1978 Philadelphia Eagles season

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1978 Philadelphia Eagles season
OwnerLeonard Tose
Head coachDick Vermeil
General managerJim Murray
Home fieldVeterans Stadium
Results
Record9–7
Division place2nd NFC East
Playoff finishLost Wild Card Playoffs (at Falcons) 13–14
Pro BowlersT Stan Walters[1]
TE Harold Carmichael[1]
RB Wilbert Montgomery[1]
LB Bill Bergey[1]

The 1978 Philadelphia Eagles season was the franchise's 46th season in the National Football League (NFL). The Eagles reached the postseason for the first time in eighteen years, which ended the longest postseason drought in the franchise's history and one of the longest in the history of the NFL.

The Miracle at the Meadowlands[]

The Miracle at the Meadowlands is the term used by sportscasters and Philadelphia Eagles fans for a fumble recovery by cornerback Herman Edwards that he returned for a touchdown at the end of a November 19, 1978 NFL game against the New York Giants in Giants Stadium.

It was seen as miraculous because it occurred at a point in the game when the Giants were easily capable of running out the game's final seconds. The Giants had the ball, and the Eagles had no timeouts left. Everyone watching expected quarterback Joe Pisarcik to take one more snap and kneel with the ball, thus running out the clock and preserving a 17–12 Giant upset. Instead, he attempted to hand it off to fullback Larry Csonka and botched it, allowing Edwards to pick up the ball and run 26 yards for the winning score.

The Eagles were 6–5 going into this game, and the win was crucial in that it ultimately allowed the Eagles to get the fifth-and-final playoff spot in the 1978 NFC playoffs.

Off Season[]

The Eagles held their last training camp at Widener University in the city of Chester, in Delaware County, Pennsylvania)

NFL Draft[]

The 1978 NFL Draft The draft was held May 2–3, 1978. The league also held a supplemental draft after the regular draft and before the regular season. The draft was 12 rounds long with a total of 334 players selected.

The Eagles, because of previous trades made, had to wait until the 3rd round for their first pick. They would only have 7 picks and of these 7 players selected, 5 made the team and played during the season. With the 66th pick the Eagles as their first pick in the draft the Philadelphia Eagles selected Reggie Wilkes, a linebacker out of Georgia Tech.

The number 1 overall pick in the draft was taken by the Houston Oilers who selected the 1977 Heisman Trophy winner, Earl Campbell[2] a running back out of the University of Texas

Future Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee, in 2006, Warren Moon, a quarterback from the University of Washington, went undrafted. Moon is also in the Canadian Football League’s Hall of Fame.

Player selections[]

The table shows the Eagles selections and what picks they had that were traded away and the team that ended up with that pick. It is possible the Eagles' pick ended up with this team via another team that the Eagles made a trade with. Not shown are acquired picks that the Eagles traded away.

= Pro Bowler [3] = Hall of Famer
Rd PICK PLAYER POS SCHOOL
1 8 Pick Traded to
Cincinnati Bengals
2 35 Pick Traded to
Cincinnati Bengals
3 66 Reggie Wilkes Linebacker Georgia Tech
4 92 Dennis Harrison Defensive tackle Vanderbilt
5 118 Pick Traded to
Kansas City Chiefs
5 130 Norris Banks
Acquired Pick
Running back Kansas
6 145 Pick Traded to
Buffalo Bills
7 176 Pick Traded to
Oakland Raiders
7 186 Greg Marshall
Acquired Vikings Pick
Defensive tackle Oregon State
8 204 Pick traded to
Minnesota Vikings
9 230 Charles Williams Defensive back Jackson State
10 261 Pick traded to
Cleveland Browns
11 288 Bill Campfield Running back Kansas
12 315 Mark Slater Center Minnesota

Preseason[]

  • On August 5, the NFL played its first game in Mexico City. The New Orleans Saints defeated the Eagles by a score of 14–7.[4]

Regular season[]

Schedule[]

