lester Hayes Rule" and the "Fred Biletnikoff Rule" since both players were notorious for using sticky substances to make it easier for them to intercept/catch passes.
  • An offensive player who comes into the game wearing an illegal number for the position he takes must report to the referee before the start of the next play.
  • The penalty for an ineligible receiver who touches a forward pass is a loss of down.
  • The penalty for illegal use of hands, arms, or body (including holding) is reduced from 15 yards to 10 yards.
  • The penalty for intentional grounding is modified: loss of down and 10 yards penalty from the previous spot, or if the foul occurs more than 10 yards from the line of scrimmage, loss of down at the spot of the foul.
  • Officials began wearing numbers 21 through 25 within their position groups after going no higher than number 20 in 1979 and 1980.

Deaths

  • January 25 - Joe Kuharich, age 63. Played three seasons for the Chicago Cardinals. Later went on to be the head coach of the Cardinals, Washington Redskins and Philadelphia Eagles and was also the General Manager for the Eagles from 1965-68.
  • April 28 - Cliff Battles, age 70. Running back for the Boston Braves, which later became the Washington Redskins. Elected to the Pro Football Hall Of Fame in 1968.
  • July 1, 1981: Linebacker Rusty Chambers, the Miami Dolphins leading tackler in 1978 and 1979, died in an automobile accident.

Regular season

Scheduling formula

Division races

From 1970 to 2001, there were three divisions (Eastern, Central and Western) in each conference. The winners of each division, and a fourth "wild card" team based on the best non-division winner, qualified for the playoffs. The tiebreaker rules were changed to start with head-to-head competition, followed by division records, records against common opponents, and records in conference play.

National Football Conference

WeekEasternCentralWesternWild Card (Home)Wild Card (Road)
1Philadelphia, Dallas1–0–0Detroit, Green Bay, Tampa Bay1–0–0Atlanta
2Philadelphia, Dallas2–0–0Detroit, Green Bay, Tampa Bay1–1–0Atlanta
3Philadelphia, Dallas3–0–0All Five Teams1–2–0Atlanta
4Philadelphia, Dallas4–0–0Detroit, Minnesota, Tampa Bay2–2–0Atlanta
5Philadelphia5–0–0Minnesota, Tampa Bay3–2–0Atlanta, Los Angeles, San Francisco
6Philadelphia6–0–0Minnesota, Tampa Bay4–2–0Los Angeles, San Francisco
7Philadelphia6–1–0Minnesota5–2–0San Francisco
8Philadelphia7–1–0Minnesota5–3–0San Francisco
9Philadelphia, Dallas7–2–0Minnesota, Tampa Bay5–4–0San Francisco
10Philadelphia, Dallas8–2–0Minnesota6–4–0San Francisco
11Philadelphia9–2–0Minnesota7–4–0San Francisco
12Philadelphia, Dallas9–3–0Minnesota7–5–0San Francisco
13Dallas10–3–0Detroit, Minnesota, Tampa Bay7–6–0San Francisco
14Dallas11–3–0Tampa Bay8–6–0San Francisco
15Dallas12–3–0Detroit, Minnesota, Tampa Bay8–7–0San Francisco
16**[Dallas](1981-dallas-cowboys-nfl-season)**12–4–0**[Tampa Bay](1981-tampa-bay-buccaneers-season)**9–7–0**[San Francisco](1981-san-francisco-49ers-season)**

American Football Conference

WeekEasternCentralWesternWild Card (Home)Wild Card (Road)
1Baltimore, Buffalo, Miami1–0–0Cincinnati, Houston1–0–0Denver, Kansas City, San Diego
2Miami2–0–0Cincinnati, Houston2–0–0Kansas City, San Diego
3Miami3–0–0Cincinnati, Houston2–1–0San Diego
4Miami4–0–0Cincinnati3–1–0Denver, Kansas City, San Diego
5Miami4–0–1Cincinnati, Houston, Pittsburgh3–2–0Denver, San Diego
6Miami4–1–1Cincinnati, Pittsburgh4–2–0Denver
7Miami5–1–1Cincinnati5–2–0Denver, Kansas City, San Diego
8Miami5–2–1Cincinnati, Pittsburgh5–3–0Kansas City
9Miami6–2–1Cincinnati6–3–0Denver, Kansas City, San Diego
10Miami7–2–1Cincinnati7–3–0Denver
11Miami7–3–1Cincinnati8–3–0Denver, Kansas City
12Miami, N.Y. Jets7–4–1Cincinnati9–3–0Denver, Kansas City
13Miami, N.Y. Jets8–4–1Cincinnati10–3–0Denver, Kansas City, San Diego
14Miami9–4–1Cincinnati10–4–0Denver
15Miami10–4–1Cincinnati11–4–0Denver
16**[Miami](1981-miami-dolphins-season)**11–4–1**[Cincinnati](1981-cincinnati-bengals-season)**12–4–0**[San Diego](1981-san-diego-chargers-season)**

Final standings

Tiebreakers

  • Baltimore finished ahead of New England in the AFC East based on head-to-head sweep (2–0).
  • San Diego finished ahead of Denver in the AFC West based on better division record (6–2 to Broncos' 5–3).
  • Buffalo was the second AFC Wild Card based on head-to-head victory over Denver (1–0).
  • Detroit finished ahead of Green Bay in the NFC Central based on better record against common opponents (4–4 to Packers' 3–5).

