1986 Denver Broncos season

Last updated

1986 Denver Broncos season
Owner Pat Bowlen
General manager John Beake
Head coach Dan Reeves
Home stadium Mile High Stadium
Results
Record11–5
Division place1st AFC West
PlayoffsWon Divisional Playoffs
(vs. Patriots) 22–17
Won AFC Championship
(at Browns) 23–20 (OT)
Lost Super Bowl XXI
(vs. Giants) 20–39
Pro Bowlers QB John Elway
RB Sammy Winder
G Keith Bishop
DE Rulon Jones
LB Karl Mecklenburg
S Dennis Smith

The 1986 Denver Broncos season was the franchise's 27th year in professional football and its 17th with the National Football League (NFL). They finished the regular season with a record of 11–5, returned to the playoffs after a one-year absence. In the Divisional Playoffs the Broncos defeated the New England Patriots 22–17. Then won the AFC Championship over the Cleveland Browns 23–20. At Super Bowl XXI the New York Giants dominated the second half of the game and won 39–20. This would be the first of back to back Super Bowl losses for the team.

Contents

This season would be the final season for the remaining members of the Orange Crush Defense that had carried the Broncos to their first Super Bowl nine seasons earlier, as nose tackle Rubin Carter, linebacker Tom Jackson, cornerback Louis Wright and safety Steve Foley would all retire after the season.

Offseason

NFL draft

1986 Denver Broncos draft
RoundPickPlayerPositionCollegeNotes
4104 Jim Juriga   Guard Illinois
5134 Tony Colorito   Nose tackle USC
6151 Orson Mobley   Tight end Salem
6161 Mark Jackson   Wide receiver Purdue
7188 Raymond Phillips   Linebacker North Carolina State
8217 Bruce Klosterman   Linebacker South Dakota State
9244 Joe Thomas   Wide receiver Mississippi Valley State
10271Victor Hall  Tight end Jackson State
11301 Thomas Dendy   Running back South Carolina
      Made roster        Pro Football Hall of Fame     *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

Personnel

Staff

1986 Denver Broncos staff

Front office

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches

Special teams coaches

Strength and conditioning

Roster

1986 Denver Broncos 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

[1]

Regular season

The Broncos won their first six games of the season, before being defeated by the then-5-1 New York Jets on Monday Night Football. They won two more games to improve to 8–1, tied with the Jets for the best record in the league. Although they would go 3–4 down the stretch, alternating wins and losses, Denver still finished ahead of the Seahawks and Chiefs in first place in the AFC West.

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueAttendance
1September 7 Los Angeles Raiders W 38–361–0 Mile High Stadium 75,695
2September 15at Pittsburgh Steelers W 21–102–0 Three Rivers Stadium 57,305
3September 21at Philadelphia Eagles W 33–73–0 Veterans Stadium 63,839
4September 28 New England Patriots W 27–204–0Mile High Stadium75,804
5October 5 Dallas Cowboys W 29–145–0Mile High Stadium76,082
6October 12at San Diego Chargers W 31–146–0 Jack Murphy Stadium 55,662
7October 20at New York Jets L 10–226–1 Giants Stadium 73,759
8October 26 Seattle Seahawks W 20–137–1Mile High Stadium76,089
9November 2at Los Angeles Raiders W 21–108–1 Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 90,153
10November 9 San Diego Chargers L 3–98–2Mile High Stadium75,012
11November 16 Kansas City Chiefs W 38–179–2Mile High Stadium75,745
12November 23at New York Giants L 16–199–3 Giants Stadium 75,116
13November 30 Cincinnati Bengals W 34–2810–3Mile High Stadium58,705
14December 7at Kansas City Chiefs L 10–3710–4 Arrowhead Stadium 47,019
15December 13 Washington Redskins W 31–3011–4Mile High Stadium75,905
16December 20at Seattle Seahawks L 16–4111–5 Kingdome 63,697
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Game summaries

Week 1

1234Total
Raiders16614036
Broncos71471038

[2]

Week 2

1234Total
Broncos077721
Steelers003710
  • Date: September 15
  • Location: Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh
  • Game start: 9:00 p.m. EST
  • Game attendance: 57,305
  • Game weather: 64 °F (18 °C); wind 7 mph (11 km/h)
  • Referee: Bob McElwee
  • TV announcers (ABC): Frank Gifford and Al Michaels

[3]

Week 12

Week 12: Denver Broncos at New York Giants
Quarter1234Total
Broncos (9–3)333716
Giants (10–2)0103619

at Giants Stadium

  • Date: November 23, 1986
  • Game time: 11:00 a.m. MST
  • Game weather: 43 °F (6 °C), relative humidity 70%, wind 10 mph (16 km/h)
  • Game attendance: 75,116
  • Referee: Tom Dooley
  • TV announcers (NBC): Dick Enberg (play-by-play), Merlin Olsen (color commentator)
  • Box Score

Standings

AFC West
WLTPCTDIVCONFPFPASTK
Denver Broncos (2)1150.6885–38–4378327L1
Kansas City Chiefs (5)1060.6255–39–5358326W3
Seattle Seahawks 1060.6255–37–5366293W5
Los Angeles Raiders 880.5004–47–5323346L4
San Diego Chargers 4120.2501–74–8335396L2

Playoffs

RoundDateOpponent (seed)ResultRecordVenueAttendance
Divisional January 4, 1987 New England Patriots (3)W 22–171–0 Mile High Stadium 76,105
AFC Championship January 11, 1987at Cleveland Browns (1) W 23–20 (OT) 2–0 Cleveland Stadium 79,915
Super Bowl XXI January 25, 1987 New York Giants (N1)L 20–392–1 Rose Bowl 101,063

They won their divisional playoff game against the Patriots at home 22–17. They then played the Cleveland Browns in Cleveland for the AFC Championship. The game culminated in the famous "Drive", where John Elway led a 98-yard drive for a touchdown pass to Mark Jackson to tie the game and send it to overtime, where they won by a field goal, 23–20.

