1983 San Diego Chargers season

The 1983 San Diego Chargers season was the franchise’s 14th season in the National Football League (NFL) and its 24th overall. The Chargers fell from their 1982 6–3 record to 6–10. It was their first losing season since 1976, to date the most points the Chargers have surrendered in a sixteen-game season, and began an era in the wilderness for the Chargers, who would not place higher than third in the AFC West, nor win more than eight games in a season, until 1992.

1983 San Diego Chargers season
OwnerEugene V. Klein
General managerJohnny Sanders
Head coachDon Coryell
Home fieldJack Murphy Stadium
Results
Record6–10
Division place5th AFC West
Playoff finishDid not qualify
Pro Bowlers
AP All-ProsNone[2]

Despite San Diego’s disappointing 6–10 record, they led the NFL in passing yardage for the sixth consecutive season, which remains an NFL record.

This was the last season for the Chargers before Gene Klein, the team's owner since 1966, sold the team to Alex Spanos.

Offseason

edit

NFL draft

edit
1983 San Diego Chargers draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
1 5 Billy Ray Smith  Linebacker Arkansas
1 20 Gary Anderson *  Running back Arkansas [a]
1 22 Gill Byrd *  Cornerback San Jose State
4 95 Danny Walters  Cornerback Arkansas
6 141 Trumaine Johnson  Wide receiver Grambling State [b]
7 192 Bill Elko  Nose tackle Louisiana State
8 202 Earnest Jackson *  Running back Texas A&M
9 245 Mike Green  Linebacker Oklahoma State
10 272 Bruce Mathison  Quarterback Nebraska
11 303 Tim Kearse  Wide receiver San Jose State
11 307 Tim Spencer  Running back Ohio State [b]
12 314 Billy Blaylock  Defensive back Tennessee Tech
12 329 Chuck Ehin  Nose tackle Brigham Young
      Made roster    *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

Roster

edit
1983 San Diego Chargers roster
Quarterbacks (QB)

Running backs (RB)

Wide receivers (WR)

Tight ends (TE)

Offensive linemen (OL)

Defensive linemen (DL)

Linebackers (LB)

Defensive backs (DB)

Special teams

Reserve

Rookies in italics

Regular season

edit

Schedule

edit
Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance Recap
1 September 4 New York Jets L 29–41 0–1 Jack Murphy Stadium 51,004 Recap
2 September 12 at Kansas City Chiefs W 17–14 1–1 Arrowhead Stadium 62,150 Recap
3 September 18 at Seattle Seahawks L 31–34 1–2 Kingdome 61,714 Recap
4 September 25 Cleveland Browns L 24–30 (OT) 1–3 Jack Murphy Stadium 49,482 Recap
5 October 2 at New York Giants W 41–34 2–3 Giants Stadium 73,892 Recap
6 October 9 Seattle Seahawks W 28–21 3–3 Jack Murphy Stadium 49,132 Recap
7 October 16 at New England Patriots L 21–37 3–4 Sullivan Stadium 59,016 Recap
8 October 23 at Denver Broncos L 6–14 3–5 Mile High Stadium 74,581 Recap
9 October 31 Washington Redskins L 24–27 3–6 Jack Murphy Stadium 46,114 Recap
10 November 6 at Pittsburgh Steelers L 3–26 3–7 Three Rivers Stadium 58,191 Recap
11 November 13 Dallas Cowboys W 24–23 4–7 Jack Murphy Stadium 46,192 Recap
12 November 20 at St. Louis Cardinals L 14–44 4–8 Busch Memorial Stadium 40,644 Recap
13 November 27 Denver Broncos W 31–7 5–8 Jack Murphy Stadium 43,650 Recap
14 December 1 Los Angeles Raiders L 10–42 5–9 Jack Murphy Stadium 47,760 Recap
15 December 11 Kansas City Chiefs W 41–38 6–9 Jack Murphy Stadium 35,510 Recap
16 December 18 at Los Angeles Raiders L 14–30 6–10 Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 57,325 Recap
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Game summaries

edit

Week 1: vs. New York Jets

edit
Week One: New York Jets at San Diego Chargers – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Jets 0 13 72141
Chargers 7 0 91329

at Jack Murphy Stadium, San Diego, California

Game information

New York's rushing attack controlled the game as San Diego opened their season with a loss.[3] Benirschke missed a 46-yard field goal on San Diego's opening drive, but they took the lead with a touchdown late in the first quarter. They converted three 3rd downs, with Duckworth's juggling 32-yard catch on 3rd and 10 from the Jets 33 followed immediately by Muncie's scoring run. New York responded with thirteen points on their next three drives, while San Diego went three-and-out once and lost a fumble at midfield through Joiner. The Jets led 13–7 at halftime.[4]

Early in the second half, Brooks broke away around left end for a 61-yard run on 3rd and 1 from the San Diego 34-yard line before being caught at the New York 5. San Diego failed to advance further and took a field goal. New York converted a 4th down on their next drive, which took seven minutes and ended with a touchdown. Fouts had back-to-back 22-yard completions to Winslow and Joiner as the Chargers quickly responded with Muncie's second touchdown. New York were soon forced to punt, but Brooks fumbled the return and the Jets recovered; they converted the turnover into a 1-yard touchdown run on 4th and goal. Fouts completed all five of his passes as the Chargers again responded, this time with Duckworth's 29-yard touchdown catch on 3rd and 15. The ensuing kickoff had to be retaken as the television network were not broadcasting, and Kirk Springs returned the second kick 64 yards to set up another touchdown. San Diego needed only three Fouts passes to produce their third consecutive touchdown drive: 21-yard completions to Chandler and Duckworth, then Joiner's 33-yard touchdown. The Jets punted, giving San Diego's offense a chance to give their team the lead. They took over at their own 5-yard line with under three minutes left, and Fouts' second pass was intercepted. New York scored the clinching touchdown, and Fouts was intercepted again before the game finished.[3]

