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NFL History 1869 - 1899
1869
Rutgers and Princeton played
a college soccer football game, the first ever, November 6. The
game used modified London Football Association rules. During the
next seven years, rugby gained favor with the major eastern schools
over soccer, and modern football began to develop from rugby.
1876
At the Massasoit
convention, the first rules for American football were written.
Walter Camp, who would become known as the father of American football,
first became involved with the game.
1892
In an era in which
football was a major attraction of local athletic clubs, an intense
competition between two Pittsburgh-area clubs, the Allegheny Athletic
Association (AAA) and the Pittsburgh Athletic Club (PAC), led to
the making of the first professional football player. Former Yale
All-America guard William (Pudge) Heffelfinger was paid $500 by
the AAA to play in a game against the PAC, becoming the first person
to be paid to play football, November 12. The AAA won the game 4-0
when Heffelfinger picked up a PAC fumble and ran 25 yards for a
touchdown.
1893
The Pittsburgh Athletic
Club signed one of its players, probably halfback Grant Dibert,
to the first known pro football contract, which covered all of the
PAC's games for the year.
1895
John Brallier became
the first football player to openly turn pro, accepting $10 and
expenses to play for the Latrobe YMCA against the Jeannette Athletic
Club.
1896
The Allegheny Athletic
Association team fielded the first completely professional team
for its abbreviated two-game season.
1897
The Latrobe Athletic
Association football team went entirely professional, becoming the
first team to play a full season with only professionals.
1898
A touchdown was changed
from four points to five.
1899
Chris O'Brien formed a
neighborhood team, which played under the name the Morgan Athletic
Club, on the south side of Chicago. The team later became known
as the Normals, then the Racine (for a street in Chicago) Cardinals,
the Chicago Cardinals, the St. Louis Cardinals, the Phoenix Cardinals,
and, in 1994, the Arizona Cardinals. The team remains the oldest
continuing operation in pro football.
TOP
NFL History 1900 - 1919
1900
William C. Temple
took over the team payments for the Duquesne Country and Athletic
Club, becoming the first known individual club owner.
1902
Baseball's Philadelphia
Athletics, managed by Connie Mack, and the Philadelphia Phillies
formed professional football teams, joining the Pittsburgh Stars
in the first attempt at a pro football league, named the National
Football League. The Athletics won the first night football game
ever played, 39-0 over Kanaweola AC at Elmira, New York, November
21.
All three teams claimed the pro
championship for the year, but the league president, Dave Berry,
named the Stars the champions. Pitcher Rube Waddell was with the
Athletics, and pitcher Christy Mathewson a fullback for Pittsburgh.
The first World Series of pro
football, actually a five-team tournament, was played among a team
made up of players from both the Athletics and the Phillies, but
simply named New York; the New York Knickerbockers; the Syracuse
AC; the Warlow AC; and the Orange (New Jersey) AC at New York's
original Madison Square Garden. New York and Syracuse played the
first indoor football game before 3,000, December 28. Syracuse,
with Glen (Pop) Warner at guard, won 6-0 and went on to win the
tournament.
1903
The Franklin (Pa.) Athletic
Club won the second and last World Series of pro football over the
Oreos AC of Asbury Park, New Jersey; the Watertown Red and Blacks;
and the Orange AC.
Pro football was
popularized in Ohio when the Massillon Tigers, a strong amateur
team, hired four Pittsburgh pros to play in the season-ending game
against Akron. At the same time, pro football declined in the Pittsburgh
area, and the emphasis on the pro game moved west from Pennsylvania
to Ohio.
1904
A field goal was changed
from five points to four.
Ohio had at least seven pro teams,
with Massillon winning the Ohio Independent Championship, that is,
the pro title. Talk surfaced about forming a state-wide league to
end spiraling salaries brought about by constant bidding for players
and to write universal rules for the game. The feeble attempt to
start the league failed.
Halfback Charles Follis signed
a contract with the Shelby (Ohio) AC, making him the first known
black pro football player.
1905
The Canton AC, later
to become known as the Bulldogs, became a professional team. Massillon
again won the Ohio League championship.
1906
The forward pass was legalized.
The first authenticated pass completion in a pro game came on October
27, when George (Peggy) Parratt of Massillon threw a completion
to Dan (Bullet) Riley in a victory over a combined Benwood-Moundsville
team.
