1970 Chicago Bears season

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1970 Chicago Bears season
OwnerGeorge Halas
Head coachJim Dooley
Home fieldWrigley Field
Dyche Stadium
Results
Record6–8
Division place4th NFC Central
Playoff finishDid not qualify

The 1970 Chicago Bears season was their 51st regular season completed in the National Football League. The team finished with a 6–8 record, a significant improvement over the 1–13 record of the previous season, the worst in franchise history.

Offseason[]

  • June 16, 1970 – After a seven-month battle with cancer, running back Brian Piccolo died at age 26.[1][2][3]

NFL Draft[]

Round Pick Player Position School/Club Team
3 58 George Farmer Wide Receiver UCLA

Roster[]

1970 Chicago Bears final roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists
  • 40 Gale Sayers RB (IR) Injury icon 2.svg


Practice squad



Rookies in italics

Regular season[]

As an experiment, the Bears hosted their first home game of the season at Northwestern University's Dyche Stadium in Evanston. The Bears' Wrigley Field landlord, the Chicago Cubs, were in a pennant race and might play in the National League Championship Series and World Series, and that Wrigley Field would be unavailable (at least for installation of temporary seating in right and center field) until well into October.[4] (The Cubs were in contention in the National League East until the final week of the 1970 season, thus rendering the anticipation moot.)[5][6]

In addition, the NFL was pressuring the Bears to move out of Wrigley Field, because it had no lights and its seating capacity was under 50,000 (even with additional seating in right field for football games), stipulations of the AFL–NFL merger agreement. The Bears planned to move to Evanston for the 1971 season, but Evanston residents petitioned city officials to block the move, and the Big Ten Conference ultimately barred the Bears from using Dyche Stadium;[7] the Bears moved to Chicago's Soldier Field.[8]

Schedule[]

Week Date Opponent Result Record Attendance
1 September 19 at New York Giants W 24–16 1–0
62,936
2 September 27 Philadelphia Eagles W 20–16 2–0
53,463
3 October 5 at Detroit Lions L 28–14 2–1
58,210
4 October 11 Minnesota Vikings L 24–0 2–2
45,485
5 October 18 San Diego Chargers L 20–7 2–3
45,278
6 October 25 Detroit Lions L 16–10 2–4
45,632
7 November 1 at Atlanta Falcons W 23–14 3–4
58,850
8 November 8 San Francisco 49ers L 37–16 3–5
45,607
9 November 15 at Green Bay Packers L 20–19 3–6
56,263
10 November 22 Buffalo Bills W 31–13 4–6
41,015
11 November 29 at Baltimore Colts L 21–20 4–7
60,240
12 December 5 at Minnesota Vikings L 16–13 4–8
47,900
13 December 13 Green Bay Packers W 35–17 5–8
44,957
14 December 20 at New Orleans Saints W 24–3 6–8
63,518
  • Saturday night (September 19), Monday night (October 5), Saturday (December 5)

Season summary[]

Week 1[]

1 234Total
Bears 7 377 24
Giants 10 303 16
  • Date: September 19
  • Location: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, New York
  • Game start: 8:00 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: 71 °F, wind 13 mph
  • Referee: Fred Silva
  • TV announcers (WBBM): Brent Musburger and Jerry Kramer

Week 2[]

1 234Total
Eagles 6 307 16
Bears 7 1003 20
  • Date: September 27
  • Location: Dyche StadiumEvanston, Illinois
  • Game start: 1:00 p.m. CST
  • Game weather: 52 °F • Wind 9
  • Referee: Fred Swearingen
  • TV announcers (CBS): Jack Whitaker and Tom Brookshier

[9]

Week 3[]

Week 4[]

Week 5[]

Week 6[]

Week 7[]

1 234Total
• Bears 10 373 23
Falcons 0 770 14
  • Date: November 1
  • Location: Atlanta Stadium, Atlanta
  • Game start: 1:00 p.m.
  • Game weather: 62 °F; wind 7

[10]

Week 8[]

Week 9[]

Week 10[]

1 234Total
Bills 6 007 13
Bears 0 14710 31
  • Date: November 22
  • Location: Wrigley FieldChicago
  • Game start: 1:00 p.m. CST
  • Game weather: 43 °F • Wind 22
  • Referee: John McDonough

[11]

Week 11[]

Week 12[]

Week 13[]

Green Bay Packers at Chicago Bears
1 234Total
Packers 3 0014 17
Bears 14 777 35
  • Date: Sunday, December 13
  • Location: Wrigley Field, Chicago
  • Game start: 1:00 p.m. CST
  • Game weather: 32 °F, wind 11 mph
  • Referee: Fred Silva

Week 14[]

1 234Total
• Bears 0 7314 24
Saints 0 300 3

[12]

Standings[]

NFC Central
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
Minnesota Vikings 12 2 0 .857 5–1 10–1 335 143 W3
Detroit Lions 10 4 0 .714 4–2 7–4 347 202 W5
Green Bay Packers 6 8 0 .429 2–4 4–7 196 293 L2
Chicago Bears 6 8 0 .429 1–5 5–6 256 261 W2

Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.

References[]

  1. ^ "Cancer fatal to Piccolo of Bears at 26". Milwaukee Journal. press dispatches. June 16, 1970. p. 13, part 2.
  2. ^ "Brian Piccolo is dead at 26". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). Associated Press. June 17, 1970. p. 19.
  3. ^ "Sayers, Halas praise Piccolo's courage". Milwaukee Sentinel. Associated Press. June 17, 1970. p. 1-part 2.
  4. ^ "Historical Newspapers from 1700s–2000s".
  5. ^ "Pennant race at a glance". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). September 16, 1970. p. 16.
  6. ^ "1970 Chicago Cubs Schedule".
  7. ^ Historical Newspapers from 1700s–2000s – Newspapers.com
  8. ^ Historical Newspapers from 1700s–2000s – Newspapers.com
  9. ^ Pro-Football-Reference.com
  10. ^ Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved 2014-Sep-14.
  11. ^ Pro-Football-Reference.com
  12. ^ Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved 2014-Sep-14.
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