The Jets' runners accounted for a combined 51 carries, 251 yards and 3 touchdowns; they converted four short 4th downs and New York kept possession of the ball for 36:31. San Diego had more total offense yardage (488 to 391), but committed four of the game's five turnovers.[5]

Week 2: at Kansas City Chiefs

edit
Week Two: San Diego Chargers at Kansas City Chiefs – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Chargers 3 0 7717
Chiefs 0 7 0714

at Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City, Missouri

Game information

Chandler's late touchdown gave the Chargers their first win.[6] Tim Fox's interception five minutes into the game set up his offense at the Kansas City 35-yard line; they could only move the ball two yards, but Benirschke made a 51-yard kick to put them ahead. The Chargers had another good scoring chance later in the opening quarter, but Muncie lost a fumble on 1st and 10 from the Chiefs 16. In the 2nd quarter they moved from their own 36 to a 4th and 1 at the Chiefs 2, but Brooks was stopped for no gain and they again came away with no points. Kansas City then drove 97 yards, converting a 3rd and 17 and taking the lead through Anthony Hancock's touchdown on the next play. A Fouts pass was intercepted but then fumbled back with a minute left in the half, allowing a Benirschke field goal try. He missed wide left from 46 yards out and the Chiefs led 7–3 at the break.[7]

Earnest Jackson misplayed the opening kickoff of the second half and was tackled at his own 4-yard line. San Diego's offense put together a 15-play, 96-yard drive, with Muncie producing a air of 3rd-down conversions and scoring on the second of them. The Chargers' next drive covered 81 yards on 14 plays, but ended with another missed scoring opportunity: on 3rd and goal from the 2, Muncie gained one yard before fumbling into the end zone, where Kansas City recovered. The Chiefs drove 80 yards the other way and retook the lead on a trick play, with wide receiver Carlos Carson throwing the touchdown. San Diego took over on their own 20 with three minutes left, but needed only five plays to retake the lead. Fouts completed all four of his passes for 76 yards, including a 36-yard gain by Brooks on a screen pass and Chandler's winning catch in the end zone. Green stopped a Chiefs run for no gain on 4th and 1 with a minute to play, and San Diego ran out the clock.[8]

The Chargers had the ball in Chiefs territory on all eleven of their drives. San Diego's offense had an uncharacteristic focus on the run, with Muncie rushing 27 times for 110 yards and Brooks 23 times for 86 yards; they had 51 rushing plays in total and only 26 passes.[7]

Week 3: at Seattle Seahawks

edit
Week Three: San Diego Chargers at Seattle Seahawks – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Chargers 7 3 02131
Seahawks 14 3 10734

at Kingdome, Seattle, Washington

  • Date: September 18
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. PDT
  • Game weather: N/A (game played indoors)
  • Game attendance: 61,714
  • Referee: Ben Dreith
  • TV announcers (NBC): Dick Enberg and Merlin Olsen
  • Box score
Game information

Seattle beat the Chargers by dominating time of possession and surviving a late rally.[9] Seattle scored a touchdown on the game's opening possession, and were threatening again when Fox intercepted an overthrown Jim Zorn pass at the Chargers 26-yard line. Fouts passed on the next five plays, completing four of them for 76 yards; a well-covered Joiner made a juggling catch for the touchdown. Fouts was intercepted twice through the rest of the first half, leading to ten Seattle points. Late in the 2nd quarter, Joiner had a 24-yard catch and also drew a further 15 yards for a late hit. San Diego reached a first and goal at the 8, but had to settle for a field goal and trailed 17–10 at halftime.[10]

The Seahawks extended their lead in the 3rd quarter through a field goal and Paul Moyer's interception and return of a tipped Fouts pass. On the following drive Chandler's 33-yard catch to the Seattle 14 was nullified because Fouts had crossed the line of scrimmage before throwing the ball, forcing the Chargers to punt. Seattle lost a fumble soon afterwards, but retained possession when Johnson was ruled to have impeded a Seahawk attempting to make a recovery. Johnson himself recovered another fumble later in the drive, giving San Diego possession at their own 35. They drove from there to score on Sievers' 26-yard catch, but Seattle came straight back with Zorn's touchdown pass to Steve Largent and led by seventeen points with under nine minutes to play. San Diego needed barely a minute to begin their comeback via Duckworth's 44-yard touchdown on a 3rd and 10. Three minutes later, Linden King knocked the ball from Zorn's hands and Rick Ackerman recovered. Fouts immediately found Sievers open near the goal line to reduce the deficit to three points. San Diego were however unable to get the ball back on offense, as Seattle converted a pair of short third down situations and ran out the final four minutes of the game.[9]

San Diego possessed the ball for only 20:56 as Seattle rushed 56 times for 206 yards and a touchdown. The Chargers outgained Seattle by 431 yards to 368.[11]

Week 4: vs. Cleveland Browns

edit
Week Four: Cleveland Browns at San Diego Chargers – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34OTTotal
Browns 7 7 73630
Chargers 3 7 140024

at Jack Murphy Stadium, San Diego, California

  • Date: September 25
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. PDT
  • Game weather: 73 °F (22.8 °C), relative humidity 69%, wind 9 miles per hour (14 km/h; 7.8 kn)
  • Game attendance: 49,482
  • Referee: Bob Frederic
  • TV announcers (NBC): Jay Randolph and Bob Chandler
  • Box score
Game information

San Diego slipped to 1–3 with an overtime defeat.[12] There were only six possessions in the first half. The Chargers attempted field goals at the end of their first two drives, with Benirschke converting from 37 yards and missing from 41; Cleveland responded with a pair of touchdown drives that consumed over fifteen minutes. San Diego scored on their next drive, Duckworth drawing a 31-yard pass interference penalty and Fouts finding Sievers in the end zone on 3rd and 10 from the 15. Cleveland drove from their own 35 to the Chargers 1-yard line with five seconds left in the half. They opted to run another play, but a pass from Brian Sipe to Ozzie Newsome fell incomplete with Green on the coverage, and time ran out with the Browns up 14–10.[13]

