1994 New England Patriots season

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1994 New England Patriots season
OwnerRobert Kraft
Head coachBill Parcells
Home fieldFoxboro Stadium
Local radioWBZ
Results
Record10–6
Division place2nd AFC East
Playoff finishLost Wild Card Playoffs
(at Browns) 13–20
Pro BowlersT Bruce Armstrong
QB Drew Bledsoe
TE Ben Coates
AP All-ProsTE Ben Coates (1st team)
Uniform

The 1994 New England Patriots season was the team's 35th season, and 25th in the National Football League (NFL). It was the first under owner Robert Kraft, who purchased the team after preventing previous owner James Orthwein from moving the Patriots to St. Louis. The Patriots finished the season with a record of ten wins and six losses, and finished tied for first in the AFC's East division.

The Patriots began the 1994 season with a 3–6 record before winning their final seven games, finishing 10–6 and qualifying the playoffs (their first winning season in 6 years). The Patriots were just two seasons removed from a 2-win season, and made the playoffs for the first time since 1986 and only the seventh time in the team's history. It was also their first winning season since 1988. The winning streak started with a 26–20 overtime win over the Minnesota Vikings. In the Wild Card round of the playoffs the Cleveland Browns defeated the New England Patriots 20–13.

Drew Bledsoe and offensive imbalance[edit]

In just his second NFL season, Patriots quarterback Drew Bledsoe threw the ball more than any quarterback in history in 1994. He set NFL records for pass attempts in a season (691 – this record was later broken by Matthew Stafford in 2012), pass completions and attempts in a game (45-for-70 with no interceptions, Week Eleven vs. Minnesota in overtime), and most games in a season with 50+ attempts (five). Bledsoe also led the NFL in passing in 1994, with 4,555 yards, and was fourth in touchdowns (25).[1] Bledsoe also led the league in interceptions (27) and his passer rating was tied for 19th in the league, at 73.6. New England's 699 team pass attempts in 1994 is the third-most in NFL history, and the most ever for a team with a winning record.[2]

In an odd statistical quirk, the Patriots' running game was one of the most inefficient in modern football. Their rushing game only gained 2.79 yards per attempt,[3] the worst of any NFL team since the merger. (The average ground gain in 1994 was 3.7 yards per carry.)[4] New England's 1,332 yards were dead-last in the AFC, and the second-fewest in the NFL to Atlanta.

Ownership changes[edit]

The team's 35th season in football, 1994 marked the debut of Robert Kraft as team owner. A long-time season-ticket holder, Kraft has steadily built up a business empire to where in the late 1980s he was able to purchase the land around Sullivan Stadium and then the stadium itself – which he renamed "Foxboro Stadium" – and thus got control of the lease the team held with the stadium. This gave him a level of control over the team that new owners Victor Kiam and James Orthwein underestimated, so much that in January 1994, Orthwein sold his share of the team to Kraft, for nearly $200 million.

The selling of the team to Kraft led to an explosion of ticket sales, to where all home games were sold out well before the season began.

As part of the NFL's 75th anniversary celebration the Patriots wore throwback uniforms in games against the Cincinnati Bengals, Green Bay Packers, and New York Jets; the uniforms dated to the team's AFL days and marked the return of the Pat Patriot logo in the second season the team sported the more streamlined "Flying Elvis" look.

1994 NFL Draft[edit]

1994 New England Patriots draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
1 4 Willie McGinest *  LB USC
2 35 Kevin Lee  WR Alabama
3 78 Ervin Collier  DT Florida A&M from San Diego[A]
3 90 Joe Burch  C Texas Southern from Miami[B]
4 121 John Burke  TE Virginia Tech from Miami via Arizona[C]
5 135 Pat O'Neill  P Syracuse from LA Rams via Arizona[C]
6 166 Steve Hawkins  WR Western Michigan
6 168 Max Lane  OT Navy from Seattle[D]
7 198 Jay Walker  QB Howard
7 222 Marty Moore  LB Kentucky from Dallas[E]
      Made roster    *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

Draft trades and notes

  1. ^ New England traded its third- and fifth-round selections (70th and 137th) to San Diego in exchange for San Diego's third-round selection (78th) and RB Marion Butts.
  2. ^ Miami traded its third-round selection (90th) and second-round selection (51st) in 1993 to New England in exchange for WR Irving Fryar.
  3. ^ a b New England traded its fourth-round selection (107th) to Arizona in exchange for Arizona's fourth- and fifth-round selections (121st and 135th).
  4. ^ Seattle traded its sixth-round selection (168th) to New England in exchange for RB Jon Vaughn.
  5. ^ Dallas traded its seventh-round selection (222nd) to New England in exchange for QB Hugh Millen.

