American Football Wiki
1980 New England Patriots season
Owner Billy Sullivan
Head Coach Ron Erhardt
General Manager Bucko Kilroy
Home Field Schaeffer Stadium
Results
Record 10–6
Place 2nd AFC East
Playoff Finish did not qualify
Pro Bowlers DE Julius Adams
FS Tim Fox
G John Hannah
CB Mike Haynes
WR Stanley Morgan
LB Steve Nelson
K John Smith
Uniform
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Timeline
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1979 1981

The New England Patriots finished the National Football League's 1980 season with a record of ten wins and six losses, and finished second in the AFC East division.

Bill Parcells, then the linebackers coach with the team, has stated that the players on this Patriots team gave him his famous "Tuna" nickname when he asked, "What do you think I am, Charlie the Tuna?"

Staff[]

New England Patriots 1980 staff
Front Office
  • President – Billy Sullivan
  • Executive Vice President – Chuck Sullivan
  • General Manager – Bucko Kilroy
  • Assistant General Manager – Patrick Sullivan
  • Director of College Scouting – Mike Holovak
  • Director of Pro Scouting – Bill McPeak

Head Coaches

  • Head Coach – Ron Erhardt

Offensive Coaches

  • Quarterbacks/Special Assistant to the Head Coach – John Polonchek
  • Offensive Backfield – Tom Yewcic
  • Receivers – Raymond Berry
  • Offensive Line – Jim Ringo
 

Defensive Coaches

Special Teams Coaches

Regular season[]

Season summary[]

The Patriots scored 441 points in 1980, a club record that stood until the 2007 squad shattered it. For the second straight season they missed the playoffs by one game.

Schedule[]

Week Date Opponent Result Stadium Record Att.
1 Sept. 7 Cleveland W 34–17 Schaefer Stadium 1–0
49,222
2 Sept. 14 Atlanta L 21–37 Schaefer Stadium 1–1
48,321
3 Sept. 21 at Seattle W 37–31 Kingdome 2–1
61,035
4 Sept. 29 (Mon) Denver W 23–14 Schaefer Stadium 3–1
59,602
5 Oct. 5 at NY Jets W 21–11 Shea Stadium 4–1
53,603
6 Oct. 12 Miami W 34–0 Schaefer Stadium 5–1
60,377
7 Oct. 19 at Baltimore W 37–21 Memorial Stadium 6–1
53,924
8 Oct. 26 at Buffalo L 13–31 Rich Stadium 6–2
75,092
9 Nov. 2 NY Jets W 34–21 Schaefer Stadium 7–2
60,834
10 Nov. 10 (Mon) at Houston L 34–38 Astrodome 7–3
51,524
11 Nov. 16 Los Angeles L 14–17 Schaefer Stadium 7–4
60,609
12 Nov. 23 Baltimore W 47–21 Schaefer Stadium 8–4
60,994
13 Nov. 30 at San Francisco L 17–21 Candlestick Park 8–5
45,254
14 Dec. 8 (Mon) at Miami L 13–16 Miami Orange Bowl 8–6
63,292
15 Dec. 14 Buffalo W 24–2 Schaefer Stadium 9–6
58,324
16 Dec. 21 at New Orleans W 38–27 Superdome 10–6
38,277

Game Summaries[]

Week 13: at San Francisco 49ers[]

Week 13: New England Patriots at San Francisco 49ers;– Game summary
1 2 3 4 Total
Patriots 0 3 7 7 17
49ers 7 7 7 0 21

at Candlestick Park, San Francisco, California

Game information
First quarter

Second quarter

  • NE – John Smith 42 yard field goal, 49ers 7-3.
  • SF – Earl Cooper 15 yard pass from Joe Montana, (Ray Wersching kick), 49ers 14-3.

Third quarter

  • SF – Eason Ramson 2 yard pass from Joe Montana, (Ray Wersching kick), 49ers 21-3.
  • NE – Mosi Tatupo 2 yard rush, (John Smith kick), 49ers 21-10.

Fourth quarter

  • NE – Mosi Tatupo 1 yard rush, (John Smith kick), 49ers 21-17.