Cleveland needed only six plays to extend their lead in the second half but San Diego came straight back, with Chandler gaining 29 yards on a 3rd and 3 before scoring in tight coverage after the ball was tipped in the air at the goal line. Cleveland were then forced to punt (the first time either side had done so), and San Diego took over at their own 47. Muncie caught a 16-yard pass, then fumbled after a 3-yard run with Don Macek recovering to preserve possession. Fouts found Chandler for his second touchdown on the next play. Winslow had catches of 24 and 28 yards on the next two drives, each one leading to a field goal try: Benirschke was short from 49 yards, then had a 34-yarder blocked. The missed opportunities proved important, as Cleveland forced San Diego to punt from their own 10-yard line with two minutes left, then put together a 28-yard drive that ended with a game-tying field goal with 18 seconds left; Andre Young broke up a potential touchdown pass one play before the kick.[13]

The game went into overtime, where Cleveland won the coin toss, received the ball and scored quickly. Sipe converted a 3rd and 7 with a 12-yard pass, then threw the 48-yard game-winner on the next play.[12]

Benirschke was 1 of 4 on field goal tries. San Diego had two 100-yard receivers: Chandler caught 6 passes for 134 yards and two touchdowns, while Winslow caught 8 for 108.[14]

Week 5: at New York Giants

edit
Week Five: San Diego Chargers at New York Giants – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Chargers 13 14 7741
Giants 0 17 71034

at Giants Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

  • Date: October 2
  • Game time: 4:00 p.m. EDT
  • Game weather: 66 °F (18.9 °C), relative humidity 86%, wind 8 miles per hour (13 km/h; 7.0 kn)
  • Game attendance: 73,892
  • Referee: Gene Barth
  • TV announcers (NBC): Dick Enberg and Merlin Olsen
  • Box Score
Game information

Muncie's touchdown and Smith's late fumble recovery saved the Chargers after they lost a seventeen point lead.[15] Benirschke made a field goal on the game's opening drive, then added another after King's fumble recovery at the New York 40-yard line. Woodrow Lowe soon forced another fumble, which Leroy Jones recovered at the New York 16 and returned to the 1-yard line. From there, Muncie ran three times in a row, scoring on the third attempt. Keith Ferguson soon became the third Chargers to recover a fumble in the opening quarter, but Muncie fumbled the ball back to New York two plays later. Fouts was intercepted in his own territory in the 2nd quarter, leading to a Giants field goal. He began the next drive with completions of 22 and 15 yards to Sievers, and San Diego eventually reached a 4th and 2 at the New York 17. They converted with a fake field goal, holder Luther passing to Sherman Smith for 4 yards; Fouts and Joiner connected for a touchdown on the next play. Giants quarterback Scott Brunner led a quick drive in response, ending with his first touchdown pass of the game. Fouts came back with five consecutive completions for 71 yards and a touchdown, caught by Winslow with 42 seconds left. That was enough time for New York to score again, with San Diego's defensive backs losing track of Danny Pittman for a 40-yard touchdown with 6 seconds left. Four touchdowns had been scored in the final 3:16 of the first half, and the Chargers led 27–17.[16]

New York continued their recovery in the second half. Young gave up a 32-yard pass interference penalty on a 3rd and 11 from San Diego's 34, and the Giants eventually scored on 4th and goal. Fouts was intercepted by Lawrence Taylor on the next play, setting New York up at the Chargers 17. They appeared to have tied the game with a field goal, but Byrd was flagged for running into the kicker, giving up a 1st and goal on the 7-yard line. The penalty benefitted San Diego when Brunner fumbled the next snap and Bill Elko recovered. The teams exchanged punts before Luther came in for an injured Fouts. He fumbled his second snap (Ed White recovered to maintain possession) but then converted two 3rd downs on the drive to Muncie's second touchdown. New York responded with Brunner's third touchdown pass, then intercepted Luther and tied the game with a field goal. Luther came back with a 32-yard pass to Joiner to open the next drive. Four plays later, Muncie swept left behind a key block from White and broke away for a 34-yard touchdown. On the next play, Byrd made his first career interception on a deep pass. New York forced a punt and began a final drive at their own 35 with three minutes left. Byrd dropped a second interception, then deflected an end zone pass after the Giants reached San Diego's 12. After another incompletion, Brunner fumbled the ball while attempting to pass. Smith recovered with 52 seconds left, and the Chargers ran out the clock.[15]

San Diego forced six of the game's ten turnovers. They recovered all five times that the Giants fumbled, and also recovered two of their own three fumbles.[17]

Week 6: vs. Seattle Seahawks

edit
Week Six: Seattle Seahawks at San Diego Chargers – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Seahawks 7 14 0021
Chargers 0 7 71428

at Jack Murphy Stadium, San Diego, California

  • Date: October 9
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. PDT
  • Game weather: 73 °F (22.8 °C), relative humidity 76%, wind 12 miles per hour (19 km/h; 10 kn)
  • Game attendance: 49,132
  • Referee: Tom Dooley
  • TV announcers (NBC): Jay Randolph and Reggie Rucker
  • Box score
Game information

Young's late interception return completed a franchise record 21-point comeback.[18] Seattle threatened on their first drive, but were stopped for no gain on 4th and 1 from the 19-yard line. Later, a Seattle punt touched Bruce Laird and the Seahawks recovered, leading to the game's first touchdown. San Diego drove to a 1st and 10 at the Seattle 23, but Winslow fumbled after a short pass; Seattle again recovered, and again drove for a touchdown. The Chargers drove to the Seahawks 19- and 43-yard lines on their next two possessions, but Fouts was intercepted both times, with Seattle scoring their third touchdown after the second of these. San Diego were able to respond immediately. Fouts began the drive with back-to-back completions of 20 yards to Muncie and 21 yards to Joiner. After a personal foul penalty on Seattle nullified an 11-yard sack, Fouts found Sievers for 28 yards but left the game with an injury. Luther and Winslow combined for the touchdown two plays later, reducing the halftime deficit to 21–7.[19]

