Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

1983 Washington Redskins season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
NFL team season (lost Super Bowl)

1983 Washington Redskins season
OwnerJack Kent Cooke
PresidentEdward Bennett Williams
General managerBobby Beathard
Head coachJoe Gibbs
Offensive coordinatorJoe Bugel
Defensive coordinatorRichie Petitbon
Home stadiumRFK Stadium
Results
Record14–2
Division place1stNFC East
PlayoffsWonDivisional Playoffs
(vs.Rams) 51–7
WonNFC Championship
(vs.49ers) 24–21
LostSuper Bowl XVIII
(vs.Raiders) 9–38
All-Pros
7
Pro Bowlers
The Redskins playing against the Raiders in Super Bowl XVIII.

The1983Washington Redskinsseason was the franchise's 52nd season in theNational Football League (NFL) and their 47th inWashington, D.C. The season began with the team trying to win consecutiveSuper Bowls, following their victory inSuper Bowl XVII against theMiami Dolphins. Washington's 14–2 record was a franchise record and the best in the NFL. Their two losses were by a combined 2 points. Though the Redskins won theNFC Championship and advanced to a second consecutiveSuper Bowl, they were blown out by theLos Angeles Raiders 38–9 despite being 3-point favorites. They were the first defending Super Bowl champions to qualify for the playoffs since the1979 Pittsburgh Steelers.

The Redskins' 541 points scored and +209 point differential was the best in the league, with the 541 points setting an NFL record at the time.[1] The 1983 Redskins also had a turnover margin of +43, an NFL record.[2] Washington was the first team since themerger to record more than 60 takeaways (61).[3]

This season was cornerbackDarrell Green's first in the league. He would spend 20 seasons with the team until his retirement in 2002.

The 27–12 victory on September 18 against the Kansas City Chiefs is the only win in franchise history against them as of 2024.

Roster

[edit]
1983 Washington Redskins roster
Quarterbacks(QB)

Running backs(RB)

Wide receivers(WR)

Tight ends(TE)

Offensive linemen(OL)

Defensive linemen(DL)

Linebackers(LB)

Defensive backs(DB)

Special teams(ST)

Reserve


Rookies in italics

Schedule

[edit]
WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueAttendanceGame
recap
1September 5Dallas CowboysL 30–310–1RFK Stadium55,045Recap
2September 11atPhiladelphia EaglesW 23–131–1Veterans Stadium69,542Recap
3September 18Kansas City ChiefsW 27–122–1RFK Stadium52,610Recap
4September 25atSeattle SeahawksW 27–173–1Kingdome60,718Recap
5October 2Los Angeles RaidersW 37–354–1RFK Stadium54,106Recap
6October 9atSt. Louis CardinalsW 38–145–1Busch Memorial Stadium42,698Recap
7October 17atGreen Bay PackersL 47–485–2Lambeau Field55,255Recap
8October 23Detroit LionsW 38–176–2RFK Stadium43,189Recap
9October 31atSan Diego ChargersW 27–247–2Jack Murphy Stadium46,114Recap
10November 6St. Louis CardinalsW 45–78–2RFK Stadium51,380Recap
11November 13atNew York GiantsW 33–179–2Giants Stadium71,482Recap
12November 20atLos Angeles RamsW 42–2010–2Anaheim Stadium63,031Recap
13November 27Philadelphia EaglesW 28–2411–2RFK Stadium54,324Recap
14December 4Atlanta FalconsW 37–2112–2RFK Stadium52,074Recap
15December 11atDallas CowboysW 31–1013–2Texas Stadium65,074Recap
16December 17New York GiantsW 31–2214–2RFK Stadium53,874Recap

Note: Intra-division opponents are inbold text.

