1966 New York Giants season | |
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Head coach | Allie Sherman |
Owner | Wellington Mara |
Home field | Yankee Stadium |
Results | |
Record | 1–12–1 |
Division place | 8th NFL Eastern |
Playoff finish | did not qualify |
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Scoring summary | ||||
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Q1 | NYG | Jones 75 yard pass from Morrall (Gogolak kick) | NYG 7–0 | |
Q1 | PIT | Ballman 9 yard pass from Nelsen (Clark kick) | Tie 7–7 | |
Q2 | NYG | Crespino 19 yard pass from Morrall (Gogolak kick) | NYG 14–7 | |
Q2 | PIT | Asbury 6 yard run (Clark kick) | Tie 14–14 | |
Q2 | NYG | Gogolak 26 yard field goal | NYG 17–14 | |
Q3 | PIT | Simmons 21 yard pass from Nelsen (Clark kick) | PIT 21–17 | |
Q3 | PIT | Clark 25 yard field goal | PIT 24–17 | |
Q3 | PIT | Hilton 31 yard pass from Nelsen (Clark kick) | PIT 31–17 | |
Q4 | NYG | Gogolak 14 yard field goal | PIT 31–20 | |
Q4 | NYG | Jones 98 yard pass from Morrall (Gogolak kick) | PIT 31–27 | |
Q4 | NYG | Harris 72 yard fumble return (Gogolak kick) | NYG 34–31 | |
Q4 | PIT | Clark 41 yard field goal | Tie 34–34 |
The 1966 New York Giants season was the 42nd season for the club in the National Football League. The Giants finished in last place in the Eastern Conference with a 1–12–1 record, the worst in franchise history.
The 1966 Giants surrendered the most points in NFL history for a 14-game season. They allowed 501 points in 14 games, or an average of 35.8 points per game. This total broke the league record for the most points given up in a season. The next most points allowed by a Giants team was 427 in the 2009 season, which was 16 games. The Giants allowed opponents to score more than 30 points in eight of the 14 games, and gave up over 50 points three times. They are the only team in history to give up 500 points in a 14-game season.
On November 27, the Giants played the highest-scoring game in NFL history, losing to the Washington Redskins, 72–41. It was the first of three straight games in which the Giants gave up more than 45 points; they allowed 49 points against the Cleveland Browns and 47 versus the Pittsburgh Steelers.
With the addition of the expansion Atlanta Falcons, the NFL had an odd number (15) of teams. This necessitated the use of bye weeks. The Giants received the most centrally located bye, in Week 8, thus perfectly dividing their season into two 7-game halves. They lost all seven games after the break. (In contrast, the expansion Falcons were 0–8 before they got their bye in Week 9, but 3–3 afterwards.)
Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.