1972 Minnesota Vikings season

{{short description|NFL team season}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}

{{Infobox NFL team season

| team = Minnesota Vikings

| year = 1972

| record = 7–7

| division_place = 3rd NFC Central

| coach = Bud Grant

| general manager = Jim Finks

| stadium = Metropolitan Stadium

| playoffs = Did not qualify

| pro bowlers = WR John Gilliam
S Paul Krause
DT Alan Page
T Ron Yary

| AP All-pros = T Ron Yary (1st team)
DE Carl Eller (2nd team)
S Paul Krause (2nd team)
DT Alan Page (2nd team)

| uniform = File:Vikings1970-74.png

| shortnavlink = Vikings seasons

}}

The 1972 season was the Minnesota Vikings' 12th in the National Football League. It marked the return of Fran Tarkenton to the Vikings after he had been traded to the New York Giants in 1967. In return, Minnesota sent three players to the Giants (Norm Snead, Bob Grim and Vince Clements), plus first- and second-round draft picks.{{cite news |url=https://www.si.com/vault/1972/02/07/565932/scramble-back-to-the-deep-purple |title=Scramble Back To The Deep Purple |work=Sports Illustrated |date=February 7, 1972 }} Tarkenton's return also resulted in Gary Cuozzo, who had been with the team since 1968, being traded to the St. Louis Cardinals in a deal that sent wide receiver John Gilliam to the Vikings along with second- and fourth-round draft picks in 1973.{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=2XsfAAAAIBAJ&sjid=OlMEAAAAIBAJ&pg=7388%2C5840272 |newspaper=Pittsburgh Press |agency=UPI |title=Vikes trade Cuozzo |date=April 27, 1972|page=38 }} Cardinals coach Bob Hollway was familiar with Cuozzo, having served as Minnesota's defensive coordinator under Bud Grant prior to leaving for St. Louis in 1971.

The Vikings finished with a record of seven wins and seven losses, 4 games worse than their 11–3 record from 1971. This would be one of only two times during the 1970s in which the Vikings failed to reach the playoffs, as they would win the NFC Central six consecutive seasons (1973–1978) before posting a 7–9 record in 1979. The Vikings started the season with just one win in their first four games, including a surprising 19–17 loss to the lightly regarded Cardinals in week four, when Gary Cuozzo bested his former team as Vikings kicker Fred Cox hit the upright on a potential game-winning field goal. The team recovered from their slow start, winning five of their next six to sit at 6–4. However, the Vikings would lose three of their final four games to finish the season at an even 7–7.

Offseason

=1972 draft=

{{main|1972 NFL draft}}

class="wikitable"

|style="background-color:lightsteelblue; border:1px solid #aaaaaa; width:2em;"|

|Pro Bowler

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
colspan="6" style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|year=1972|border=2}}"|1972 Minnesota Vikings Draft
colspan="2" style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|year=1972|border=2}}"|Draft order

!rowspan="2" style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|year=1972|border=2}}"|Player name

!rowspan="2" style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|year=1972|border=2}}"|Position

!rowspan="2" style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|year=1972|border=2}}"|College

!rowspan="2" style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|year=1972|border=2}}"|Notes

style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|year=1972|border=2}}"|Round

!style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|year=1972|border=2}}"|Selection

rowspan="2"| 1 || 10

|bgcolor=lightsteelblue| Jeff Siemon || Linebacker || Stanford || from Patriots{{efn|The Vikings received New England's first-round selection (10th overall), CB John Charles, and cash as compensation for free agent QB Joe Kapp.}}

24

|colspan="4"| Traded to the New York Giants{{efn-ua|The Vikings traded their first-round selection (24th overall), a 1973 second-round selection (40th overall), QB Norm Snead, WR Bob Grim and RB Vince Clements to the Giants in exchange for QB Fran Tarkenton.}}

2 || 50

| Ed Marinaro || Running back || Cornell ||

rowspan="2"| 3 || 59

| Bart Buetow || Offensive tackle || Minnesota || from Packers{{efn-ua|The Vikings traded QB Zeke Bratkowski to the Packers in exchange for a third-round selection (59th overall).}}

76

|colspan="4"| Traded to the Philadelphia Eagles{{efn-ua|The Vikings traded their third-round selection (76th overall), a 1971 second- and sixth-round selections (50th and 154th overall) and OT Steve Smith to the Eagles in exchange for QB Norm Snead.}}

