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1961 Buffalo Bills season

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1961 Buffalo Bills season
OwnerRalph Wilson
Head coachBuster Ramsey
Home fieldWar Memorial Stadium
Results
Record6–8
Division place4th Eastern
Playoff finishDid not qualify

The 1961 Buffalo Bills season was the team's second year in the American Football League. The Bills played in the Eastern division, winning six games, losing eight, and missing the postseason.

The Bills didn't have a winning record at any point in the season; they played their final five games of the season on the road.

Season summary

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The Bills had a problematic quarterback situation, with former Redskin M.C. Reynolds, second-year Bills QB Johnny Green and ex-Lion Warren Rabb all struggling at the passer position. None completed more than 46% of their passes, and only Reynolds had a winning record (2–1) and threw for more than 1,000 yards.[1]

Punter Billy Atkins led the league in punts, with 85; he also led the league with 44.5 yards per punt. Atkins also played safety for the Bills in 1961, and led the league with 10 interceptions, and was 2nd-Team All-AFL on defense.[2]

Middle linebacker Archie Matsos was 1st-Team All-AFL for the second consecutive year, as was defensive tackle Chuck McMurtry. Defensive tackle LaVerne Torczon was 2nd-Team All-AFL in 1961.[3]

Offseason

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Personnel

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Staff

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1961 Buffalo Bills staff

Front office

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

 

Defensive coaches

Final roster

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1961 Buffalo Bills roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

*Note: rookies in italics

AFL draft

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The Bills amassed a great deal of talent on their offensive line in the 1961 draft. Four of their first seven picks—Rice, Shaw, Barber and Bemiller, all offensive linemen—would go on to make at least one All-AFL team in the next five years. This draft would form the nucleus for the Bills' power running game over the next five years.

Rice was All-AFL as a rookie in 1961.

= All-AFL[4]
Round Player Position College
1 Ken Rice[5] Tackle Auburn
2 Billy Shaw[6] Tackle Georgia Tech
3 Art Baker Fullback Syracuse (from New York)
3 Tom Gilburg Tackle Syracuse
4 Stew Barber[7] Tackle Penn State
5 Norm Snead*[8] Quarterback Wake Forest
6 Fred Brown Halfback Georgia
7 Albert Bemiller[9] Center Syracuse
8 Charles Linning Tackle Miami
9 William Majors Halfback Tennessee
10 Don Kern Halfback VMI
11 Roy Wall Halfback North Carolina
12 Floyd Powers Guard Mississippi State
13 Tom Causey Offensive end Louisiana Tech
14 Ron Kostelnik*[10] Tackle Cincinnati
15 Jerry Frye Offensive end South Carolina
16 Vincent Scott Offensive end Maryland
17 Wayne Wolff Tackle Wake Forest
18 John Bodkin Guard South Carolina
19 Charley Barnes Offensive end NE Louisiana State
20 Everett Cloud Halfback Maryland
21 Larry Vargo Offensive end Detroit
22 Charles Baker Tackle Tennessee
23 William Mack Halfback Notre Dame
24 Frank Jackunas Center Detroit
25 Jack Harbaugh Halfback Bowling Green
26 Lorenzo Stanford Tackle North Carolina A & I
27 Bob Allen Offensive end Wake Forest
28 Jason Harness Offensive end Michigan State
29 Mike Stock Halfback Northwestern
30 William Martin Halfback Minnesota

Standings

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AFL Eastern Division
W L T PCT DIV PF PA STK
Houston Oilers 10 3 1 .769 4–1–1 513 242 W9
Boston Patriots 9 4 1 .692 2–3–1 413 313 W4
New York Titans 7 7 0 .500 3–3 301 390 L2
Buffalo Bills 6 8 0 .429 2–4 294 342 L1

Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings in the AFL.

1961 Game-By-Game Results

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The 1961 preseason was notable for the Bills as they became the only AFL (or NFL) team to lose to a CFL team, and it was the last game between the CFL and AFL/NFL met in history.[11]

1961 Preseason

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Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance
1 August 8 at Hamilton Tiger-Cats L 21–38 0–1 Hamilton Civic Stadium 12,000 [12]
2 August 18 Dallas Texans L 26–35 0–2 War Memorial Stadium 11,166
3 August 25 at Boston Patriots L 10–28 0–3 Mt. Pleasant Stadium (Providence, RI) 4,762
4 September 1 Boston Patriots L 12–15 0–4 War Memorial Stadium 17,071

1961 Regular Season

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Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance Recap
1 September 10 Denver Broncos L 10–22 0–1 War Memorial Stadium 16,636 Recap
2 September 17 New York Titans W 41–31 1–1 War Memorial Stadium 15,584 Recap
3 September 23 Boston Patriots L 21–23 1–2 War Memorial Stadium 21,504 Recap
4 September 30 San Diego Chargers L 11–19 1–3 War Memorial Stadium 20,742 Recap
5 October 8 at Houston Oilers W 22–12 2–3 Jeppesen Stadium 22,761 Recap
6 October 15 Dallas Texans W 27–24 3–3 War Memorial Stadium 20,678 Recap
7 October 22 at Boston Patriots L 21–52 3–4 Boston University Field 9,398 Recap
8 October 29 Houston Oilers L 16–28 3–5 War Memorial Stadium 21,237 Recap
9 November 5 Oakland Raiders L 22–31 3–6 War Memorial Stadium 17,027 Recap
10 November 12 at Dallas Texans W 30–20 4–6 Cotton Bowl 15,000 Recap
11 November 19 at Denver Broncos W 23–10 5–6 Bears Stadium 7,645 Recap
12 November 23 at New York Titans L 14–21 5–7 Polo Grounds 12,023 Recap
13 December 3 at Oakland Raiders W 26–21 6–7 Candlestick Park 8,011 Recap
14 December 10 at San Diego Chargers L 10–28 6–8 Balboa Stadium 24,486 Recap
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Final roster

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References

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  1. ^ Pro-Football-Reference.com: 1961 Buffalo Bills
  2. ^ Pro-Football-Reference.com: 1961 AFL Leaders and Leaderboards
  3. ^ Pro-Football-Reference.com: 1961 AFL Pro Bowlers
  4. ^ Players are identified as All-AFL if they were selected to the All-AFL at any time in their career.
  5. ^ All-AFL 1961
  6. ^ 8× AFL All-Star
  7. ^ 5× AFL All-Star
  8. ^ NFL Pro Bowler for Washington Redskins, Philadelphia Eagles and New York Giants
  9. ^ 1965 AFL All-Star
  10. ^ Inducted into Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame (NFL) in 1989
  11. ^ "Hamilton Tiger-Cats vs. Buffalo Bills, August 8, 1961". Archived from the original on January 19, 2008. Retrieved July 4, 2014.
  12. ^ NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York, NY, ISBN 0-7611-2480-2, p. 369