Arch-rivals Canton
and Massillon, the two best pro teams in America, played twice,
with Canton winning the first game but Massillon winning the second
and the Ohio League championship. A betting scandal and the financial
disaster wrought upon the two clubs by paying huge salaries caused
a temporary decline in interest in pro football in the two cities
and, somewhat, throughout Ohio.
1909
A field goal dropped from
four points to three.
1912
A touchdown was increased
from five points to six.
Jack Cusack revived
a strong pro team in Canton.
1913
Jim Thorpe, a former football
and track star at the Carlisle Indian School (Pa.) and a double
gold medal winner at the 1912 Olympics in Stockholm, played for
the Pine Village Pros in Indiana.
1915
Massillon again fielded
a major team, reviving the old rivalry with Canton. Cusack signed
Thorpe to play for Canton for $250 a game.
1916
With Thorpe and former
Carlisle teammate Pete Calac starring, Canton went 9-0-1, won the
Ohio League championship, and was acclaimed the pro football champion.
1917
Despite an upset by Massillon,
Canton again won the Ohio League championship.
1919
Canton again won the Ohio
League championship, despite the team having been turned over from
Cusack to Ralph Hay. Thorpe and Calac were joined in the backfield
by Joe Guyon.
Earl (Curly) Lambeau
and George Calhoun organized the Green Bay Packers. Lambeau's employer
at the Indian Packing Company provided $500 for equipment and allowed
the team to use the company field for practices. The Packers went
10-1.
TOP
NFL History 1920 - 1929
1920
Pro football was in a state
of confusion due to three major problems: dramatically rising salaries;
players continually jumping from one team to another following the
highest offer; and the use of college players still enrolled in
school. A league in which all the members would follow the same
rules seemed the answer. An organizational meeting, at which the
Akron Pros, Canton Bulldogs, Cleveland Indians, and Dayton Triangles
were represented, was held at the Jordan and Hupmobile auto showroom
in Canton, Ohio, August 20. This meeting resulted in the formation
of the American Professional Football Conference.
A second organizational
meeting was held in Canton, September 17. The teams were from four
states-Akron, Canton, Cleveland, and Dayton from Ohio; the Hammond
Pros and Muncie Flyers from Indiana; the Rochester Jeffersons from
New York; and the Rock Island Independents, Decatur Staleys, and
Racine Cardinals from Illinois. The name of the league was changed
to the American Professional Football Association. Hoping to capitalize
on his fame, the members elected Thorpe president; Stanley Cofall
of Cleveland was elected vice president. A membership fee of $100
per team was charged to give an appearance of respectability, but
no team ever paid it. Scheduling was left up to the teams, and there
were wide variations, both in the overall number of games played
and in the number played against APFA member teams.
Four other teams-the
Buffalo All-Americans, Chicago Tigers, Columbus Panhandles, and
Detroit Heralds-joined the league sometime during the year. On September
26, the first game featuring an APFA team was played at Rock Island's
Douglas Park. A crowd of 800 watched the Independents defeat the
St. Paul Ideals 48-0. A week later, October 3, the first game matching
two APFA teams was held. At Triangle Park, Dayton defeated Columbus
14-0, with Lou Partlow of Dayton scoring the first touchdown in
a game between Association teams. The same day, Rock Island defeated
Muncie 45-0.
By the beginning
of December, most of the teams in the APFA had abandoned their hopes
for a championship, and some of them, including the Chicago Tigers
and the Detroit Heralds, had finished their seasons, disbanded,
and had their franchises canceled by the Association. Four teams-Akron,
Buffalo, Canton, and Decatur-still had championship as-pirations,
but a series of late-season games among them left Akron as the only
undefeated team in the Association. At one of these games, Akron
sold tackle Bob Nash to Buffalo for $300 and five percent of the
gate receipts-the first APFA player deal.
1921
At the league meeting in
Akron, April 30, the championship of the 1920 season was awarded
to the Akron Pros. The APFA was reorganized, with Joe Carr of the
Columbus Panhandles named president and Carl Storck of Dayton secretary-treasurer.
Carr moved the Association's headquarters to Columbus, drafted a
league constitution and by-laws, gave teams territorial rights,
restricted player movements, developed membership criteria for the
franchises, and issued standings for the first time, so that the
APFA would have a clear champion.
The Association's
membership increased to 22 teams, including the Green Bay Packers,
who were awarded to John Clair of the Acme Packing Company.
Thorpe moved from
Canton to the Cleveland Indians, but he was hurt early in the season
and played very little.
