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1968 Baltimore Colts season
16th season in franchise history; first Super Bowl appearance and loss From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The 1968 Baltimore Colts season was the 16th season for the team in the National Football League (NFL). Led by sixth-year head coach Don Shula, they finished the regular season with a record of 13 wins and 1 loss, and won the Western Conference's Coastal division.
The previous season, the Colts finished 11–1–2, tied for the best in the league, but were excluded from the playoffs. They lost a tiebreaker with the Los Angeles Rams for the Coastal Division title in 1967; the other three teams in the NFL postseason, all division winners, had nine wins each.
The Colts finished the 1968 regular season with the team's defense having allowed just 144 points — tying the NFL record for a 14-game season.[1]
In 1968, Baltimore won the Western Conference playoff game with the Minnesota Vikings and the NFL Championship Game in a shutout of the Cleveland Browns, but then lost to the New York Jets of the American Football League in Super Bowl III.[2] Hall of Fame quarterback Johnny Unitas had been injured during the pre-season, so Earl Morrall led the offense. He would finish the season as the league leader in touchdown passes with 26. Shula decided to bring Unitas back in during the second half of the Super Bowl, to no avail.
After the upset, instead of championship rings, luxury watches were given to the team as a consolation prize to commemorate their NFL Championship victory over Cleveland.[3]
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NFL draft
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Personnel
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Staff/Coaches
1968 Baltimore Colts staff | ||||||
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Front office
Coaching staff
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Defensive coaches
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Roster
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Regular season
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Schedule
Game summaries
Week 11: vs. Minnesota Vikings
Minnesota Vikings (6–4) at Baltimore Colts (9–1) – Game summary
at Memorial Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
- Date: November 24, 1968
- Game time: 1:00 p.m.
- Game weather: 50 °F or 10 °C, relative humidity 63%, wind 9 miles per hour (14 km/h; 7.8 kn)
- TV: CBS
- [4]
This would be the last occasion the Colts hosted the Vikings in the regular season until 2000 in Indianapolis. The intervening gap — following the playoff meeting between the same teams at the same venue — of 31 seasons constitutes the second-longest gap without one team visiting another in NFL history.[a]
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Standings
- Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.
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Post-season
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The team made it to the playoffs as winners of the Coastal division and hosted the Minnesota Vikings of the Central division for the Western Conference title. The Colts took a 21–0 lead and went on to win 24–14.[6] They then traveled to Cleveland to take on the Browns in the NFL Championship Game. Baltimore's only loss of the season came at home to the Browns in October, falling 20–30.[7][8] In late December, the Colts defense was on top of their game as they shut out the Browns 34–0 to gain their third NFL title.[9][10][11] The 1968 Colts were being touted as "the greatest football team in history."
In Super Bowl III, the Colts took on the heavy underdog New York Jets led by quarterback Joe Namath, with the Colts favored by 19+1⁄2 points.[12][13][14] Before the game, former NFL star and coach Norm Van Brocklin ridiculed the AFL, saying "This will be Namath's first professional football game." Three days before the game, Namath was being heckled in Miami and he responded by saying: "We’re going to win Sunday. I guarantee it."[14][15][16] The Jets beat the Colts 16–7 in one of the biggest upsets in American sports history.[2]
Perhaps the biggest effect of the Colts' loss is that the predominant sentiment that the AFL was not strong enough to merge with the NFL was firmly squelched.[17]
Conference Playoff: vs. Minnesota Vikings
Minnesota Vikings (8–6) at Baltimore Colts (13–1) – Game summary
at Memorial Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
- Date: December 22, 1968
- Game time: 1:00 p.m.
- Game weather: 33 °F or 0.6 °C, relative humidity 73%, wind 7 miles per hour (11 km/h; 6.1 kn), wind chill 27 °F or −2.8 °C
- TV: CBS
- [18]
Following upon their last regular-season visit to the Colts for 32 years, the Vikings would visit the Colts for the last time in a competition game until 2000 in their first-ever postseason appearance.
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