1976 New York Jets season

The 1976 New York Jets season was the seventeenth season for the team and the seventh in the National Football League. It began with the team trying to improve upon its 3–11 record from 1975 under new head coach Lou Holtz. The Jets again finished with a record of 3–11, which combined with the resignation of Holtz with one game left in the season to become coach at the University of Arkansas, prompted John Facenda to say about the Jets during the NFL Films highlight film for that season “Perhaps the best thing to say about the 1976 New York Jets season is that it’s over”.

1976 New York Jets season
OwnerLeon Hess
Head coachLou Holtz (resigned following Week 13, 3–10 record
Mike Holovak (interim, 0–1 record)
Home fieldShea Stadium
Results
Record3–11
Division place4th AFC East
Playoff finishDid not qualify
Pro BowlersNone

The only teams that the Jets defeated in 1976 were the 2–12 Buffalo Bills (twice) and the 0–14 Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Jets were 0–9 vs. teams with a winning record.

The 1976 season was also the twelfth and final year with the Jets for quarterback Joe Namath.[note 1]

Offseason

Draft

1976 New York Jets draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
1 6 Richard Todd  QB Alabama
      Made roster       Pro Football Hall of Fame    *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

Undrafted free agents

1976 Undrafted Free Agents of note
Player Position College
Jim Rosecrans Linebacker Penn State
Howard Satterwhite Wide Receiver Sam Houston State

Personnel

Staff

1976 New York Jets staff
Front office

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches



Roster

1976 New York Jets final roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists



Practice squad



Rookies in italics

Schedule

WeekDateOpponentResultGame siteAttendance
1 September 12at Cleveland BrownsL 38–17Cleveland Stadium67,496
2 September 19at Denver BroncosL 46–3Mile High Stadium62,669
3 September 29at Miami DolphinsL 16–0Miami Orange Bowl49,754
4 October 3at San Francisco 49ersL 17–6Candlestick Park42,961
5 October 10Buffalo BillsW 17–14Shea Stadium59,110
6 October 18at New England PatriotsL 41–7Schaefer Stadium50,883
7 October 24Baltimore ColtsL 20–0Shea Stadium59,576
8 October 31at Buffalo BillsW 19–14Rich Stadium41,285
9 November 7Miami DolphinsL 27–7Shea Stadium53,344
10 November 14Tampa Bay BuccaneersW 34–0Shea Stadium46,426
11 November 21New England PatriotsL 38–24Shea Stadium49,983
12 November 28at Baltimore ColtsL 33–16Memorial Stadium44,023
13 December 5Washington RedskinsL 37–16Shea Stadium46,638
14 December 12Cincinnati BengalsL 42–3Shea Stadium31,067

Standings

AFC East
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
Baltimore Colts(2) 11 3 0 .786 7–1 11–1 417 246 W1
New England Patriots(4) 11 3 0 .786 6–2 10–2 376 236 W6
Miami Dolphins 6 8 0 .429 5–3 6–6 263 264 L1
New York Jets 3 11 0 .214 2–6 3–9 169 383 L4
Buffalo Bills 2 12 0 .143 0–8 2–10 245 363 L10
  • The television series Barney Miller referenced the game between the Buccaneers playing at the Jets, in the third season episode “The Recluse”, in which Yemana (Jack Soo) had tickets to the Jets/Tampa Bay game. When asked “Why?’, his response, “They were on sale”. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers finished 0–14 the same season.

Notes

  1. Namath would play one final season with the 1977 L.A. Rams

References

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