Brooks converted a 4th and inches early in the second half. Fouts had returned to the game, and found Duckworth behind the defense for a 59-yard touchdown on the next play. San Diego next went three-and-out, but then made it three touchdowns from four possessions with an 87-yard drive. Fouts converted a 3rd and 9 with an 11-yard pass to Joiner and a 3rd and 13 with a 22-yarder to Chandler, before Muncie tied the score early in the final quarter. Ken Greene recovered a fumble at the Seattle 36 with under six minutes left, but Muncie fumbled it back four plays later. The Seahawks moved to a 2nd and 13 from their own 32 before Young intercepted a Zorn pass near the right sideline and scored easily with 2:04 to play. Seattle reached their own 47-yard line on their final drive, but were pushed back by two penalties and a Ferguson sack, with Zorn eventually throwing incomplete on 4th and 38.[19]

The comeback was matched by the Chargers in 2006 and 2014, but has not been exceeded as of 2024.[20] They won despite committing five of the game's seven turnovers, and possessing the ball for under 25 minutes.[21]

Week 7: at New England Patriots

edit
Week Seven: San Diego Chargers at New England Patriots – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Chargers 7 14 0021
Patriots 3 7 32437

at Sullivan Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts

  • Date: October 16
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT
  • Game weather: 50 °F (10 °C), relative humidity 51%, wind 15 miles per hour (24 km/h; 13 kn)
  • Game attendance: 59,016
  • Referee: Fred Wyant
  • TV announcers (NBC): Phil Stone, Gene Washington
  • Box score
Game information

San Diego collapsed in the 4th quarter after being stopped on a key 4th down attempt.[22][23] King's sack forced New England to punt on their opening possession, and the Chargers drove 64 yards to Brooks' opening touchdown without having to convert a 3rd down. Brooks fumbled in his own territory later in the 1st quarter, setting up a Patriots field goal. San Diego responded by covering 77 yards with three Fouts passes: 11 yards to Duckworth, 26 to Brooks, and 40 to Duckworth again for the touchdown. New England drew back within four points on their next drive, then each side punted once before San Diego scored again. Winslow converted a 3rd and 8 on the drive, and Brooks' second touchdown came on 3rd and goal from the 1-yard line. The Chargers led 21–10 at halftime.[23]

Fouts was intercepted three plays into the second half, leading to a New England field goal. The Chargers gained a first down at the Patriots 40, but Fouts fumbled the snap and New England recovered. After forcing a punt, San Diego drove from their own 16 to a 4th and inches from the Patriots 1-yard line, with Fouts converting three 3rd downs along the way. However, he was stopped just short on a quarterback sneak with two minutes left in the 3rd quarter, sparking a New England comeback. The Patriots drove 84 yards for a field goal, then took the lead two plays after another Brooks fumble. The next two Chargers drives ended with a punt and a turnover on downs, with New England responding with touchdowns both times.[23]

The Chargers outgained New England by 427 yards to 327, but committed all four of the game's turnovers.[24] It was San Diego's eleventh consecutive regular season game gaining 400 or more yards, still a record as of 2024.[25]

Week 8: at Denver Broncos

edit
Week Seven: San Diego Chargers at Denver Broncos – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Chargers 0 3 306
Broncos 0 0 01414

at Mile High Stadium, Denver, Colorado

  • Date: October 23
  • Game time: 2:00 p.m. MDT
  • Game weather: 56 °F (13.3 °C), relative humidity 25%, wind 6 miles per hour (9.7 km/h; 5.2 kn)
  • Game attendance: 74,581
  • Referee: Jim Tunney
  • TV announcers (NBC): Marv Albert and John Brodie
  • Box score
Game information

San Diego failed to reached the end zone as Luther lost his first career start.[26] With Fouts and Muncie both out injured, San Diego began the game with punts on their first three possessions. Late in the 1st quarter, Carlos Bradley recovered a Denver fumble near midfield and the Chargers crossed into Broncos territory for the first time. They reached the 34-yard line before Luther threw his first interception. On their next possession the Chargers drove from their own 8-yard line to the Denver 34 with Luther converting three 3rd downs, but Benirschke was short on a 43-yard kick. Denver then produced their longest drive of the half, reaching the Chargers 24 before Young sacked Steve DeBerg and Johnson recovered. After a San Diego punt, Johnson produced his own sack and forced fumble, which Ackerman recovered at the Denver 11-yard line. Luther threw three incompletions, and Benirschke's 29-yard kick put the Chargers up 3–0 at the interval.[27]

The Chargers' first two possessions of the second half reached Denver's 33-yard line, from where Luther was intercepted, and 12-yard line, where they stalled and Benirschke kicked his second field goal. Denver's first touchdown came on the next possession with DeBerg's touchdown pass on 3rd and 7. The Chargers went three-and-out, and Denver were soon threatening to score again as they reached a 3rd and 3 at the San Diego 9 before being stopped by Green's interception. Following another three-and-out, the Broncos drove 47 yards for the clinching touchdown, and Luther was intercepted again in the final seconds.[27]

It was first time Fouts had missed a game since week 13, 1978, and the first time San Diego failed to score a touchdown since week 6, 1979 (also at Denver).[26] The Chargers were hampered by 14 penalties for 100 yards.[28]

Week 9: vs. Washington Redskins

edit
Week Nine: Washington Redskins at San Diego Chargers – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Redskins 7 3 71027
Chargers 7 0 01724

at Jack Murphy Stadium, San Diego, California

  • Date: October 31
  • Game time: 6:00 p.m. PST
  • Game weather: 71 °F (21.7 °C), relative humidity 73%, wind 9 miles per hour (14 km/h; 7.8 kn)
  • Game attendance: 46,114
  • Referee: Fred Silva
  • TV announcers (NBC): Frank Gifford, Don Meredith and Howard Cosell
  • Box score
Game information

