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Officially the Patriots hired Fairbanks two days later, but it was on this day that the news broke on WBZ-TV channel 4's local news show. (Bob Lobel, perhaps?) For all those that say the hiring of Bill Parcells brought credibility to the Patriots, I would remind them that the Pats had been to the Super Bowl a few years prior to Tuna signing a contract. The addition of Fairbanks was just as big to the franchise, if not bigger. It took Fairbanks longer to turn the team around, but unlike Parcells, Fairbanks coached in an era with no salary cap and no true free agency - critical components that made turnarounds take much longer, with far more difficulty than in the 90s and beyond.
Fairbanks Is Reported Ready to Join Patriots
After seven years of awful to average-at-best drafts had left the Patriot roster devoid of talent, in new GM/HC Chuck Fairbanks' first draft the team selected John Hannah, Sam Cunningham and Darryl Stingley. The next year they drafted Steve Nelson, Andy Johnson and Sam Hunt. Then in '75 the Pats added Russ Francis, Rod Shoate and Steve Grogan. For most teams a three-year stretch like that would be extremely impressive, but the Patriots were not done yet - hitting gold the following year.
Grogan had performed well enough in relief of injured Jim Plunkett for Fairbanks to put the number one overall pick from the 1971 draft on the market. Three days prior to the 1976 draft the trade was made, with the Pats receiving two first round selections in the upcoming draft, first and second round 1977 picks, and a backup QB for good measure. Those four draft picks turned out to be center Pete Brock, safety Tim Fox, running back Horace Ivory, and cornerback Raymond Clayborn, who was belatedly voted in to the Patriots Hall of Fame in 2017. That group of four went on to play a combined 482 games for the Patriots.
In Fairbanks first season the Pats only went 5-9, but the improvement was already apparent. The offense improved from 24th to 16th in points scored, while the defense rose from 26th to 16th. The next year Fairbanks installed his 3-4 defense and the team started out at a league best 6-1, before injuries were too much to overcome. Still, the 7-7 finish was the first non-losing record since just missing out on a chance at the first super bowl in 1966, ending a streak of seven consecutive losing seasons.
1975 saw a player strike over the Sullivan's miserly negotiating tactics that led to a canceled preseason game, and a distraction that could not be overcome. Unfortunately this was just a foreshadowing of events to follow a couple years later.
In '76 the Pats went 11-3, making the playoffs for the first time in 13 years. The team ranked second in scoring offense and third in turnover differential. The Pats led the league with 5.0 yards per rush, and had not lost a game since October. Then came the Ben Dreith game, arguably the most egregiously one-sided officiated game in the history of the NFL (if not all sports). With Pittsburgh decimated by injuries and the AFC vastly superior to the NFC that year, the Raiders-Patriots game was the de facto league championship game. Yes, it still bothers me to this day.
Fairbanks then worked out contract extensions for Hannah and Leon Gray, two future Patriot Hall of Famers. The Sullivans screwed Fairbanks over however, not approving the deals and forcing him to renege on the contracts. Hannah and Gray walked out on the team during preseason and did not return until week four. The Pats had lost two games to below average teams by that time and never recovered, going 7-3 the rest of the way to finish 9-5 in 1977 - but missing the playoffs.
In 1978 Fairbanks worked out a contract extension with Stingley, just prior to his being viciously hit and paralyzed by Jack Tatum in a preseason game. When the Sullivans refused to honor that verbal commitment, it was the final straw; Fairbanks started looking for another job. The team won the AFC East, but then word leaked out that Fairbanks had been hired by the University of Colorado. Billy Sullivan suspended Fairbanks prior to the final game of the season, making the OC the head coach when the Pats had the ball, and the DC the head coach when on defense. The ridiculous arrangement predictably failed, and Fairbanks was allowed to return and coach the first home playoff game in franchise history. Under gloomy skies a lethargic and distracted team was defeated by Earl Campbell, Dan Pastorini and Bum Phillips' Houston Oilers on new years eve of 1978. With that loss, the Fairbanks-era was over.
