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1998 New England Patriots season
Head Coach Pete Carroll
Home Field Foxboro Stadium
Results
Record 9–7
Place 4th AFC East
Playoff Finish Lost Wild Card Playoffs (Jaguars) 25–10
Pro Bowlers TE Ben Coates
CB Ty Law
SS Lawyer Milloy
Uniform
AFC-1995-1999-Uniform-NE
Timeline
Previous season Next season
1997 1999

The 1998 New England Patriots season was the 29th season for the team in the National Football League and 39th season overall. They finished with a 9–7 record, good for fourth place in the division but also a playoff berth; they lost in the first round to the Jacksonville Jaguars.

In the offseason, the Patriots tendered restricted free agent running back Curtis Martin with the highest possible tender, which would return the Patriots first- and third-round draft picks if any team were to sign him and the Patriots were to decide not to match the offer. Fueling the rivalry between the two teams, the New York Jets and head coach Bill Parcells, who had resigned from the Patriots two years earlier, signed Martin, the 1995 NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year, and per restricted free agency rules ceded their first- and third-round picks in the 1998 NFL Draft to the Patriots.[1] With the first-round pick the Patriots selected another running back Robert Edwards, who rushed for over 1,000 yards in his rookie campaign. Suffering a broken finger in November,[2] veteran quarterback Drew Bledsoe was unable to start the team's final two regular season games and was replaced by Scott Zolak.[3] With a 9–7 record the Patriots finished fourth in the AFC East but earned a sixth seed in the AFC playoffs. With Zolak still at the helm, the Patriots were defeated on the road by the Jacksonville Jaguars, the second straight playoff defeat for second-year head coach Pete Carroll.

1998 NFL Draft[]

1998 New England Patriots Draft Selections
Round Overall Player Position College
1[4] 18 Robert Edwards Running back Georgia
1 22 Tebucky Jones Safety Syracuse
2[5] 52 Tony Simmons Wide receiver Wisconsin
2 54 Rod Rutledge Tight end Alabama
3[6] 81 Chris Floyd Fullback Michigan
3 83 Greg Spires Defensive end Florida State
4 115 Leonta Rheams Defensive tackle Houston
5 145 Ron Merkerson Linebacker Colorado
6 176 Harold Shaw Fullback Southern Miss
7 211 Jason Andersen Offensive guard BYU

Staff[]

New England Patriots 1998 staff
Front Office
  • Chairman/CEO – Robert Kraft
  • Vice President – Jonathan Kraft
  • Vice President of Business Operations – Andy Wasynczuk
  • Vice President of Player Personnel – Bobby Grier
  • Director of College Scouting – Larry Cook
  • Director of Pro Scouting – Dave Uyrus
  • Assistant Director of Pro Scouting – Andre Tippett

Head Coaches

Offensive Coaches

 

Defensive Coaches

Special Teams Coaches

  • Special Teams – Dante Scarnecchia
  • Special Teams Coaching Assistant – Mark Jackson

Strength and Conditioning

Regular season[]

Schedule[]

Week Date Opponent Result TV Time Attendance
1 September 7, 1998 at Denver Broncos L 27–21 ABC 9:00 pm
74,745
2 September 13, 1998 Indianapolis Colts W 29–6 ESPN 8:15 pm
60,068
3 September 20, 1998 Tennessee Oilers W 27–16 CBS 1:00 pm
59,973
4 Bye
5 October 4, 1998 at New Orleans Saints W 30–27 CBS 1:00 pm
56,172
6 October 11, 1998 Kansas City Chiefs W 40–10 CBS 1:00 pm
59,749
7 October 19, 1998 New York Jets L 24–14 ABC 9:00 pm
60,062
8 October 25, 1998 at Miami Dolphins L 12–9 CBS 1:00 pm
73,973
9 November 1, 1998 at Indianapolis Colts W 21–16 CBS 1:00 pm
58,056
10 November 8, 1998 Atlanta Falcons L 41–10 FOX 1:00 pm
59,790
11 November 15, 1998 at Buffalo Bills L 13–10 CBS 1:00 pm
72,020
12 November 23, 1998 Miami Dolphins W 26–23 ABC 9:00 pm
58,729
13 November 29, 1998 Buffalo Bills W 25–21 CBS 4:15 pm
58,304
14 December 6, 1998 at Pittsburgh Steelers W 23–9 CBS 4:15 pm
58,632
15 December 13, 1998 at St. Louis Rams L 32–18 CBS 1:00 pm
48,946
16 December 20, 1998 San Francisco 49ers W 24–21 FOX 1:00 pm
59,153
17 December 27, 1998 at New York Jets L 31–10 CBS 1:00 pm
74,302