Game summaries

[edit]

Week 1: vs. Dallas Cowboys

[edit]
Quarter1234Total
Cowboys (1–0)03141431
Redskins (0–1)10130730

atRobert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium

Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter

Passing

  • Cowboys –Danny White – 9/20, 193 Yds, 3 TD, 0 Int, 75 Lng
  • Redskins –Joe Theismann – 28/38, 325 Yds, 2 TD, 1 Int, 41 Lng

Rushing

Receiving

Vegas Spread

  • Vegas Line= Dal -1.5
  • Over/Under= 41(Over)

Week 2: at Philadelphia Eagles

[edit]
Quarter1234Total
Redskins (1–1)7031323
Eagles (1–1)037313

atVeterans Stadium

Week 3: vs. Kansas City Chiefs

[edit]
Quarter1234Total
Chiefs (1–2)390012
Redskins (2–1)00171027

atRobert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium

  • Date: Sunday, September 18, 1983
  • Game time: 1:00pm(ET)
  • Game weather: 72 °F (22 °C), relative humidity 58%, wind 6 mph (9.7 km/h)
  • Referee: Bob Frederic
  • TV announcers (NBC): Charlie Jones and Bob Griese
  • Pro-Football-Reference.com

To date, this marks the only time that Washington has defeated Kansas City.

Week 4: at Seattle Seahawks

[edit]
Quarter1234Total
Redskins (3–1)7130727
Seahawks (2–2)370717

atSeattle Kingdome

Week 5: vs. Los Angeles Raiders

[edit]
Team1234Total
Raiders (4–1)07141435
Redskins (4–1)71031737
  • Date: October 2
  • Location: RFK Stadium • Washington, D.C.
  • Game start: 1:00 p.m.EST
  • Game attendance: 54,106
  • Game weather: 65 °F (18 °C) • Wind 4 mph (6.4 km/h)
  • Referee:Pat Haggerty
  • TV announcers (NBC):Marv Albert andJohn Brodie
Scoring summary
1WSHJohn Riggins 2 yard run (Mark Moseley kick)Redskins 7–0
2WSHMark Moseley 28 yard field goalRedskins 10–0
2LACliff Branch 99 yard pass fromJim Plunkett (Chris Bahr kick)Redskins 10–7
2WSHJoe Washington 5 yard pass fromJoe Theismann (Mark Moseley kick)Redskins 17–7
3WSHMark Moseley 29 yard field goalRedskins 20–7
3LACalvin Muhammad 35 yard pass from Jim Plunkett (Chris Bahr kick)Redskins 20–14
3LACalvin Muhammad 22 yard pass from Jim Plunkett (Chris Bahr kick)Raiders 21–20
4LATodd Christensen 2 yard pass from Jim Plunkett (Chris Bahr kick)Raiders 28–20
4LAGreg Pruitt 97 yard punt return (Chris Bahr kick)Raiders 35–20
4WSHCharlie Brown 11 yard pass from Joe Theismann (Mark Moseley kick)Raiders 35–27
4WSHMark Moseley 34 yard field goalRaiders 35–30
4WSHJoe Washington 6 yard pass from Joe Theismann (Mark Moseley kick)Redskins 37–35

[4]

Week 6: at St. Louis Cardinals

[edit]
Quarter1234Total
Redskins (5–1)71714038
Cardinals (1–5)077014

atBusch Stadium

  • Date: Sunday, October 9, 1983
  • Game time: 1:00pm(ET)
  • Game weather: 56 °F (13 °C), relative humidity 76%, wind 10 mph (16 km/h)
  • Referee:Red Cashion
  • TV announcers (CBS): Jack Buck and Hank Stram
  • Pro-Football-Reference.com

Week 7: at Green Bay Packers

[edit]
Quarter1234Total
Redskins (5–2)1010131447
Packers (4–3)101471748

atLambeau Field

Game information

First quarter

  • Packers -Mike Douglass 22 yard fumble return (Jan Stenerud kick) -WAS 0, GNB 7
  • Redskins -Clint Didier 0 yard fumble return (Mark Moseley kick) -WAS 7, GNB 7
  • Packers - Jan Stenerud 47 yard field goal -WAS 7, GNB 10
  • Redskins - Mark Moseley 42 yard field goal -WAS 10, GNB 10

