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1979 Los Angeles Rams season
Head Coach Ray Malavasi
Home Field Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
Results
Record 9-7
Place 1st NFC West
Playoff Finish Won Divisional (21-19 at Cowboys)
Won Conference (9-0 at Buccaneers)
Lost Super Bowl XIV (31-19 vs. Steelers)
Timeline
Previous season Next season
1978 1980

The 1979 Los Angeles Rams season was the team's 42nd year with the National Football League and the 34th season in Los Angeles. It was the final season for the franchise in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, as owner Carroll Rosenbloom previously announced the Rams would move to Anaheim Stadium for the 1980 season.

Rosenbloom drowned on April 2, 1979, while swimming in the Atlantic Ocean just off of his home in Golden Beach, Florida, leaving the team to his widow, Georgia.

Offseason[]

NFL Draft[]

Round Pick Player Position School/Club Team

Regular season[]

Schedule[]

Game Date Opponent Result Rams points Opponents Rams first downs Record Attendance
1 Sept. 2 Oakland Raiders Loss 17 24 21 0-1
59,000
2 Sept. 6 at Denver Broncos Win 13 9 15 1-1
74,884
3 Sept. 16 San Francisco 49ers Win 27 24 25 2-1
44,303
4 Sept. 23 at Tampa Bay Buccaneers Loss 6 21 11 2-2
69,497
5 Sept. 30 St. Louis Cardinals Win 21 0 24 3-2
48,160
6 Oct. 7 at New Orleans Saints Win 35 17 22 4-2
68,986
7 Oct. 14 at Dallas Cowboys Loss 6 30 11 4-3
64,462
8 Oct. 21 San Diego Chargers Loss 16 40 24 4-4
64,245
9 Oct. 28 New York Giants Loss 14 20 20 4-5
43,376
10 Nov. 4 at Seattle Seahawks Win 24 0 29 5-5
62,048
11 Nov. 11 at Chicago Bears Loss 23 27 16 5-6
51,483
12 Nov. 19 Atlanta Falcons Win 20 14 18 6-6
54,097
13 Nov. 25 at San Francisco 49ers Win 26 20 18 7-6
49,282
14 Dec. 2 Minnesota Vikings Win 27 21 14 8-6
56,700
15 Dec. 9 at Atlanta Falcons Win 34 13 15 9-6
49,236
16 Dec. 16 New Orleans Saints Loss 14 29 16 9-7
53,879

[1]

Standings[]

NFC West
Team W L T PCT PF PA
Los Angeles Rams 9 7 0 .563 323 309
New Orleans Saints 8 8 0 .500 370 360
Atlanta Falcons 6 10 0 .375 300 388
San Francisco 49ers 2 14 0 .125 308 416

Roster[]

1979 Los Angeles Rams roster

Quarterbacks

Running Backs

Wide Receivers

Tight Ends

Offensive Linemen

Defensive Linemen

Linebackers

Defensive Backs

Special Teams

Reserve Lists

Practice Squad

Rookies in italics

Key regular season games and moments[]

Game 2: Rams 13, Denver Broncos 9[]

In an early Monday night affair, the Rams were on the verge of starting the season 0-2, trailing 9-6 in a game that featured a rare safety scored by the Broncos when Rams offensive tackle John Williams was penalized for holding Broncos linebacker Larry Evans in the Rams' end zone. Late in the fourth quarter, however, Rams defensive tackle Mike Fanning laid a hit on running back Larry Canada deep in Broncos territory and Jack Reynolds picked up the resulting fumble and bulled his way into the end zone for the winning touchdown.

Game 4: Tampa Bay Buccaneers 21, Rams 6[]

The Buccaneers asserted themselves as a legitimate NFC contender in this game. Jim Youngblood intercepted a Doug Williams pass in the first quarter and returned it for a Rams touchdown, but then it was all Bucs as game conditions (heavy rain) and the vaunted Bucs defense took over. Williams only completed five passes, but two were for touchdowns in a 21-point second quarter.

This would be the final start of aging running back great Lawrence McCutcheon's Rams career. The Rams, in an attempt to get more speed on offense, would start Wendell Tyler in McCutcheon's place for the rest of the season.

Game 6: Rams 35, Saints, 17[]

The "new look" Rams played one of their better games of the season in this one. Pat Haden threw for three touchdowns for the first and only time in his NFL career and Wendell Tyler rushed for two more. Two of Haden's scores were to veteran Ron Jessie, but Jessie would be injured late and lost for the remainder of the season. With veteran Willie Miller also lost for the season, the Rams would have an inexperienced wide receiver corps for the rest of 1979.

