American Football Database
Register
Advertisement
1986 Atlanta Falcons season
Head Coach Dan Henning
Home Field Fulton County Stadium
Results
Record 7–8–1
Place 3rd NFC West
Playoff Finish did not qualify
Timeline
Previous season Next season
1985 1987

The 1986 Atlanta Falcons season began with moderate expectations.[1] Head coach Dan Henning was going into his fourth year having failed to post a record above .500 in any of his first three seasons. Local media, including the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, saw it as Henning's last chance to save his head coaching job.[2] Atlanta entered the season led by, among others, Gerald Riggs,[3] Scott Case, Bill Fralic and Jeff VanNote. David Archer was the starting quarterback heading into the season.[4]

Offseason[]

NFL Draft[]

Round Pick Player Position School
1 2 Tony Casillas Nose Tackle Oklahoma
1 17 Tim Green Linebacker Syracuse
6 154 Floyd Dixon Wide receiver Stephen F. Austin
6 159 Keith Williams Running back SW Missouri State
8 197 Kevin Hudgens Defensive end Idaho State
9 224 Kevin Starks Tight end Minnesota
10 252 Tony Baker Running back East Carolina
11 280 Chris Hegg Quarterback N.E. Missouri State
12 308 Steve Griffin Wide receiver Purdue

Personnel[]

Staff[]

1986 Atlanta Falcons staff
Front office
  • Chairman of the Board – Rankin M. Smith, Sr.
  • President – Rankin M. Smith, Jr.
  • Executive Vice President – Taylor Smith
  • Director of Player Personnel – Tom Braatz
  • Director of Pro Personnel – Bill Jobko
  • Assistant for Research and Development – Joe Madden

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

  • Running Backs – Sam Elliott
  • Receivers – Bob Harrison
  • Tight Ends – Bobby Jackson
  • Offensive Line – Larry Beightol
  • Quality Control – Steve Crosby
Defensive coaches

Special teams coaches

Strength and conditioning

  • Strength and Conditioning – George Dostal

Regular season[]

Season summary[]

The team started with an impressive 4-0 start, beating their NFC West rivals, the New Orleans Saints, 31-10 in the season opener. They opened at home in Atlanta with a 33-13 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals. Then, after a thrilling 37-35 win in Dallas, they beat the lowly Tampa Bay Buccaneers 23-20. The first loss came to the Philadelphia Eagles, whose strong defense coached by Buddy Ryan took care of the Falcons 16-0. Henning didn't let the loss affect his team as they beat the playoff bound Los Angeles Rams 26-14. Things seemed to be going great for the team as they were able to tie the powerhouse San Francisco 49ers 10-10. Following the tie to the 49ers, a five-game losing streak derailed the season, starting with a 14-7 loss to the Rams, then a 25-17 loss to the defending AFC champion New England Patriots. They returned home to face the 8-1 New York Jets, where they lost 28-14 to drop them to 5-4-1. The next week a 13-10 loss to the Chicago Bears knocked them into last place in the division. Their last loss of the streak was a 20-0 loss to the 49ers. The now 5-6-1 Falcons ended their winless streak against the Miami Dolphins in a 20-14 victory. The nadir of the season came in a 28-23 loss to the Indianapolis Colts, who started the year 0-13, and was the Colts' first win of the year. By that time, the Falcons were out of the playoff picture with Los Angeles and San Francisco already in. The Falcons dropped their last home game 14-9 to New Orleans. They concluded their season with a 20-6 victory against the Detroit Lions.

Schedule[]

Week Date Opponent Result Game site Attendance
1 1986-09-07 at New Orleans Saints W 31-10 Louisiana Superdome
67,950
2 1986-09-14 St. Louis Cardinals W 33-13 Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium
46,463
3 1986-09-21 at Dallas Cowboys W 37-35 Texas Stadium
62,880
4 1986-09-28 at Tampa Bay Buccaneers W 23-20 Tampa Stadium
38,950
5 1986-10-05 Philadelphia Eagles L 0-16 Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium
57,104
6 1986-10-12 Los Angeles Rams W 26-14 Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium
51,662
7 1986-10-19 San Francisco 49ers T 10-10 Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium
55,306
8 1986-10-26 at Los Angeles Rams L 7-14 Anaheim Stadium
56,993
9 1986-11-02 at New England Patriots L 17-25 Sullivan Stadium
60,597
10 1986-11-09 New York Jets L 14-28 Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium
53,476
11 1986-11-16 Chicago Bears L 10-13 Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium
55,520
12 1986-11-23 at San Francisco 49ers L 0-20 Candlestick Park
58,747
13 1986-11-30 at Miami Dolphins W 20-14 Miami Orange Bowl
53,762
14 1986-12-07 Indianapolis Colts L 23-28 Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium
30,397
15 1986-12-14 New Orleans Saints L 9-14 Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium
39,994
16 1986-12-21 at Detroit Lions W 20-6 Pontiac Silverdome
35,255

Standings[]

NFC West
view · talk · edit W L T PCT PF PA STK
San Francisco 49ers 10 5 1 .656 374 247 W3
Los Angeles Rams 10 6 0 .625 309 267 L2
Atlanta Falcons 7 8 1 .469 280 280 W1
New Orleans Saints 7 9 0 .483 288 287 L1

[5]

Rankings for 1986 season[]

Atlanta was 6th in scoring defense allowing 280 points, 21st in scoring offense scoring 280 points. Passing; 246 completions of 452 attempts for 3046 yards. David Archer threw for 10 of the teams 14 passing touchdowns, Turk Schonert threw the other four. Archer had nine of the teams 17 interceptions, and Schonert was picked the other eight times. The team rushed for 12 touchdowns nine of which came from Gerald Riggs, one from Schonert, one from William Andrews, one Cliff Austin.

References[]

  1. "Picking the Falcons to go 9-7, starting with a win over the Saints". Atlanta Journal-Constitution. 7 Sep 1986.
  2. "Falcons hoping for fast start in New Orleans opener". Atlanta Journal-Constitution. 7 Sep 1986.
  3. "Riggs makes backfield whole again". Atlanta Journal-Constitution. 5 Sep 1986.
  4. "Archer reports bruised right shoulder feeling 'fair'". Atlanta Journal-Constitution. 3 Sep 1986.
  5. (PDF) 2010 NFL Record and Fact Book. National Football League. p. 382. http://www.nfl.info/download/2010%20NFL%20Record%20and%20Fact%20Book.pdf. Retrieved February 24, 2011.
AFC East Central West East Central West NFC
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 St. Louis Minnesota San Francisco
NY Jets Seattle Washington Tampa Bay
1986 NFL DraftNFL PlayoffsPro BowlSuper Bowl XXI
Advertisement