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter

Redskins

  • Passing
  • Joe Theismann - 27/39, 398 Yds, 2 TD, 0 Int, 35 Lng
  • Rushing
  • John Riggins - 25 Att, 98 Yds, 2 TD, 36 Lng
  • Joe Washington - 16 Att, 80 Yds, 0 TD, 19 Lng
  • Joe Theismann - 1 Att, 14 Yds, 0 TD, 14 Lng
  • Receiving
  • Art Monk - 5 Rec, 105 Yds, 0 TD, 56 Lng
  • Charlie Brown - 6 Rec, 91 Yds, 0 TD, 20 Lng
  • Don Warren - 4 Rec, 70 Yds, 0 TD, 29 Lng
  • Joe Washington - 9 Rec, 57 Yds, 2 TD, 13 Lng
  • Nick Giaquinto - 2 Rec, 66 Yds, 0 TD, 35 Lng

Packers

  • Passing
  • Lynn Dickey - 22/31, 387 Yds, 3 TD, 1 Int, 56 Lng
  • Rushing
  • Gerry Ellis - 3 Att, 41 Yds, 1 TD, 24 Lng
  • Mike Meade - 2 Att, 6 Yds, 0 TD, 9 Lng
  • James Lofton - 1 Att, 6 Yds, 0 TD, 6 Lng
  • Receiving
  • James Lofton - 5 Rec, 96 Yds, 0 TD, 40 Lng
  • John Jefferson - 4 Rec, 50 Yds, 0 TD, 19 Lng
  • Paul Coffman - 6 Rec, 124 Yds, 2 TD, 36 Lng
  • Gerry Ellis - 4 Rec, 105 Yds, 0 TD, 56 Lng
  • Mike Meade - 2 Rec, 35 Yds, 1 TD, 31 Lng

Vegas Spread

  • Vegas Line= Washington -3.0
  • Over/Under= 52.0(over)

Packers Defeat Redskins in 48–47 Monday Night ThrillerThe Green Bay Packers were facing a major challenge as they hosted the Washington Redskins on October 17, 1983. At 3–3, Head CoachBart Starr’s Packers were a team that could put points on the board, especially with QB Lynn Dickey (pictured above) passing to wide receivers James Lofton and John Jefferson and TE Paul Coffman. But they also gave up points and came into the game with the 28th-ranked defense in the NFL. They also had to make adjustments on the offensive line, with G Tim Huffman out with an ankle injury that necessitated moving Greg Koch over from his OT position and starting Charlie Getty at tackle.

Having a poor defense was not a good situation to be in when facing the Redskins. Coached by Joe Gibbs, they were coming off a Super Bowl-winning season and, if anything, were even stronger in ‘83. Behind the best offensive line in the league, QB Joe Theismann was a proficient passer and RB John Riggins a powerful force running the ball. If there was a weak point, it was the defensive backfield, but Washington was cruising at 5–1, with a close opening-game loss to the Cowboys the only blemish.

There were 55,255 fans in attendance for the Monday night game at Lambeau Field. Just over a minute into the first quarter, they had reason to get excited when Green Bay LB Mike Douglass forced RB Joe Washington to fumble and returned it 22 yards for a touchdown and, with Jan Stenerud’s extra point added, the early 7–0 lead.

DB Mike Nelms returned the kickoff 41 yards and the Redskins drove 55 yards in six plays, highlighted by Theismann’s pass to WR Art Monk for a 34-yard gain. The series ended with John Riggins fumbling into the end zone and TE Clint Didier recovering for a TD. Mark Moseley tied the score with his PAT.