Undrafted Free Agents[edit]

1994 Undrafted Free Agents of note
Player Position College
Greg Ballard Wide receiver Kansas
Troy Barnett Defensive end North Carolina
Bernard Basham Defensive tackle Virginia Tech

Personnel[edit]

Staff[edit]

1994 New England Patriots staff

Front office

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches

Special teams coaches

  • Special Teams – Mike Sweatman

Strength and conditioning

[5]

Roster[edit]

1994 New England Patriots roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists


Practice squad

53 active, 5 inactive, 3 practice squad


Rookies in italics

[6]

Schedule[edit]

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance
1 September 4 at Miami Dolphins L 35–39 0–1 Joe Robbie Stadium Recap
2 September 11 Buffalo Bills L 35–38 0–2 Foxboro Stadium Recap
3 September 18 at Cincinnati Bengals W 31–28 1–2 Riverfront Stadium Recap
4 September 25 at Detroit Lions W 23–17 2–2 Pontiac Silverdome Recap
5 October 2 Green Bay Packers W 17–16 3–2 Foxboro Stadium Recap
6 October 9 Los Angeles Raiders L 17–21 3–3 Foxboro Stadium Recap
7 October 16 at New York Jets L 17–24 3–4 Giants Stadium Recap
8 Bye
9 October 30 Miami Dolphins L 3–23 3–5 Foxboro Stadium Recap
10 November 6 at Cleveland Browns L 6–13 3–6 Cleveland Stadium Recap
11 November 13 Minnesota Vikings W 26–20 (OT) 4–6 Foxboro Stadium Recap
12 November 20 San Diego Chargers W 23–17 5–6 Foxboro Stadium Recap
13 November 27 at Indianapolis Colts W 12–10 6–6 RCA Dome Recap
14 December 4 New York Jets W 24–13 7–6 Foxboro Stadium Recap
15 December 11 Indianapolis Colts W 28–13 8–6 Foxboro Stadium Recap
16 December 18 at Buffalo Bills W 41–17 9–6 Rich Stadium Recap
17 December 24 at Chicago Bears W 13–3 10–6 Soldier Field Recap

Playoffs[edit]

Round Date Opponent (seed) Result Record Venue Attendance
Wild Card January 1, 1995 at Cleveland Browns (4) L 13–20 0–1 Cleveland Stadium Recap

Standings[edit]

AFC East
W L T PCT PF PA STK
(3) Miami Dolphins 10 6 0 .625 389 327 W1
(5) New England Patriots 10 6 0 .625 351 312 W7
Indianapolis Colts 8 8 0 .500 307 320 W2
Buffalo Bills 7 9 0 .438 340 356 L3
New York Jets 6 10 0 .375 264 320 L5

Game summaries[edit]

Regular season[edit]

Week 1: at Miami Dolphins[edit]

Week 1: New England Patriots at Miami Dolphins – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Patriots 7 7 14735
Dolphins 0 10 151439

at Joe Robbie Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida

Game information

The debut game of Robert Kraft as team owner. Drew Bledsoe and Dan Marino put on a passing clinic, combining for 894 passing yards and nine touchdowns (two caught by Ben Coates of the Patriots and three snared by Irving Fryar of the Dolphins). The game was Marino's first game back from a ruptured Achilles tendon. The Dolphins won 39–35 after the Patriots drive stalled at midfield in the final minute. On the Patriots‘ previous drive Ben Coates fumbled the ball after a big gain and the Dolphins recovered.

Week 2: vs. Buffalo Bills[edit]

Week 2: Buffalo Bills at New England Patriots – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Bills 14 14 01038
Patriots 7 7 71435

at Foxboro Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts

Game information

The debut home game under Kraft's ownership, the Patriots rallied from down 35–21 in the fourth quarter as a Michael Timpson touchdown catch and Marion Butts rushing score tied the game, but Steve Christie's 32-yard field goal won the game for Buffalo 38–35.