Standings[]

AFC East
Team W L T PCT PF PA
New York Jets 12 4 0 .750 416 266
Miami Dolphins 10 6 0 .625 321 265
Buffalo Bills 10 6 0 .625 400 333
New England Patriots 9 7 0 .563 337 329
Indianapolis Colts 3 13 0 .188 310 444

Playoffs[]

Week Date Opponent Result
Wildcard January 3, 1999 at Jacksonville Jaguars L 25–10

Notable games[]

The Peyton Manning/New England Patriots rivalry kicked off with a 29–6 rout of Manning's Colts. Ty Law ran back a first-quarter interception 59 yards for the game's first touchdown, while Terry Glenn's three-yard catch and Robert Edwards' one-yard run went with three field goals by future Colt Adam Vinatieri for the Pats. Torrance Small caught a touchdown from Manning in the final five minutes for the only score by the Colts. Manning ended the day with three picks returned for 71 yards.

In their final season using the team nickname "Oilers", the future Tennessee Titans put on a hard challenge for the Patriots, as Eddie George rushed for 100 yards and caught a 22-yard touchdown from Steve McNair. Al Del Greco and Adam Vinatieri exchanged field goals in the first half and the game lead tied or changed seven times before Lawyer Milloy picked off McNair for a 30-yard fourth-quarter touchdown sealing a 27–16 Patriots win.

Two seasons since losing Super Bowl XXXI in New Orleans the Patriots made their first trip to the Louisiana Superdome; coincidentally, the coach they were facing was the one who'd crushed them in Super Bowl XX in that same building – Mike Ditka. Drew Bledsoe overcame three interceptions and led the Patriots to a 27–24 lead in the game's final four minutes. On a Patriots punt Tebucky Jones of the Patriots tried to down the ball before it went into the endzone; Earl Little of the Saints grabbed it in the endzone but as he went to his knees his teammate Andre Hastings yanked it out of his hands and returned the kick 76 yards, setting up the tying field goal with 1:29 left in regulation. Bledsoe then led the Patriots downfield and Adam Vinatieri kicked the game-winning field goal with three seconds left in a 30–27 Patriots win.

Several days before this Monday Night Football matchup came word that team owner Robert Kraft had secured a stadium deal in Hartford, Connecticut for 2001 (a deal subsequently aborted when a deal to build Gillette Stadium was completed). Though the fanbase was displeased, their support for the team didn't waver even as the Patriots fell behind 23–19 with 3:22 left in the fourth after a Karim Abdul-Jabbar rushing touchdown. On the ensuing Patriots possession, Bledsoe completed a first-down pass on fourth and ten, but later broke the index finger on his throwing hand after striking Todd Rucci's helmet; on another fourth-and-ten on the Dolphins 35-yard-line coach Pete Carroll tried to call timeout, but the Patriots didn't see him and Bledsoe completed the first-down throw to Ben Coates. He then found Shawn Jefferson for the game-winning touchdown with 29 seconds remaining, in a 26–23 Patriots final score.

Local hero Doug Flutie made his first visit to Foxboro Stadium since his days as Patriots quarterback, where he'd won all five starts there. Directing the Bills he threw for 339 yards and rushed for 30 more, leading the Bills to a 21–17 lead in the game's final minute. From there, and despite still nursing a broken finger on his throwing hand, Drew Bledsoe led the Patriots downfield and completed a fourth-down throw to the Bills 26 to Shawn Jefferson with six seconds remaining. There was a referee conference after the play regarding the spot of the ball, at which point one of the referees was heard to say "just give it to them", in reference to the first down.[7] Bledsoe threw for the endzone on the next play but the ball fell incomplete; the Bills were flagged for pass interference, extending the game by one untimed down, and from the one-yard line Bledsoe lofted a play-action pass to Ben Coates for the winning touchdown. The disgusted Bills (who felt Jefferson was out of bounds on the catch at the 26) went to the locker room even though the extra point still had to be kicked; Adam Vinatieri thus ran in an unopposed two-point conversion for a 25–21 Patriots win, the first career loss in Foxboro for Flutie. The NFL later stated that the game-extending pass interference call was an erroneous decision by the referees.

Final roster[]

New England Patriots 1998 final roster
Quarterbacks

Running Backs

Wide Receivers

Tight Ends

Offensive Linemen

Defensive Linemen

Linebackers

Defensive Backs

Special Teams

Reserve Lists
data possibly incomplete


Practice Squad

data incomplete


Notations

Notes and references[]

External links[]

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NY Jets Tennessee Seattle Washington Tampa Bay San Francisco
1998 NFL DraftNFL PlayoffsPro BowlSuper Bowl XXXIII
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