1978 Minnesota Vikings season

Last updated • 2 min readFrom Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia

1978 Minnesota Vikings season
General manager Mike Lynn
Head coach Bud Grant
Home stadium Metropolitan Stadium
Results
Record8–7–1
Division place1st NFC Central
PlayoffsLost Divisional Playoffs
(at Rams) 10–34
Pro Bowlers LB Matt Blair
WR Ahmad Rashad
Uniform
Vikings1975-86.png

The 1978 season was the Minnesota Vikings' 18th in the National Football League (NFL). The Vikings finished with an 8–7–1 record, and finished in first place in the NFC Central division, despite having a regular season point differential of minus 12. The team appeared in the playoffs for the 10th time in 11 years. In the divisional round, the Vikings lost 34–10 to the Los Angeles Rams. Following the season, longtime quarterback Fran Tarkenton retired.

Contents

Offseason

1978 draft

1978 Minnesota Vikings Draft
Draft orderPlayer namePositionCollegeNotes
RoundSelection
1 21 Randy Holloway Defensive end Pittsburgh
248 John Turner Defensive back Miami (FL)
375Whip Walton Linebacker San Diego State
4100 Jim Hough Center Utah State
5132Traded to the New York Giants [A]
6159Traded to the San Francisco 49ers [B]
7186Traded to the Philadelphia Eagles [C]
8204 Mike Wood Placekicker Southeast Missouri State From Seahawks [D]
213Traded to the New York Jets [E]
9240Mike Deutsch Punter Colorado State
10272Hughie Shaw Running back Texas A&I
11299Ron Harris Running back Colorado State
12326Jeff Morrow Offensive tackle Minnesota

Notes

  1. The Vikings traded a fifth-round selection (132nd overall) to the New York Giants in exchange for TE Bob Tucker.
  2. The Vikings traded a sixth-round selection (159th overall) to the San Francisco 49ers in exchange for DB Windlan Hall and CB Nate Allen.
  3. The Vikings traded a seventh-round selection (186th overall) to the Philadelphia Eagles in exchange for S Bill Bradley.
  4. The Vikings traded S Autry Beamon and LB Amos Martin to the Seattle Seahawks in exchange for an eighth-round selection (204th overall).
  5. The Vikings traded their eighth-round selection (213th overall) and a 1979 10th-round selection (263rd overall) to the New York Jets in exchange for S Phil Wise.

Roster

1978 Minnesota Vikings roster
Quarterbacks (QB)

Running backs (RB)

Wide receivers (WR)

Tight ends (TE)

Offensive linemen (OL)

Defensive linemen (DL)

Linebackers (LB)

Defensive backs (DB)

Special teams (ST)

Reserve

Rookies in italics
, 5 practice squad

Preseason

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueAttendance [1]
1August 5 Washington Redskins W 20–131–0 Metropolitan Stadium 46,212
2August 12at Kansas City Chiefs L 13–171–1 Arrowhead Stadium 41,092
3August 18at Miami Dolphins L 22–301–2 Miami Orange Bowl 46,316
4August 26 Buffalo Bills W 30–272–2 Metropolitan Stadium 45,062

Regular season

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueAttendance
1September 3at New Orleans Saints L 24–310–1 Superdome 54,187
2September 11 Denver Broncos W 12–91–1 Metropolitan Stadium 46,508
3September 17 Tampa Bay Buccaneers L 10–161–2 Metropolitan Stadium 46,152
4September 25at Chicago Bears W 24–202–2 Soldier Field 53,551
5October 1at Tampa Bay Buccaneers W 24–73–2 Tampa Stadium 65,972
6October 8at Seattle Seahawks L 28–293–3 Kingdome 62,031
7October 15 Los Angeles Rams L 17–343–4 Metropolitan Stadium 46,551
8October 22 Green Bay Packers W 21–74–4 Metropolitan Stadium 47,411
9October 26at Dallas Cowboys W 21–105–4 Texas Stadium 61,848
10November 5 Detroit Lions W 17–76–4 Metropolitan Stadium 46,008
11November 12 Chicago Bears W 17–147–4 Metropolitan Stadium 43,286
12November 19 San Diego Chargers L 7–137–5 Metropolitan Stadium 38,859
13November 26at Green Bay Packers T 10–10 (OT)7–5–1 Lambeau Field 51,737
14December 3 Philadelphia Eagles W 28–278–5–1 Metropolitan Stadium 38,722
15December 9at Detroit Lions L 14–458–6–1 Silverdome 78,685
16December 17at Oakland Raiders L 20–278–7–1 Oakland Coliseum 44,643

Game summaries

Week 8: vs Green Bay Packers

Week 8: Green Bay Packers at Minnesota Vikings – Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Packers07007
Vikings0140721

at Metropolitan Stadium, Bloomington, Minnesota

Game information

The Vikings won a game they had to win in their bid to win a 10th NFC Central division title in 11 seasons, as Fran Tarkenton completed 26 of 43 passes for 262 yards and three touchdowns, two of them to Ahmad Rashad. "That's pretty amazing for a guy who can't throw a football anymore, isn't it?" said the 38-year-old Tarkenton, who raised his 18-year yardage total to 45,143, the first man to surpass 45,000 yards. Tarkenton's third scoring strike to running back Chuck Foreman just before the half went for 16 yards. Terdell Middleton, who entered the game as the NFC's third leading rusher, scored Green Bay's only touchdown on a 3-yard run midway through the second quarter, giving Green Bay a 7–7 tie. He finished the game with 81 yards on 15 carries.

Standings

NFC Central
WLTPCTDIVCONFPFPASTK
Minnesota Vikings (3)871.5315–2–17–4–1294306L2
Green Bay Packers 871.5315–2–16–5–1249269L2
Detroit Lions 790.4384–45–7290300W2
Chicago Bears 790.4383–57–5253274W2
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 5110.3132–63–11241259L4

Playoffs

WeekDateOpponent (seed)ResultRecordVenueAttendance
DivisionalDecember 31at Los Angeles Rams L 10–340–1 Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 69,631

In 2004, Football Outsiders named the 1978 Vikings as one of the "worst playoff teams ever". [2]

Awards and records

Statistical leaders

CategoryPlayer(s)Value
Passing yards Fran Tarkenton 3,468
Passing touchdowns Fran Tarkenton 25
Rushing yards Chuck Foreman 749
Rushing touchdowns Chuck Foreman 5
Receiving yards Ahmad Rashad 769
Receiving touchdowns Sammy White 9
Points Rick Danmeier 72
Kickoff return yards Kevin Miller 854
Punt return yards Kevin Miller 239
Interceptions Bobby Bryant 7

League rankings

CategoryTotal yardsYards per gameNFL rank
(out of 28)
Passing offense3,243202.72nd
Rushing offense1,53696.028th
Total offense4,779298.717th
Passing defense2,690168.119th
Rushing defense2,116132.310th
Total defense4,806300.414th

References

  1. "1978 Minnesota Vikings (NFL) - Pro Football Archives".
  2. Football Outsiders: Skin of the Teeth: The Worst Playoff Teams Ever