1981 Buffalo Bills season

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1981 Buffalo Bills season
OwnerRalph Wilson
Head coachChuck Knox
Home fieldRich Stadium
Results
Record10–6
Division place3rd AFC East
Playoff finishWon Wild Card Playoffs (at Jets) 31–27
Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Bengals) 21–28
Bills' running back Joe Cribbs (middle) rushes the ball against the Jets in the 1981 AFC Wild Card game.

The 1981 Buffalo Bills season was the franchise's 12th season in the National Football League, and the 22nd overall.

The season's most memorable moment was probably a Hail Mary catch against the New England Patriots in Week Twelve.[1] The 36-yard touchdown pass from Bills quarterback Joe Ferguson to running back Roland Hooks as time expired won the game for Buffalo, 20–17.[2] The win proved to be crucial in giving Buffalo the final playoff spot in the AFC in 1981.[3] The Bills qualified for the playoffs, but lost, 28-21, to the Cincinnati Bengals.

Offseason[]

The Bills were coming off of their first division title since 1966, and their first since the merger. Coach Chuck Knox's Bills, in his fourth season with the team, were considered a contender in the AFC.

In their 1981 NFL preview, Sports Illustrated's Paul Zimmerman wrote, "A word of advice: Go to Vegas and take the price on Buffalo to go all the way. The odds are right. Just look at how close the Bills came last year. ... The Bills are a hungry team, on the rise. They'll have to stay almost injury-free, though, because they're in big trouble if one of the big boys goes down, i.e., [Joe] Ferguson, Nose Guard Freddy Smerlas, Wide Receiver Jerry Butler or Halfback Joe Cribbs, who handled the ball more times (389) than any back in the NFL, counting passes caught and punt and kick returns as well as his rushes."[4]

NFL Draft[]

Running back Robb Riddick played eight seasons for the Bills; he started eight games and ran for 632 total yards in 1986, and he became a short-yardage specialist in 1988

Said Zimmerman about the team's first pick, "(Coach Chuck) Knox is a ball control coach, and he's been desperately trying to juice up the fullback position, to take some heat off the 190-pound Cribbs. But No. 1 draft choice Booker Moore from Penn State came down with a nerve disorder called Guillain–Barré syndrome."[4]

1981 Buffalo Bills Draft
Round Selection Player Position College Notes
1 28 Booker Moore RB Penn State
2 49 Chris Williams DB LSU
50 Byron Franklin WR Auburn
3 76 Mike Mosley WR Texas A&M
84 Robert Geathers DT South Carolina State
5 135 Calvin Clark DE Purdue
6 161 Robert Holt WR Baylor
7 188 Steve Doolittle LB Colorado
9 241 Robb Riddick RB Millersville (PA)
10 272 Justin Cross OT Western Colorado
11 299 Buster Barnett TE Jackson State
12 326 Keith Clark LB Memphis State

Personnel[]

Staff/Coaches[]

1981 Buffalo Bills staff
Front Office
  • Majority Owner/Team President – Ralph Wilson
  • General Manager – Stew Barber
  • Vice President/Minority Owner – Pat McGroder

Coaching Staff

  • Head Coach – Chuck Knox
  • Assistant Head Coach - - Tom Catlin

Offensive Coaches

  • Offensive Coordinator / Offensive Line -
  • Running Backs Coach -
  • Quarterbacks Coach - Kay Stephenson
  • Wide Receivers Coach -

Defensive/Special Teams Coaches

Special Assignments'

  • Special Assignments Coach -

Roster[]

1981 Buffalo Bills roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists


Practice squad



Rookies in italics

Regular season[]

Schedule[]

Week Date Opponent Result Attendance
1 September 6, 1981 New York Jets W 31–0
79,754
2 September 13, 1981 at Baltimore Colts W 35–3
45,772
3 September 17, 1981 Philadelphia Eagles L 20–14
78,331
4 September 27, 1981 at Cincinnati Bengals L 27–24
46,418
5 October 4, 1981 Baltimore Colts W 23–17
77,811
6 October 12, 1981 Miami Dolphins W 31–21
78,576
7 October 18, 1981 at New York Jets L 33–14
54,607
8 October 25, 1981 Denver Broncos W 9–7
77,757
9 November 1, 1981 Cleveland Browns W 22–13
78,266
10 November 9, 1981 at Dallas Cowboys L 27–14
62,583
11 November 15, 1981 at St. Louis Cardinals L 24–0
46,214
12 November 22, 1981 New England Patriots W 20–17
71,593
13 November 29, 1981 Washington Redskins W 21–14
59,624
14 December 6, 1981 at San Diego Chargers W 28–27
51,488
15 December 13, 1981 at New England Patriots W 19–10
42,549
16 December 19, 1981 at Miami Dolphins L 16–6
72,596