Mark Moseley's field goal with 4 seconds left beat the Chargers after they had overcome a seventeen point 4th-quarter deficit.[29] It took only four plays for Joe Theismann to open the scoring with his touchdown pass. Later in the opening quarter Luther's threw his first interception of the game in his own territory, but Moseley missed a 43-yard field goal. Luther then converted a pair of 3rd downs with passes to Winslow and Pete Holohan to set up Muncie's game-tying touchdown run. The Chargers had a 2nd and 10 at the Washington 11-yard line on their next drive, but Sherman Smith fumbled at the end of a 4-yard run, and the ball rolled out of bounds in the end zone for a touchback and a turnover. The next two Washington drives ended with a Danny Walters interception and a 52-yard Moseley field goal try that missed after striking the right upright. Luther was intercepted on the next play, and Moseley's 43-yard success made it 10–7 at the break.[30]

Washington intercepted a deep pass from Luther early in the second half, and drove 93 yards the other way for a touchdown. The drive included a 48-yard run on a fake punt by Jeff Hayes. Luther was intercepted again on the next drive, and Washington again drove for a touchdown, pushing their lead to 24–7 early in the 4th quarter. The turnovers continued for Luther, who was intercepted and then lost a fumble in quick succession, both in his own territory. Moseley responded with missed field goal tries from 47 and 39 yards. The Charger offense then found form, beginning with a 78-yard drive which Muncie began with a 21-yard run before Holohan had catches of 35 and 23 yards, the latter for a touchdown on 3rd and 11. Washington drove inside the San Diego 20 before a holding penalty and a King sack prompted them to punt; Hayes pinned the Chargers on their own 1-yard line. Luther covered the full 99 yards with only four passes, all complete—10 and 39 yards to Chandler, 23 yards to Joiner and 27 to Chandler again for the touchdown. San Diego completed the comeback after Brooks' 30-yard punt return to the Washington 30; the offense could only gain 4 yards but Benirschke was successful on a 43-yard kick with 1:52 to play. Theismann converted a 3rd and 7 from his own 12 early in the winning drive, which Moseley eventually capped with a 37-yard field goal. Luther was intercepted once more as time ran out.[29]

San Diego committed eight of the game's nine turnovers; Luther was intercepted six times and lost a fumble. It was the first time the Chargers had lost three in a row with Don Coryell as their head coach.[31]

Week 10: at Pittsburgh Steelers

edit
Week Ten: San Diego Chargers at Pittsburgh Steelers – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Chargers 0 3 003
Steelers 17 3 3326

at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

  • Date: November 6
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: 43 °F (6.1 °C), relative humidity 71%, wind 11 miles per hour (18 km/h; 9.6 kn)
  • Game attendance: 58,191
  • Referee: Jerry Seeman
  • TV announcers (NBC): Bob Costas and Bob Trumpy
  • Box score
Game information

Luther struggled again as the Chargers lost their fourth game in a row.[32] Steelers running back Walter Abercrombie had a 51-yard reception on the game's fifth play and scored on the next, putting Pittsburgh ahead to stay. Lowe recovered a fumble at the Steelers 34-yard line soon afterwards, but the Chargers gained no yards on three plays and Benirschke missed from 52 yards. Pittsburgh made their first field goal on the next drive, and extended their lead when Luther fumbled and Mel Blount recovered and scored. Walters made an interception at his own 23 in the 2nd quarter and San Diego drove 56 yards for their only points of the game, but Pittsburgh came straight back with a field goal of their own, and led 20–3 at halftime.[33]

After the Steelers' third field goal, San Diego took over from their own 20-yard line and produced their only serious scoring threat of the second half. Muncie began the drive with carries of 12 and 17 yards, and later converted a 4th and 1. The Chargers reached 4th and 4 at the Pittsburgh 16, from where Luther was sacked and fumbled. The Steelers returned the ball to the Chargers 47, added a fourth field goal, and won without difficulty.[33]

San Diego were outgained by 288 yards to 218. It was their smallest total since week 12, 1979.[34]

Week 11: vs. Dallas Cowboys

edit
Week Eleven: Dallas Cowboys at San Diego Chargers – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Cowboys 0 6 31423
Chargers 7 10 7024

at Jack Murphy Stadium, San Diego, California

Game information

Luther's first career win was a surprise defeat of the 9–1 Cowboys.[35] San Diego's special teams put them ahead to stay when Miles McPherson blocked a Danny White punt and Derrie Nelson returned the loose ball for a touchdown. The offense embarked on an 81-yard touchdown drive midway through the 2nd quarter; Luther completed 4 of 6 passes for 80 yards, and Muncie finished from the 2-yard line. Dallas missed a 50-yard field goal with 1:45 left in the half, but got another chance when Luther was intercepted. They drove 30 yards for a touchdown but the extra point was mishit and missed to the left. Taking over at his own 26-yard line with 43 seconds left in the half, Luther completed three straight passes for 56 yards. Two plays later, Benirschke's 37-yard kick extended the lead to 17–6.[36]

The Chargers took the second half kickoff and narrowly converted a 3rd and 10 through Joiner. They reached 3rd and 1 at the Dallas 31-yard line. Consecutive catches of 13 and 18 yards by Holohan took them to the end zone and an eighteen point lead. Dallas had to settle for a field goal on their next drive after Lowe sacked White on 3rd and goal from the 11, but followed up with consecutive touchdown drives and drew within a point with eight minutes still to play. They had one more possession, starting from their own 4-yard line and gaining one first down before punting. San Diego's ran the final 3:37 off the clock; on 3rd and 1 Muncie ran for 2 yards, then on 3rd and 6 Joiner dove for a 12-yard catch.[36]

