1972 Miami Dolphins season

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1972 Miami Dolphins season
Head coach Don Shula
Owner Joe Robbie
Home field Miami Orange Bowl
Results
Record 14–0
Division place 1st AFC East
Playoff finish Won Divisional Playoffs (Browns) 20–14
Won Conference Championship (Steelers) 21–17
Won Super Bowl VII (Redskins) 14–7
File:1986 Jeno's Pizza - 33 - Jim Kiick.jpg
Jim Kiick (center right) rushing the ball for Miami in Super Bowl VII.

The 1972 Miami Dolphins season was the team’s seventh season, and third season in the National Football League. The 1972 Dolphins are the only National Football League team to win the Super Bowl with a perfect season. The undefeated campaign was led by coach Don Shula and notable players Bob Griese, Earl Morrall, and Larry Csonka. The 1972 Dolphins went 14–0 in the regular season and won all three post-season games, including Super Bowl VII against the Washington Redskins, to finish 17–0.

The team remains the only NFL team to complete an entire season undefeated and untied from the opening game through the Super Bowl (or championship game). The closest team to repeating this feat was the 2007 New England Patriots, who recorded the most wins in a season in NFL history by going 18–0 before losing to the New York Giants in Super Bowl XLII (the Dolphins won 18 straight through and until the first week of the 1973 season). The 2007 Patriots were able to record a better regular season than the 1972 Dolphins because the NFL lengthened it to 16 games in 1978. Besides the 1972 Dolphins and 2007 Patriots, the only other team to ever complete the regular season undefeated and untied is the Chicago Bears, who accomplished the feat in both 1934 and 1942. Both of those Bears teams however failed to win the NFL Championship Game.

During the 1972 season, Bob Griese’s ankle was broken in Week 5 as he was sacked by San Diego Chargers defensive tackle Ron East and defensive end Deacon Jones. He was replaced by veteran Earl Morrall for the rest of the regular season. Griese returned to the field as a substitute in the final regular season game against the Baltimore Colts and then also relieved Morrall for the second half of the AFC Championship game versus the Pittsburgh Steelers and then started for Miami in Super Bowl VII. On the ground, running backs Larry Csonka and Mercury Morris became the first teammates to each rush for 1,000 yards in a season. Paul Warfield led the receivers, averaging over 20 yards per catch on 29 receptions. The offensive line included future Hall of Fame members Jim Langer and Larry Little and Pro Bowler Norm Evans.

The 1972 Dolphins defensive unit, called the No-Name Defense because Miami’s impressive offense received much more publicity, as well as Cowboys coach Tom Landry coining the phrase in an interview, was the league’s best that year. It was led by linebacker Nick Buoniconti, end Bill Stanfill, tackle Manny Fernandez, and safeties Dick Anderson and Jake Scott. In all, nine players—Csonka, Morris, Warfield, Little, Evans, Buoniconti, Stanfill, Anderson and Scott—were selected to the Pro Bowl, and Morrall, Stanfill and Anderson were named 1st team All-Pro.[1]

On August 20, 2013, four decades after their accomplishment, President Barack Obama hosted the 1972 Dolphins, noting that they "never got their White House visit".[2][3]

Regular season

Preseason

Week Date Opponent Result Record
1 August 5, 1972 at Detroit Lions L 23–31 0–1
2 August 12, 1972 Green Bay Packers L 13–14 0–2
3 August 19, 1972 at Cincinnati Bengals W 35–17 1–2
4 August 25, 1972 Atlanta Falcons W 24–10 2–2
5 August 31, 1972 at Washington Redskins L 24–27 2–3
6 September 10, 1972 Minnesota Vikings W 21–19 3–3

Schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Record Attendance
1 September 17, 1972 at Kansas City Chiefs W 20–10 1–0
79,829
2 September 24, 1972 Houston Oilers W 34–13 2–0
77,821
3 October 1, 1972 at Minnesota Vikings W 16–14 3–0
47,900
4 October 8, 1972 at New York Jets W 27–17 4–0
63,841
5 October 15, 1972 San Diego Chargers W 24–10 5–0
80,010
6 October 22, 1972 Buffalo Bills W 24–23 6–0
80,010
7 October 29, 1972 at Baltimore Colts W 23–0 7–0
60,000
8 November 5, 1972 at Buffalo Bills W 30–16 8–0
46,206
9 November 12, 1972 New England Patriots W 52–0 9–0
80,010
10 November 19, 1972 New York Jets W 28–24 10–0
80,010
11 November 27, 1972 St. Louis Cardinals W 31–10 11–0
80,010
12 December 3, 1972 at New England Patriots W 37–21 12–0
60,999
13 December 10, 1972 at New York Giants W 23–13 13–0
62,728
14 December 16, 1972 Baltimore Colts W 16–0 14–0
80,010

Game summaries

Week 4

1 2 3 4 Total
• Dolphins 0 14 3 10 27
Jets 7 0 3 7 17

[4]

Postseason

Game Date Opponent Result Record Attendance
Divisional playoffs December 24, 1972 Cleveland Browns W 20–14 15–0
80,010
Conference championship December 31, 1972 at Pittsburgh Steelers W 21–17 16–0
50,350
Super Bowl VII January 14, 1973 Washington Redskins W 14–7 17–0
90,182

Standings

AFC East
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
Miami Dolphins 14 0 0 1.000 8–0 11–0 385 171 W14
New York Jets 7 7 0 .500 6–2 6–5 367 324 L2
Baltimore Colts 5 9 0 .357 4–4 5–6 235 252 L2
Buffalo Bills 4 9 1 .321 2–6 2–9 257 377 W1
New England Patriots 3 11 0 .214 0–8 0–11 192 446 L1

Urban legend

There is an urban legend that every season, whenever the last remaining undefeated NFL team loses its first game, all the surviving members of the 1972 Miami Dolphins open bottles of champagne in celebration. Coach Don Shula tried to play down the myth by saying that two players, Dick Anderson and Nick Buoniconti, who live near each other sometimes have a toast together.[5][6] However, in a college football broadcast on ABC, following the loss of an undefeated team, Bob Griese, after being asked by his colleague, commented that he called former Dolphins, and they had Diet Cokes together. That celebration comes with the connotation that they no longer drink alcoholic beverages, but that a toast was customary.[7]

The perfect season

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The 1972 Miami Dolphins were the first team to execute a perfect regular season in the post-merger NFL. They are the only team in NFL history to go undefeated and untied in the regular season and postseason.

After their loss to the Dallas Cowboys in Super Bowl VI, Don Shula had vowed to not get to the Super Bowl but to win it. To achieve this, he made the team watch the loss 2 times at training camp. Shula would later go on to say:

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I think that's when we all came together for what was going happen for the next two years.What I stressed in the locker room was that we wanted to make sure this wouldn't happen again. Our goal was not to go to the Super Bowl but to win it.[8]

An enduring controversy is that the 1972 Dolphins played a soft schedule not possible under the current scheduling formula.[9] Prior to the implementation of position scheduling in 1978, opponents were set by the NFL on a rotating basis. Statistically, the Dolphins’ 1972 regular-season opponents had an aggregate winning percentage of .397 and only two opponents had winning records that year (both the Kansas City Chiefs and New York Giants finished 8-6).

The Dolphins were beneficiaries of a weak AFC East which saw the Colts lapse from a perennial contender into a three-year stretch in which they would win only 11 games; a Bills team which had yet to find its legs with O.J. Simpson and the return of coach Lou Saban; a dysfunctional Patriots organization which had little to no talent to surround former No. 1 overall draft choice Jim Plunkett; and a Jets squad with a porous defense, offsetting the benefits of Joe Namath remaining healthy throughout the season and an emerging John Riggins in the running game. Miami also caught a scheduling break by facing an Oilers squad in the midst of back-to-back 1-13 seasons, and a Cardinals squad which appeared to lack direction by rotating its starting quarterbacks instead of giving the job full-time to Jim Hart. Also, the Dolphins caught the Vikings in the midst of a massive transformation following the return of Fran Tarkenton. Minnesota missed the playoffs for the only time between 1968 and 1978 in 1972, going 7-7.