Green Bay responded with a 10-play, 40-yard drive. Lynn Dickey threw to Paul Coffman for 17 yards and John Jefferson for 13 along the way and Stenerud kicked a 47-yard field goal that put the Packers back in front by three.

Washington moved the ball quickly downfield with Theismann connecting with Monk for a 22-yard gain and with RB Nick Giaquinto for 31 more yards. But the Green Bay defense came through with back-to-back sacks of Theismann and the Redskins had to settle for a 42-yard Moseley field goal. The eventful first quarter ended with the score tied at 10–10.

Things did not slow down as the game approached the second quarter. Dickey threw to James Lofton for 21 yards and the Packers picked up 15 more on a penalty when CB Darrell Green hit the receiver out of bounds. Dickey then tossed a 36-yard touchdown pass to Coffman. Stenerud added the extra point and the home team was back in front by 17–10.

Back came the Redskins, moving 67 yards in seven plays and highlighted by a 36-yard carry by Riggins. Riggins scored from a yard out and Moseley again knotted the score with the successful PAT.

The Packers reached the Washington 33 on the next series before a Dickey pass was intercepted by CB Anthony Washington. After getting a first down, the Redskins were finally forced to punt and Green Bay came back with a 73-yard, seven-play possession. RB Eddie Lee Ivery tossed an option pass to Coffman for 15 yards and a first down at the Washington 9 from where Coffman caught a scoring pass, this time from Dickey. Stenerud added the extra point and once again the Packers were in front by a touchdown.

With less than two minutes remaining in the half, the Redskins came out throwing. Theismann completed five passes to reach the Green Bay 11 and Moseley booted a 28-yard field goal as the clock reached five seconds. The Packers carried a 24–20 lead into the intermission.

Starting off the third quarter, the Packers struck quickly as they advanced 80 yards in just 42 seconds. Dickey threw to Coffman for 40 yards and then RB Gerry Ellis, taking advantage of a big hole, ran 24 yards for a touchdown. The home team had its biggest lead of the day at 31-20.

Washington seemed on the verge of responding with a touchdown, reaching the Green Bay four, but an offensive pass interference penalty nullified an apparent scoring catch and once again the Redskins settled for a Moseley field goal, this time from 31 yards.

Starting off the third quarter, the Packers struck quickly as they advanced 80 yards in just 42 seconds. Dickey threw to Coffman for 40 yards and then RB Gerry Ellis, taking advantage of a big hole, ran 24 yards for a touchdown. The home team had its biggest lead of the day at 31-20.

Washington seemed on the verge of responding with a touchdown, reaching the Green Bay four, but an offensive pass interference penalty nullified an apparent scoring catch and once again the Redskins settled for a Moseley field goal, this time from 31 yards.

Up by eight points, the Packers were forced to punt on their next series and Bucky Scribner’s kick was blocked to give the Redskins the ball at the Green Bay 19. Five plays later, Theismann threw to Joe Washington for a six-yard TD and, with Moseley’s PAT, the Green Bay lead was down to 31–30.

Washington’s defense again asserted itself as Dickey was sacked twice by DT Dave Butz. Nelms made a good return of the ensuing punt by Scribner to give the visitors possession at their 46. From there, the Redskins again moved deep into Green Bay territory, but after reaching the nine yard line, Douglass tackled Joe Washington for a loss and once again Washington was held to a field goal. Still, Moseley connected from 28 yards and put the visitors ahead by 33–31 with ten seconds left in the period.

RB Harlan Huckleby returned the ensuing kickoff for 54 yards to the Washington 39 and the fourth quarter started with Dickey throwing to Ellis for 32 yards. Shortly thereafter, TE Gary Lewis scored a touchdown from two yards out on an end-around that put the Packers back in front.

The Redskins came right back again as Theismann threw to Monk for 25 yards and WR Charlie Brown for another 15. Riggins blasted into the end zone from a yard out and Washington was again in the lead of the wildly back-and-forth contest.

