1979 Houston Oilers season | |
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Head coach | Bum Phillips |
Owner | Bud Adams |
Home field | Astrodome |
Results | |
Record | 11–5 |
Division place | 2nd AFC Central |
Playoff finish | Lost AFC Championship Game (Steelers) |
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Scoring summary | ||||
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Q1 | DAL | Pearson 56-yard pass from Staubach (Septien kick) | DAL 7–0 | |
Q1 | HOU | Campbell 61-yard run (Fritsch kick) | Tie 7–7 | |
Q1 | DAL | Newhouse 21-yard pass from Staubach (Septien kick) | DAL 14–7 | |
Q2 | HOU | Fritsch 27-yard field goal | DAL 14–10 | |
Q2 | DAL | Dorsett 1-yard run (Septien kick) | DAL 21–10 | |
Q2 | HOU | Campbell 27-yard run (Fritsch kick) | DAL 21–17 | |
Q3 | HOU | Renfro 47-yard pass from Pastorini (kick failed) | HOU 23–21 | |
Q4 | DAL | Septien 44-yard field goal | DAL 24–23 | |
Q4 | HOU | Burrough 32-yard pass from Pastorini (Fritsch kick) | HOU 30–24 |
The 1979 season was the Houston Oilers 20th season and their tenth in the National Football League (NFL). The franchise scored 362 points while the defense gave up 331 points. Their record of 11 wins and 5 losses resulted in a second-place finish in the AFC Central Division. The Oilers appeared once on Monday Night Football and returned to the AFC Championship Game for the second consecutive year. Earl Campbell would lead the NFL in rushing for the second consecutive year and set a franchise record for most touchdowns in a season with 19.
The Oilers managed to shut down the Broncos offense for most of the game en route to a 13–7 win.
The Oilers offense, playing without starting quarterback Dan Pastorini, receiver Ken Burrough, and running back Earl Campbell, could only generate 259 yard compared to San Diego's 385. But they still won the game, largely due to the effort of rookie safety Vernon Perry, who set a playoff record with 4 interceptions as the Oilers defeated the Chargers, 17–14. In his first career playoff game, Chargers future Hall of Fame quarterback Dan Fouts threw for 333 yards, but was intercepted 5 times.
The Steelers held the Oilers to only 24 rushing yards, but were also aided by a controversial non-touchdown call on Mike Renfro to come away with a 27–13 win.