This is not however a record: the 1975 Minnesota Vikings, who began 10–0 and finished 12–2, played fourteen opponents with an average winning percentage of .332 and nine of their games were against teams 4–10 or worse.[10]

However, the NFL’s rules at the time also forced the undefeated Dolphins (14-0) to play the Steelers (11-3) in Pittsburgh for the AFC Championship Game, a game in which the Dolphins won on the road to reach the Super Bowl. Subsequent rule changes have since changed the playoff structure so that this would never happen again. Since the 1975 season, teams that have won their division and have had a superior record than their opponent (as was the case with the 1972 Dolphins when they faced the Steelers) would play their postseason games at home.

Yet, no matter how willing many contributors want to down-play the 1972 Miami Dolphin team's accomplishment, it was not a fluke. The Miami Dolphins 1972 team consisted mostly of the same core of players it had from 1970 through 1974 (five seasons) was the most dominant professional football team in the NFL during that stretch. In those five seasons the Dolphins made the playoffs all five years, won 3 AFC Championships, went to the Super Bowl 3 times winning 2 and went undefeated - untied while winning the Super Bowl in 1972. They posted a record of 64-14-1. They were also the fastest franchise to win a Super Bowl after its inception and joining the NFL (7 years after they started in the AFL and then 3 years after becoming a member of the NFL). "Miami Dolphins". Pro-Football Reference.

Other teams are occasionally cited as undefeated based on their regular season record. Among these are:

Teams since the first uniform 14-game regular season in 1961 which have come close to matching the perfect season are:

Television coverage

Fans in the Miami area could not catch the home games on television – they had to be there at the games, listen to the radio, or travel to watch the games on TV. For Miami-Dade residents in 1972, that would have meant driving northwest on Florida's Turnpike towards Orlando, or north on Interstate 95 to areas along the east coast of the state which picked up signals from Orlando and/or Jacksonville.

1972 was the last year that all home games were blacked out on local television even if they sold out. Super Bowl VII was the first game to be televised in the market of origin under new rules which would come into effect the following season – games must be sold out within 72 hours of kickoff time in order to be aired in the market of origin. As all Super Bowls except the first have sold out, none have been blacked out since (tickets sell out rather quickly due to high demand to see such a major game).

Coincidentally, President Richard Nixon, many of his White House staff, and members of Congress were angered by the blackout rules, since they could not watch the Dolphins' eventual Super Bowl opponent, the Redskins, play at home, even though all games at RFK Stadium had been sold out since 1966.

2013 White House visit

File:Potus-1973-dolphins.jpg
President Obama honoring the 1972 team at the White House in 2013

Four decades later in 2013, the team was invited by President Barack Obama to visit the White House. This occurred on August 20, when Obama noted that the team "never got their White House visit".[14] As to why this team had not been invited by President Richard Nixon in 1973, Larry Csonka stated that he did not feel neglected as it had not been a regular occurrence at the time.[15] However, MSNBC reported that this was a deliberate snub by Nixon, who was a Redskins fan.[16] Obama had previously invited the 1985 Bears to the White House, as their visit had gotten cancelled due to the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster by President Reagan. President Obama, a Chicago resident and Bears fan,[17] had called them the greatest team ever, but during the Dolphins' visit he called his own words into question, also noting that the only loss the 1985 Bears had was to the Dolphins.[18] Bob Kuechenberg, Jim Langer, and Manny Fernandez all refused to attend due to political differences with the Obama administration.[19]

Notes and references

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  4. Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved 2014-Jul-28.
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  7. Caesar, Dan; "‘72 Dolphins share a Coke and a smile"; in St. Louis Post-Dispatch, December 19, 1972; p. B8
  8. https://books.google.com/books?id=-0ukAS0WhtAC&pg=PA56&lpg=PA56&dq=did+don+shula+make+his+team+watch+the+super+bowl+loss&source=bl&ots=p1sa91HfuJ&sig=OpVHz4ddkK42uS_FABd_5SoQ30Q&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjnkZaoiv3MAhXCQD4KHWiWBxoQ6AEIJzAE#v=onepage&q=did%20don%20shula%20make%20his%20team%20watch%20the%20super%20bowl%20loss&f=false
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  10. 1975 Minnesota Vikings
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  13. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/04/sports/football/04game.html
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External links