Standings[]

AFC East
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
Miami Dolphins(2) 11 4 1 .719 5–2–1 8–3–1 345 275 W4
New York Jets(4) 10 5 1 .656 6–1–1 8–5–1 355 287 W2
Buffalo Bills(5) 10 6 0 .625 6–2 9–3 311 276 L1
Baltimore Colts 2 14 0 .125 2–6 2–10 259 533 W1
New England Patriots 2 14 0 .125 0–8 2–10 322 370 L9

Game Summaries[]

Week 9[]

1 234Total
Browns 0 337 13
• Bills 6 727 22
  • Date: November 1
  • Location: Rich Stadium
  • Game start: 1:00 PM EST
  • Game attendance: 78,266
  • Game weather: 51 °F (11 °C) • 9 miles per hour (14 km/h; 7.8 kn)
  • TV announcers (NBC): Don Criqui

Week 10[]

1 234Total
Bills 7 700 14
• Cowboys 7 0200 27
  • Date: November 9, 1981
  • Location: Texas Stadium
  • Game start: 9:00 PM EST
  • Game attendance: 62,583
  • Game weather: 50 °F (10 °C) • 20 miles per hour (32 km/h; 17 kn)
  • Referee: Dick Jorgensen
  • TV announcers (ABC Monday Night Football): Frank Gifford, Don Meredith, and Howard Cosell

Week 14[]

Buffalo Bills at San Diego Chargers
1 234Total
Bills 7 7140 28
Chargers 7 1433 27
  • Date: December 6
  • Location: Jack Murphy Stadium, San Diego, California
  • Game start: 4:00pm PST
  • Game weather: 59 °F, wind 9 mph
  • Referee: Fred Wyant
  • TV announcers (NBC): Dick Enberg and Merlin Olsen

Coming off their win at home against the Washington Redskins, the Buffalo Bills traveled to San Diego to face the Chargers and their potent offense. Buffalo's defense would face a tall task in slowing the Chargers who, in their previous two games, outscored their opponents 89–38. This game was a clash of style that pitted the Chargers and their pass-oriented Air Coryell offense versus Chuck Knox and his run-heavy, ball control offense. Defensively the teams also contrasted starkly with the Chargers ranking near the bottom of the NFL (26th overall), and the Bills ranking among the top defenses (6th overall). In the 1st quarter both teams traded rushing touchdowns as Chuck Muncie scored on a 9-yard run to give the home a lead, and Bills' quarterback Joe Ferguson scored on a 3-yard run to tie the game. The 2nd quarter produced a 21-point flurry that began when Dan Fouts threw a touchdown pass of 17 yards to Wes Chandler. The Bills answered when Roosevelt Leaks scored on a 9-yard run to tie the game briefly at 14–14. Dan Fouts put the Chargers ahead before the half when he connected with Kellen Winslow on a 67-yard touchdown pass. In the 3rd quarter the Bills tied the game when Roosevelt Leaks scored his second touchdown of the game on a 1-yard run. The Chargers took back the lead with Rolf Benirschke kicking a 29-yard field goal to give the Chargers a 24–21 lead. The Bills answered with a fourth rushing touchdown when Joe Cribbs scored on a 1-yard run. The Chargers cut the Bills' lead to 28–27 in fourth quarter when Rolf Benirschke kicked a 27-yard field. The Bills hung on to win the game and upset the heavily favored Chargers. Despite the Chargers outgaining the Bills 482 to 318 in total yards, the Bills forced three Chargers turnovers (1 fumble, 2 INTs) that allowed the Bills to keep the Chargers' potent offense on the sideline. With the win the Bills improved to 9–5.