4 || 102

|colspan="4"| Traded to the Denver Broncos{{efn-ua|The Vikings traded their fourth-round selection (102nd overall) and CB John Charles to the Broncos in exchange for WR Al Denson.}}

5 || 128

|colspan="4"| Traded to the Los Angeles Rams{{efn-ua|The Vikings traded their fifth-round selection (128th overall) to the Rams in exchange for CB Ted Provost.}}

6 || 154

| Amos Martin || Linebacker || Louisville ||

7 || 181

| Bill Slater || Defensive end || Western Michigan || Originally Dolphins pick{{efn|The Vikings originally had 180th overall but passed, allowing the Dolphins to move up and Minnesota selected in the 181st overall pick.}}

8 || 206

| Calvin Demery || Wide receiver || Arizona State ||

9 || 232

| Charlie Goodrum || Guard || Florida A&M ||

10 || 258

| Willie Aldridge || Running back || South Carolina State ||

11 || 284

| Willie McKelton || Defensive back || Southern ||

12 || 310

| Bob Banaugh || Defensive back || Montana State ||

13 || 336

| Franklin Roberts || Running back || Alcorn A&M ||

14 || 361

| Marv Owens || Running back || San Diego State ||

15 || 388

| Mike Sivert || Guard || East Tennessee State ||

16 || 414

| Neil Graff || Quarterback || Wisconsin ||

17 || 440

| Dick Schmalz || Wide receiver || Auburn ||

Notes

{{Notelist-ua}}

{{Notelist}}

Roster

{{NFL final roster

| year = 1972

| team = Minnesota Vikings

| prefix =

| active = 44

| inactive =

| PS =

| quarterbacks =

{{NFLplayer|10|Fran Tarkenton}}

{{NFLplayer|19|Bob Lee|d=quarterback}}

| running_backs =

{{NFLplayer|30|Bill Brown|d=American football}}

{{NFLplayer|26|Clinton Jones|d=American football}}

{{NFLplayer|21|Jim Lindsey}}

{{NFLplayer|49|Ed Marinaro|rookie=y}}

{{NFLplayer|41|Dave Osborn}}

{{NFLplayer|32|Oscar Reed}}

| wide_receivers =

{{NFLplayer|27|Calvin Demery|rookie=y}}

{{NFLplayer|42|John Gilliam|KR}}

{{NFLplayer|80|John Henderson|d=wide receiver}}

{{NFLplayer|84|Gene Washington|d=American football, born 1944}}

| tight_ends =

{{NFLplayer|83|Stu Voigt}}

{{NFLplayer|87|John Beasley|d=American football}}

| Offensive Linemen=

{{NFLplayer|67|Grady Alderman|T}}

{{NFLplayer|71|Doug Davis|d=American football|T}}

{{NFLplayer|64|Milt Sunde|G}}

{{NFLplayer|53|Mick Tingelhoff|C}}

{{NFLplayer|72|John Ward|d=American football, born 1948|G/C/DE}}

{{NFLplayer|62|Ed White|d=American football|G}}

{{NFLplayer|73|Ron Yary|T}}

{{NFLplayer|51|Godfrey Zaunbrecher|C}}

| Defensive Linemen=

{{NFLplayer|81|Carl Eller|DE}}

{{NFLplayer|77|Gary Larsen|DT}}

{{NFLplayer|75|Bob Lurtsema}}

{{NFLplayer|70|Jim Marshall|d=defensive end|DE}}

{{NFLplayer|88|Alan Page|DT}}

{{NFLplayer|69|Doug Sutherland|d=American football|DT}}

| Linebackers=

{{NFLplayer|56|Carl Gersbach}}

{{NFLplayer|58|Wally Hilgenberg}}

{{NFLplayer|55|Amos Martin|rookie=y}}

{{NFLplayer|50|Jeff Siemon|rookie=y}}

{{NFLplayer|59|Lonnie Warwick}}

{{NFLplayer|60|Roy Winston}}

