1987 Houston Oilers season explained

Team:Houston Oilers
Year:1987
Record:9–6
Division Place:2nd AFC Central
Coach:Jerry Glanville
General Manager:Ladd Herzeg
Owner:Bud Adams
Stadium:Houston Astrodome
Playoffs:Won Wild Card Playoffs
(vs. Seahawks) 23–20
Lost Divisional Playoffs
(at Broncos) 10–34
Shortnavlink:Oilers seasons

The 1987 Houston Oilers season was the franchise's 18th season in the National Football League and the 28th overall. The Oilers came into the season looking to improve on their 5–11 record from 1986, and make the playoffs for the first time since 1980. The 1987 NFL season was affected by a players strike that took place in week 3 of the season, which canceled all week 3 games. As a result, the Oilers canceled there was-to-be week 3 game against the Los Angeles Raiders. The Oilers began the season 3–1, their best start to a season since 1980. After the Oilers lost at home to the Patriots 21–7 in week 5, the Oilers defeated the Atlanta Falcons and Cincinnati Bengals to give them a 5–2 start to the season. After the Oilers lost to the 49ers on the road, they beat the Pittsburgh Steelers on the road, 23–3, for their first win in Pittsburgh since 1978. The Oilers would then play 2 disastrous games against the Browns and the Colts, as they allowed 40+ points in each game, losing 40–7 to Cleveland at home and losing 51–27 to the Colts in Indianapolis. The Oilers would defeat the Chargers the next week, rebounding from those 2 bad losses. The Oilers would clinch a playoff spot in the season's final week with a 21–17 win over Cincinnati, thus ending their 6-year playoff drought. This was the first of seven consecutive playoff appearances for the Oilers. In the playoffs, they defeated the Seattle Seahawks 23–20 in overtime on a Tony Zendejas field goal. However, the next week, they lost to the Broncos 34–10 in the Divisional Round, ending their season.

Offseason

NFL draft

See main article: article and 1987 NFL draft. [1]

Personnel

NFL replacement players

After the league decided to use replacement players during the NFLPA strike, the following team was assembled:

Regular season

Schedule

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueAttendance
1September 13Los Angeles RamsW 20–161–0Astrodome33,186
2September 20at Buffalo BillsL 30–341–1Rich Stadium56,534
September 27Los Angeles Raiderscanceled1–1Astrodome
3October 4at Denver BroncosW 40–102–1Mile High Stadium38,494
4October 11at Cleveland BrownsW 15–103–1Cleveland Municipal Stadium38,927
5October 18New England PatriotsL 7–213–2Astrodome26,294
6October 25Atlanta FalconsW 37–334–2Astrodome29,062
7November 1at Cincinnati BengalsW 31–295–2Riverfront Stadium52,700
8November 8at San Francisco 49ersL 20–275–3Candlestick Park59,740
9November 15at Pittsburgh SteelersW 23–36–3Three Rivers Stadium56,177
10November 22Cleveland BrownsL 7–406–4Astrodome51,161
11November 29at Indianapolis ColtsL 27–516–5Hoosier Dome54,999
12December 6San Diego ChargersW 33–187–5Astrodome31,714
13December 13at New Orleans SaintsL 10–247–6Louisiana Superdome68,257
14December 20Pittsburgh SteelersW 24–168–6Astrodome38,683
15December 27Cincinnati BengalsW 21–179–6Astrodome49,775
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Game summaries

Week 7

Standings

Playoffs

AFC Wild Card

Oilers kicker Tony Zendejas won the game with a 42-yard field goal 8:05 into overtime. Although Houston outgained Seattle with 427 total offensive yards to 250, the game remained close until the very end.

AFC Divisional Playoff

Awards and records

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1987 Houston Oilers draftees . Pro-Football-Reference.com . October 20, 2014 .