The 1979 season was the Minnesota Vikings' 19th in the National Football League. The Vikings finished with a 7–9 record, their first losing season since 1967, and missed the playoffs for the first time since 1972.
The loss of Fran Tarkenton to retirement in the off-season meant third-year quarterback Tommy Kramer became the starter. The season also marked the end of an era as the last remaining original Viking, longtime defensive end Jim Marshall, retired after 19 seasons with the Vikings and 20 in the NFL, having set league records for most consecutive games played (282) and consecutive starts (270). Counting playoff games, he had started in every one of the 289 games in Vikings history. Safety Paul Krause also retired after the season ended; he holds the league record with 81 career interceptions.
Offseason
1979 draft
Notes
- ^ The Vikings traded an eighth-round selection (207th overall) to the Baltimore Colts in exchange for OT Frank Myers.
- ^ The Vikings traded a 10th-round selection (263rd overall) and a 1978 eighth-round selection (213th overall) to the New York Jets in exchange for S Phil Wise.
- ^ The details of this forfeited pick are unknown.
Undrafted free agents
Roster
Preseason
Regular season
Schedule
| Week
|
Date
|
Opponent
|
Result
|
Record
|
Venue
|
Attendance
|
| 1
|
September 2
|
San Francisco 49ers
|
W 28–22
|
1–0
|
Metropolitan Stadium
|
46,539
|
| 2
|
September 9
|
at Chicago Bears
|
L 7–26
|
1–1
|
Soldier Field
|
53,231
|
| 3
|
September 16
|
Miami Dolphins
|
L 12–27
|
1–2
|
Metropolitan Stadium
|
46,187
|
| 4
|
September 23
|
Green Bay Packers
|
W 27–21 (OT)
|
2–2
|
Metropolitan Stadium
|
46,524
|
| 5
|
September 30
|
at Detroit Lions
|
W 13–10
|
3–2
|
Silverdome
|
75,295
|
| 6
|
October 7
|
Dallas Cowboys
|
L 20–36
|
3–3
|
Metropolitan Stadium
|
47,572
|
| 7
|
October 15
|
at New York Jets
|
L 7–14
|
3–4
|
Shea Stadium
|
54,479
|
| 8
|
October 21
|
Chicago Bears
|
W 30–27
|
4–4
|
Metropolitan Stadium
|
41,164
|
| 9
|
October 28
|
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
|
L 10–12
|
4–5
|
Metropolitan Stadium
|
46,906
|
| 10
|
November 4
|
at St. Louis Cardinals
|
L 7–37
|
4–6
|
Busch Memorial Stadium
|
47,213
|
| 11
|
November 11
|
at Green Bay Packers
|
L 7–19
|
4–7
|
Milwaukee County Stadium
|
52,706
|
| 12
|
November 18
|
Detroit Lions
|
W 14–7
|
5–7
|
Metropolitan Stadium
|
43,650
|
| 13
|
November 25
|
at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
|
W 23–22
|
6–7
|
Tampa Stadium
|
70,039
|
| 14
|
December 2
|
at Los Angeles Rams
|
L 21–27 (OT)
|
6–8
|
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
|
56,700
|
| 15
|
December 9
|
Buffalo Bills
|
W 10–3
|
7–8
|
Metropolitan Stadium
|
42,239
|
| 16
|
December 16
|
at New England Patriots
|
L 23–27
|
7–9
|
Schaefer Stadium
|
54,719
|
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.
Standings
Awards and records
Statistics
Team leaders
League rankings
| Category
|
Total yards
|
Yards per game
|
NFL rank (out of 28)
|
| Passing offense |
3,139 |
196.2 |
12th
|
| Rushing offense |
1,764 |
110.3 |
23rd
|
| Total offense |
4,903 |
306.4 |
19th
|
| Passing defense |
2,697 |
168.6 |
11th
|
| Rushing defense |
2,526 |
157.9 |
26th
|
| Total defense |
5,223 |
326.4 |
18th
|
References
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|
| Franchise | |
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| Stadiums | |
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| Culture | |
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| Lore | |
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| Rivalries | |
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| Division championships (21) | |
|---|
| Conference championships (4) | |
|---|
| League championships (1) | |
|---|
| Retired numbers | |
|---|
| Current league affiliations | |
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