Stats

  • Dan Fouts 28/42, 343 Yds, 2 TD, INT
  • Chuck Muncie 22 Rush, 113 Rush Yds, 1 Rush TD
  • Kellen Winslow 6 Rec, 126 Yds, 1 TD
  • Joe Ferguson 13/29, 248 Yds, 4 Rush Yds, 1 Rush TD
  • Roosevelt Leaks 8 Rush, 28 Rush Yds, 2 Rush TDs
  • Frank Lewis 5 Rec, 113 Yds

Playoffs[]

Week Date Opponent Result Attendance
Wildcard December 27, 1981 at New York Jets W 31–27
57,050
Divisional January 3, 1982 at Cincinnati Bengals L 28–21
55,420

Wild Card[]

1 234Total
• Bills 17 707 31
Jets 0 10314 27
  • Date: December 27
  • Location: Shea Stadium Flushing, Queens, New York
  • Game start: 12:00 p.m. EST
  • Game attendance: 57,050
  • Game weather: Light rain; 37 °F; wind 17
  • Referee: Bob McElwee
  • TV announcers (NBC): Charlie Jones and Len Dawson

The Bills traveled to Shea Stadium, where the Jets were playing in their first playoff game since the 1970 merger. In a cold rain the Jets got off to a poor start as Bruce Harper fumbled the opening kickoff at his 25 and Charles Romes ran back the fumble for a touchdown only sixteen seconds into the matchup. The Bills raced to a 24–0 lead in the second quarter as Frank Lewis caught two Joe Ferguson passes for touchdowns; the first was a pass from the Bills 40 yard line caught by Lewis at the Jets 32 and run in, then Joe Cribbs caught a 50-yarder, setting up Lewis' second catch; later Rufus Bess picked off Richard Todd and ran back 49 yards, setting up a field goal. But in the second the Jets began clawing back as Mickey Shuler caught a 30-yard touchdown in traffic (it was Shuler's first catch of the entire 1981 season) from Todd and following a Greg Buttle interception of Ferguson Pat Leahy booted a 26-yard field goal. A 19-yarder from Leahy was the only score in the third, then early in the fourth Ferguson was picked off by Donald Dykes, but Todd was intercepted by Bill Simpson. Following the Simpson pick Ferguson was intercepted again, by Jerry Holmes, but the Bills defense forced a mediocre punt by Chuck Ramsey caught at the 50. Three plays later Joe Cribbs caught a toss-sweep and ran in a 45-yard touchdown for Buffalo. But the Jets refused to give in; Todd tossed a 30-yard score to Bobby Jones and later Kevin Long ran in a 1-yard score. The Jets got the ball back in the final minutes, but a sack by Fred Smerlas led to a last-ditch Todd drive to the endzone; after completions to Gaffney and Scott Dierking Todd fired from the Bills 11 for the endzone but was picked off by Bill Simpson, ending a 31–27 Bills playoff win, only the third in the team's history and first since winning back-to-back AFL titles in the 1964 and '65 seasons.

Divisional[]

1 234Total
Bills 0 777 21
• Bengals 14 077 28
  • Date: January 3
  • Location: Cincinnati, OH
  • Game start: 1:00 p.m. EST
  • Game attendance: 55,420
  • Game weather: 45 °F; wind 14
  • Referee: Pat Haggerty
  • TV announcers (NBC): Dick Enberg and Merlin Olsen


After their thrilling Wild Card win in Shea Stadium, the Buffalo Bills traveled to Riverfront Stadium to play the #1 seeded Cincinnati Bengals. The Bills fell behind early when Cincinnati scored two rushing touchdowns in the 1st quarter to take a 14-0 lead. The Bills began chipping away at the deficit in the 2nd quarter when Joe Cribbs scored from 1 yard out and cut Cincinnati's lead to 14-7 at the half. In the 3rd quarter the Bills tied the game when Joe Cribbs scored on a 44-yard touchdown run. The Bengals promptly retook the lead with a 20-yard touchdown run from Charles Alexander. The Bills fought back and tied the game again in the 4th quarter when Jerry Butler caught a 21-yard touchdown pass from Joe Ferguson. The Bengals broke the deadlock and took a 28-21 lead when Cris Collinsworth scored on a 16-yard touchdown pass from Ken Anderson. The Bills attempted to tie the game at the end of regulation, but Joe Ferguson's fourth down pass fell incomplete and Cincinnati held on for the win.

Awards and honors[]

All-Pros[]

First Team

  • Fred Smerlas, Nose tackle

Second Team

  • Joe Cribbs, Running back
  • Frank Lewis, Wide receiver

References[]

  1. ^ NFL.com: Hooks' Hail Mary catch video
  2. ^ Buffalo Rumblings: Best Moments in Bills History, No. 21: Roland Hooks' Hail Mary Catch
  3. ^ Had the Bills lost the game, the last wild card spot would have gone to 10–6 Denver, whom the Bills beat out for the spot by virtue of a head-to-head tiebreaker.
  4. ^ a b Sports Illustrated, Sept. 7, 1981: PRO FOOTBALL '81, by Paul Zimmerman, page 48
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