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance
1 September 3 Los Angeles Rams L 14–16 0–1 Veterans Stadium 64,721
2 September 10 at Washington Redskins L 30–35 0–2 RFK Stadium 54,380
3 September 17 at New Orleans Saints W 24–17 1–2 Louisiana Superdome 49,242
4 September 24 Miami Dolphins W 17–3 2–2 Veterans Stadium 62,998
5 October 1 at Baltimore Colts W 17–14 3–2 Memorial Stadium 50,314
6 October 8 at New England Patriots L 14–24 3–3 Schaefer Stadium 61,016
7 October 15 Washington Redskins W 17–10 4–3 Veterans Stadium 65,722
8 October 22 at Dallas Cowboys L 7–14 4–4 Texas Stadium 60,525
9 October 29 St. Louis Cardinals L 10–16 4–5 Veterans Stadium 62,989
10 November 5 Green Bay Packers W 10–3 5–5 Veterans Stadium 64,214
11 November 12 New York Jets W 17–9 6–5 Veterans Stadium 60,249
12 November 19 at New York Giants W 19–17 7–5 Giants Stadium 70,318
13 November 26 at St. Louis Cardinals W 14–10 8–5 Busch Memorial Stadium 39,693
14 December 3 at Minnesota Vikings L 27–28 8–6 Metropolitan Stadium 38,722
15 December 10 Dallas Cowboys L 13–31 8–7 Veterans Stadium 64,667
16 December 17 New York Giants W 20–3[5] 9-7 Veterans Stadium 56,396

Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Game recap[]

Week 1 vs LA Rams[]

Week 1: Philadelphia Eagles vs Los Angeles Rams
1 2 34Total
Rams 3 3 01016
Eagles 0 0 01414

at Veterans Stadium on AstroTurf,

  • Date: September 3, 1978
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: 76 °F (24.4 °C), wind 9 miles per hour (14 km/h; 7.8 kn)
  • Referee: Gordon McCarter
  • [1]
Game information

Week 3 at NO Saints[]

  • Television: CBS
  • Announcers: Gary Bender and Hank Stram

Former Youngstown State University star Ron Jaworski threw three touchdown passes two to Harold Carmichael one from 6 yards and the other from 18 yards as the Eagles got their first win of the season. The bitterness stemmed from the fact that one of their teammates, kick return specialist Wally Henry, suffered a broken leg when he hit illegally from behind. Henry was playing on the kickoff team in the third quarter when he was hit and carried from the field. Only minutes earlier, he had set up a touchdown with a 55-yard punt return to the Saints 20-yard line. The Eagles also had a 20-yard touchdown pass from Jaworski to Keith Krepfle and a Nick Mike-Mayer 21-yard field goal. The Saints also scored with a 47-yard pass from Archie Manning to Tinker Owens Touchdown connection, a nine-yard score from fullback Tony Galbreath and a 21-yard field goal by Rich Szaro. The Eagles had to make two last minute interceptions to halt the Saints drive to a tying score.

Week 9 vs St. Louis Cardinals[]

The St. Louis Cardinals come into the game with a win-loss record of 0–8 against the 4th place, 4 wins and 4 losses Philadelphia Eagles.

Week 9: Philadelphia Eagles vs St. Louis Cardinals
1 2 34Total
Cardinals 0 13 0316
Eagles 0 10 0010

at Veterans Stadium on AstroTurf,

  • Date: October 29, 1978
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: 52 °F (11.1 °C), wind 8 miles per hour (13 km/h; 7.0 kn)
  • [2]
Game information

Week 11 vs NY Jets[]

Week 11: Philadelphia Eagles vs New York Jets
1 2 34Total
Jets 0 3 609
Eagles 0 7 3717

at Veterans Stadium on AstroTurf,

  • Date: November 12, 1978
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: 50 °F (10 °C), wind 9 miles per hour (14 km/h; 7.8 kn)
  • [3]
Game information

Week 12[]

Philadelphia Eagles (6–5) at New York Giants (5–6)
1 2 34Total
Eagles 0 6 01319
Giants 14 0 3017

at Giants StadiumEast Rutherford, New Jersey

  • Date: November 19
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: 49 °F (9.4 °C) • Wind 14 miles per hour (23 km/h; 12 kn)
  • Game attendance: 70,318
  • Referee: Cal Lepore
  • Pro-Football-Reference.com
Game information

The Miracle at the Meadowlands is the term used by sportscasters and Philadelphia Eagles fans for a fumble recovery by cornerback Herman Edwards that he returned for a touchdown at the end of a November 19, 1978 NFL game against the New York Giants in Giants Stadium. It was seen as miraculous because it occurred at a point in the game when the Giants were easily capable of running out the game's final seconds. The Giants had the ball, and the Eagles had no timeouts left. Everyone watching expected quarterback Joe Pisarcik to take one more snap and kneel with the ball, thus running out the clock and preserving a 17–12 Giant upset. Instead, he attempted to hand it off to fullback Larry Csonka and botched it, allowing Edwards to pick up the ball and run 26 yards for the winning score.

