1978 Kansas City Chiefs season

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1978 Kansas City Chiefs season
OwnerLamar Hunt
Head coachMarv Levy
General managerJim Schaaf
Home fieldArrowhead Stadium
Results
Record4–12
Division place5th AFC West
Playoff finishDid not qualify
Pro BowlersNone

The 1978 Kansas City Chiefs season was the franchise's 9th season in the National Football League, the 16th as the Kansas City Chiefs, and the 19th overall. It began with the hiring of new head coach Marv Levy, formerly of the Canadian Football League's Montreal Alouettes. With the NFL expanding its schedule to 16 games, the Chiefs finished with a 4–12 record and 5th in the AFC West.

Coach Levy's systematic restocking of a relatively barren defensive roster began with a 1978 draft class that included a pair of future Chiefs franchise hall of famers in defensive end Art Still and linebacker Gary Spani. Running back Ed Podolak, who was the club's all-time leading rusher at the time, retired in the offseason on June 15.[1]

Perhaps Levy's most unconventional tactic in rebuilding the Chiefs was installing the Wing-T offense. "It was a situation where we took over a team that had the worst defensive record in the history of the National Football League," Levy explained.[1] "We wanted to keep that defense off the field, so we ran the ball 60 times a game."[1] The 1978 Chiefs team ran and ran often, posting franchise records with 663 rushing attempts and 2,986 ground yards.[1] Levy's squad ran the ball a staggering 69 times in a 24–23 Opening Day win at Cincinnati on September 3, the most rushing attempts in an NFL contest since 1948.[1] Five different players had 100-yard rushing games during the year, including running back Tony Reed, who finished the season with 1,053 yards to become the team's first 1,000-yard back since 1967.[1] Despite the squad's Opening Day success, the club lost 10 of its next 11 games, including a pair of overtime decisions. However, the team showed signs of improvement with the defense recording a 23–0 shutout against San Diego on November 26 as the club concluded its first 16-game schedule with a 4–12 mark.[1]

Offseason[]

NFL Draft[]

Round Pick Player Position School/Club Team

Roster[]

1978 Kansas City Chiefs roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists
  • -- QB (IR) Injury icon 2.svg


Practice squad



Rookies in italics

Schedule[]

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance Recap
1 September 3 at Cincinnati Bengals W 24–23 1–0 Riverfront Stadium 41,810 Recap
2 September 10 Houston Oilers L 17–20 1–1 Arrowhead Stadium 40,213 Recap
3 September 17 at New York Giants L 10–26 1–2 Giants Stadium 70,546 Recap
4 September 24 Denver Broncos L 17–23 (OT) 1–3 Arrowhead Stadium 60,593 Recap
5 October 1 at Buffalo Bills L 13–28 1–4 Rich Stadium 47,310 Recap
6 October 8 Tampa Bay Buccaneers L 13–30 1–5 Arrowhead Stadium 38,201 Recap
7 October 15 at Oakland Raiders L 6–28 1–6 Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum 50,759 Recap
8 October 22 Cleveland Browns W 17–3 2–6 Arrowhead Stadium 41,157 Recap
9 October 29 at Pittsburgh Steelers L 24–27 2–7 Three Rivers Stadium 48,185 Recap
10 November 5 Oakland Raiders L 10–20 2–8 Arrowhead Stadium 75,418 Recap
11 November 12 at San Diego Chargers L 23–29 (OT) 2–9 San Diego Stadium 41,395 Recap
12 November 19 Seattle Seahawks L 10–13 2–10 Arrowhead Stadium 35,252 Recap
13 November 26 San Diego Chargers W 23–0 3–10 Arrowhead Stadium 26,248 Recap
14 December 3 Buffalo Bills W 14–10 4–10 Arrowhead Stadium 25,781 Recap
15 December 10 at Denver Broncos L 3–24 4–11 Mile High Stadium 74,149 Recap
16 December 17 at Seattle Seahawks L 19–23 4–12 Kingdome 58,490 Recap

Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Standings[]

AFC West
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
Denver Broncos(3) 10 6 0 .625 7–1 8–4 282 198 L1
Oakland Raiders 9 7 0 .563 3–5 5–7 311 283 W1
Seattle Seahawks 9 7 0 .563 4–4 6–6 345 358 W1
San Diego Chargers 9 7 0 .563 5–3 7–5 355 309 W3
Kansas City Chiefs 4 12 0 .250 1–7 4–10 243 327 L2

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Kansas City Chiefs History 1970's". Archived from the original on August 23, 2007. Retrieved July 31, 2007.
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