1971 Baltimore Colts season explained

Team:Baltimore Colts
Year:1971
Record:10–4
Division Place:2nd AFC East
Owner:Carroll Rosenbloom
General Manager:Don Klosterman
Coach:Don McCafferty
Stadium:Memorial Stadium
Playoffs:Won Divisional Playoffs
(at Browns) 20–3
Lost AFC Championship
(at Dolphins) 0–21
Shortnavlink:Colts seasons

The 1971 Baltimore Colts season was the 19th season for the team in the National Football League. Led by second-year head coach Don McCafferty, the Colts appeared to be on the verge of winning the AFC East again after beating the Miami Dolphins 14–3 in the penultimate game of the regular season. However, the Colts lost the final game of the season at home to the New England Patriots, dropping them to 10–4 and the wild card berth.[1] They lost to the Dolphins in the AFC Championship game. The Baltimore defense gave up a total of 140 points for 14 regular season games, an average of ten points a game. In their four defeats, they lost by a combined total of 15 points.

This was the final season under the ownership of Carroll Rosenbloom, who traded franchises with the Los Angeles Rams in July 1972, with players and coaching staffs remaining intact.[2] [3] [4]

Offseason

NFL draft

See main article: article and 1971 NFL Draft.

Personnel

Roster

Regular season

See main article: 1971 NFL season.

Schedule

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueAttendance
1September 19New York JetsW 22–01–0Memorial Stadium56,458
2September 26Cleveland BrownsL 13–141–1Memorial Stadium56,837
3October 3at New England PatriotsW 23–32–1Schaefer Stadium61,232
4October 10at Buffalo BillsW 43–03–1War Memorial Stadium46,206
5October 17at New York GiantsW 31–74–1Yankee Stadium62,860
6at Minnesota VikingsL 3–104–2Metropolitan Stadium49,784
7October 31Pittsburgh SteelersW 34–215–2Memorial Stadium60,238
8Los Angeles RamsW 24–176–2Memorial Stadium57,722
9November 14at New York JetsW 14–137–2Shea Stadium63,947
10November 21at Miami DolphinsL 14–177–3Miami Orange Bowl75,312
11November 28at Oakland RaidersW 37–148–3Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum54,689
12December 5Buffalo BillsW 24–09–3Memorial Stadium58,476
13Miami DolphinsW 14–310–3Memorial Stadium60,238
14December 19New England PatriotsL 17–2110–4Memorial Stadium57,942
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Game summaries

Week 1

[5]

Standings

[6]

Postseason

See main article: 1971–72 NFL playoffs.

The team made it to the playoffs as a No. 4 seed and traveled to Cleveland to play the Cleveland Browns in the divisional round. The Colts led 14–0 at the half and would cruise to a 20–3 win. They then traveled south to play the Miami Dolphins and tried to make it to their second consecutive Super Bowl. Colts QB Johnny Unitas was intercepted three times as they were shut out 21–0.

RoundDateOpponentResultRecordVenueAttendance
DivisionalDecember 26at Cleveland BrownsW 20–31–0Cleveland Municipal Stadium70,734
AFC ChampionshipJanuary 2, 1972at Miami DolphinsL 0–211–1Miami Orange Bowl76,622

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Plunkett bumps Colts from lead . Milwaukee Sentinel . Associated Press . December 20, 1971 . 1, part 2 .
  2. News: Colts owner trades club for Rams . Milwaukee Sentinel . Associated Press . July 14, 1972 . 1, part 2 .
  3. News: Colts' owner now sole owner of Rams . The Bulletin . (Bend, Oregon). UPI . July 14, 1972 . 12 .
  4. Nay on the neighs, yea on the baas . Sports Illustrated . Maule . Tex . Tex Maule . August 14, 1972 . 67.
  5. https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/197109190clt.htm Pro-Football-Reference.com
  6. NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York,NY,, p. 297