1992 San Francisco 49ers season

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1992 San Francisco 49ers season
OwnerEddie DeBartolo, Jr.
General managerCarmen Policy
Head coachGeorge Seifert
Offensive coordinatorMike Shanahan
Defensive coordinatorBill McPherson
Home fieldCandlestick Park
Results
Record14–2
Division place1st NFC West
Playoff finishWon Divisional Playoffs
(vs. Redskins) 20–13
Lost NFC Championship
(vs. Cowboys) 20–30
Pro BowlersG Guy McIntyre
T Steve Wallace
TE Brent Jones
WR Jerry Rice
QB Steve Young
RB Ricky Watters
DE Pierce Holt

The 1992 San Francisco 49ers season was the franchise's 43rd season in the National Football League (NFL) and their 47th overall. The 49ers appeared in the NFC Championship Game for the second time in three seasons. This was the last season the 49ers had Joe Montana on the roster. The last game he played as a 49er was the December 28 Monday Night Football game against the Detroit Lions.

Offseason[edit]

Draft[edit]

1992 San Francisco 49ers draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
1 18 Dana Hall  FS Washington
2 45 Amp Lee  RB Florida State
3 76 Brian Bollinger  G North Carolina
4 89 Mark Thomas  DE NC State Made roster in 1993
6 151 Damien Russell  DB Virginia Tech Made roster in 1993
9 242 Darian Hagan  QB Colorado
10 269 Corey Mayfield  DT Oklahoma
11 300 Tom Covington  TE Georgia Tech
12 327 Matt LaBounty  DE Oregon Made roster in 1993
      Made roster    *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

[1]

Personnel[edit]

With the departure of Mike Holmgren to Green Bay, the 49ers hired Denver Broncos offensive assistant Mike Shanahan to run the offense. Jeff Fisher joined the coaching staff as defensive backs coach.

Staff[edit]

1992 San Francisco 49ers staff

Front office

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches

Special teams coaches

Strength and conditioning

  • Physical development coordinator – Jerry Attaway

Roster[edit]

1992 San Francisco 49ers final roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists


Practice squad


Rookies in italics
47 active, 12 inactive, 2 practice squad

Regular season[edit]

Schedule[edit]

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance
1 September 6 at New York Giants W 31–14 1–0 Giants Stadium 74,519
2 September 13 Buffalo Bills L 31–34 1–1 Candlestick Park 64,053
3 September 20 at New York Jets W 31–14 2–1 Giants Stadium 71,020
4 September 27 at New Orleans Saints W 16–10 3–1 Louisiana Superdome 68,591
5 October 4 Los Angeles Rams W 27–24 4–1 Candlestick Park 63,071
6 October 11 at New England Patriots W 24–12 5–1 Foxboro Stadium 54,126
7 October 18 Atlanta Falcons W 56–17 6–1 Candlestick Park 63,302
8 Bye
9 November 1 at Phoenix Cardinals L 14–24 6–2 Sun Devil Stadium 47,642
10 November 9 at Atlanta Falcons W 41–3 7–2 Georgia Dome 67,404
11 November 15 New Orleans Saints W 21–20 8–2 Candlestick Park 64,895
12 November 22 at Los Angeles Rams W 27–10 9–2 Anaheim Stadium 65,858
13 November 29 Philadelphia Eagles W 20–14 10–2 Candlestick Park 64,374
14 December 6 Miami Dolphins W 27–3 11–2 Candlestick Park 58,474
15 December 13 at Minnesota Vikings W 20–17 12–2 Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome 60,685
16 December 19 Tampa Bay Buccaneers W 21–14 13–2 Candlestick Park 60,519
17 December 28 Detroit Lions W 24–6 14–2 Candlestick Park 55,907
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Game summaries[edit]

Week 1: at New York Giants[edit]

Steve Young completed four of six passes for 27 yards and a touchdown but was knocked out of the game; backup QB Steve Bono threw for 187 yards and two touchdowns while Ricky Watters rushed for 100 yards. Phil Simms was intercepted in the fourth quarter and the Niners scored on the pick.

Week 2: vs. Buffalo Bills[edit]

In the first NFL game ever to go without a single punt, Steve Young, Jim Kelly, and two of the most famous offenses in league history – San Francisco's West Coast offense and Buffalo's K-Gun offense – combined for 1,086 yards and 65 points as a late Niners field goal attempt missed for a 34–31 Bills win. Jerry Rice was knocked out of the game after three catches for 26 yards; Mike Sherrard led the Niners' receiving attack with 159 yards. |Weather= 84 °F or 28.9 °C (Sunny)

Week 3: at New York Jets[edit]

The Niners returned to Giants Stadium and won 31–14 generating 335 yards of offense. Young threw for 163 yards and also rushed for fifty, nearly matching Ricky Watters's 55 yards. The Jets didn't score until the fourth quarter.