Week 13 at St. Louis Cardinals[]

After the games of week 11 the Philadelphia Eagles' outlook of being an NFC playoff team was slim. They were in 3rd place in the NFC East and behind 4 teams for a Wild Card team spot. That was some of the reasoning why the placekicking duties were given to the punter Mike Michel when regular kicker Nick Mick-Meyer got hurt. At the end of week 13 the Eagles found themselves trailing division leading Dallas by one game, and tied with the Atlanta Falcons and Washington Redskins for 1 of 2 Wild Card team playoff spots.

Week 12: Philadelphia Eagles at St. Louis Cardinals – Game summary
1 2 34Total
Eagles 0 7 0714
Cardinals 3 0 0710

at Busch Memorial Stadium on AstroTurf,

  • Date: November 26, 1978
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: 43 °F (6.1 °C), wind 15 miles per hour (24 km/h; 13 kn)
  • [4]
Game information

Standings[]

The Eagles were hampered by the loss of their placekicker (Nick Mike-Mayer) in the closing weeks of the season and his replacement (punter Mike Michel) missed an extra point kick in each of the last three games of the season.

NFC East
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
Dallas Cowboys(2) 12 4 0 .750 7–1 9–3 384 208 W6
Philadelphia Eagles(5) 9 7 0 .563 4–4 6–6 270 250 W1
Washington Redskins 8 8 0 .500 4–4 6–6 273 283 L5
St. Louis Cardinals 6 10 0 .375 3–5 6–6 248 296 W1
New York Giants 6 10 0 .375 2–6 5–9 264 298 L1

Roster[]