San Diego won despite rushing 20 times for only 23 yards. Muncie had 18 carries for 30 yards and a touchdown, but also caught 4 passes for 65 yards.[37]

Week 12: at St. Louis Cardinals

edit
Week Twelve: San Diego Chargers at St. Louis Cardinals – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Chargers 0 7 0714
Cardinals 7 30 7044

at Busch Stadium, St. Louis, Missouri

  • Date: November 20
  • Game time: 12:00 p.m. CST
  • Game weather: 54 °F (12.2 °C), relative humidity 80%, wind 21 miles per hour (34 km/h; 18 kn)
  • Game attendance: 40,644
  • Referee: Tom Dooley
  • TV announcers (NBC): Bob Costas and Bob Trumpy
  • Box score
Game information

A 30 point scoring burst for St. Louis turned a close game into a blowout.[38] The Chargers trailed only 7–0 when they drove from their own 37 to a 2nd and goal from the Cardinals 1-yard line, from where they began the 2nd quarter. Muncie lost a fumble on the next play, and Neil Lomax immediately made a 55-yard completion to move St. Louis away from their own goal line. That drive ended with a field goal, after which the Chargers were surprised by an onside kick—the Cardinals recovered and drove for a touchdown. San Diego's next three drives lasted four plays, two plays and one play, ending with two interceptions and a lost fumble for Luther. Each time, St. Louis scored a touchdown to run their lead to 37–0 with three minutes still to play in the first half. Subsequent touchdowns for Muncie and Winslow slightly improved the final score.[39]

The Cardinals' scoring outburst took only 8:08 of game time, during which the Chargers ran seven offensive plays and had three turnovers. The final statistics showed relatively small advantages for St. Louis in first downs (18 to 16) and offensive yardage (378 to 315), but San Diego committed six and of the game's eight turnovers.[40]

Week 13: vs. Denver Broncos

edit
Week Thirteen: Denver Broncos at San Diego Chargers – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Broncos 7 0 007
Chargers 14 7 01031

at Jack Murphy Stadium, San Diego, California

  • Date: November 27
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. PST
  • Game weather: 57 °F (13.9 °C), relative humidity 42%, wind 6 miles per hour (9.7 km/h; 5.2 kn)
  • Game attendance: 43,650
  • Referee: Gordon McCarter
  • TV announcers (NBC): Don Criqui and Gene Washington
  • Box score
Game information

Fouts ended his five-game absence and led the Chargers to victory.[41] He began badly by losing a fumble on the game's third play, leading to the Broncos' lone touchdown. San Diego responded immediately with an 85-yard drive that included a 4-yard run by Muncie on 4th and 1 from the Denver 13-yard line. Muncie fumbled on the next play but Chandler recovered, allowing Fouts and Winslow to combine for the touchdown on 3rd and goal. Walters intercepted John Elway on the first play of Denver's reply and returned the ball 18 yards to the Broncos 27-yard line, setting up a short drive and another Winslow touchdown. After a Denver punt, the Chargers produced their third consecutive touchdown; their 74-yard drive began with Winslow's 28-yard catch and ended with Brooks' short scoring run. The Broncos had a 2nd and 2 from the San Diego 21 late in the half, but Walters came up with an interception and the Chargers went into halftime up 21–7.[42]

San Diego forced a punt to start the second half, then Fouts led them from their own 14-yard line to a 1st and goal at the 10 before being intercepted in the end zone. Denver drove to the Chargers 37 but Elway threw incomplete on 4th and 11. San Diego soon scored again—Chandler drew a 36-yard pass interference penalty in the end zone, and Muncie reached the end zone on the next play. After Denver were again stopped on downs, Fouts completed passes of 26 yards to Joiner and 28 to Winslow en route to the Benirschke field goal that ended the scoring.[41]

The San Diego defense sacked Elway four times and intercepted him three times. They had two 100-yard receivers, with Winslow catching 6 passes for 103 yards and 2 touchdowns while Joiner caught 7 for 102 yards.[43]

Week 14: vs. Los Angeles Raiders

edit
Week Fourteen: Los Angeles Raiders at San Diego Chargers – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Raiders 0 14 28042
Chargers 7 3 0010

at Jack Murphy Stadium, San Diego, California

  • Date: December 1
  • Game time: 6:00 p.m. PST
  • Game weather: 65 °F (18.3 °C), relative humidity 64%, wind 12 miles per hour (19 km/h; 10 kn)
  • Game attendance: 47,760
  • Referee: Dick Jorgensen
  • TV announcers (ABC): Frank Gifford, Don Meredith and Howard Cosell
  • Box score
Game information

San Diego were officially eliminate from postseason contention after a collapse against Los Angeles.[44] Walters intercepted a deep pass early in the game and returned it 33 yards to his own 48. From there, the Chargers drove to a 3rd and 5 at the Raiders 17-yard line, from where Joiner converted with a 12-yard catch and Muncie scored on the next play. Benirschke added a short field goal in the 2nd quarter to extend the lead to ten points. The game turned on a Raiders trick play with two minutes left in the half—on 3rd and 1 from the San Diego 43, running back Marcus Allen threw a touchdown pass to Todd Christensen. Jim Plunkett combined with the same player on their next drive, and Los Angeles led 14–10 at halftime.[45]

Los Angeles pulled away in the 3rd quarter, forcing a San Diego three-and-out and scoring with their first drive. Fouts was sacked and fumbled soon afterwards, leaving the Raiders with only 2 yards to go for their fourth touchdown in four drives. Fouts was intercepted on the next two plays from scrimmage, with the first of these run back for a touchdown; this gave him three turnovers in as many plays. After an exchange of punts, Los Angeles drove for the game's final points.[45]

The Raiders scored their 42 points in a span of 13:29. Despite the lopsided scoreline, Los Angeles had only one more yard of offense (323 to 322) and slightly less time of possession (28:59 to 31:01).[46]