Week 4: at New Orleans Saints[edit]

The Saints held the Niners to 333 yards of offense but fumbled twice and Bobby Hebert threw three picks. Steve Young and Ricky Watters accounted for 141 rushing yards as the Niners clawed out a 16–10 win.

Week 5: vs. Los Angeles Rams[edit]

The Niners returned to The Stick and saw a 10–7 grinder explode in the fourth quarter as Robert Bailey picked off Steve Young and scored; Young followed with two rushing scores (and 60 rushing yards total, once again coming close to matching Ricky Watters's game total, here 83 yards) before Jim Everett's nine-yard score to Flipper Anderson tied the game; Mike Cofer then won it (27–24) on a late 21-yard field goal. |Weather= 82 °F or 27.8 °C(Sunny)

Week 6: at New England Patriots[edit]

Despite two fumbles and a Steve Young pick, the Niners manhandled the faltering Patriots 24–12, intercepting Hugh Millen twice and limiting the Patriots to 227 yards of offense. Young and Ricky Watters again were a two-pronged rushing attack with 173 combined yards on the ground.

Week 7: vs. Atlanta Falcons[edit]

The Niners scored five rushing touchdowns, three of them by Watters, and put up 191 rushing yards to go with 399 passing yards from Steve Young in a 56–17 massacre of the Falcons. |Weather= 67 °F or 19.4 °C (Cloudy)

Week 9: at Phoenix Cardinals[edit]

Four years after one of the most frustrating losses of the Bill Walsh era, the Niners again fell to the Cardinals, this time 24–14. Chris Chandler threw three touchdowns and the Cards swallowed four Niners turnovers. The biggest highlight for San Francisco was when Mike Sherrard scored a touchdown after he grabbed the ball from Eric Hill who had recovered a fumble from Brent Jones.

Week 10: at Atlanta Falcons[edit]

The Niners responded to the Phoenix loss by unleashing three Steve Young touchdowns and a Merton Hanks punt return score while picking off Billy Joe Tolliver three times and swallowing three Falcons fumbles in a 41–3 massacre. Deion Sanders had four kick returns for 81 yards for Atlanta.

Week 11: vs. New Orleans Saints[edit]

The Saints picked off Steve Young once and raced to a 20–7 lead, but in the fourth quarter, Young and Brent Jones erased New Orleans's lead on two touchdowns, winning 21–20. |Weather= 64 °F or 17.8 °C (Drizzle)

Week 12: at Los Angeles Rams[edit]

The Niners assault through 1992 continued as they limited the Rams to 245 yards and won 27–10. Ricky Watters erupted to 163 rushing yards and two scores.

Week 13: vs. Philadelphia Eagles[edit]

Despite two Randall Cunningham touchdowns the Eagles fell 20–14 at San Francisco. Steve Young threw for 342 yards and posted the most rushing yards of the game at 26. |Weather= 62 °F or 16.7 °C (Sunny)

Week 14: vs. Miami Dolphins[edit]

Dan Marino was routed once again by the 49ers as they limited him to 192 passing yards and won 27–3. With Watters sidelined, Amp Lee led the rushing attack with 58 yards and a score. |Weather= 55 °F or 12.8 °C (Rain)

Week 15: at Minnesota Vikings[edit]

Both teams combined for just 472 yards of offense as a late Terry Allen score could get the Vikings no closer than a 20–17 Niners win. Amp Lee exploded to 134 rushing yards.

Week 16: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers[edit]

With Steve Young facing his former team, the game lead tied or changed five times as Jerry Rice's 30-yard touchdown won the game for the Niners 21–14.[2][3] The game was a clean affair with just five total penalties. |Weather= 51 °F or 10.6 °C (Sunny)

Week 17: vs. Detroit Lions[edit]

Steve Young threw for 153 yards as the Niners clawed to a 7–6 halftime lead; from there Joe Montana came into the game and threw for 126 yards and two touchdowns. |Weather= 51 °F or 10.6 °C (Light rain)

Standings[edit]

NFC West
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
(1) San Francisco 49ers 14 2 0 .875 6–0 11–1 431 236 W8
(4) New Orleans Saints 12 4 0 .750 4–2 9–3 330 202 W1
Atlanta Falcons 6 10 0 .375 1–5 4–8 327 414 L2
Los Angeles Rams 6 10 0 .375 1–5 4–8 313 383 W1

Best performances[edit]

  • Second Most Total Yards in One 49ers Game, 590 Total Yards (vs. Atlanta Falcons on October 18, 1992) [4]

Playoffs[edit]

The 49ers' NFC West division championship and 14–2 regular-season record earned them the first-round bye, the NFC's #1 seed, and home-field advantage throughout the playoffs.