A.E. Staley turned
the Decatur Staleys over to player-coach George Halas, who moved
the team to Cubs Park in Chicago. Staley paid Halas $5,000 to keep
the name Staleys for one more year. Halas made halfback Ed (Dutch)
Sternaman his partner.
Player-coach Fritz
Pollard of the Akron Pros became the first black head coach.
The Staleys claimed
the APFA championship with a 9-1-1 record, as did Buffalo at 9-1-2.
Carr ruled in favor of the Staleys, giving Halas his first championship.
1922
After admitting the use
of players who had college eligibility remaining during the 1921
season, Clair and the Green Bay management withdrew from the APFA,
January 28. Curly Lambeau promised to obey league rules and then
used $50 of his own money to buy back the franchise. Bad weather
and low attendance plagued the Packers, and Lambeau went broke,
but local merchants arranged a $2,500 loan for the club. A public
nonprofit corporation was set up to operate the team, with Lambeau
as head coach and manager.
The American Professional
Football Association changed its name to the National Football League,
June 24. The Chicago Staleys became the Chicago Bears.
The NFL fielded
18 teams, including the new Oorang Indians of Marion, Ohio, an all-Indian
team featuring Thorpe, Joe Guyon, and Pete Calac, and sponsored
by the Oorang dog kennels.
Canton, led by
player-coach Guy Chamberlin and tackles Link Lyman and Wilbur (Pete)
Henry, emerged as the league's first true powerhouse, going 10-0-2.
1923
For the first time, all
of the franchises considered to be part of the NFL fielded teams.
Thorpe played first for Oorang, then for the Toledo Maroons. Against
the Bears, Thorpe fumbled, and Halas picked up the ball and returned
it 98 yards for a touchdown, a record that would last until 1972.
Canton had its
second consecutive undefeated season, going 11-0-1 for the NFL title.
1924
The league had 18 franchises,
including new ones in Kansas City, Kenosha, and Frankford, a section
of Philadelphia. League champion Canton, successful on the field
but not at the box office, was purchased by the owner of the Cleveland
franchise, who kept the Canton franchise inactive, while using the
best players for his Cleveland team, which he renamed the Bulldogs.
Cleveland won the title with a 7-1-1 record.
1925
Five new franchises were
admitted to the NFL-the New York Giants, who were awarded to Tim
Mara and Billy Gibson for $500; the Detroit Panthers, featuring
Jimmy Conzelman as owner, coach, and tailback; the Providence Steam
Roller; a new Canton Bulldogs team; and the Pottsville Maroons,
who had been perhaps the most successful independent pro team. The
NFL established its first player limit, at 16 players.
Late in the season,
the NFL made its greatest coup in gaining national recognition.
Shortly after the University of Illinois season ended in November,
All-America halfback Harold (Red) Grange signed a contract to play
with the Chicago Bears. On Thanksgiving Day, a crowd of 36,000-the
largest in pro football history-watched Grange and the Bears play
the Chicago Cardinals to a scoreless tie at Wrigley Field. At the
beginning of December, the Bears left on a barnstorming tour that
saw them play eight games in 12 days, in St. Louis, Philadelphia,
New York City, Washington, Boston, Pittsburgh, Detroit, and Chicago.
A crowd of 73,000 watched the game against the Giants at the Polo
Grounds, helping assure the future of the troubled NFL franchise
in New York. The Bears then played nine more games in the South
and West, including a game in Los Angeles, in which 75,000 fans
watched them defeat the Los Angeles Tigers in the Los Angeles Memorial
Coliseum.
Pottsville and
the Chicago Cardinals were the top contenders for the league title,
with Pottsville winning a late-season meeting 21-7. Pottsville scheduled
a game against a team of former Notre Dame players for Shibe Park
in Philadelphia. Frankford lodged a protest not only because the
game was in Frankford's protected territory, but because it was
being played the same day as a Yellow Jackets home game. Carr gave
three different notices forbidding Pottsville to play the game,
but Pottsville played anyway, December 12. That day, Carr fined
the club, suspended it from all rights and privileges (including
the right to play for the NFL championship), and re-turned its franchise
to the league. The Cardinals, who ended the season with the best
record in the league, were named the 1925 champions.
1926
Grange's manager, C.C.
Pyle, told the Bears that Grange wouldn't play for them unless he
was paid a five-figure salary and given one-third ownership of the
team. The Bears refused. Pyle leased Yankee Stadium in New York
City, then petitioned for an NFL franchise. After he was refused,
he started the first American Football League. It lasted one season
and included Grange's New York Yankees and eight other teams. The
AFL champion Philadelphia Quakers played a December game against
the New York Giants, seventh in the NFL, and the Giants won 31-0.