Week 15: vs. Kansas City Chiefs

edit
Week Fifteen: Kansas City Chiefs at San Diego Chargers – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Chiefs 7 7 101438
Chargers 10 14 14341

at Jack Murphy Stadium, San Diego, California

  • Date: December 11
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. PST
  • Game weather: 58 °F (14.4 °C), relative humidity 78%, wind 6 miles per hour (9.7 km/h; 5.2 kn)
  • Game attendance: 35,510
  • Referee: Ben Dreith
  • TV announcers (NBC): Charlie Jones and Bob Griese
  • Box score
Game information

Winslow's three first half touchdowns set the Chargers up for a high-scoring win.[47] King recovered a fumble on the game's fourth play to set up Benirschke's early field goal. Kansas City were forced to punt and Brooks returned the ball 28 yards to the Chiefs 43-yard line; Fouts converted a 3rd and 8 with a 9-yard pass to Holohan and Winslow scored his first touchdown two plays later. Kansas City came back with a 50-yard touchdown when Carlos Carson beat the single coverage of Walters. The Chargers went straight back up by ten points by covering 73 yards without having to face a 3rd down; Sievers had a 28-yard reception and Winslow was awarded the touchdown despite one of his feet being out of bounds in the back of the end zone. Preston stopped a threatening Chiefs drive with an interception, but Kansas City scored a touchdown on their next possession. The Chargers again responded immediately, this time with a 12-play, 92-yard drive that featured three conversions on 3rd and 1 (one on a catch by Winslow and two on runs by Muncie). Winslow capped the drive with his third touchdown of the half and San Diego went into the interval up 24–14.[48]

Kansas City scored on their first possession of the second half on a breakaway 49-yard run, but San Diego came straight back with a touchdown for the third time. Third down situations were converted with passes to Winslow, Chandler and Winslow again, before the touchdown came on a broken play; Muncie slipped before Fouts could hand him the ball, so the quarterback kept it himself and dove over from a yard out. The Chiefs scored a field goal, then Fouts was intercepted on one drive and knocked out with a shoulder injury on the next. Luther came in and threw a touchdown to Chandler on his second attempt of the game, increasing the lead to 38–24. Kansas City pulled back within seven points with a touchdown, then the Chargers ran over five minutes off the clock with a 13-play drive that featured a 4th-down conversion by Brooks but ended when a Luther pass was tipped and intercepted. The Chiefs reached a 1st and goal at the 3, but Cliff Thrift forced a fumble that Ferguson recovered. San Diego went three-and-out, and Kansas City needed only four plays to drive for the game-tying touchdown. The Chargers began the winning drive at their own 20 with 1:34 left. Duckworth drew a 25-yard pass interference penalty and had a 14-yard catch; Brooks moved the ball to the Kansas City 14 with an 18-yard run, and Benirschke hit the decisive field goal two plays later.[48]

A total of 13,945 no-shows caused the small attendance figures.[47] Winslow's 14 catches were a new franchise record.[c] The teams combined for over 1,000 yards of offense (537 for the Chiefs, 476 for the Chargers).[50]

Week 16: at Los Angeles Raiders

edit
Week Sixteen: San Diego Chargers at Los Angeles Raiders – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Chargers 7 0 7014
Raiders 7 6 31430

at Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles, California

  • Date: December 18
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. PST
  • Game weather: 56 °F (13.3 °C), relative humidity 75%, wind 6 miles per hour (9.7 km/h; 5.2 kn)
  • Game attendance: 57,325
  • Referee: Jim Tunney
  • TV announcers (NBC): Marv Albert and Reggie Rucker
  • Box score
Game information

San Diego concluded their season with defeat to the playoffs-bound Raiders.[51] Luther again filled in for the injured Fouts, and led his team 91 yards on their first possession, the final 40 coming on Duckworth's touchdown catch. They then forced Los Angeles to punt, but Brooks failed to gather the return and the Raiders recovered, setting up their first touchdown. Los Angeles drove into Chargers territory on their next three drives, resulting in two field goals either side of a King interception. They led 13–7 at halftime.[52]

The Raiders added a third field goal on their first drive of the second half, before San Diego got back into the game with a 17-play, 75-yard drive that consumed over nine minutes. Winslow converted three 3rd downs, while Muncie got just enough on a 4th and inches and eventually scored from the 2-yard line. Los Angeles faced a 3rd and 4 from their own 16 soon afterwards, but converted with a 41-yard pass from Plunkett. That led to a touchdown, and the Raiders scored another on their next drive as they eased to the win.[51]

Muncie had 5 catches for 43 yards to go with his 18 carries for 78 yards and a touchdown.[53] The touchdown was the 74th and last of his career.[54]

Standings

edit
AFC West
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
Los Angeles Raiders(1) 12 4 0 .750 6–2 10–2 442 338 W1
Seattle Seahawks(4) 9 7 0 .563 5–3 8–4 403 397 W2
Denver Broncos(5) 9 7 0 .563 3–5 9–5 302 327 L1
San Diego Chargers 6 10 0 .375 4–4 4–8 358 462 L1
Kansas City Chiefs 6 10 0 .375 2–6 4–8 386 367 W1

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Signed for Tampa Bay Bandits (USFL); joined the Chargers in 1985
  2. ^ a b Signed for Chicago Blitz (USFL); joined the Chargers in 1985
  3. ^ Winslow broke this record himself with 15 catches in week 6, 1984.[49]

