On January 18, 1973 the St. Louis Cardinals of the NFL dipped into the college ranks to hire Don Coryell as the new head coach. The 48-year-old Coryell of San Diego State replaced Bob Hollway, who was fired directly following a second straight 4-9-1 record in 1972 with one year remaining on his three-year contract. The Cardinals had not reached the postseason since 1948, although they were contenders several times under Wally Lemm and Charley Winner during the 1960s.
Coryell’s record at San Diego State was 104-19-2 over
twelve seasons, including 10-1 in 1972. Prior to that, the former college
defensive back spent one year as coach at Wenatchee Junior College in
Washington in 1955 and then coached a service team at Fort Ord in California that
went undefeated in ’56. Moving on to Whittier College, his teams had a 23-5-1
record and won three conference championships.
Prior to his arrival in 1961, the Aztecs had gone through
lean years and hit rock bottom with back-to-back 1-6-1 records in the two seasons
immediately preceding. Coryell recruited junior college players and his teams
were known for their pass-oriented offense. He had success with future pro
quarterbacks Don Horn, Dennis Shaw, and Brian Sipe, and notable wide receivers
included Gary Garrison, Isaac Curtis, and Haven Moses. John Madden and Joe
Gibbs were assistant coaches, and Gibbs rejoined Coryell in St. Louis along
with two of his current assistants, Rod Dowhower and Jim Hanifan, who all went
on to head coaching jobs in the NFL.
Asked about his decision to move to a pro team, Coryell
explained that “I was as far as I could go in the situation I was in.” He had a
written a letter to owner Bill Bidwill expressing his interest in the job.
“I’m not a disciplinarian in the way I try to get people
to do things,” said the soft-spoken Coryell of his manner of handling players.
“They do it or they don’t play.”
“I believe in a wide-open style of play,” said Coryell with
regard to his offensive strategy, which ran counter to the prevailing wisdom in the NFL at the time. “I like to throw the
ball. I believe in attacking the defense.”
The quarterback Coryell inherited was Jim Hart (pictured at left), a
29-year-old veteran who had been unheralded coming out of Southern Illinois in
1966, showed great promise when forced into the starting job in ’67, but had endured
challenges from Pete Beathard, Gary Cuozzo, and Tim Van Galder in recent years.
A classic drop-back passer who was at
his best throwing long, Hart prospered in Coryell’s offense.
TE Jackie Smith was a talented veteran receiver and WR Mel
Gray was up-and-coming. HB Donny Anderson was still effective at age 30, but
was joined by speedy rookie Terry Metcalf out of Long Beach State. There were
also good young linemen in OT Dan Dierdorf, G Conrad Dobler, and C Tom Banks,
in addition to savvy veteran OT Ernie McMillan. The defense included a good
group of linebackers in Larry Stallings, Pete Barnes, and Mark Arneson. CB
Roger Wehrli was the best of the defensive backs and DT Dave Butz was a
promising rookie. To top things off, Jim Bakken was an accomplished placekicker
who had been with the club since 1962.
The Cardinals duplicated their 4-9-1 record in 1973. Hart
performed capably but played with injuries during the second half of the season
and missed two games altogether (rookie Gary Keithley, also the punter, filled
in). Moreover, the team ranked 12th in the league in offensive
production but 26th in defense.
St. Louis broke out with a 10-4 record in 1974, making it
into the postseason for the first time in 26 years. Hart had a Pro Bowl year as
he threw for 2411 yards and led the NFC in touchdown passes (20) and
completions (200), while giving up just eight interceptions. He was sacked only
16 times, a tribute to the improvement on the offensive line. Metcalf also
gained Pro Bowl recognition for his outstanding all-around performance, gaining
a total of 2058 yards (718 on 152 rushing attempts, 377 on 50 catches, 623 on
20 kickoff returns and 340 on 26 punt returns). FB Jim Otis provided inside
power and Mel Gray also reached the Pro Bowl. The dependable Jackie Smith had a
new backup and heir apparent in rookie J.V. Cain. The defense, under the direction of
coordinator Ray Willsey, was significantly better, allowing 147 fewer points
and almost a thousand less yards than in ’73. Wehrli was chosen to the Pro Bowl
and CB Norm Thompson intercepted six passes, while DT Bob Rowe was outstanding
on the line that lost Butz for the year in the season’s opening week. After
getting off to a 7-0 start, the Cards had a rougher time during the second half
of the season but still topped the NFC East. They lost to Minnesota in the
Divisional playoff round.