| defensive_backs =

{{NFLplayer|24|Terry Brown|d=American football|S}}

{{NFLplayer|20|Bobby Bryant|CB}}

{{NFLplayer|29|Karl Kassulke|S}}

{{NFLplayer|22|Paul Krause|S}}

{{NFLplayer|45|Ed Sharockman|CB}}

{{NFLplayer|40|Charlie West|CB/PR}}

{{NFLplayer|23|Jeff Wright|d=defensive back|S}}

{{NFLplayer|43|Nate Wright|CB}}

| special_teams =

{{NFLplayer|11|Mike Eischeid|P}}

{{NFLplayer|14|Fred Cox|K}}

| reserve_lists =

| practice_squad =

{{NFLplayer|--|Neil Graff|rookie=y|QB}}

}}

Preseason

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
Week

! Date

! Opponent

! Result

! Record

! Venue

! Attendance{{Cite web|url=https://www.profootballarchives.com/1972nflmin.html|title=1972 Minnesota Vikings (NFL) - Pro Football Archives}}

style="background:#cfc"

! 1

| August 12

| San Diego Chargers

| W 24–13

| 1–0

| Metropolitan Stadium

| 47,900

style="background:#ffdddd"

! 2

| August 18

| at Buffalo Bills

| L 10–21

| 1–1

| War Memorial Stadium

| 41,006

style="background:#cfc"

! 3

| August 26

| at Cleveland Browns

| W 20–17

| 2–1

| Cleveland Stadium

| 70,583

style="background:#cfc"

! 4

| September 4

| Houston Oilers

| W 26–14

| 3–1

| Metropolitan Stadium

| 47,900

style="background:#ffdddd"

! 5

| September 10

| at Miami Dolphins

| L 19–21

| 3–2

| Miami Orange Bowl

| 74,298

Regular season

=Schedule=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueAttendance
bgcolor="#ffdddd"

! 1

| September 18

| Washington Redskins

| L 21–24

| 0–1

| Metropolitan Stadium

| 47,900

bgcolor="#ddffdd"

! 2

| September 24

| at Detroit Lions

| W 34–10

| 1–1

| Tiger Stadium

| 54,418

bgcolor="#ffdddd"

! 3

| October 1

| Miami Dolphins

| L 14–16

| 1–2

| Metropolitan Stadium

| 47,900

bgcolor="#ffdddd"

! 4

| October 8

| St. Louis Cardinals

| L 17–19

| 1–3

| Metropolitan Stadium

| 49,687

bgcolor="#ddffdd"

! 5

| October 15

| at Denver Broncos

| W 23–20

| 2–3

| Mile High Stadium

| 51,656

bgcolor="#ffdddd"

! 6

| October 23

| at Chicago Bears

| L 10–13

| 2–4

| Soldier Field

| 55,701

bgcolor="#ddffdd"

! 7

| October 29

| at Green Bay Packers

| W 27–13

| 3–4

| Lambeau Field

| 56,263

bgcolor="#ddffdd"

! 8

| November 5

| New Orleans Saints

| W 37–6

| 4–4

| Metropolitan Stadium

| 49,784

bgcolor="#ddffdd"

! 9

| November 12

| Detroit Lions

| W 16–14

| 5–4

| Metropolitan Stadium

| 49,784

bgcolor="#ddffdd"

! 10

| November 19

| at Los Angeles Rams

| W 45–41

| 6–4

| Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum

| 77,982

bgcolor="#ffdddd"

! 11

| November 26

| at Pittsburgh Steelers

| L 10–23

| 6–5

| Three Rivers Stadium

| 50,348

bgcolor="#ddffdd"

! 12

| December 3

| Chicago Bears

| W 23–10

| 7–5

| Metropolitan Stadium

| 49,784

bgcolor="#ffdddd"

! 13

| December 10

| Green Bay Packers

| L 7–23

| 7–6

| Metropolitan Stadium

| 49,784

bgcolor="#ffdddd"