References

edit
  1. ^ "1983 NFL Pro Bowlers". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  2. ^ "1983 NFL All-Pros". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  3. ^ a b Cobbs, Chris (September 5, 1983). "McNeil's too much, Fouts not enough as Chargers fall to Jets". Los Angeles Times. p. III-6.
  4. ^ 1983 week 1 gamebook, Jets at Chargers. September 4, 1983.
  5. ^ "New York Jets at San Diego Chargers — September 4th, 1983". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved January 27, 2024.
  6. ^ Cobbs, Chris (September 13, 1983). "And so it came to pass that Chargers win". Los Angeles Times. pp. III-1, III-6.
  7. ^ a b 1983 week 2 gamebook, Chargers at Chiefs. September 12, 1983.
  8. ^ "San Diego Chargers at Kansas City Chiefs — September 12th, 1983". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved January 28, 2024.
  9. ^ a b Cobbs, Chris (September 19, 1983). "Grounded again! Seahawks, 34–31". Los Angeles Times. pp. III-1, III-13.
  10. ^ 1983 week 3 gamebook, Chargers at Seahawks. September 18, 1983.
  11. ^ "San Diego Chargers at Seattle Seahawks — September 18th, 1983". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved January 28, 2024.
  12. ^ a b Schudel, Jeff (September 26, 1983). "Browns nip Chargers on Holt's score". Mansfield News-Journal. pp. 1-C 4-C.
  13. ^ a b 1983 week 4 gamebook, Browns at Chargers. September 25, 1983.
  14. ^ "Cleveland Browns at San Diego Chargers — September 25th, 1983". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved January 28, 2024.
  15. ^ a b Cobbs, Chris (October 3, 1983). "Luther guns down the Giants, notches a Chargers win, 41–34". Los Angeles Times. p. III-5.
  16. ^ 1983 week 5 gamebook, Chargers at Giants. October 2, 1983.
  17. ^ "San Diego Chargers at New York Giants — October 2nd, 1983". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved January 29, 2024.
  18. ^ Cobbs, Chris (October 10, 1983). "Defense has a big hand in Chargers big rally". Los Angeles Times. p. III-7.
  19. ^ a b 1983 week 6 gamebook, Seahawks at Chargers. October 9, 1983.
  20. ^ "Los Angeles Chargers comebacks". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved January 31, 2024.
  21. ^ "Seattle Seahawks at San Diego Chargers — October 9th, 1983". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved January 31, 2024.
  22. ^ Cobbs, Chris (October 17, 1983). "Patriots stop Fouts on ground and rally to win". Los Angeles Times. p. III-6.
  23. ^ a b c 1983 week 7 gamebook, Chargers at Patriots. October 16, 1983.
  24. ^ "San Diego Chargers at New England Patriots — October 16th, 1983". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved January 31, 2024.
  25. ^ "Most consecutive regular season games with 400+ yards". stathead.com. Retrieved January 28, 2024.
  26. ^ a b "Denver drops limping Chargers". Sacramento Bee. AP. October 14, 1983. p. D3.
  27. ^ a b 1983 week 8 gamebook, Chargers at Broncos. October 23, 1983.
  28. ^ "San Diego Chargers at Denver Broncos — October 23rd, 1983". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved February 1, 2024.
  29. ^ a b "Comeback derailed". Tulare Advance-Register. UPI. November 1, 1983. p. 6.
  30. ^ 1983 week 9 gamebook, Washington at Chargers. October 31, 1983.
  31. ^ "Washington Redskins at San Diego Chargers — October 31st, 1983". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved February 1, 2024.
  32. ^ Cobbs, Chris (November 7, 1983). "Without Fouts, Chargers no match for Steelers". Los Angeles Times. p. III-8.
  33. ^ a b 1983 week 10 gamebook, Chargers at Steelers. November 6, 1983.
  34. ^ "San Diego Chargers at Pittsburgh Steelers — November 6th, 1983". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved February 2, 2024.
  35. ^ Dilbeck, Steve (November 14, 1983). "Chargers write new script for Cowboys". San Bernardino County Sun. pp. C-1, C-6.
  36. ^ a b 1983 week 11 gamebook, Cowboys at Chargers. November 13, 1983.
  37. ^ "Dallas Cowboys at San Diego Chargers — November 13th, 1983". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved February 2, 2024.
  38. ^ "Cardinals 44, Chargers 14". Sacramento Bee. November 21, 1983. p. D2.
  39. ^ 1983 week 12 gamebook, Chargers at Cardinals. November 20, 1983.
  40. ^ "San Diego Chargers at St. Louis Cardinals — November 20th, 1983". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved February 2, 2024.
  41. ^ a b "Fouts returns, so does Air Coryell; Seattle, Atlanta take wild OT wins". Fresno Bee. November 28, 1983. p. C2.
  42. ^ 1983 week 13 gamebook, Broncos at Chargers. November 27, 1983.
  43. ^ "Denver Broncos at San Diego Chargers — November 27th, 1983". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved February 3, 2023.
  44. ^ "Raiders take the charge out of San Diego". Ventura County Star. UPI. December 2, 1983. p. C-1.
  45. ^ a b 1983 week 14 gamebook, Raiders at Chargers. December 1, 1983.
  46. ^ "Los Angeles Raiders at San Diego Chargers — December 1st, 1983". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved February 3, 2024.
  47. ^ a b Cobbs, Chris (December 12, 1983). "Here's the catch: Winslow gets rest, Chargers get Chiefs". Los Angeles Times. p. III-2.
  48. ^ a b 1983 week 15 gamebook, Chiefs at Chargers. December 11, 1983.
  49. ^ Norcross, Don (October 8, 1984). "Chargers get two big plays from defense to sack Pack". Escondido Times-Advocate. p. C2 – via newspapers.com.
  50. ^ "Kansas City Chiefs at San Diego Chargers — December 11th, 1983". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved February 3, 2024.
  51. ^ a b "Raiders take care of Chargers to make sure they can stay home". Thousand Oaks Star. Associated Press. December 19, 1983. p. 11.
  52. ^ 1983 week 16 gamebook, Chargers at Cardinals. December 18, 1983.
  53. ^ "San Diego Chargers at Los Angeles Raiders — December 18th, 1983". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved February 3, 2024.
  54. ^ "Chuck Muncie career touchdowns". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved February 3, 2024.
edit