Playoffs

Main article: 1981–82 NFL playoffs

Records, milestones, and notable statistics

Records Set

Records Tied

Baltimore Colts Defense

The 1981 Baltimore Colts were one of the worst defenses in NFL history; they set five dubious defensive records:

  • Most Points Allowed, Season, 533
  • Most Touchdowns Allowed, Season, 68
  • Most First Downs Allowed Season, 406
  • Most Yards Allowed, Season, 6,793
  • Fewest Punt Returns, Season, 12

Statistical leaders

Team

**Fewest passing yards allowed**Philadelphia Eagles (2,696)

Awards

**Super Bowl Most Valuable Player**Joe Montana, quarterback, San Francisco

Coaching changes

  • Denver Broncos: Dan Reeves replaced the fired Red Miller.
  • Houston Oilers: Bum Phillips was fired and replaced by Ed Biles.
  • New Orleans Saints: Bum Phillips joined the Saints after being fired by the Oilers. Dick Nolan was fired after a 0–12 start in 1980, and Dick Stanfel took over as interim.
  • Washington Redskins: Joe Gibbs replaced Jack Pardee.

Stadium changes

The home of the San Diego Chargers, San Diego Stadium, was renamed Jack Murphy Stadium in memory of local sportswriter Jack Murphy

Uniform changes

  • The Cincinnati Bengals made significant modifications to their uniforms for the first time since the team's debut in 1968, discontinuing the design similar to the Cleveland Browns' jerseys. Orange and black tiger stripes adorned the shoulder stripes of the jersey and the side striping of the pants. Black tiger stripes were also added to the orange helmets, replacing the Bengals wordmark.
  • The Dallas Cowboys darkened the shade of their blue jerseys from royal to navy blue, with the numerals becoming silver. The Cowboys wore this blue jersey through 1994.
  • The Houston Oilers resumed wearing blue pants with their white jerseys after a one-season hiatus; in addition, the team also changed their face masks from gray to red.
  • The Los Angeles Rams switched from gray to navy blue face masks.

Television

This was the fourth and final year under the league's broadcast contracts with ABC, CBS, and NBC to televise Monday Night Football, the NFC package, and the AFC package, respectively. The league then negotiated to have all three networks renew their deals for another five years.

John Madden became the lead color commentator for CBS, replacing Tom Brookshier who moved into a play-by-play role. However CBS Sports executives debated on whether Madden should be paired with incumbent lead play-by-play announcer Pat Summerall or should #2 announcer Vin Scully be promoted to the role. To resolve the situation, both Scully and Summerall were paired with Madden in four-week stretches. Scully was paired with Madden during the first four weeks of the season while Summerall was primarily covering the US Open Tennis Championships. Then Summerall called games with Madden while Scully covered the Major League Baseball playoffs for CBS Radio. After the eighth week of the NFL season, CBS Sports executives decided that Summerall had better chemistry with Madden than Scully did. Scully was later assigned as a consolation prize the NFC Championship Game. After the season, he would move to NBC to cover Major League Baseball and golf, but he decided to never call NFL games again.

Regular season game not broadcast by Network TV

September 5, 19818:00 PM EDT[Minnesota](1981-minnesota-vikings-season) @ [Tampa Bay](1981-tampa-bay-buccaneers-season)KSTP-TV ([Minnesota](1981-minnesota-vikings-season))
WTOG-TV ([Tampa Bay](1981-tampa-bay-buccaneers-season))

References

References

  1. 100 Things Dolphins Fans Should Know and Do Before They Die, Armando Salguero, Triumph Books, Chicago, 2020, ISBN 978-1-62937-722-3, p.185
  2. "1981 NFL Standings Through Week 1".
  3. "1981 NFL Standings Through Week 1".
  4. Brulia, Tim. "A CHRONOLOGY OF PRO FOOTBALL ON TELEVISION: Part 3".
  5. Weintraub, Rob. (May 23, 2016). "The Day Vin Scully Didn't Land That N.F.L. Broadcasting Job". The New York Times.
  6. "1981 NFL Standings Week by Week".
Info: Wikipedia Source

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