! 14

| December 16

| at San Francisco 49ers

| L 17–20

| 7–7

| Candlestick Park

| 61,214

=Game summaries=

==Week 3: vs. Miami Dolphins==

The Dolphins traveled to Metropolitan Stadium in Minnesota for a match against the Vikings in week 3. Miami trailed Minnesota for much of the game. In the first quarter, the Vikings scored a touchdown via a 56-yard pass from quarterback Fran Tarkenton to wide receiver John Gilliam. With no further scoring in the first or second quarters, the Vikings led 7–0 at halftime.{{cite web|url=https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/197210010min.htm|title=Miami Dolphins at Minnesota Vikings - October 1st, 1972|publisher=Pro-Football-Reference.com|access-date=March 27, 2020|archive-date=March 27, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200327061213/https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/197210010min.htm|url-status=live}} As Tarkenton attempted another pass to Gilliam early in the third quarter, cornerback Tim Foley intercepted and returned the ball to Minnesota's 37-yard line. Dolphins kicker Garo Yepremian kicked a 51-yard field goal and later a 42-yard field goal with 5:23 left in the third quarter after Miami re-gained possession. The Vikings then executed an 80-yard, 13-play drive which consumed all time remaining in the third quarter.{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/47435192/fort-lauderdale-news/|title=No Names Slay The Big Names|date=October 2, 1972|author=Mike Schwebel|newspaper=Fort Lauderdale News|page=1D|access-date=March 27, 2020|via=Newspapers.com|archive-date=March 27, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200327061218/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/47435192/fort-lauderdale-news/|url-status=live}} {{free access}}

As the fourth quarter started, Minnesota scored a touchdown via a 1-yard run by running back Bill Brown, with the score being 14–6. After the Dolphins re-gained possession, Vikings linebacker Roy Winston intercepted Bob Griese. However, the No-Name Defense stopped Minnesota's subsequent drive with two sacks on Tarkenton. Miami's next drive, which included a 22-yard double reverse pass from wide receiver Marlin Briscoe to tight end Jim Mandich, ended with a 51-yard field goal by Yepremian. The Dolphins defense then stalled the Vikings next drive and took possession at the Miami 41-yard line. After 39 seconds, 6 plays, and a penalty for roughing the passer, Miami scored a touchdown – a 3-yard pass from Grise to Mandich. The Dolphins thus took a 16–14 lead. With one minute and twenty-eight seconds left, the Vikings attempted to reach field goal range. With little time left, Tarkenton threw a Hail Mary pass at the Minnesota 28-yard line, but was intercepted by Dolphins defensive back Lloyd Mumphord. Miami won by a score of 16–14, sacking Tarkenton five times,100 Things Dolphins Fans Should Know and Do Before They Die, Armando Salguero, Triumph Books, Chicago, 2020, ISBN 978-1-62937-722-3, p.3 and improved to 3–0.{{cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/47435265/fort-lauderdale-news/|title=Dolphins Nip Vikings, 16-14, With Late Touchdown Pass|date=October 2, 1972|author=Mike Schwebel|newspaper=Fort Lauderdale News|page=6D|access-date=March 27, 2020|via=Newspapers.com|archive-date=March 27, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200327061214/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/47435265/fort-lauderdale-news/|url-status=live}} {{free access}}

==Week 11: at Pittsburgh Steelers==

{{Americanfootballbox

|titlestyle={{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|year=1972|border=2}};text-align:center;

|state=autocollapse

|title=Week 11: Minnesota Vikings at Pittsburgh Steelers – Game summary

|date=November 26

|time=1:00 p.m. EDT

|road=Vikings

|R1=3 |R2=0 |R3=0 |R4=7

|home=Steelers

|H1=7 |H2=0 |H3=3 |H4=13

|stadium=Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

|attendance=50,348

|weather={{convert|38|F|C}}

|referee=

|TV=CBS

|TVAnnouncers=Jack Drees, George Connor, and Andy Musser

|reference=[https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/197211260pit.htm Pro-Football-Reference.com]

|scoring=

First quarter

Second quarter

  • No scoring plays.

Third quarter

  • PIT – Roy Gerela 17-yard field goal. Steelers 10–3.

