1978 Oakland Raiders season explained

Team:Oakland Raiders
Year:1978
Record:9–7
Division Place:2nd AFC West
Owner:Al Davis
General Manager:Al Davis
Coach:John Madden
Stadium:Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum
Playoffs:Did not qualify
Shortnavlink:Raiders seasons

The 1978 Oakland Raiders season was the team's 19th season, and ninth as an NFL member.

1978 would prove to be an up and down year for the silver and black. Two new offensive line and defensive starts were named in the pre-season and All-Pro player, Monte Jackson, was not listed as a starter. Injuries were seen as a possible concern during the pre-season and during a pre-season game, Jack Tatum paralyzed New England Patriots wide receiver Darryl Stingley from the chest down while making a hit. Overall, the Raiders were plagued by one of quarterback Kenny Stabler's worst seasons, tossing 16 TD's, while throwing 30 interceptions. The running game also fell off from seasons past. Even the great wide receiver Cliff Branch, only caught one touchdown. The season started off with a 14–6 loss in Denver. The Raiders would rally to a 5–3 start, then climbed to 8–4. As a result of a last-minute defeat to the Seattle Seahawks 17–16, the Raiders lost twice to a single team in the same season for the first time since 1965. The following week, the Broncos completed their sweep of the Raiders with a 21–6 victory in Oakland, which was followed by a 23–6 defeat in Miami which eliminated Oakland from the playoffs for the first time since 1971. A meaningless 27–20 victory over the Minnesota Vikings kept the Raiders consecutive seasons with a winning record streak alive. This was head coach John Madden's tenth and final season and final game as head coach of the Raiders. He was replaced for the 1979 season by his wide receivers coach, Tom Flores.

Offseason

NFL Draft

See main article: article and 1978 NFL Draft.

Regular season

Schedule

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueAttendance
1September 3at Denver BroncosL 6–140–1Mile High Stadium75,092
2September 10at San Diego ChargersW 21–201–1San Diego Stadium51,653
3September 17at Green Bay PackersW 28–32–1Lambeau Field55,903
4September 24New England PatriotsL 14–212–2Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum52,904
5October 1at Chicago BearsW 25–19 (OT)3–2Soldier Field52,848
6October 8Houston OilersW 21–174–2Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum52,550
7October 15Kansas City ChiefsW 28–65–2Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum50,759
8October 22at Seattle SeahawksL 7–275–3Kingdome62,529
9October 29San Diego ChargersL 23–275–4Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum52,612
10November 5at Kansas City ChiefsW 20–106–4Arrowhead Stadium75,418
11November 13at Cincinnati BengalsW 34–217–4Riverfront Stadium51,374
12November 19Detroit LionsW 29–178–4Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum44,517
13November 26Seattle SeahawksL 16–178–5Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum52,978
14December 3Denver BroncosL 6–218–6Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum53,932
15December 10at Miami DolphinsL 6–238–7Miami Orange Bowl73,003
16December 17W 27–209–7Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum44,643
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Game summaries

Week 2

[1]

The Holy Roller

During this game, one of the most famous plays known as the Holy Roller occurred. Kenny Stabler fumbled the ball and Pete Banaszak moved it forward allowing Dave Casper to finish the job for a touchdown. It is one of the most controversial plays in the history of the NFL.

Week 3

[2]

Week 6

This game started with nearly all Oilers as future Raider Dan Pastorini throw touchdown passes of 58 yards to Mike Renfro and 17 yards to Mike Barber and Toni Fritsch kicked a 35-yard field goal. The only Raiders points in the first 3 quarters was a 4-yard touchdown run by Arthur Whittington. Then with the Oilers leading 17-7 lead and driving deep in Raiders' territory, Oiler running back Earl Campbell ran around left tackle and lost the ball when Oakland's Dave Browning hit him, and Charles Phillips picked up the ball and ran it 96 yards to cut the Oilers lead to 3. Then in quarter four, and late Ken Stabler who had 3 interceptions prior to this drive suddenly came to life as he successfully passes 71 of the 80 yards ending with a pass to Dave Casper. Oiler defender Greg Stemrick got his hands on the short winning pass, but Casper yanked the ball loose and held on for the score. His four-yard touchdown reception helped the Raiders go to 4-2 and a tie for first with Denver in the AFC West standings.

References

Notes and References

  1. https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/197809100sdg.htm Pro-Football-Reference.com
  2. https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/197809170gnb.htm Pro-Football-Reference.com