Today in Patriots History
January 24, 1973: news breaks that the Pats
will hire Chuck Fairbanks as Head Coach
January 24, 1973: news breaks that the Pats
will hire Chuck Fairbanks as Head Coach
Fairbanks Is Reported Ready to Join Patriots
BOSTON, January 24 (AP)—Chuck Fairbanks, who led the resurgence of football at Oklahoma, has accepted a job offer from the, New England Patriots of the National Football League, WBZ television reported tonight.
The report did not specify whether Fairbanks would be hired as coach and general manager or only as head coach.
After seven years of awful to average-at-best drafts had left the Patriot roster devoid of talent, in new GM/HC Chuck Fairbanks' first draft the team selected John Hannah, Sam Cunningham and Darryl Stingley. The next year they drafted Steve Nelson, Andy Johnson and Sam Hunt. Then in '75 the Pats added Russ Francis, Rod Shoate and Steve Grogan. For most teams a three-year stretch like that would be extremely impressive, but the Patriots were not done yet - hitting gold the following year.
Grogan had performed well enough in relief of injured Jim Plunkett for Fairbanks to put the number one overall pick from the 1971 draft on the market. Three days prior to the 1976 draft the trade was made, with the Pats receiving two first round selections in the upcoming draft, first and second round 1977 picks, and a backup QB for good measure. Those four draft picks turned out to be center Pete Brock, safety Tim Fox, running back Horace Ivory, and cornerback Raymond Clayborn, who was belatedly voted in to the Patriots Hall of Fame in 2017. That group of four went on to play a combined 482 games for the Patriots.
In Fairbanks first season the Pats only went 5-9, but the improvement was already apparent. The offense improved from 24th to 16th in points scored, while the defense rose from 26th to 16th. The next year Fairbanks installed his 3-4 defense and the team started out at a league best 6-1, before injuries were too much to overcome. Still, the 7-7 finish was the first non-losing record since just missing out on a chance at the first super bowl in 1966, ending a streak of seven consecutive losing seasons.
1975 saw a player strike over the Sullivan's miserly negotiating tactics that led to a canceled preseason game, and a distraction that could not be overcome. Unfortunately this was just a foreshadowing of events to follow a couple years later.
In '76 the Pats went 11-3, making the playoffs for the first time in 13 years. The team ranked second in scoring offense and third in turnover differential. The Pats led the league with 5.0 yards per rush, and had not lost a game since October. Then came the Ben Dreith game, arguably the most egregiously one-sided officiated game in the history of the NFL (if not all sports). With Pittsburgh decimated by injuries and the AFC vastly superior to the NFC that year, the Raiders-Patriots game was the de facto league championship game. Yes, it still bothers me to this day.
Fairbanks then worked out contract extensions for Hannah and Leon Gray, two future Patriot Hall of Famers. The Sullivans screwed Fairbanks over however, not approving the deals and forcing him to renege on the contracts. Hannah and Gray walked out on the team during preseason and did not return until week four. The Pats had lost two games to below average teams by that time and never recovered, going 7-3 the rest of the way to finish 9-5 in 1977 - but missing the playoffs.
In 1978 Fairbanks worked out a contract extension with Stingley, just prior to his being viciously hit and paralyzed by Jack Tatum in a preseason game. When the Sullivans refused to honor that verbal commitment, it was the final straw; Fairbanks started looking for another job. The team won the AFC East, but then word leaked out that Fairbanks had been hired by the University of Colorado. Billy Sullivan suspended Fairbanks prior to the final game of the season, making the OC the head coach when the Pats had the ball, and the DC the head coach when on defense. The ridiculous arrangement predictably failed, and Fairbanks was allowed to return and coach the first home playoff game in franchise history. Under gloomy skies a lethargic and distracted team was defeated by Earl Campbell, Dan Pastorini and Bum Phillips' Houston Oilers on new years eve of 1978. With that loss, the Fairbanks-era was over.
Making A Case for Chuck Fairbanks for the Patriots Hall | PatsFans.com
But there was a brief lull in the doldrums of the mid-to-late 60’s and before the Super Bowl team of 1985 and that was during the tenure of Chuck Fairbanks.
www.patsfans.com
The first thing he did was fix a Patriots draft system that was pretty much broken at that time. In his first draft Fairbanks landed HOF OL John Hannah, RB Sam Cunningham, WR Darryl Stingley as well as NT ‘Sugar Bear’ Ray Hamilton. A year later he brought in LB Steve Nelson, RB Andy Johnson and LB Sam Hunt. The core of his teams in New England was being put together. Russ Francis and Steve Grogan joined the team in 1975.
Chuck Fairbanks for Patriots Hall of Fame
This time of year the Patriots Hall of Fame committee meets to decide who will be the newest inductees. Each of the past couple years a heated debate has been centered around Bill Parcells, but I t…
www.patspropaganda.com
The Patriots had six-straight losing seasons prior to Fairbanks’ arrival, and hadn’t been to the playoffs in ten years. By 1976 the Patriots had (at that time) their best team ever, handing the eventual Super Bowl champion Oakland Raiders their only loss of the season. Oakland would win the re-match in the playoffs in a hard fought game that featured a marginal roughing the passer penalty on Sugar Bear Hamilton on a third-and-18 incomplete pass that would set Oakland up for the 24-21 win.
But to this day, many believe the ’76 Pats teams was one of their best ever, even if they didn’t even make it to the Super Bowl. Before that, the Patriots truly were nobodies in the NFL landscape. If we really want to talk about a coach who put the Patriots on the map, Fairbanks would have to be the original choice.
The fact that Billy ****ing Sullivan is in the NEP HOF and Chuck Fairbanks isn't is, in the words of former President Jimmy Carter, a Disgrace to the Human Race.
- captain stone
Fairbanks was the best drafter the team ever had. I dearly wish he had more time with the Pats to see what he could have ultimately built them into.
But Sullivans gotta Sullivan...
-turkeyneck
Former Patriots Head Coach Chuck Fairbanks Passed Away
The New England Patriots are deeply saddened to learn of the loss of Chuck Fairbanks, who served as head coach of the Patriots for six seasons from 1973 through 1978.
www.patriots.com
Chuck Fairbanks, a Fitful Football Coach, Dies at 79 (Published 2013)
Mr. Fairbanks built successful football teams in college at the University of Oklahoma and in the N.F.L. with New England. But controversy often followed him.
www.nytimes.com
Roughing the Passer: The Patriots-Raiders Game You Should Know About
Now that Tom Brady has shown us his throwback resume, lets flash back to the Patriots-Raiders AFC divisional playoff game that took place on Dec. 18, 1976.
archive.boston.com
Listen to 'Rough Injustice: The Story of the 1976 New England Patriots'
The 1976 New England Patriots are chronicled in the 98.5 the Sports Hub special "Rough Injustice". Listen for interviews with John Hannah and many others.
985thesportshub.com
‘Roughing the Passer’ The Patriots Raiders Playoff Game What Raider fans never talk about
2:48 Video
11/7/1976 Buffalo Bills at New England Patriots highlights, National Football League Week 9
1:46 Game Highlight Video
1976 New England Patriots
1:21:41 Season Highlights
1976 New England Patriots Team Season Highlights "Second Revolution"
21:48 Season Highlights
1978 New England Patriots Team Season Highlights "How The East Was Won"
22:08 Season Highlights
2:48 Video
11/7/1976 Buffalo Bills at New England Patriots highlights, National Football League Week 9
1:46 Game Highlight Video
1976 New England Patriots
1:21:41 Season Highlights
1976 New England Patriots Team Season Highlights "Second Revolution"
21:48 Season Highlights
1978 New England Patriots Team Season Highlights "How The East Was Won"
22:08 Season Highlights