Fourth quarter

  • MIN – Stu Voigt 5-yard pass from Fran Tarkenton (Fred Cox kick). Tied 10–10.
  • PIT – Terry Bradshaw 1-yard run (kick blocked). Steelers 16–10.
  • PIT – Frank Lewis 17-yard pass from Terry Bradshaw (Roy Gerela kick). Steelers 23–10.

|stats=

Top passers

Top rushers

Top receivers

}}

Pittsburgh came into the game 5–0 at home for the season, while Minnesota was riding a four-game win streak. It was quite windy in the stadium at gametime, as the ball blew off the tee twice during the opening kickoff. Once it was kicked, the Vikings began with a good return to their own 45-yard line, but went three-and-out. They got the ball back quickly on the Steelers' opening drive, as John Fuqua fumbled the ball on a bad exchange, recovered by Carl Eller at the Pittsburgh 20. The possession led to a 24-yard field goal after Minnesota only gained three yards. The Vikings followed with a low kickoff due to the wind conditions, and Pittsburgh started again from their own 48, but punted without a first down. The Vikings got the game rolling in an unusual way, extending their possession when Ed Marinaro fumbled a catch and teammate John Gilliam ran it across the 50-yard line. Despite a good drive, the Vikings were held scoreless after failing to gain a foot on a fourth down attempt at the 8. The Steelers then punted again, and late in the first quarter got a turnover at the Vikings' 12 when Bill Brown fumbled. Franco Harris scored untouched on the next play.

The Vikings continued their miscues in the second quarter, as their possession stalled with penalties and the snap was bobbled on the punt, although punter Mike Eischeid performed a fantastic improvised punt while scrambling. It began raining at this point, and after a Steelers punt, the Vikings drove all the way to the 4-yard line, only to settle for a bobbled field goal attempt for a turnover. The Steelers gave it back on an interception by Charlie West, but a field goal attempt by the Vikings from 50 missed badly. The half ended with the Steelers holding a 7–3 lead despite the Vikings holding a 140–84 edge in total yards.

The second half started with a Steelers punt, and then a Vikings punt which the Steelers fumbled at their own 47 after a good return. The Vikings recovered and drove to the 7-yard line but, incredibly, they again bobbled a field goal attempt and again failed to gain any points. On the following Steelers possession, they hit on a big play with a swing pass to Ron Shanklin, which went from their own 39 to the Vikings 19 and set up a field goal. The teams each traded punts twice, until the Vikings neared the goal line again on a 63-yard catch-and-run by John Gilliam. They finally found the end zone with the next play on a swing pass to tight end Stu Voigt, tying the score at 10–10 with about nine minutes left in the fourth quarter.

The Steelers quickly responded with a 61-yard Franco Harris run to the 1-yard line, giving Harris 100-plus rushing yards for the fifth consecutive game. The Steelers scored with a QB sneak by Terry Bradshaw on the following play. The extra point was blocked, and the Steelers led 16–10. They quickly got the ball back, taking Minnesota's punt to the Vikings 39, but were held to a missed field goal attempt. The Vikings then took their last meaningful shot, but failed on fourth down at their own 29. The Steelers then sealed the game with a touchdown catch by Frank Lewis, making the final 23–10.

=Standings=

{{1972 NFC Central standings}}

Awards, records, and honors

=All-Pros=

First team

Second team

=Pro Bowlers=

=League leaders=

Statistics

=Team leaders=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
width=150px style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|year=1972|border=2}}"| Category

!width=150px style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|year=1972|border=2}}"| Player(s)

!width=75px style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|year=1972|border=2}}"| Value

Passing yardsFran Tarkenton2,651
Passing touchdownsFran Tarkenton18
Rushing yardsOscar Reed639
Rushing touchdownsBill Brown4
Receiving yardsJohn Gilliam1,035
Receiving touchdownsJohn Gilliam7
PointsFred Cox97
Kickoff return yardsJohn Gilliam369
Punt return yardsCharlie West111
InterceptionsPaul Krause6

=League rankings=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
width=150px style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|year=1972|border=2}}"| Category

!width=100px style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|year=1972|border=2}}"| Total yards

!width=110px style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|year=1972|border=2}}"| Yards per game

!width=80px style="{{NFLPrimaryStyle|Minnesota Vikings|year=1972|border=2}}"| NFL rank
{{small|(out of 26)}}

Passing offense2,523180.24th
Rushing offense1,740124.320th
Total offense || 4,263 || 304.5 || 12th
Passing defense1,699121.41st
Rushing defense2,002143.016th
Total defense || 3,701 || 264.4 || 5th

References

{{reflist}}

{{Minnesota Vikings}}

{{Minnesota Vikings seasons}}

{{1972 NFL season by team}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:1972 Minnesota Vikings Season}}

Category:Minnesota Vikings seasons

Minnesota

Minnesota Vikings