Week 3: at Cincinnati Bengals[edit]

The Patriots debuted their throwback uniforms and helmets, returning the Pat Patriot logo after it was retired following the 1992 season. David Klingler of the Bengals threw two touchdowns to Carl Pickens and Steve Broussard ran in two scores for the Bengals, but Klingler was sacked seven times and the Patriots behind Drew Bledsoe's 365 passing yards to Michael Timpson (125 yards with a 34-yard touchdown catch) and Ben Coates, two Marion Butts touchdown runs, and four Matt Bahr field goals overcame the Bengals for a 31–28 win, the Patriots' first under Robert Kraft ownership.

Week 4: at Detroit Lions[edit]

The Patriots raced to a 20–7 lead and withstood a late Lions rally to win 23–17. Barry Sanders put on an impressive performance in the loss, rushing for 131 yards (outperforming the entire Patriots offensive backfield's 108 combined yards); NFL Films caught in slow motion a twisting Sanders run in which he shook off Patriots defenders Myron Guyton and Harlon Barnett for one of his two touchdowns; the image is among the most replayed in retrospectives on Sanders' career.

Week 5: vs. Green Bay Packers[edit]

Both teams sported throwback uniforms, with the Packers in yellow and brown and the Patriots wearing the white road version of their AFL-era uniforms with Pat Patriot logo. The Packers stormed to a 10–0 halftime lead but two Vincent Brisby touchdown catches and a last-minute Matt Bahr field goal rallied the Patriots to a 17–16 win.

Week 6: vs. Los Angeles Raiders[edit]

Drew Bledsoe threw two touchdowns in the second quarter for a 17–7 Patriots lead but the Raiders rallied behind three Bledsoe INTs (the first run back for a score by Terry McDaniel) and two Jeff Hostetler touchdowns (one on the ground) to win 21–17. Kevin Turner was drilled in mid-air diving for the goalline late in the fourth quarter; though it appeared he'd broken the goalline plane the ball was knocked out of his hands and recovered by the Raiders.[7]

Week 7: at New York Jets[edit]

Two Brad Baxter touchdowns and a score from Boomer Esiason put the Jets up 21–7 at the half. Former Jet Blair Thomas scored in the fourth but the Patriots could not get closer than a 24–17 loss.

Week 9: vs. Miami Dolphins[edit]

  • October 30 vs. Miami Dolphins:

Despite two interceptions Dan Marino had more passing yards (198) than the Patriots had yards of offense (188). Drew Bledsoe had a terrible day with three interceptions and just 125 yards; backup Scott Zolak finished the game with 28 passing yards.

Week 10: at Cleveland Browns[edit]

In what turned out to be a playoff preview, Bill Parcells faced his former defensive assistant Bill Belichick and the 6–2 Browns. Belichick's defense harassed Drew Bledsoe all game, forcing four interceptions and limiting the Patriots to just two Matt Bahr field goals while Leroy Hoard rushed for 123 yards and caught a one-yard Mark Rypien touchdown pass. The 13–6 loss dropped the Patriots to 3–6.

Week 11: vs. Minnesota Vikings[edit]

Week 11: Minnesota Vikings at New England Patriots – Game summary
Period 1 2 34OTTotal
Vikings 10 10 00020
Patriots 0 3 710626

at Foxboro Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts

  • Date: November 13
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: 48 °F (9 °C)
  • Game attendance: 58,382
  • Box score
Game information

Former Oilers quarterback Warren Moon led the Vikings to a 20–3 halftime lead, but in the third Bill Parcells abandoned his gameplan and went to a no-huddle attack. Drew Bledsoe threw touchdowns to Ray Crittenden and Leroy Thompson, the Patriots defense shut down the Vikings (the key play came with 2:04 to go in the fourth when Maurice Hurst swatted away a pass for Qadry Ismail). On the final drive Bledsoe was blitzed three straight downs but facing 4th and 10 from his 35 completed a 27-yard strike to Vincent Brisby, and Matt Bahr, after missing a field goal attempt late in the third quarter, kicked the tying field goal with 14 seconds left in regulation. On the coin toss for overtime Patriots captain Vincent Brown protested the Vikings team captain's call because he called after the coin landed on the ground. The Patriots won the re-toss and Bledsoe led the Patriots down field and lobbed a 14-yard touchdown toss to Kevin Turner. The 26–20 win ended a four-game losing streak. Moon threw for 349 yards while Bledsoe (426 yards) set NFL single-game records with 70 throws and 45 completions.

