1976 Philadelphia Eagles season

The 1976 Philadelphia Eagles season was the franchise's 44th in the National Football League. It was the first year with the team for head coach Dick Vermeil, who would bring the Eagles to their first playoff berth in eighteen seasons in 1978 and then their first Super Bowl just two seasons later. As for this season, the Eagles matched their 4–10 record from last season and failed to reach the playoffs for the sixteenth consecutive season. This was also the tenth straight season for Philadelphia in which they did not end the season with an above .500 record.

1976 Philadelphia Eagles season
OwnerLeonard Tose
Head coachDick Vermeil
General managerJim Murray
Home fieldVeterans Stadium
Results
Record4–10
Division place4th NFC East
Playoff finishDid not qualify
Pro BowlersLB Bill Bergey

Offseason

After coaching #12 UCLA (8–2–1) to a win over #1 Ohio State (11–0) in the 1976 Rose Bowl by the score of 23–10 Dick Vermeil was offered the Head coaching job of the Philadelphia Eagles. Because of bad trades by past Eagles coaches, Vermeil did not have a 1st round draft pick until 1978, but Vermeil did big things with the talent he had inherited from previous coaches.

NFL Draft

The 1976 NFL Draft was an annual player selection meeting held on April 8–9, 1976. It lasted 17 rounds, with the expansion Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Seattle Seahawks making the first two selections. The expansion teams were also given a pair of extra picks at the end of each of rounds 2–5.

The Philadelphia Eagles would pick 9th in the 17 rounds. They still had to overcome the traded away draft picks of the Mike McCormack era.

The draft began with first overall pick of Hall of Famer Lee Roy Selmon, Defensive End from Oklahoma, Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Eagles had to wait until the fourth round and make a selection with the 111th pick.

Player selections

The table[1] shows the Eagles selections and what picks they had that were traded away and the team that ended up with that pick. It is possible the Eagles’ pick ended up with this team via another team that the Eagles made a trade with.

= Pro Bowler[note 1] = Hall of Famer
Rd PICK PLAYER POS COLLEGE
19Pick Traded to Cincinnati Bengals
218Pick Traded to Cincinnati Bengals
369Pick Traded to Cincinnati Bengals
4a101Pick Traded to San Francisco 49ers
4b111Mike SmithDEFlorida
4cPick Acquired from New England Patriots
Pick Traded to Cleveland Browns
5135Greg JohnsonDTFlorida State
6165Kirk JohnsonTHoward Payne
7191Carl HairstonDEMaryland-Eastern Shore
8216Richard LaFargueCArkansas
9a247Mike Hogan
Pick Acquired from Chicago Bears
RBTennessee-Chattanooga
9b248Richard OsborneTETexas A&M
10273Herb LuskRBLong Beach State
11300Mike GilbertDTSan Diego State
12228Pick Traded to New York Jets
13a353Terry Tautolo
Pick Acquired from New York Jets
LBUCLA
13b358Steve EbbeckeDBVillanova
14385Melvin ShyDBTennessee State
15412Brett WhitePunterUCLA
16439Steve CampassiRBKentucky
17470Anthony TerryDBCalifornia-Davis

Roster

1976 Philadelphia Eagles roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists

{{{reserve_lists}}}


Practice squad {{{practice_squad}}}


Rookies in italics

Regular season

Vincent Papale

Vincent Papale, at 6-feet 2-inches (1.88 m) and 195 pounds (88.5 kg), was a long shot to make the Eagles roster. At age 30, Papale became the oldest rookie in the history of the NFL to play without the benefit of college football experience (other than kickers). He went on to play wide receiver and special teams for the Eagles.

Papale earned the nickname “Rocky” (after the 1976 Sylvester Stallone movie and character) while playing with Philadelphia. He is the subject of the Disney movie Invincible, starring Mark Wahlberg.

Schedule

A game against the St. Louis Cardinals on October 10 was originally scheduled to be played at Veterans Stadium, however was relocated to St. Louis due to a Philadelphia Phillies game being played at Veterans Stadium on the same day. Consequently, the game on November 7 that was originally scheduled to be played in St. Louis was moved to Philadelphia.

Week Date Opponent Result Attendance
1 September 12, 1976 at Dallas Cowboys L 27–7
54,052
2 September 19, 1976 New York Giants W 20–7
66,005
3 September 27, 1976 Washington Redskins L 20–17
66,005
4 October 3, 1976 at Atlanta Falcons W 14–13
45,535
5 October 10, 1976 at St. Louis Cardinals L 33–14
44,933
6 October 17, 1976 at Green Bay Packers L 28–13
55,398
7 October 24, 1976 Minnesota Vikings L 31–12
56,233
8 October 31, 1976 at New York Giants W 10–0
68,690
9 November 7, 1976 St. Louis Cardinals L 17–14
65,505
10 November 14, 1976 at Cleveland Browns L 24–3
62,120
11 November 21, 1976 Oakland Raiders L 26–7
65,990
12 November 28, 1976 at Washington Redskins L 24–0
54,292
13 December 5, 1976 Dallas Cowboys L 26–7
55,072
14 December 12, 1976 Seattle Seahawks W 27–10
37,949

Week 2

1 234Total
Giants 0 007 7
Eagles 0 1037 20

[2]

Standings

NFC East
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
Dallas Cowboys(2) 11 3 0 .786 6–2 9–3 296 194 L1
Washington Redskins(4) 10 4 0 .714 6–2 9–3 291 217 W4
St. Louis Cardinals 10 4 0 .714 5–3 9–3 309 267 W2
Philadelphia Eagles 4 10 0 .286 2–6 4–8 165 286 W1
New York Giants 3 11 0 .214 1–7 3–9 170 250 L1

Notes

  1. Players are identified as a Pro Bowler if they were selected for the Pro-Bowl at any time in their career.

References

  1. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on December 29, 2009. Retrieved 2008-05-22.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. Pro-Football-Reference.com
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