1991 Houston Oilers season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1991 Houston Oilers season
Head Coach Jack Pardee
Home Field Astrodome
Results
Record 11-5
Place 1st AFC Central
Playoff Finish Lost AFC Divisional Playoff to Denver Broncos
Timeline
Previous Season Next Season
1990 1992

The 1991 season was the Houston Oilers 32nd season and their 22nd in the NFL. Haywood Jeffires would become the second Oiler to have 100 receptions in a season. The first Oiler to accomplish the feat was Charley Hennigan in 1964. Jeffires would be the 5th receiver in NFL history to have a 100 reception season. The Oilers scored 386 points and gave up 251 points. The franchise earned its first division title since the AFL-NFL merger. The last division title for the Oilers was in 1967. The franchise finished the season with 11 wins compared to 5 losses and appeared twice on Monday Night Football.

Contents

[edit] Offseason

[edit] NFL Draft

Pick # NFL Team Player Position College
1 (28) Houston Oilers Mike Dumas Defensive Back Indiana
11 (38) Houston Oilers Darryll Lewis Defensive Back Arizona

[edit] Regular Season

  • October 13, 1991 – Warren Moon threw for 423 yards against the New York Jets.
  • November 10, 1991 – Warren Moon threw for 432 yards against the Dallas Cowboys. On that same day, Mark Rypien of the Washington Redskins threw for over 400 yards as well.
  • December 13, 1991 – Haywood Jeffires set an Oilers record with most receptions in one game with 13.

[edit] Season Standings

AFC Central
Team W L T PCT PF PA
Houston Oilers 11 5 0 .688 386 251
Pittsburgh Steelers 7 9 0 .438 292 344
Cleveland Browns 6 10 0 .375 293 298
Cincinnati Bengals 3 13 0 .188 263 435

[edit] Season Schedule

[edit] Roster

Houston Oilers roster
view  talk  edit
Quarterbacks
  •  1 Warren Moon

Running Backs

Wide Receivers

  •  81 Ernest Givins
  •  84 Haywood Jeffires

Tight Ends

Offensive Linemen

Defensive Linemen

Linebackers

Defensive Backs CB

Special Teams

Reserve Lists

Practice Squad

Rookies in italics

[edit] Postseason

[edit] AFC Wild Card

  • Houston Oilers 17, New York Jets 10
1 2 3 4 Total
Jets 0 10 0 0 10
Oilers 7 7 0 3 17

at Astrodome, Houston, Texas

After leading 14-10 at halftime, the Oilers stopped the Jets twice inside the 5-yard line in the second half to preserve the victory. Houston quarterback Warren Moon threw two touchdowns in the first half, both to Ernest Givins for 5 and 20 yards.

[edit] AFC Divisional Playoff

  • Denver Broncos 26, Houston Oilers 24
1 2 3 4 Total
Oilers 14 7 0 3 24
Broncos 6 7 3 10 26

at Mile High Stadium, Denver, Colorado

Trailing 24-23 with 2:07 left in the game, quarterback John Elway led the Broncos from their own 2-yard line to the winning 28-yard field goal with 16 seconds remaining. On the drive, he converted on two fourth downs. On fourth down and 6 from the Denver 28, he rushed for 7 yards. Then on fourth down and 10, he completed a 44-yard pass to wide receiver Vance Johnson.

The Oilers jumped to a 14-0 lead with quarterback Warren Moon's two touchdown passes to wide receivers Haywood Jeffires and Drew Hill for 15 and 9 yards, respectively. Elway then completed a 10-yard touchdown to Johnson, but kicker David Treadwell missed the extra point. Moon responded by throwing a 6-yard touchdown to wide receiver Curtis Duncan to give Houston a 21-6 lead, but Denver running back Greg Lewis scored a 1-yard touchdown before halftime. In the second half, the Oilers were limited to only a 25-yard field goal by kicker Al Del Greco, which gave Houston a 24-16 lead in the fourth quarter. The Broncos then marched 80 yards to score on Lewis' 1-yard touchdown run to cut the deficit to 24-23.

Elway's comeback is now known solely as The Drive II.

[edit] Awards and records

[edit] Milestones

[edit] References

  1. ^ NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York,NY, ISBN 0-7611-2480-2, p. 440
1991 NFL season
v  d  e
AFC East Central West NFC East Central West
Buffalo Cincinnati Denver Dallas Chicago Atlanta
Indianapolis Cleveland Kansas City NY Giants Detroit LA Rams
Miami Houston LA Raiders Philadelphia Green Bay New Orleans
New England Pittsburgh San Diego Phoenix Minnesota San Francisco
NY Jets Seattle Washington Tampa Bay
1991 NFL DraftNFL PlayoffsPro BowlSuper Bowl XXVI