Schedule[edit]

Round Date Opponent (seed) Result Record Venue
Wild Card First-round bye
Divisional January 9, 1993 Washington Redskins (6) W 20–13 1–0 Candlestick Park
NFC Championship January 17, 1993 Dallas Cowboys (2) L 20–30 1–1 Candlestick Park

Game summaries[edit]

NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. (6) Washington Redskins[edit]

NFC Divisional Playoff: (6) Washington Redskins at (1) San Francisco 49ers – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Redskins 3 0 3713
49ers 10 7 0320

at Candlestick Park

  • Date: January 9, 1993
  • Game time: 1 p.m. CDT
  • Game weather: 51 °F or 10.6 °C (Cloudy), relative humidity 86%, wind 11 mph
Game information

In a rain-plagued, muddy, and sloppily played game, the 49ers defeated the Redskins 20–13. The entire field was covered in mud with resulting play affected. The 49ers took a 17–3 lead at halftime, but trailed off in the second half and the Redskins kept it close. Steve Young was 20 for 30, throwing for 227 yards, but he fumbled three times (following one fumble, 49ers radio analyst Wayne Walker criticized Young's run-heavy playing style, unfavorably contrasting it with erstwhile Niners starter Joe Montana) and threw an interception. Late in the game, the Redskins were at the San Francisco 28-yard line and looking to take their first lead of the game when a hand-off by Redskins quarterback Mark Rypien to running back Brian Mitchell was fumbled and recovered by the 49ers. Both teams committed 4 turnovers each.

NFC Championship Game vs. Dallas Cowboys[edit]

NFC Championship: vs. (2) Dallas Cowboys[edit]

NFC Championship: (2) Dallas Cowboys at (1) San Francisco 49ers – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Cowboys 3 7 71330
49ers 7 3 3720

at Candlestick Park

  • Date: January 17, 1993
  • Game time: 1 p.m. CDT
  • Game weather: 52 °F or 11.1 °C (Light Rain), relative humidity 88%, wind 7 mph
Game information

The 49ers, who struggled the previous week, did not look much better in this game as they had four turnovers while the Cowboys had none. Even with the turnovers the Niners clawed to within 24–20 on a five-yard Jerry Rice touchdown catch, but on the ensuing Cowboys' possession a 70-yard catch and run by Alvin Harper set up Troy Aikman's touchdown pass to Kelvin Martin, sealing the Cowboys' win. In all, the 49ers had eight turnovers in their two playoff games. Young finished the playoffs with a passer rating of 91.0.

Awards and records[edit]

  • Franchise Record, Most Points in One Game, 56 Points (vs. Atlanta Falcons on October 18, 1992) [5]
  • Franchise Record, Most Total Yards in One Game, 598 Total Yards (vs. Buffalo Bills on September 13, 1992) [4]
  • Led NFL, Points Scored, 431 Points [6]
  • Steve Young, Led NFL, Passer Rating, 107.0 Rating [7]
  • Steve Young, Led NFL, Touchdown Passes, 25 Passes [7]
  • Steve Young, Bert Bell Award[8]
  • Steve Young, Miller Lite Player of the Year [9]
  • Steve Young, NFL MVP[9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "1992 San Francisco 49ers Draftees". Pro Football Reference. Retrieved February 24, 2022.
  2. ^ Archives, L. A. Times (December 20, 1992). "49ers Are Best in the NFC : Pro football: They clinch division title, home-field advantage in playoffs by beating Buccaneers, 21-14. Montana does not play". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 2, 2024.
  3. ^ Shapiro, Leonard (December 22, 1992). "IN THE NFL, A STRONG RUN IN STRETCH DOES NOT ALWAYS EXTEND SEASON". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved February 2, 2024.
  4. ^ a b NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York, NY, ISBN 0-7611-2480-2, p. 248
  5. ^ NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York, NY, ISBN 0-7611-2480-2, p. 247
  6. ^ NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York, ISBN 0-7611-2480-2, p. 455
  7. ^ a b NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York, ISBN 0-7611-2480-2, p. 450
  8. ^ "Bert Bell Award – Professional Player of the Year: Past Recipients". Maxwell Football Club. Archived from the original on June 19, 2009. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  9. ^ a b NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York, ISBN 0-7611-2480-2, p. 400

External links[edit]