1979 Seattle Seahawks season


The 1979 Seattle Seahawks season was the team's fourth season in the National Football League. The Seahawks had a winning record for the second consecutive year, matching their 9–7 record from 1978.
Starting off the season with a 1–4 record, the Seahawks rallied to finish 9–7. Season highlights included a sweep of the Oakland Raiders for the second straight year, and winning both of their Monday Night Football contests in Atlanta and at home against the New York Jets, where Jim Zorn completed 13 passes in a row in a 30–7 victory. The team also enjoyed their first victory over the Denver Broncos 28–23 on a 43-yard TD pass from Zorn to Largent in the final minutes.
Season lowlights included a 37–34 loss in Denver, after leading 34–10 midway through the 3rd quarter. The Los Angeles Rams shut out the Seattle Seahawks 24–0, holding the Seahawks to -7 yards total offense, and only one first down. The team lost twice to the Kansas City Chiefs, including a 37–21 defeat in week 14 that eliminated Seattle from playoff contention. The team also lost running back David Sims, who led the AFC in TDs in 1978, to a career-ending injury.
The 1979 season was the franchise's last winning season until 1983 when new coach Chuck Knox led the Seahawks to their first playoff berth and Championship game appearance.

1979 NFL draft

Personnel

Staff

Final roster

Preseason

Regular season

Divisional matchups have the AFC West playing the NFC West.
WeekDateOpponentResultRecordGame siteNFL.com
recap
1September 2San Diego ChargersL 16–330–1Kingdome
2September 9at Miami DolphinsL 10–190–2Orange Bowl
3September 16Oakland RaidersW 27–101–2Kingdome
4September 23at Denver BroncosL 34–371–3Mile High Stadium
5September 30Kansas City ChiefsL 6–241–4Kingdome
6October 7at San Francisco 49ersW 35–242–4Candlestick Park
7October 14at San Diego ChargersL 10–202–5San Diego Stadium
8October 21Houston OilersW 34–143–5Kingdome
9at Atlanta FalconsW 31–284–5Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium
10November 4Los Angeles RamsL 0–244–6Kingdome
11November 11at Cleveland BrownsW 29–245–6Cleveland Stadium
12November 18New Orleans SaintsW 38–246–6Kingdome
13New York JetsW 30–77–6Kingdome
14December 2at Kansas City ChiefsL 21–377–7Arrowhead Stadium
15Denver BroncosW 28–238–7Kingdome
16December 16at Oakland RaidersW 29–249–7Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum

Standings

Game summaries

For the second straight year, the Seahawks missed the playoffs by one game. Season highlights included sweeping the Oakland Raiders for the 2nd straight year, and defeating the Denver Broncos for the 1st time in team history in a comeback thriller 28–23 at the Kingdome, and winning the team's first appearance on MNF over the Atlanta Falcons, 31–28. The team started out 3–5, and had a 6–2 finish. A 37–21 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in week 14 knocked them out of playoff contention, but rebounded to end their season repeating 1978 at 9–7.

Preseason

Week P1: vs. Minnesota Vikings

Week P2: vs. Dallas Cowboys

Week P3: at Los Angeles Rams

Week P4: vs. San Francisco 49ers

Regular Season

Week 1: vs. San Diego Chargers

Week 2: at Miami Dolphins

Week 3: vs. Oakland Raiders

Week 4: at Denver Broncos

Week 5: vs. Kansas City Chiefs

Week 6: at San Francisco 49ers

Week 7: at San Diego Chargers

Week 8: vs. Houston Oilers

Week 9: at Atlanta Falcons

Week 10: vs. Los Angeles Rams

With -7 total yards and just one first down, this is the fewest yards the Seahawks have ever gained in one match. It is the most recent – and only since 1970 – occasion when an NFL team has gained just one first down for an entire match, although the Denver Broncos did not gain a single first down in a 1966 game with the Houston Oilers.

Week 11: at Cleveland Browns

Week 12: vs. New Orleans Saints

Week 13: vs. New York Jets

Week 14: at Kansas City Chiefs

Week 15: vs. Denver Broncos

Week 16: at Oakland Raiders

Awards and records