At the end of the season, the AFL folded.
Halas pushed through
a rule that prohibited any team from signing a player whose college
class had not graduated.
The NFL grew to
22 teams, including the Duluth Eskimos, who signed All-America fullback
Ernie Nevers of Stanford, giving the league a gate attraction to
rival Grange. The 15-member Eskimos, dubbed the Iron Men of the
North, played 29 exhibition and league games, 28 on the road, and
Nevers played in all but 29 minutes of them.
Frankford edged
the Bears for the championship, despite Halas having obtained John
(Paddy) Driscoll from the Cardinals. On December 4, the Yellow Jackets
scored in the final two minutes to defeat the Bears 7-6 and move
ahead of them in the standings.
1927
At a special meeting in
Cleveland, April 23, Carr decided to secure the NFL's future by
eliminating the financially weaker teams and consolidating the quality
players onto a limited number of more successful teams. The new-look
NFL dropped to 12 teams, and the center of gravity of the league
left the Midwest, where the NFL had started, and began to emerge
in the large cities of the East. One of the new teams was Grange's
New York Yankees, but Grange suffered a knee injury and the Yankees
finished in the middle of the pack. The NFL championship was won
by the cross-town rival New York Giants, who posted 10 shutouts
in 13 games.
1928
Grange and Nevers both
retired from pro football, and Duluth disbanded, as the NFL was
reduced to only 10 teams. The Providence Steam Roller of Jimmy Conzelman
and Pearce Johnson won the championship, playing in the Cycledrome,
a 10,000-seat oval that had been built for bicycle races.
1929
Chris O'Brien sold the
Chicago Cardinals to David Jones, July 27.
The NFL added a
fourth official, the field judge, July 28.
Grange and Nevers
returned to the NFL. Nevers scored six rushing touchdowns and four
extra points as the Cardinals beat Grange's Bears 40-6, November
28. The 40 points set a record that remains the NFL's oldest.
Providence became
the first NFL team to host a game at night under floodlights, against
the Cardinals, November 3.
The Packers added
back Johnny Blood (McNally), tackle Cal Hubbard, and guard Mike
Michalske, and won their first NFL championship, edging the Giants,
who featured quarterback Benny Friedman.
TOP
NFL History 1930 - 1939
1930
Dayton, the last of the NFL's original franchises, was purchased
by William B. Dwyer and John C. Depler, moved to Brooklyn, and renamed
the Dodgers. The Portsmouth, Ohio, Spartans entered the league.
The Packers edged
the Giants for the title, but the most improved team was the Bears.
Halas retired as a player and replaced himself as coach of the Bears
with Ralph Jones, who refined the T-formation by introducing wide
ends and a halfback in motion. Jones also introduced rookie All-America
fullback-tackle Bronko Nagurski.
The Giants defeated
a team of former Notre Dame players coached by Knute Rockne 22-0
before 55,000 at the Polo Grounds, December 14. The proceeds went
to the New York Unemployment Fund to help those suffering because
of the Great Depression, and the easy victory helped give the NFL
credibility with the press and the public
1931
The NFL decreased to 10 teams, and halfway through the season the
Frankford franchise folded. Carr fined the Bears, Packers, and Portsmouth
$1,000 each for using players whose college classes had not graduated.
The Packers won
an unprecedented third consecutive title, beating out the Spartans,
who were led by rookie backs Earl (Dutch) Clark and Glenn Presnell.
1932
George Preston Marshall, Vincent Bendix, Jay O'Brien, and M. Dorland
Doyle were awarded a franchise for Boston, July 9. Despite the presence
of two rookies-halfback Cliff Battles and tackle Glen (Turk) Edwards-the
new team, named the Braves, lost money and Marshall was left as
the sole owner at the end of the year.
NFL membership
dropped to eight teams, the lowest in history. Official statistics
were kept for the first time. The Bears and the Spartans finished
the season in the first-ever tie for first place. After the season
finale, the league office arranged for the first playoff game in
NFL history. The game was moved indoors to Chicago Stad-ium because
of bitter cold and heavy snow. The arena allowed only an 80-yard
field that came right to the walls. The goal posts were moved from
the end lines to the goal lines and, for safety, inbounds lines
or hashmarks where the ball would be put in play were drawn 10 yards
from the walls that butted against the sidelines. The Bears won
9-0, December 18, scoring the winning touchdown on a two-yard pass
from Nagurski to Grange. The Spartans claimed Nagurski's pass was
thrown from less than five yards behind the line of scrimmage, violating
the existing passing rule, but the play stood.
