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1992 Houston Oilers season
Owner Bud Adams
Head Coach Jack Pardee
Home Field Astrodome
Results
Record 10–6
Place 2nd AFC Central
Playoff Finish Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at Bills) 38–41 (OT)
Timeline
Previous Season Next Season
1991 1993

The 1992 Houston Oilers season was the team's 33rd season, and their 23rd in the NFL.

The Oilers reached the playoffs for the 6th consecutive season, which was the longest such streak in the NFL at the time. (They would extend that to seven straight playoff appearances the next season.) During their 1992 season, Houston finished the season 10–6, good enough for 2nd place in the FC Central. However, in the postseason, the Oilers would fall on the losing end of what would become one of the most substantial come from behind victories in NFL history, dropping a 35–3 lead in the Wild Card game against the Buffalo Bills only to lose by a score of 41–38. As noted at the time, the Buffalo Bills victory in this game is deemed the greatest comeback in NFL history (regular or postseason) and is referred to as "The Comeback" (or by then-Oiler fans, "The Choke").

NFL Draft[]

1992 Houston Oilers draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
2 50 Eddie Robinson Linebacker Alabama State
3 77 Corey Harris Wide receiver Vanderbilt
4 108 Mike Mooney Offensive tackle Georgia Tech
5 133 Joe Bowden Linebacker Oklahoma
5 135 Tony Brown Defensive back Fresno State
5 136 Tim Roberts Defensive tackle Southern Miss
6 162 Mario Bailey Wide receiver Washington
7 189 Elbert Turner Wide receiver Illinois
8 220 Bucky Richardson Quarterback Texas A&M
9 247 Bernard Dafney Offensive tackle Tennessee
10 274 Dion Johnson Wide receiver East Carolina
11 301 Anthony Davis Linebacker Utah
12 332 Joe Wood Placekicker Air Force
      Made roster  

[1]

Personnel[]

Staff[]

1992 Houston Oilers final staff
Front Office
  • Owner/Chairman of the Board/President – Bud Adams
  • Executive Vice President/General Manager – Mike Holovak
  • Assistant General Manager – Floyd Reese

Head Coaches

Offensive Coaches

  • Offensive Coordinator – Kevin Gilbride
  • Running Backs – Frank Novak
  • Receivers – Chris Palmer
  • Offensive Line – Bob Young
  • Assistant Offensive Line – Richard Smith
  Defensive Coaches
  • Defensive Coordinator – Jim Eddy
  • Defensive Line – Jim Stanley
  • Linebackers – Frank Bush
  • Defensive Backs – Pat Thomas
  • Quality Control – Gregg Williams

Special Teams Coaches

  • Special Teams – Richard Smith

Strength and Conditioning

  • Strength and Rehabilitation – Steve Watterson

Roster[]

Final roster[]

1991 Houston Oilers roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

  • 33 Gary Brown
  • 30 Victor Jones
  • 20 Allen Pinkett KR
  • 44 Lorenzo White

Wide receivers

  • 87 Pat Coleman PR
  • 80 Curtis Duncan
  • 81 Ernest Givins
  • 83 Leonard Harris
  • 85 Drew Hill
  • 84 Haywood Jeffires
  • 86 Alex Johnson
  • 82 Tony Jones
  • 89 Frank Miotke

Tight ends

  • Vacant
Offensive linemen
  • 66 Doug Dawson G
  • 77 Kevin Donnalley G
  • 55 John Flannery G
  • 78 Don Maggs T
  • 74 Bruce Matthews C
  • 63 Mike Munchak G
  • 70 Dean Steinkuhler T
  • 73 David Williams T

Defensive linemen

  • 76 Jeff Alm DT
  • 79 Ray Childress DT
  • 95 William Fuller DE
  • 90 Ezra Johnson DE
  • 96 Sean Jones DE
  • 94 Glenn Montgomery DT
  • 99 Doug Smith DT
  • 97 Lee Williams DE
Linebackers
  • 51 Eric Fairs MLB
  • 93 Rick Graf OLB
  • 56 Scott Kozak OLB
  • 57 Lamar Lathon OLB
  • 91 Johnny Meads OLB
  • 53 Eugene Seale MLB
  • 54 Al Smith MLB

Defensive backs

  • 22 Herbie Anderson CB
  • 28 Cris Dishman CB
  • 38 Mike Dumas FS
  • 24 Steve Jackson CB
  • 23 Richard Johnson CB
  • 29 Darryll Lewis CB
  • 25 Bubba McDowell SS
  • 26 Bo Orlando FS
  • 31 Marcus Robertson FS

Special teams

  •  3 Al Del Greco K
  •  6 Ian Howfield K
  •  7 Kent Sullivan P
Reserve lists
  •  9 Greg Montgomery P (IR) Injury icon 2
  • 72 Willis Peguese DE (IR) Injury icon 2

