1969 Philadelphia Eagles season

The 1969 Philadelphia Eagles season was the franchise's thirty-seventh season in the National Football League. The team improved on its previous output of 2–12, winning four games.[1]

1969 Philadelphia Eagles season
OwnerLeonard Tose
Head coachJerry Williams
Home fieldFranklin Field
Results
Record4–9–1
Division place4th NFL Capitol
Playoff finishDid not qualify

Despite the improvement, the team failed to qualify for the playoffs for the ninth consecutive season.

Background

edit

The Eagles wore both green (for road games) and white (for home games) helmets during the 1969 season.[2] The white helmets then became part of the Eagles' permanent uniform for the next four seasons.[3]

Philadelphia became the first NFL team to play home games on artificial turf when Franklin Field installed AstroTurf prior to this season. The Houston Oilers of the AFL was on its second season on AstroTurf; the team moved into the Astrodome the previous year.

Offseason

edit

NFL Draft

edit

The 1969 NFL/AFL draft was the third and final year in which the NFL and American Football League (AFL) held a joint draft of college players. The draft took place on January 28–29, and the Eagles alternated with the Atlanta Falcons in picking second and third over the seventeen rounds.

The draft began with first overall pick of O. J. Simpson, the Heisman Trophy-winning running back from USC, by the AFL's Buffalo Bills.

During the fourteen-game 1968 season, the Eagles had no wins until November 28 (week twelve) when the team defeated the Detroit Lions (4–8–2) in Detroit 12–0, and on December 8 (week thirteen), defeated the New Orleans Saints (4–9–1) in Philadelphia 29–17.

These victories gave the Eagles a better record than Buffalo (1–12–1) by half a game, and equaled the record of the Atlanta Falcons (2–12), which won the coin flip for the rights to the second pick in the draft, offensive tackle George Kunz from Notre Dame. Future hall of famer "Mean" Joe Greene, defensive tackle from North Texas State, was taken fourth by the Pittsburgh Steelers (2–11–1).

Player selections

edit
RoundPickPlayerPositionSchool
13Leroy KeyesRBPurdue
228Ernest CallowayLBTexas Southern
355Pick Traded to Cleveland Browns
369Bill BradleyDBTexas
480Bob KuechenbergGNotre Dame
5107Jim AndersonGMissouri
6132Richard BarnhorstTEXavier
7159Mike SchmeisingRBSt. Olaf
8184Bill HobbsLBTexas A&M
9211Kent LawrenceWRGeorgia
9218Lynn BussLBWisconsin
10236Sonny WadeQBEmory & Henry
10243Donnie ShanklinRBKansas
11263Jim MarcumDBTexas-Arlington
12288Gary AdamsDBArkansas
13314Wade KeyTESouthwest Texas State
14340James RossTBishop
15367Leon AngevineWRPenn State
16392Tom McClintonDBSouthern
17419Bob HaackTLinfield (Ore.)

Roster

edit
1969 Philadelphia Eagles roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists


Practice squad



Rookies in italics

Schedule

edit
WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueAttendance
1September 21Cleveland BrownsL 20–270–1Franklin Field60,658
2September 28Pittsburgh SteelersW 41–271–1Franklin Field60,658
3October 5Dallas CowboysL 7–381–2Franklin Field60,658
4October 13at Baltimore ColtsL 20–241–3Municipal Stadium56,864
5October 19at Dallas CowboysL 14–491–4Cotton Bowl71,509
6October 26New Orleans SaintsW 13–102–4Frankin Field60,658
7November 2at New York GiantsW 23–203–4Yankee Stadium62,912
8November 9at Washington RedskinsT 28–283–4–1RFK Stadium50,502
9November 16Los Angeles RamsL 17–233–5–1Franklin Field60,658
10November 23at St. Louis CardinalsW 34–304–5–1Busch Memorial Stadium45,512
11November 30at New Orleans SaintsL 17–264–6–1Tulane Stadium72,805
12December 7Washington RedskinsL 29–344–7–1Franklin Field60,658
13December 14Atlanta FalconsL 3–274–8–1Franklin Field60,658
14December 21at San Francisco 49ersL 13–144–9–1Kezar Stadium25,391
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Standings

edit
NFL Capitol
WLTPCTDIVCONFPFPASTK
Dallas Cowboys1121.8466–09–1369223W3
Washington Redskins752.5833–2–16–3–1307319L1
New Orleans Saints590.3571–54–6311393W1
Philadelphia Eagles491.3081–4–14–5–1279377L4

Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.

References

edit
  1. ^ 1969 Philadelphia Eagles
  2. ^ "1969 season". Archived from the original on October 14, 2014. Retrieved January 23, 2015.
  3. ^ "Gridiron Uniform Database: Philadelphia Eagles". Archived from the original on October 14, 2014. Retrieved January 23, 2015.