1933
The NFL, which long had followed the rules of college football,
made a number of significant changes from the college game for the
first time and began to develop rules serving its needs and the
style of play it preferred. The innovations from the 1932 championship
game-inbounds line or hashmarks and goal posts on the goal lines-were
adopted. Also the forward pass was legalized from anywhere behind
the line of scrimmage, February 25.
Marshall and Halas
pushed through a proposal that divided the NFL into two divisions,
with the winners to meet in an annual championship game, July 8.
Three new franchises
joined the league-the Pittsburgh Pirates of Art Rooney, the Philadelphia
Eagles of Bert Bell and Lud Wray, and the Cincinnati Reds. The Staten
Island Stapletons suspended operations for a year, but never returned
to the league.
Halas bought out
Sternaman, became sole owner of the Bears, and reinstated himself
as head coach. Marshall changed the name of the Boston Braves to
the Redskins. David Jones sold the Chicago Cardinals to Charles
W. Bidwill.
In the first NFL
Championship Game scheduled before the season, the Western Division
champion Bears defeated the Eastern Division champion Giants 23-21
at Wrigley Field, December 17.
1934
G.A. (Dick) Richards purchased the Portsmouth Spartans, moved them
to Detroit, and renamed them the Lions.
Professional football
gained new prestige when the Bears were matched against the best
college football players in the first Chicago College All-Star Game,
August 31. The game ended in a scoreless tie before 79,432 at Soldier
Field.
The Cincinnati
Reds lost their first eight games, then were suspended from the
league for defaulting on payments. The St. Louis Gunners, an independent
team, joined the NFL by buying the Cincinnati franchise and went
1-2 the last three weeks.
Rookie Beattie
Feathers of the Bears became the NFL's first 1,000-yard rusher,
gaining 1,004 on 101 carries. The Thanksgiving Day game between
the Bears and the Lions became the first NFL game broadcast nationally,
with Graham McNamee the announcer for NBC radio.
In the championship
game, on an extremely cold and icy day at the Polo Grounds, the
Giants trailed the Bears 13-3 in the third quarter before changing
to basketball shoes for better footing. The Giants won 30-13 in
what has come to be known as the Sneakers Game, December 9.
The player waiver
rule was adopted, December 10.
1935
The NFL adopted Bert Bell's proposal to hold an annual draft of
college players, to begin in 1936, with teams selecting in an inverse
order of finish, May 19. The inbounds line or hashmarks were moved
nearer the center of the field, 15 yards from the sidelines.
All-America end
Don Hutson of Alabama joined Green Bay. The Lions defeated the Giants
26-7 in the NFL Championship Game, December 15.
1936
There were no franchise transactions for the first year since the
formation of the NFL. It also was the first year in which all member
teams played the same number of games.
The Eagles made
University of Chicago halfback and Heisman Trophy winner Jay Berwanger
the first player ever selected in the NFL draft, February 8. The
Eagles traded his rights to the Bears, but Berwanger never played
pro football. The first player selected to actually sign was the
number-two pick, Riley Smith of Alabama, who was selected by Boston.
A rival league
was formed, and it became the second to call itself the American
Football League. The Boston Shamrocks were its champions.
Because of poor
attendance, Marshall, the owner of the host team, moved the Championship
Game from Boston to the Polo Grounds in New York. Green Bay defeated
the Redskins 21-6, December 13.
1937
Homer Marshman was granted a Cleveland franchise, named the Rams,
February 12. Marshall moved the Redskins to Washington, D.C., February
13. The Redskins signed TCU All-America tailback Sammy Baugh, who
led them to a 28-21 victory over the Bears in the NFL Championship
Game, December 12.
The Los Angeles
Bulldogs had an 8-0 record to win the AFL title, but then the 2-year-old
league folded.
1938
At the suggestion of Halas, Hugh (Shorty) Ray became a technical
advisor on rules and officiating to the NFL. A new rule called for
a 15-yard penalty for roughing the passer.
Rookie Byron (Whizzer)
White of the Pittsburgh Pirates led the NFL in rushing. The Giants
defeated the Packers 23-17 for the NFL title, December 11.