The Packers responded with another score of their own, with Dickey completing passes covering 19 yards to Jefferson and 17 yards to Lofton. An 11-yard touchdown pass to FB Mike Meade, followed by Stenerud’s extra point, again put Green Bay in front at 45–40.

Now it was Washington’s turn again. Theismann (pictured at right) threw to Monk for 21 yards and Joe Washington ran for two first downs. A sack of Theismann by DE Byron Braggs momentarily derailed the Redskins, but a pass to Giaquinto picked up 35 yards and set up a five-yard scoring toss to Washington. Moseley added the point and, with 2:50 left on the clock, the visitors were back on top at 47-45.

It looked bleak for the Packers when, following the kickoff, Dickey tossed two incomplete passes. But then he found Ellis on a short pass over the middle that turned into a 56-yard gain to the Washington eight and, after conservatively running the ball into the line three times, the dependable Stenerud came on to kick a 20-yard field goal. It was the fifth lead change of the final period and put the Packers ahead by a point.

There were still 54 seconds remaining in the contest, however, and while the Redskins had no timeouts remaining, they quickly moved the ball down the field. Theismann completed three passes to Joe Washington, gaining a total of 33 yards, and the running back made it out of bounds after each. Theismann then threw to Brown for 22 yards, but the clock was still running and the quarterback had to hurriedly toss a pass out of bounds with three seconds to go. On the last play of the game, Moseley missed a 39-yard field goal attempt, the fans erupted, and the Packers came away with the 48–47 win.

The combined 95 points was a new high for Monday Night Football until it was broken on November 19, 2018 whenthe Kansas City Chiefs and the Los Angeles Rams combined to score 105 points. The teams also combined for 1025 yards of offense, with the Redskins topping Green Bay by 552 to 473. They had more first downs (33 to 23). Each team turned the ball over once, and there were just three punts in all (one by Washington, two for Green Bay, one of which was blocked by the Redskins).

“It was about the wildest thing I’ve ever been in,” said Lynn Dickey. “I wish I had been in the stands or at home watching on tv, it was that good.”

“It was a tremendously inspirational win because you could see the sort of enthusiasm and intensity that was on display tonight,” said Bart Starr. “You have to salute both teams because Washington, for the reasons demonstrated on the field, is a world-championship team. They are magnificent.”[1]

Week 8: vs. Detroit Lions

[edit]
Quarter1234Total
Lions (3–5)037717
Redskins (6–2)14143738

atRobert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium

  • Date: Sunday, October 23, 1983
  • Game time: 1:00pm(ET)
  • Game weather: 56 °F (13 °C), relative humidity 85%, wind 8 mph (13 km/h)
  • Referee: Jerry Markbreit
  • TV announcers (CBS): Frank Glieber and Dick Vermeil
  • Pro-Football-Reference.com

Week 9: at San Diego Chargers

[edit]
Quarter1234Total
Redskins (7–2)7371027
Chargers (3–6)7001724

atJack Murphy Stadium

  • Date: Monday, October 31, 1983
  • Game time: 9:00pm(ET)
  • Game weather: 71 °F (22 °C), relative humidity 73%, wind 9 mph (14 km/h)
  • Referee:Fred Silva
  • TV announcers (ABC): Frank Gifford, Don Meredith, Howard Cosell
  • Pro-Football-Reference.com

Week 10: vs. St. Louis Cardinals

[edit]
Quarter1234Total
Cardinals (3–6–1)00707
Redskins (8–2)71021745

atRobert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium

Week 11: at New York Giants

[edit]
Quarter1234Total
Redskins (9–2)13310733
Giants (2–8–1)3001417

atThe Meadowlands

  • Date: Sunday, November 13, 1983
  • Game time: 4:00pm(ET)
  • Game weather: 37 °F (3 °C), relative humidity 55%, wind 19 mph (31 km/h), wind chill 27 °F (−3 °C)
  • Referee:Chuck Heberling
  • Pro-Football-Reference.com