NO. Player AGE POS GP GS WT HT YRS College
Dick Vermeil 40 Head Coach 3 San Jose State
38 Larry Barnes 24 RB 7 0 220 5–11 1 Tennessee State
66 Bill Bergey* 33 LB 16 16 243 6–4 9 Arkansas State
34 James Betterson 24 RB 9 0 210 6–0 1 North Carolina
25 Bill Bryant 27 DB 3 0 195 5–11 2 Grambling State
95 John Bunting 28 LB 6 6 220 6–1 6 North Carolina
67 Lem Burnham 31 DE 15 0 236 6–4 1 U.S. International
37 Billy Campfield 22 RB 16 2 200 5–11 Rookie Kansas
17 Harold Carmichael* 29 WR-TE 16 16 225 6–8 7 Southern
71 Ken Clarke 22 NT-DT 16 0 268 6–2 Rookie Syracuse
46 Herman Edwards 24 DB 16 16 194 6–0 1 California and
San Diego State
13 Rick Engles 24 P 6 0 177 5–11 2 Tulsa
30 Cleveland Franklin 23 RB 16 4 216 6–2 1 Baylor
53 Dennis Franks 25 C 16 0 241 6–1 2 Michigan
64 Ed George 32 T 16 0 270 6–4 3 Ferrum, Wake Forest
33 Louie Giammona 25 RB 7 0 180 5–9 2 Utah State
78 Carl Hairston 26 DE-DT-LB 16 16 260 6–3 2 Md-Eastern Shore
68 Dennis Harrison 22 DE 16 6 275 6–8 Rookie Vanderbilt
89 Wally Henry 24 WR 3 0 175 5–8 1 UCLA
35 Mike Hogan 24 RB 14 12 213 6–2 2 Tennessee-Chattanooga
23 Bob Howard 34 DB 10 6 174 6–2 11 Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo and
San Diego State
7 Ron Jaworski 27 QB 16 16 196 6–2 4 Youngstown State
65 Charlie Johnson 26 NT 16 16 266 6–3 1 Colorado
49 26 DB 16 0 192 6–1 1 Washington State
72 Wade Key 32 G-T 13 12 245 6–5 8 Texas, Texas State
84 Keith Krepfle 26 TE 10 10 227 6–3 3 Iowa State
88 Bill Larson 25 TE 5 1 225 6–4 3 Colorado State
55 Frank LeMaster 26 LB 16 16 232 6–2 4 Kentucky
41 Randy Logan 27 DB 16 16 195 6–1 5 Michigan
63 Tom Luken 28 G 16 6 253 6–3 6 Purdue
32 Herb Lusk 25 RB 3 0 190 6–0 2 Long Beach State
54 Drew Mahalic 25 LB 9 8 225 6–4 3 Notre Dame
2 Mike Michel 24 P-K 10 0 177 5–10 1 Stanford
81 Oren Middlebrook 25 WR 16 0 185 6–2 Rookie Arkansas State
1 Nick Mike-Mayer 28 K 12 0 186 5–8 5 Temple
31 Wilbert Montgomery* 24 RB 14 14 196 5–10 1 Abilene Christian and
Jackson State
50 Guy Morriss 27 C 16 16 255 6–4 5 TCU
57 Mike Osborn 23 LB 16 1 235 6–5 Rookie Kansas State
86 Richard Osborne 25 TE 16 7 230 6–3 2 Texas A&M
20 John Outlaw 33 DB 14 8 180 5–10 9 Jackson State
83 Vince Papale 32 WR 13 0 195 6–2 2 St. Joseph's (PA)
Played no college football
82 Ken Payne 28 WR 16 9 185 6–1 4 Langston
69 Woody Peoples 35 G 15 14 252 6–2 10 Grambling State
52 Ray Phillips 24 LB 10 4 224 6–4 1 Nebraska
26 28 DB 15 15 175 6–1 4 South Dakota
21 John Sciarra 24 DB-QB 16 2 185 5–11 Rookie UCLA
76 Jerry Sisemore 27 T-G 16 16 265 6–4 5 Texas
79 Manny Sistrunk 31 DT-DE 16 10 269 6–5 8 Ark-Pine Bluff
85 Charlie A. Smith 28 WR 14 5 185 6–1 4 Grambling State
58 Terry Tautolo 24 LB 16 2 232 6–2 2 UCLA
75 Stan Walters* 30 T 16 16 275 6–6 6 Syracuse
11 John Walton 31 QB 4 0 210 6–2 2 Elizabeth City State
51 Reggie Wilkes 22 LB 16 13 235 6–4 Rookie Georgia Tech
47 25 DB 7 1 180 6–1 Rookie Jackson State
53 Players
Team Average
26.7 16 217.9 6–1.8 3.1

Postseason[]

NFL Wild Card Game[]

Atlanta Falcons 14, Philadelphia Eagles 13
1 2 34Total
Eagles 6 0 7013
Falcons 0 0 01414

at Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium, Atlanta

  • Date: December 24, 1978
  • Game time: 12:30 p.m. EST
  • Game attendance: 49,447
  • TV announcers (CBS): Gary Bender and Hank Stram

The Falcons won their first playoff game in team history after they overcame a 13–0 deficit by scoring 2 touchdowns in the final 5 minutes of the game. Punter Mike Michel, who took over placekicker duties when regular placekicker Nick Mike-Mayer got injured in week 12, missed a possible game-winning 34-yard field goal in the closing seconds.

Awards and honors[]

  • UPI Coach of the Year: Dick Vermeil

League Leaders[6]

  • Harold Carmichael, NFC Leader, Receiving Yards – 1072 [7]
  • Wilbert Montgomery, NFC Leader, Rushing Avg – 4.6

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d "Philadelphia Eagles All-Pros and Pro Bowlers". Pro Football Reference.
  2. ^ Earl Campbell, 1977 Heisman Trophy winner "Heisman Trophy". Heismen. Archived from the original on June 14, 2009. Retrieved August 4, 2008.
  3. ^ Players are identified as a Pro Bowler if they were selected for the Pro-Bowl at any time in their career.
  4. ^ NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York, ISBN 0-7611-2480-2, p.284
  5. ^ "Herm Edwards remembers well the first 'Miracle at the Meadowlands'". December 20, 2010.
  6. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on May 14, 2011. Retrieved April 15, 2011.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. ^ NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York, ISBN 0-7611-2480-2, p. 452

External links[]

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