Practice/Taxi Squad



Rookies in italics

[2]

Regular season[]

Schedule[]

Week Date Opponent Result Attendance
1 September 6, 1992 Pittsburgh Steelers L 29–24
63,713
2 September 13, 1992 at Indianapolis Colts W 20–10
44,851
3 September 20, 1992 Kansas City Chiefs W 23–20
60,955
4 September 27, 1992 San Diego Chargers W 27–0
57,491
5 Bye week
6 October 11, 1992 at Cincinnati Bengals W 38–24
54,254
7 October 18, 1992 at Denver Broncos L 27–21
74,827
8 October 25, 1992 Cincinnati Bengals W 26–10
58,701
9 November 1, 1992 at Pittsburgh Steelers L 21–20
58,074
10 November 8, 1992 Cleveland Browns L 24–14
57,348
11 November 15, 1992 at Minnesota Vikings W 17–13
56,726
12 November 22, 1992 at Miami Dolphins L 19–16
63,597
13 November 26, 1992 at Detroit Lions W 24–21
73,711
14 December 7, 1992 Chicago Bears W 24–7
62,193
15 December 13, 1992 Green Bay Packers L 16–14
57,285
16 December 20, 1992 at Cleveland Browns W 17–14
59,898
17 December 27, 1992 Buffalo Bills W 27–3
61,742

Standings[]

AFC Central standings
Team W L T PCT PF PA
Pittsburgh Steelers 11 5 0 .688 299 225
Houston Oilers 10 6 0 .625 352 258
Cleveland Browns 7 9 0 .438 272 275
Cincinnati Bengals 5 11 0 .313 274 364

Playoffs[]

AFC Wildcard[]

The Oilers held a 35-3 lead on the Buffalo Bills. Bills backup quarterback Frank Reich led the Bills on a 35–3 run in the second half and overtime against the Oilers defense en route to a 41–38 overtime victory. The game is the largest comeback in NFL history, regular or postseason. Houston, whose 1992 team some believed gave them their best chance to win the Super Bowl, made several sweeping changes in the offseason.

Defensive coordinator Jim Eddy was fired shortly after the game. Oilers cornerback Chris Dishman called it "the biggest choke in history,"[3]

According to statistics site Football Outsiders, who does play-by-play analyses of each team each season, the Oilers were the best team in the AFC at the end of the 1992 season. "So if you are a Houston Oilers/Tennessee Titans fan," says the site, "who agonizes over the Frank Reich comeback game blowing your franchise's best shot at a Super Bowl title, well, here's another opportunity to feel sad."[4]


Scoring summary

Team 1 2 3 4 Total
Oilers 7 21 7 3 {{{RTotal}}}
Bills 3 0 28 7 {{{HTotal}}}


  • HOU – Jeffires 3-yard pass from Moon (Del Greco kick) 7–0 HOU
  • BUF – FG Christie 36-yards 7–3 HOU
  • HOU – Slaughter 7-yard pass from Moon (Del Greco kick) 14–3 HOU
  • HOU – Duncan 26-yard pass from Moon (Del Greco kick) 21–3 HOU
  • HOU – Jeffires 27-yard pass from Moon (Del Greco kick) 28–3 HOU
  • HOU – McDowell 58-yard interception return (Del Greco kick) 35–3 HOU
  • BUF – K. Davis 1-yard run (Christie kick) 35–10 HOU
  • BUF – Beebe 38-yard pass from Reich (Christie kick) 35–17 HOU
  • BUF – Reed 26-yard pass from Reich (Christie kick) 35–24 HOU
  • BUF – Reed 18-yard pass from Reich (Christie kick) 35–31 HOU
  • BUF – Reed 17-yard pass from Reich (Christie kick) 38–35 BUF
  • HOU – FG Del Greco 26-yards 38–38 tie
  • BUF – FG Christie 32-yards 41–38 BUF

Awards and records[]

  • Haywood Jeffires, Pro Bowl Selection
  • Haywood Jeffires, All Pro Selection
  • Warren Moon, AFC Passing Leader (Passer Rating 89.3) [5]
  • Warren Moon, Pro Bowl Selection
  • Lorenzo White, Pro Bowl Selection

Milestones[]

References[]

  1. 1992 Houston Oilers draftees. Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  2. 1991 Houston Oilers starters, roster, and players. Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  3. JOHN McCLAIN, ""WE CHOKED'/Oilers squander 32-point lead in historic 41-38 loss to Bills"|Houston Chronicle, 4 January, 1993|Retrieved 8 January 2012
  4. Football Outsiders: 1992 DVOA Ratings and Commentary
  5. NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York, NY, ISBN 0-7611-2480-2, p. 450

External links[]

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