Week 12: at Los Angeles Rams

[edit]
Quarter1234Total
Redskins (10–2)101910342
Rams (7–5)6001420

atAnaheim Stadium

  • Date: Sunday, November 20, 1983
  • Game time: 4:00pm(ET)
  • Game weather: 59 °F (15 °C), relative humidity 68%, wind 15 mph (24 km/h)
  • Referee: Fred Wyant
  • TV announcers (CBS): Frank Glieber and Dick Vermeil
  • Pro-Football-Reference.com

Week 13: vs. Philadelphia Eagles

[edit]
Quarter1234Total
Eagles (4–9)0213024
Redskins (11–2)7210028

atRobert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium

Week 14: vs. Atlanta Falcons

[edit]
Quarter1234Total
Falcons (6–8)0002121
Redskins (12–2)71314337

atRobert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium

  • Date: Sunday, December 4, 1983
  • Game time: 1:00pm(ET)
  • Game weather: 43 °F (6 °C), relative humidity 76%, wind 9 mph (14 km/h)
  • Referee:Tom Dooley
  • TV announcers (CBS): Jim Hill and Tom Brookshier
  • Pro-Football-Reference.com

Week 15: at Dallas Cowboys

[edit]
Team1234Total
Redskins (13–2)14071031
Cowboys (12–3)730010
Scoring summary
1WSHJohn Riggins 3 yard run (Mark Moseley kick)WSH 7–0
1WSHClint Didier 40 yard pass fromJoe Theismann (Mark Moseley kick0WSH 14–0
1DALDoug Cosbie 29 yard pass fromDanny White (Rafael Septién kick)WSH 14–7
2DALRafael Septien 35 yard field goalWSH 14–10
3WSHArt Monk 43 yard pass from Joe Theismann (Mark Moseley kick)WSH 21–10
4WSHJohn Riggins 1 yard run (Mark Moseley kick)WSH 28–10
4WSHMark Moseley 38 yard field goalWSH 31–10

[5]

Week 16: vs. New York Giants

[edit]
Quarter1234Total
Giants (3–12–1)397322
Redskins (14–2)0771731

atRobert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium

  • Date: Saturday, December 17, 1983
  • Game time: 12:30pm(ET)
  • Game weather: 40 °F (4 °C), relative humidity 50%, wind 8.2 mph (13.2 km/h)
  • Referee:Gordon McCarter
  • TV announcers (CBS): Pat Summerall and John Madden
  • Pro-Football-Reference.com
Game information

First quarter

Second quarter

  • Redskins -Charlie Brown 17 yard pass fromJoe Theismann (Mark Moseley kick) -NYG 3, Wash 7
  • Giants - Ali Haji-Sheikh 39 yard field goal -NYG 6, Wash 7
  • Giants - Ali Haji-Sheikh 19 yard field goal -NYG 9, Wash 7
  • Giants - Ali Haji-Sheikh 45 yard field goal -NYG 12, Wash 7

Third quarter

Fourth quarter

Vegas Spread

  • Vegas Line= Wash -15.5
  • Over/Under= 44.5(Over)

Playoffs

[edit]
RoundDateOpponent (seed)ResultVenueAttendanceGame
recap
DivisionalJanuary 1, 1984Los Angeles Rams (5)W 51–7RFK Stadium55,363Recap
Conference ChampionshipJanuary 8, 1984San Francisco 49ers (2)W 24–21RFK Stadium55,363Recap
Super Bowl XVIIIJanuary 22, 1984Los Angeles Raiders (A1)L 9–38Tampa Stadium72,920Recap

January 1, 1984

[edit]

NFC: Washington Redskins 51, Los Angeles Rams 7

[edit]
Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Rams07007
Redskins17216751

atRobert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium,Washington, D.C.

