General manager Joe Thomas took over the head coaching duties for the remainders of the season, but could direct the team to only two wins, both on the road, as the Colts failed to win a home game during the 1974 season. This would be the last time the Colts would fail to win a home game in a non-strike season until their abysmal 1–15 1991 season, when the team was based in Indianapolis.
In an autopsy of the Colts 1974 season written for Street & Smith's Pro Football Annual,Buffalo Evening News writer Larry Felser observed that the patience of Baltimore fans was waning, with the perennially sold-out Memorial Stadium had failed to crack the 40,000 mark at the gate on multiple occasions.[3] "When Joe Thomas arrived on the scene as general manager in 1972, he promised to tear down a decaying team and rebuild it into a champion," Felser wrote. "He produced on the first part of his vow; the Baltimore fans are waiting for the other shoe to drop."[3]
^ abLarry Felser, "Baltimore Colts," in Sam E. Andre (ed.), Street & Smith's Pro Football Annual, 1975. New York: Conde Nast Publications, 1975, pp. 48–50.
^NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York, ISBN0-7611-2480-2, p. 296