Did they? I feel like their 1973 schedule's toughness is overinflated because of Buffalo winning 9 games.
PIT/OAK weren't as good as before/after 1973
Did they? I feel like their 1973 schedule's toughness is overinflated because of Buffalo winning 9 games.
The AFC East was trash from 1972-74. Nobody else was over .500 in 1972. In 1973 and 74, the Bills had winning records, but the other three teams finished .500 or below.
I'd actually agree - in a magic world where the 73 Fins line up against the 72 Fins I think 73 win it. The 72 team played a historically weak schedule, too lazy to look it up but something like bottom 5 opponent winning percentage of all-time.JohnTurney wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 9:24 amI think I'd vote 1973. Obviosuly 72 moesuccessful in meeting goal of not losing .. but pass rush better in 73, Griese more efficient ... close call but 73 for me.
So true. From Tom Callahan's 2006 book on John Unitas:The 1967 Colts are the fascinating team to try to parse. No playoff run upon which to judge a one-loss team.
Do they go to Green Bay/Milwaukee and win in place of the Rams? Those Colts had more playoff experience than the Rams did. Do they then beat the Cowboys in Baltimore?
The whole trajectory and future perception of the Colts of that period might be different if they had won that tiebreaker.
Speaking as a huge Unitas/Colts fan back then, Callahan's book was disappointing in many ways. Still waiting for the Johnny U book to be written.Halas Hall wrote: ↑Fri Jul 18, 2025 1:44 pmSo true. From Tom Callahan's 2006 book on John Unitas:The 1967 Colts are the fascinating team to try to parse. No playoff run upon which to judge a one-loss team.
Do they go to Green Bay/Milwaukee and win in place of the Rams? Those Colts had more playoff experience than the Rams did. Do they then beat the Cowboys in Baltimore?
The whole trajectory and future perception of the Colts of that period might be different if they had won that tiebreaker.
"For a remarkable stretch that almost no one remembers -starting on December 18, 1966 and ending on January 12, 1969 - Shula's Colts played a total of thirty football games and lost two. In (1967) the Colts led the NFL with over 5000 yards gained. They allowed fewer than 200 points."