Game information
  • Scoring
    • WAS – Riggins 3 run (Moseley kick)WAS 7–0
    • WAS – Monk 40 pass from Theismann (Moseley kick) 14–0
    • WAS – field goal Moseley 42 WAS 17–0
    • WAS – Riggins 1 run (Moseley kick) WAS 24–0
    • LA – Dennard 32 pass from Ferragamo (Lansford kick) WAS 24–7
    • WAS – Monk 21 pass from Theismann (Moseley kick) WAS 31–7
    • WAS – Riggins 1 run (Moseley kick) WAS 38–7
    • WAS – field goal Moseley 36 WAS 41–7
    • WAS – field goal Moseley 41 WAS 44–7
    • WAS – Green 72 interception return (Moseley kick) WAS 51–7

January 8, 1984

[edit]

NFC Championship: Washington Redskins 24, San Francisco 49ers 21

[edit]
Game summary
Quarter1234Total
49ers0002121
Redskins0714324

atRobert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium,Washington, D.C.

Game information
  • Scoring
    • WAS – Riggins 4 run (Moseley kick) WAS 7–0
    • WAS – Riggins 1 run (Moseley kick) WAS 14–0
    • WAS – Brown 70 pass from Theismann (Moseley kick) WAS 21–0
    • SF – Wilson 5 pass from Montana (Wersching kick) WAS 21–7
    • SF – Solomon 76 pass from Montana (Wersching kick) WAS 21–14
    • SF – Wilson 12 pass from Montana (Wersching kick) 21–21
    • WAS – field goal Moseley 25 WAS 24–21

Super Bowl XVIII: Los Angeles Raiders 38, Washington Redskins 9

[edit]
Further information:Super Bowl XVIII
Game summary
Quarter1234Total
Redskins (NFC)03609
Raiders (AFC)71414338

atTampa Stadium,Tampa, Florida

Standings

[edit]
NFC East
WLTPCTDIVCONFPFPASTK
Washington Redskins(1)1420.8757–110–2541332W9
Dallas Cowboys(4)1240.7507–110–2479360L2
St. Louis Cardinals871.5313–4–15–6–1374428W3
Philadelphia Eagles5110.3131–74–10233322L2
New York Giants3121.2191–6–13–8–1267347L4

Awards and records

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Pro-Football-Reference.com: In a single season, from 1980 to 1989, in the NFL, in the regular season, sorted by descending Points For, the record was eventually broken in 1998 by theMinnesota Vikings with 556, and then broken again in 2007 by theNew England Patriots with 589).
  2. ^The team with the second-best turnover margin, the1946 Browns, had a margin of 33:Pro-Football-Reference.com: In a single season, from 1940 to 2011, in the regular season, sorted by descending Turnover Margin.
  3. ^As of the2011 season, only the 1983 Redskins and the1984 Seattle Seahawks (63) have recorded more than 60 takeaways.
  4. ^Pro-Football-Reference.com
  5. ^Pro-Football-Reference.com
  6. ^"Maxwell Football Club - Bert Bell Award Past Recipients". Archived fromthe original on June 19, 2009. RetrievedJune 28, 2010.
  • Formerly theBoston Braves (1932),Boston Redskins (1933–1936),Washington Redskins (1937–2019), andWashington Football Team (2020–2021)
  • Based in Landover, Maryland
  • Headquartered in Ashburn, Virginia
Affiliations
Franchise
Stadiums
Key personnel
Culture and lore
Rivalries
Retired numbers
Hall of Famers
League championships (5)
Division championships (15)
Wild Card playoff berths (10)
Formerly theBoston Braves (1932),Boston Redskins (1933–1936),Washington Redskins (1937–2019), andWashington Football Team (2020–2021)
Bold indicatesNFL Championship orSuper Bowl victory
Italics indicates NFL Championship or Super Bowl appearance
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1983_Washington_Redskins_season&oldid=1315484411"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp