Английская Википедия:1988 NFL season

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox NFL Шаблон:NFL Team Maps 1988–91

Файл:Warren Moon and Mike Rozier 1987.jpg
Quarterback Warren Moon (left) and running back Mike Rozier (right) of the Houston Oilers were among the league's top passers and rushers, respectively.

The 1988 NFL season was the 69th regular season of the National Football League. The Cardinals relocated from St. Louis, Missouri, to the Phoenix, Arizona, area becoming the Phoenix Cardinals but remained in the NFC East division. The playoff races came down to the regular season's final week, with the Seattle Seahawks winning the AFC West by one game, and the Philadelphia Eagles and San Francisco 49ers winning their respective divisions in a five-way tie, with the New Orleans Saints and New York Giants losing the NFC Wild Card berth to the Los Angeles Rams on tiebreakers.

1988 marked the final seasons for legendary head coaches Tom Landry of Dallas and Bill Walsh of San Francisco as well as the final full year for commissioner Pete Rozelle.

The season ended with Super Bowl XXIII when the San Francisco 49ers defeated the Cincinnati Bengals 20–16 at the Joe Robbie Stadium in Florida.

Transactions

Retirements

Draft

The 1988 NFL Draft was held from April 24 to 25, 1988 at New York City’s Marriott Marquis. With the first pick, the Atlanta Falcons selected linebacker Aundray Bruce from the Auburn University.

Officiating changes

Johnny Grier became the first African-American in NFL history to be promoted to referee.[2] Grier replaced long time referee Bob Frederic, who retired in the offseason. Grier was the field judge in the previous season's Super Bowl XXII, which was the same game that Doug Williams of the Washington Redskins became the first African-American quarterback to win the Super Bowl.

Major rule changes

  • A standard system of two time intervals between plays are established (and would be timed using the play clock): For normal plays, the offensive team has 45 seconds to snap the ball after the previous play is signaled dead. After time outs and other administrative stoppages, the time limit is 30 seconds beginning after the Referee signals that the ball is ready to resume play.
  • If a fumble occurs during an extra point attempt, only the fumbling player can recover and/or advance the ball. This change closes a loophole in the "Stabler Fumble Rule" that was enacted during the 1979 NFL season in reaction to the Holy Roller Game.
  • The penalty for running into the kicker was changed from five yards and an automatic first down to just five yards.

1988 deaths

Preseason

American Bowl

A series of National Football League pre-season exhibition games that were held at sites outside the United States, the only American Bowl game in 1988 was held at London's Wembley Stadium.

Date Winning Team Score Losing Team Score Stadium City
July 31, 1988 Miami Dolphins 27 San Francisco 49ers 21 Wembley Stadium Шаблон:Flagicon London

Regular season

Scheduling formula

    Inter-conference
AFC East vs NFC Central
AFC Central vs NFC East
AFC West vs NFC West

Highlights of the 1988 season included:

  • Thanksgiving: Two games were played on Thursday, November 24, featuring Minnesota at Detroit and Houston at Dallas, with Minnesota and Houston winning.

Final standings

Шаблон:Col-begin Шаблон:Col-2 Шаблон:1988 AFC East standings Шаблон:1988 AFC Central standings Шаблон:1988 AFC West standings Шаблон:Col-2 Шаблон:1988 NFC East standings Шаблон:1988 NFC Central standings Шаблон:1988 NFC West standings Шаблон:Col-end

Tiebreakers

  • Cincinnati was the top AFC playoff seed ahead of Buffalo based on head-to-head victory (1–0).
  • Indianapolis finished ahead of New England in the AFC East based on better record against common opponents (7–5 to Patriots’ 6–6).
  • Cleveland finished ahead of Houston in the AFC Central based on better division record (4–2 to Oilers’ 3–3).
  • San Francisco was the second NFC playoff seed ahead of Philadelphia on better record against common opponents (5–3 to Eagles’ 5–4).
  • Philadelphia finished first in the NFC East based on head-to-head sweep of the N.Y. Giants (2–0).
  • Washington finished third in the NFC East based on better division record (4–4) than Phoenix (3–5).
  • Detroit finished fourth in the NFC Central based on head-to-head sweep of Green Bay (2–0).
  • San Francisco finished first in the NFC West based on better head-to-head record (3–1) against the L.A. Rams (2–2) and New Orleans (1–3).
  • The L.A. Rams finished second in the NFC West based on better division record (4–2) than New Orleans (3–3).
  • Rams earned the #2 NFC Wild Card based on better conference record (8–4, .667) than the N.Y. Giants (9–5, .642) and New Orleans (6–6, .500).

Playoffs

Файл:1989 AFC Championship Game - Buffalo Bills at Cincinnati Bengals 1989-01-08 (ticket).jpg
A ticket for the AFC Championship Game between the Bengals and the Bills.

Шаблон:Main article Шаблон:1988–89 NFL playoffs

Statistical leaders

Team

Points scored Cincinnati Bengals (448)
Total yards gained Cincinnati Bengals (6,057)
Yards rushing Cincinnati Bengals (2,710)
Yards passing Miami Dolphins (4,516)
Fewest points allowed Chicago Bears (215)
Fewest total yards allowed Minnesota Vikings (4,091)
Fewest rushing yards allowed Chicago Bears (1,326)
Fewest passing yards allowed Kansas City Chiefs (2,434)

Awards

Most Valuable Player Boomer Esiason, quarterback, Cincinnati
Coach of the Year Mike Ditka, Chicago
Offensive Player of the Year Roger Craig, running back, San Francisco
Defensive Player of the Year Mike Singletary, linebacker, Chicago
Offensive Rookie of the Year John Stephens, running back, New England
Defensive Rookie of the Year Erik McMillan, safety, NY Jets
NFL Comeback Player of the Year Greg Bell, running back, LA Rams
NFL Man of the Year Steve Largent, wide receiver, Seattle
Super Bowl Most Valuable Player Jerry Rice, wide receiver, San Francisco

Coaching changes

Offseason

In-season

Stadium changes

The relocated Phoenix Cardinals moved from Busch Memorial Stadium in St. Louis to Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona

Uniform changes

  • Referees were outfitted with white hats while all other officials wore black hats, matching the standard practice in college and high school football. From 1979 through 1987, the reverse convention was used, with referees wearing black hats with all other officials wearing white hats.
  • The Green Bay Packers removed the elliptical green circles with the player's number from the hip area of the pants, one of the additions made in 1984 by former coach Forrest Gregg.
  • The New England Patriots dropped the red road pants they had worn since 1984. The red pants returned in 1990.
  • The San Diego Chargers switched to a darker shade of blue on their jerseys, from gold to blue face masks, and from gold to white lightning bolts. The helmets remained unchanged until a complete redesign in 2007.

Television

This was the second year under the league's three-year broadcast contracts with ABC, CBS, NBC, and ESPN to televise Monday Night Football, the NFC package, the AFC package, and Sunday Night Football, respectively. Joe Theismann took over as lead color commentator in ESPN's booth, replacing Roy Firestone, while the weekly "guest color commentator" spot was discontinued. Meanwhile, Dick Butkus joined The NFL Today as analyst, alongside host Brent Musburger and Irv Cross.[7]

A number of NBC's regular NFL commentators were temporarily replaced while they called the network's coverage of the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea from September 17 to October 2. Among them, Len Berman returned to the NFL on NBC pregame show to fill-in for host Bob Costas, while Curt Gowdy, Ray Scott, Chuck Thompson, Marty Glickman, Merle Harmon, and Al DeRogatis filled-in on the network's various broadcast crews.

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:1988 NFL season by team Шаблон:NFL seasons