Week 12: vs. San Diego Chargers[edit]

The rejuvenated Patriots raced to a 13–3 second-quarter lead as Leroy Thompson caught a 27-yard touchdown from Drew Bledsoe in the first quarter to go with two Matt Bahr field goals, but the Chargers scored after Bahr's second field goal as Andre Coleman ran back the ensuing kick 80 yards for a touchdown. The Patriots finally put the game away in the fourth on a one-yard Marion Butts score and another Bahr field goal, offsetting a Tony Martin touchdown catch from Stan Humphries.

Week 13: at Indianapolis Colts[edit]

The Colts, clawing to a .500 season, hosted the Patriots on Sunday Night and limited New England to four Matt Bahr field goals, but despite 186 yards and a touchdown by Don Majkowski to go with 132 rushing yards by Majkowski, Marshall Faulk, and Roosevelt Potts, the Colts fell 12–10 as the Patriots recovered two Indianapolis fumbles.

Week 14: vs. New York Jets[edit]

  • December 4 vs. New York Jets:

One week after the epic "Fake Spike" meltdown against the Miami Dolphins the Jets' season-ending losing streak continued while the Patriots ended a three-game losing streak to the Jets with a 24–13 win in Foxboro Stadium. The Jets led 13–10 in the third quarter but the Patriots pinned Boomer Esiason at his own goalline, then Ricky Reynolds ran back an interception for a touchdown. A Leroy Thompson touchdown in the fourth quarter finished off the Jets as Esiason ended with just 16 completions for 40 throws. The loss was Jets coach Pete Carroll's last trip to Foxboro until he became Patriots head coach in 1997.

Week 15: vs. Indianapolis Colts[edit]

  • December 11 vs. Indianapolis Colts:

The Colts raced to a 10–0 lead as Drew Bledsoe was intercepted at the Indianapolis 10 and Ray Buchanan ran back a 90-yard touchdown, but from there Don Majkowski was intercepted twice, Bledsoe (despite four interceptions) tossed touchdowns to Leroy Thompson and Ben Coates, Thompson and Marion Butts scored on the ground, and the Patriots grabbed two more fumbles for a 28–13 win. The Patriots were now 8–6 and still in the hunt for a playoff spot while the Colts fell to 6–8.

Week 16: at Buffalo Bills[edit]

  • December 18 at Buffalo Bills:

The Patriots fell behind 17–3 in the second quarter, then scored 38 unanswered points for a 41–17 rout. The win knocked the Bills out of the playoffs after four straight Super Bowl trips.

Week 17: at Chicago Bears[edit]

Needing a win to make the playoffs, the Patriots overtook the Bears 13–3, for their seventh consecutive win and ending their regular season at 10–6. It was their first playoff appearance since 1986 and first double-digit win season since that year as well.

Postseason[edit]

AFC Wild Card Playoffs: at (4) Cleveland Browns[edit]

AFC Wild Card Playoffs: (5) New England Patriots at (4) Cleveland Browns – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Patriots 0 10 0313
Browns 3 7 7320

at Cleveland Municipal Stadium, Cleveland, Ohio

Game information

After seven dramatic victories in a row, the Patriots fell flat in a 20–13 loss in their first playoff game since 1986. Drew Bledsoe was picked off three times despite a game-tying rally in the second quarter; he threw the ball 50 times but completed just 22 passes. Leroy Hoard and Earnest Byner totaled 96 rushing yards, outrushing the entire Patriots offensive backfield (57 yards). The win was the first in a playoff game for Browns head coach Bill Belichick. The Patriots successfully executed an onsides kick in this game; they would not succeed with an onsides kick until 2013, coincidentally against the Browns

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Pro-Football-Reference.com: 1994 NFL Passing
  2. ^ Pro-Football-Reference.com: In a single season, from 1940 to 2012, in the Regular Season, requiring Pass Attempts >= 0, sorted by descending Pass Attempts, behind the 2012 Lions (740) and the 1981 Vikings (709)
  3. ^ Pro-Football-Reference.com: In a single season, from 1990 to 1999, in the NFL, in the regular season, sorted by ascending Yds/Rushing Att
  4. ^ Pro-Football-Reference.com: 1994 NFL Standings, Team & Offensive Statistics
  5. ^ "1994 Club Directory, Administration, and Coaches". 1994 New England Patriots Media Guide. pp. 3, 6–32.
  6. ^ "1994 New England Patriots Starters, Roster, & Players". pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved May 12, 2020.
  7. ^ 1994 NFL Primetime recap