Game 10: Rams 24, Seattle Seahawks 0[]

The Rams broke out of a mid-season slump by holding the Seahawks to minus-7 yards of total offense, only two pass completions, and only one first down for the entire game. However, starting quarterback Pat Haden broke the index finger on his throwing hand late in the third quarter and would be lost for the remainder of the season.

Game 12: Rams 20, Falcons 14[]

Vince Ferragamo made his first start of the season in this Monday night game and immediately showed his "big-play" capability, something the Rams had lacked at the quarterback position. Ferragamo completed long touchdown passes to young speedsters Preston Dennard and Billy Waddy as the Rams would embark on a winning streak that would carry them to the NFC West title and the playoffs.

Game 14: Rams 27, Vikings 21 (OT)[]

The Rams lined up for a potential game-winning field goal in overtime, but holder Nolan Cromwell took the snap and scooted around left end for a 5-yard touchdown to lift Los Angeles into first place in the NFC West. The Rams took sole possession of the division lead the next night when the Raiders rallied from a 35-14 deficit in New Orleans to defeat the Saints 42-35.

Vikings' defensive back Paul Krause intercepted two passes in this game, giving him 81 for his career and breaking the previous all-time record set by Emlen Tunnell. The record still stands to this day.

Game 15: Rams 34, Falcons 13[]

In this impressive romp, the Rams clinched their seventh straight NFC West division title. Vince Ferragamo was entrenched as the Rams' quarterback by this time, and would go on to an impressive postseason.

Game 16: Saints 29, Rams 14[]

Wendell Tyler rushed for 141 yards and a first quarter touchdown, but New Orleans scored the next 27 points to win going away in the Rams' final game at the Coliseum. The victory allowed the Saints to finish 8-8, the franchise's first non-losing record after 12 consecutive losing seasons.

Playoffs[]

NFC Divisional[]

1 2 3 4 OT
Rams 0 14 0 7 21
Cowboys 2 3 7 7 19




Quarterback Vince Ferragamo led the Rams to a victory by throwing for 3 touchdown passes, the last one with 2:06 left in the game. The Cowboys scored first when defensive tackle Randy White sacked Ferragamo in the end zone for a safety. However, Ferragamo responded by throwing a 32-yard touchdown pass to running back Wendell Tyler. Dallas kicker Rafael Septien kicked a 33-yard field goal with 52 seconds left in the first half, but Ferragamo completed a 43-yard touchdown pass to Ron Smith before time expired to make it a 14-5 halftime lead. The Cowboys, led by quarterback Roger Staubach in what proved to be his last NFL game of his hall of fame career, then scored 2 unanswered touchdowns in the second half to take the lead, 19-14. With about 2 minutes left in the game and the Rams at midfield, Ferragamo found wide receiver Billy Waddy on a short crossing route and Waddy sprinted the rest of the way for a game winning 50-yard touchdown. Staubach was unable to engineer a late fourth quarter comeback like the ones that made him famous throughout his career. The Rams defense forced a sack, and then pressured the Dallas quarterback to throw a pass illegally to an ineligible receiver, guard Herbert Scott, on third down; the last pass of his career to be caught; on fourth down overthrew Tony Hill.

NFC Championship Game[]

1 2 3 4 OT
Rams 0 6 0 3 9
Buccaneers 0 0 0 0 0




In a defensive battle in which the Rams squandered numerous scoring opportunities, Rams kicker Frank Corral kicked 3 field goals to win the game. Los Angeles was able to record 369 yards of total offense, while running backs Cullen Bryant and Wendell Tyler rushed for 106 and 86 yards, respectively. Meanwhile, the Buccaneers only had 177 total offensive yards, including 92 rushing yards and 85 passing yards. Most of Tampa Bay's passing yards came from a 42-yard halfback option pass from Jerry Eckwood to wide receiver Larry Mucker in the fourth quarter. During the game, two touchdowns were nullified by penalties, one by each team: A four yard run by Bryant and a 27-yard reception by Buccaneers' tight end Jimmie Giles.

Super Bowl XIV[]

Awards and records[]

Milestones[]

References[]

AFC East Central West East Central West NFC
Baltimore Cincinnati Denver Dallas Chicago Atlanta
Buffalo Cleveland Kansas City NY Giants Detroit Los Angeles
Miami Houston Oakland Philadelphia Green Bay New Orleans
New England Pittsburgh San Diego St. Louis Minnesota San Francisco
NY Jets Seattle Washington Tampa Bay
1979 NFL DraftNFL PlayoffsPro BowlSuper Bowl XIV
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