1974 Chicago Bears season

NFL team season

The 1974 Chicago Bears season was their 55th regular season completed in the National Football League. The team finished with a 4–10 record, which led to the ouster of Abe Gibron as head coach.

Offseason

NFL Draft

Round Pick Player Position School/Club Team
1 4 Waymond Bryant Linebacker Tennessee State
1 20 Dave Gallagher Defensive tackle Michigan

Roster

1974 Chicago Bears final roster
Quarterbacks
  • 18 Joe Barnes
  • 10 Bobby Douglass
  • 19 Gary Huff

Running backs

  • 29 Dave Gagnon
  • 26 Carl Garrett
  • 47 Ken Grandberry
  • 35 Jim Harrison FB
  • 33 Gary Kosins
  • 22 Cliff Taylor
  • 36 Perry Williams FB

Wide receivers

  • 43 George Farmer
  • 17 Ike Hill
  • 80 Bo Rather
  • 83 Charlie Wade
  • 85 Wayne Wheeler

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists
  • 87 Tom Reynolds WR (IRTooltip Injured reserve)


Rookies in italics

Regular season

Schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance
1 September 15 Detroit Lions W 17–9 1–0 Soldier Field 48,134
2 September 22 New York Jets L 21–23 1–1 Soldier Field 50,213
3 September 29 at Minnesota Vikings L 7–11 1–2 Metropolitan Stadium 46,217
4 October 6 New Orleans Saints W 24–10 2–2 Soldier Field 45,818
5 October 13 at Atlanta Falcons L 10–13 2–3 Atlanta Stadium 47,835
6 October 21 Green Bay Packers W 10–9 3–3 Soldier Field 50,623
7 October 27 at Buffalo Bills L 6–16 3–4 Rich Stadium 78,084
8 November 3 Minnesota Vikings L 0–17 3–5 Soldier Field 33,343
9 November 10 at Green Bay Packers L 3–20 3–6 Milwaukee County Stadium 46,567
10 November 17 San Francisco 49ers L 0–34 3–7 Soldier Field 42,686
11 November 24 at Detroit Lions L 17–34 3–8 Tiger Stadium 40,930
12 December 1 New York Giants W 16–13 4–8 Soldier Field 18,802
13 December 8 at San Diego Chargers L 21–28 4–9 San Diego Stadium 33,662
14 December 15 at Washington Redskins L 0–42 4–10 RFK Stadium 52,085
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Game summaries

Week 1: vs. Detroit Lions

Gary Huff hit Charlie Wade with two long passes, one from 73 yards and another from 43, setting up Chicago touchdowns that beat Detroit. Carl Garrett ran in from one yard for the Bears first touchdown and Huff threw a nine-yard touchdown pass for a 14–0 lead. It would be though the high mark for the Bears that season.

Week 6: vs. Green Bay Packers

1 234Total
Packers 0 063 9
Bears 10 000 10
  • Source: Pro-Football-Reference.com
Scoring summary
1BearsMirro Roder 23-yard field goalBears 3–0
1BearsCharlie Wade 57-yard pass from Gary Huff (Mirro Roder kick)Bears 10–0
3PackersChester Marcol 34-yard field goalBears 10–3
3PackersChester Marcol 33-yard field goalBears 10–6
4PackersChester Marcol 36-yard field goalBears 10–9

Standings

NFC Central
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W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
Minnesota Vikings 10 4 0 .714 4–2 8–3 310 195 W3
Detroit Lions 7 7 0 .500 3–3 6–5 256 270 L1
Green Bay Packers 6 8 0 .429 3–3 4–7 210 206 L3
Chicago Bears 4 10 0 .286 2–4 4–7 152 279 L2

Awards and records

References

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Chicago Bears
  • Founded in 1919
  • Formerly the Decatur Staleys (1919–1920) and the Chicago Staleys (1921)
  • Based in Chicago, Illinois
  • Headquartered in Lake Forest, Illinois
Franchise
Records
Stadiums
Culture
Lore
Rivalries
Minor league affiliates
Retired numbers
Key personnel
Division championships (21)
Conference championships (4)
League championships (9)
Media
  • Broadcasters
  • Radio:
  • Personnel:
  • Television:
    • WFLD (pre-season and most regular season games through Fox, official pre-game and post-game alternate)
    • Marquee Sports Network (official post-game and in-season programming)
  • Personnel:
    • Lou Canellis (gameday television host, pre-season sideline reporter)
    • Adam Amin (pre-season play-by-play)
    • Jim Miller (pre-season analyst)
Current league affiliations
  • Category:Chicago Bears
  • WikiProject Chicago Bears
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Chicago Bears seasons
Formerly the Decatur Staleys (1920) and the Chicago Staleys (1921)
Bold indicates NFL Championship (1920–69) or Super Bowl (1966–present) victory
Italics indicates NFL Championship (1920–69) or Super Bowl (1966–present) appearance


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