1970 Kansas City Chiefs season

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1970 Kansas City Chiefs season
Head Coach Hank Stram
Home Field Municipal Stadium
Results
Record 7-5-2
Place 2nd AFC West
Playoff Finish Did not qualify
Timeline
Previous Season Next Season
1969 1971

The 1970 Kansas City Chiefs season began with the Chiefs attempting the defend their championship but ended with a 7-5-2 record and no playoff berth.

Following their championship success, the Chiefs traded running back Mike Garrett, whom was the club’s all-time leading rusher at the time, to San Diego and replaced in the lineup by Ed Podolak.[1] Despite a 44-24 win against Baltimore on September 28 in just the second-ever telecast of ABC’s Monday Night Football package, the Chiefs owned a 3-3-1 record at the season’s midpoint.[1] One of the season’s pivotal junctures came in a 17-17 tie against Oakland on November 1.[1] The Chiefs were ahead 17-14 when Len Dawson apparently sealed the win, running for a first down which would have allowed Kansas City to run out the clock. While on the ground, Dawson was speared by Raiders defensive end Ben Davidson in an infamous incident that cost the Chiefs a victory and further inflamed the already heated Chiefs-Raiders rivalry.[1] Wide receiver Otis Taylor retaliated and a bench-clearing brawl ensued. Offsetting penalties were called, nullifying Dawson’s first down. The Chiefs were forced to punt and Raiders kicker George Blanda eventually booted a game-tying field with eight seconds remaining. That tie ultimately cost the Chiefs the opportunity to split the AFC West division title with Oakland as Kansas City finished the year with a 7-5-2 record, while the Raiders went 8-4-2.[1]

[edit] Offseason

[edit] NFL Draft

Main article: 1970 NFL Draft
Round Pick Player Position Nationality School/Club Team


[edit] References


1970 NFL season
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AFC East Central West NFC East Central West
Baltimore Cincinnati Denver Dallas Chicago Atlanta
Boston Cleveland Kansas City NY Giants Detroit Los Angeles
Buffalo Houston Oakland Philadelphia Green Bay New Orleans
Miami Pittsburgh San Diego St. Louis Minnesota San Francisco
NY Jets Washington
1970 NFL DraftNFL PlayoffsPro BowlSuper Bowl V