The Cardinals repeated as division champs in 1975 with an
11-3 record. The offense was even more productive. Hart threw more
interceptions (19) but also 19 touchdowns and 2507 yards and again was chosen
to the Pro Bowl. Metcalf outdid himself by setting a NFL record with 2462
all-purpose yards, scoring 13 touchdowns with at least one apiece via rushing,
pass receiving, returning a punt, and returning a kickoff, and Otis led the NFC
in rushing with 1076 yards. Both joined Hart as Pro Bowl choices, and so did
Dan Dierdorf and Conrad Dobler on the line that allowed just eight sacks. Gray was a consensus first-team All-NFL
selection as well (48 catches, 926 yards, 11 TDs). On defense, the pass rush
was still unexceptional, but Wehrli and Thompson intercepted 13 passes between
them, and the former was also a consensus first-team All-Pro. But once more the
Cards couldn’t win in the postseason, losing to the Rams.
The record in 1976 was still strong at 10-4, although in
the highly-competitive NFC East that was only good for third place (thanks to
being swept by the Redskins, who managed the same record) and the Cards missed
the playoffs. Hart had a third straight Pro Bowl year, tossing 18 touchdown
passes while his yardage increased (2946) and his interceptions dropped (13).
Metcalf and Otis had lesser, if still good, seasons. WR Ike Harris emerged with
52 catches for 782 yards across from Gray, still a dangerous deep threat and
Pro Bowler. Bakken was a consensus first-team All-NFL selection for the second
straight year with perhaps his greatest season in his 15th year,
connecting on 20 of 27 field goal attempts, several of which were pivotal in
victories. But the pass rush continued to be disappointing and injuries were a
problem at middle linebacker.
The Cards dropped down to 7-7 in 1977. Hart, Metcalf,
Gray, Dierdorf, Dobler, Banks, and Wehrli were still Pro Bowl performers, but
after breaking out to a 7-3 start, the club lost its last four games. Friction
developed with the front office, where Bidwill insisted on cutting costs and
salary disputes with several veterans affected team morale. Coryell also chafed
at not having a voice in personnel decisions, the team had not drafted well,
and he became increasingly outspoken about the situation.
Coryell resigned as head coach following the season,
having compiled a 42-27-1 record that included two division titles. In just
five years, he had become the winningest coach in the team’s long history (he
was eventually surpassed by Ken Whisenhunt). At a time when zone defenses ruled
and teams tended toward ground-oriented offenses, Coryell proved that an
aggressive passing offense could still be successful.
Coryell did not remain out of work long, returning to San
Diego as head coach of the Chargers during the 1978 season and remaining there until
1986, enjoying even more success (if still never achieving a
championship). With outstanding
personnel and rules changes that went into effect in ’78 to benefit the passing
game, Coryell was able to further innovate and develop an even more explosive
offensive attack.
Bidwill and the Cardinals again went with a successful
college coach to replace Coryell, although in this instance it was 62-year-old
Bud Wilkinson, who had last manned the sidelines at Oklahoma 15 years earlier
before moving to the broadcast booth. With the loss of key personnel, including
Metcalf, who jumped to the CFL, and Harris and Dobler, dealt to New Orleans, the
result was a drop to 6-10 in ’78. It was the first of four straight losing
seasons until the team went 5-4 in the strike-shortened 1982 season under Jim
Hanifan, the former Coryell assistant.
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