Top passers

Top rushers

  • NE – Don Calhoun - 13 rushes, 23 yards
  • SF – Earl Cooper – 17 rushes, 60 yards

Top receivers

  • NE – Stanley Morgan - 4 receptions, 142 yards
  • SF – Eason Ramson - 3 receptions, 32 yards, TD

Standings[]

AFC East
Team W L T PCT PF PA
Buffalo Bills 11 5 0 .688 320 260
New England Patriots 10 6 0 .625 441 325
Miami Dolphins 8 8 0 .500 266 305
Baltimore Colts 7 9 0 .438 355 387
New York Jets 4 12 0 .250 302 395

Notable games[]

The game lead tied or changed eight times as Jim Zorn and Steve Grogan combined for 583 passing yards, seven touchdowns, and two picks. Trailing 27–14 after three quarters the Seahawks behind Zorn touchdowns to Steve Largent and Sam McCullum took a 31–30 lead before Grogan found tight end Don Hasselbeck (whose son Matt would quarterback the Seahawks over two decades later) for the game-winning touchdown of a 37–31 final.

The Patriots opened the first of three Monday Night Football appearances on their schedule hosting the Broncos for the fourth time since the AFL-NFL merger. A Matt Robinson touchdown in the first quarter put the Broncos up 7–0, then the game lead changed three times in the next two quarters behind Patriot scores by Vagas Ferguson, Stanley Morgan, and kicker John Smith and an Otis Armstrong touchdown for the Broncos, before the Patriots inched away in the fourth to a 23–14 win. It was the fourth straight win for the home team in the rivalry and would be the Patriots' last win over the Broncos until 1999.

The Patriots edged the Jets 21–11, sacking Richard Todd five times. It had been a rough week leading up to the game for Todd, as he broke the little toe on his left foot after accidentally kicking a table at home, then broke the right little toe after his foot was stepped on by Stan Waldemore on a play-action drill during practice – Waldemore was subbing for Randy Rasmussen after Rasmussen was injured earlier in practice.

The Patriots and Dolphins had split their season series the previous four seasons, and 1980 proved no different. The Patriots hammered the Dolphins at Schaefer Stadium 34–0 as Don Calhoun and Allan Clark had rushing touchdowns, Steve Grogan and Matt Cavanaugh each had a touchdown throw, and kicker John Smith kicked two field goals. The Dolphins had four fumbles and recovered all four, but also threw four picks.

In their second Monday Night Football game the Patriots fell behind 24–6 at halftime as they faced an Oilers squad that included two players who'd haunted the Pats during their Oakland Raiders days – Ken Stabler and Dave Casper. The Patriots managed four touchdowns in the second half and recovered an onside kick late in the fourth quarter, but Grogan was intercepted in the endzone and thus the Oilers had the game 38-34.

Steve Grogan started despite injuries to both knees because backup Matt Cavanaugh (a future Niners backup for Joe Montana) was coming off knee surgery. Grogan was picked off five times in a 21–17 loss and "I got crucified in the newspapers, but no one knew I was playing on two bad knees."[1]

The Dolphins got revenge in a 16–13 overtime win at the Miami Orange Bowl. The Patriots clawed to a 13–6 lead in the fourth quarter, then the Dolphins forced overtime with a David Woodley throw to Nat Moore in the fourth, then Uwe von Schamann won it with a 23-yard field goal in the extra quarter. The game, though, wound up taking a back seat to the announcement by Howard Cosell that John Lennon had been shot and killed.

With a playoff berth out of reach the Patriots outdueled the Saints 38–27 behind three Matt Cavanaugh touchdown throws and rushing scores by Don Calhoun and Mosi Tatupu. Running back Jack Holmes threw a touchdown to fellow RB Jimmy Rogers as the Saints clawed to a 10–0 first quarter lead, but the lead was gone before halftime. Archie Manning threw for 301 yards and a score to Wes Chandler against a Patriots organization his sons Peyton and Eli would battle in another time.

References[]

  1. Felger, Michael (2004) TALES FROM THE PATRIOTS SIDELINES (IL: Sports Publishing LLC), from Forward ISBN 1-59670-154-4