1998 Miami Dolphins season

1998 Miami Dolphins season
OwnerWayne Huizenga
General managerEddie Jones
Head coachJimmy Johnson
Home fieldPro Player Stadium
Results
Record10–6
Division place2nd AFC East
Playoff finishWon Wild Card Playoffs
(vs. Bills) 24–17
Lost Divisional Playoffs
(at Broncos) 3–38
Pro Bowlers3
DT Tim Bowens
LB Zach Thomas
DB Sam Madison

The 1998 Miami Dolphins season was the team's 33rd overall and 29th as a member of the National Football League (NFL). The Dolphins improved upon their previous season's output of 9–7, winning ten games.[1] The team qualified for the playoffs for the second straight year. The Dolphins defeated the Buffalo Bills 24–17 in the Wild Card round, but lost to the defending and eventual Super Bowl champion Denver Broncos 38–3 in the Divisional Playoff Game.

The 2012 Football Outsiders Almanac states that the 1998 Dolphins had the single biggest defensive improvement (from the previous season) from 1991 to 2011.[2]

As with the 1985 Bears, the Dolphins defeated a team (the Broncos) widely tipped a few weeks earlier to beat their unbeaten 1972 season,[3][4] although this time the Dolphins were not defending their status as the only unbeaten team since the Giants had already beaten the Broncos. Because, before the admission of the Texans in 2002, scheduling for NFL games outside a team's division was subject to much greater influence from table position during the previous season,[5] that game was the first time the Dolphins had opposed the Broncos since that same 1985 season.[6]

This season marked the last time the Dolphins finished with the #1 Defense in the NFL.

  1. ^ 1998 Miami Dolphins
  2. ^ Football Outsiders Almanac 2012 (ISBN 1478201525), p. 102
  3. ^ “Denver eyes 19–0, but there's no rush” in Minneapolis Star Tribune, November 16, 1998
  4. ^ Freeman, Mike; “Chasing Perfection and Taking Questions; Voluble Broncos Are 13–0 and Ready to Talk” in The New York Times, December 9, 1998
  5. ^ History of the NFL's Structure and Formats
  6. ^ Denver Broncos v Miami Dolphins