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View history; General What links here; Related changes; Upload file; Special pages; Permanent link; ... 1967–68 Chicago Bulls season; 1968 Chicago Bears season;
Chicago Staleys regular season record (1921) 779 644 39 .546 Chicago Bears regular season record (1922–present) 798 646 42 .551 All-time regular season record (1920–present) [49] 17 20 — .459 All-time postseason record (1933–present) [49] 815 666 42 .549 All-time regular season and postseason record (1920–present) [49]
The 1968 season was the Chicago Bears' 49th in the National Football League.The team failed to improve on their 7–6–1 record from 1967 and finished with a 7–7 record under first-year head coach Jim Dooley and earning them a second-place finish in the Central Division within the NFL's Western Conference, a game behind the Minnesota Vikings.
The 1968 Major League Baseball season was contested from April 10 to October 10, 1968. It was the final year of baseball's pre-expansion era, in which the teams that finished in first place in each league went directly to the World Series to face each other for the "World Championship."
April 25 – The Chicago White Sox lose their tenth consecutive game to start the 1968 campaign, stretching their two-season losing streak to 15 contests dating to September 1967. April 27 – Tom Phoebus , the Baltimore Orioles ' top pitcher in 1967, throws a 6–0 no-hitter against the Boston Red Sox at Baltimore's Memorial Stadium .
View history; General ... 1968–69 Chicago Bulls season; Head coach: Dick Motta: ... 1968–69 Game log # Date: Opponent: Score: High points: Record: 1: October 15
In the early 1970s he molded Chicago into a tough, defensive-minded squad that was always ready to challenge the opposition, even if it couldn't match up in talent. Chicago owned the fourth overall pick in the 1968 NBA draft and selected 7-foot, 265-pound center Tom Boerwinkle of Tennessee. Boerwinkle would spend his entire 10-year career with ...