AFC Divisional Playoff

AFC: Denver Broncos 22, New England Patriots 17

Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Patriots0107017
Broncos3710222

at Mile High Stadium, Denver

Game information
  • Scoring
    • DEN – FG R. Karlis 27 DEN 3–0
    • NE – S. Morgan 19 pass from Eason (Franklin kick) NE 7–3
    • DEN – J. Elway 22 run (Karlis kick) DEN 10–7
    • NE – FG A. Franklin 38 10–10
    • DEN – field goal Karlis 22 DEN 13–10
    • NE – S. Morgan 45 pass from Eason (Franklin kick) NE 17–13
    • DEN – V. Johnson 48 pass from Elway (Karlis kick) DEN 20–17
    • DEN – Safety, Eason sacked by R. Jones in end zone DEN 22–17

Broncos go to the AFC Championship Game and win to the Cleveland Browns in The Drive 23-20. But lost in Super Bowl XXI to the Giants 39-20.

AFC Championship game

Quarter1234OTTotal
Broncos01037323
Browns73010020

at Cleveland Stadium, Cleveland

This game is best remembered for The Drive when the Broncos drove 98 yards to tie the game with 37 seconds left in regulation, and Denver kicker Rich Karlis made the game-winning 33-yard field goal 5:38 into overtime.

The Browns scored first when quarterback Bernie Kosar threw a 6-yard touchdown pass to running back Herman Fontenot at the end of an 86-yard drive. But the Broncos then scored 10 unanswered points: Karlis' 19-yard field goal and running back Gerald Willhite's 1-yard rushing touchdown. Cleveland kicker Mark Moseley's 29-yard field goal before halftime tied the score, 10–10. The teams exchanged punts before Kosar completed a 48-yard touchdown pass to Brian Brennan with 5:43 remaining in regulation. Elway then led his team from their own 2-yard line to tie the game on wide receiver Mark Jackson's 5-yard touchdown reception with 37 seconds left in regulation. Karlis' game-winning field goal in overtime capped a 60-yard drive after the Browns were forced to punt.

The Drive play-by-play

The Browns had jumped to a 20–13 lead and the Broncos had muffed the ensuing kickoff when Elway took over, first-and-10 on their own 2-yard line, with 5:32 to play in the game.

1. – First down and 10, Denver 2-yard line. Sammy Winder 5-yard pass from Elway.

2. – Second down and 5, Denver 7-yard line. Winder 3-yard run.

3. – Third down and 2, Denver 10-yard line. Winder 2-yard run.

4. – First down and 10, Denver 12-yard line. Winder 3-yard run.

5. – Second down and 7, Denver 15-yard line. Elway 11-yard run.

6. – First down and 10, Denver 26-yard line. Steve Sewell 22-yard pass from Elway.

7. – First down and 10, Denver 48-yard line. S. Watson 12-yard pass from Elway.

Two-minute warning

8. – First down and 10, Cleveland 40-yard line (1:59 remaining). Incomplete pass by Elway, intended for Vance Johnson.

9. – Second down and 10, Cleveland 40-yard line (1:52 remaining). Dave Puzzilli sack of Elway, 8-yard loss.

10. – Third down and 18, Cleveland 48-yard line (1:47 remaining). Mark Jackson 20-yard pass from Elway.

11. – First down and 10, Cleveland 28-yard line (1:19 remaining). Incomplete pass by Elway, intended for Watson.

12. – Second down and 10, Cleveland 28-yard line (1:10 remaining). Steve Sewell 14-yard pass from Elway.

13. – First down and 10, Cleveland 14-yard line (:57 remaining). Incomplete pass by Elway, intended for Watson.

14. – Second down and 10, Cleveland 14-yard line (:42 remaining). John Elway 9-yard run (scramble).

15. – Third down and 1, Cleveland 5-yard line (:39 remaining). Mark Jackson 5-yard pass from Elway for the touchdown. Rich Karlis then adds the extra point to tie the game. Broncos go to Super Bowl XXI but lost to the Giants 39-20.

Super Bowl XXI

They played the Giants in Super Bowl XXI, losing 20–39, the first of Elway's five Super Bowls and the first of his three losses. Despite leading 10–9 at halftime, the Broncos collapsed in the second half as the Giants scored 30 points to Denver's ten.

Super Bowl XXI: New York Giants 39, Denver Broncos 20

Super Bowl XXI: Denver Broncos vs. New York Giants
Quarter1234Total
Broncos (13–6)10001020
Giants (17–2)72171339

at Rose Bowl, Pasadena, California

Broncos lost and in 1987 finished 10-4-1 but lost in Super Bowl XXII to the Redskins 42-10.

Statistics

Team stats

Denver scored 378 points during the year, sixth in the NFL. They gave up 327 points, 15th in the league.

The Broncos were 17th in the league in total offense, with 5,489 yards. They had 3,811 passing yards and 1,678 rushing yards. They had 22 passing touchdowns and 17 rushing touchdowns.

They were 17th in the league with 3,755 passing yards given up and 15th with 1,891 rushing yards given up. They were 21st in overall defense with 5,646 yards given up.

The team's 11–5 record is their sixth-best 16-game season in franchise history.

Player stats

Awards and honors

References

  1. "1986 Denver Broncos starters and roster". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved November 12, 2014.
  2. Pro-Football-Reference.com
  3. Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved 2014-Sep-06.