Marshall, Los Angeles
Times sports editor Bill Henry, and promoter Tom Gallery established
the Pro Bowl game between the NFL champion and a team of pro all-stars.
1939
The New York Giants defeated the Pro All-Stars 13-10 in the first
Pro Bowl, at Wrigley Field, Los Angeles, January 15.
Carr, NFL president
since 1921, died in Columbus, May 20. Carl Storck was named acting
president, May 25.
An NFL game was
televised for the first time when NBC broadcast the Brooklyn Dodgers-Philadelphia
Eagles game from Ebbets Field to the approximately 1,000 sets then
in New York.
Green Bay defeated
New York 27-0 in the NFL Championship Game, December 10 at Milwaukee.
NFL attendance exceeded 1 million in a season for the first time,
reaching 1,071,200.
TOP
NFL History 1940 - 1949
1940
A six-team rival league,
the third to call itself the American Football League, was formed,
and the Columbus Bullies won its championship.
Halas's Bears,
with additional coaching by Clark Shaughnessy of Stanford, defeated
the Redskins 73-0 in the NFL Championship Game, December 8. The
game, which was the most decisive victory in NFL history, popularized
the Bears'
T-formation with
a man-in-motion. It was the first championship carried on network
radio, broadcast by Red Barber to 120 stations of the Mutual Broadcasting
System, which paid $2,500 for the rights.
Art Rooney sold
the Pittsburgh franchise to Alexis Thompson, December 9, then bought
part interest in the Philadelphia Eagles.
1941
Elmer Layden was named
the first Commissioner of the NFL, March 1; Storck, the acting president,
resigned, April 5. NFL headquarters were moved to Chicago.
Bell and Rooney
traded the Eagles to Thompson for the Pirates, then re-named their
new team the Steelers. Homer Marshman sold the Rams to Daniel F.
Reeves and Fred Levy, Jr.
The league by-laws
were revised to provide for playoffs in case there were ties in
division races, and sudden-death overtimes in case a playoff game
was tied after four quarters. An official NFL Record Manual was
published for the first time.
Columbus again
won the championship of the AFL, but the two-year-old league then
folded.
The Bears and the
Packers finished in a tie for the Western Division championship,
setting up the first divisional playoff game in league history.
The Bears won 33-14, then defeated the Giants 37-9 for the NFL championship,
December 21.
1942
Players departing for service
in World War II depleted the rosters of NFL teams. Halas left the
Bears in midseason to join the Navy, and Luke Johnsos and Heartley
(Hunk) Anderson served as co-coaches as the Bears went 11-0 in the
regular season. The Redskins defeated the Bears 14-6 in the NFL
Championship Game, December 13.
1943
The Cleveland Rams, with
co-owners Reeves and Levy in the service, were granted permission
to suspend operations for one season, April 6. Levy transferred
his stock in the team to Reeves, April 16.
The NFL adopted
free substitution, April 7. The league also made the wearing of
helmets mandatory and approved a 10-game schedule for all teams.
Philadelphia and
Pittsburgh were granted permission to merge for one season, June
19. The team, known as Phil-Pitt (and called the Steagles by fans),
divided home games between the two cities, and Earle (Greasy) Neale
of Philadelphia and Walt Kiesling of Pittsburgh served as co-coaches.
The merger automatically dissolved the last day of the season, December
5.
Ted Collins was
granted a franchise for Boston, to become active in 1944.
Sammy Baugh led
the league in passing, punting, and interceptions. He led the Redskins
to a tie with the Giants for the Eastern Division title, and then
to a 28-0 victory in a divisional playoff game. The Bears beat the
Redskins 41-21 in the NFL Championship Game, December 26.
1944
Collins, who had wanted
a franchise in Yankee Stadium in New York, named his new team in
Boston the Yanks. Cleveland resumed operations. The Brooklyn Dodgers
changed their name to the Tigers.
Coaching from the
bench was legalized, April 20.
The Cardinals and
the Steelers were granted permission to merge for one year under
the name Card-Pitt, April 21. Phil Handler of the Cardinals and
Walt Kiesling of the Steelers served as co-coaches. The merger automatically
dissolved the last day of the season, December 3.
In the NFL Championship
Game, Green Bay defeated the New York Giants 14-7, December 17.
1945
The inbounds lines or hashmarks
were moved from 15 yards away from the sidelines to nearer the center
of the field-20 yards from the sidelines.
Brooklyn and Boston
merged into a team that played home games in both cities and was
known simply as The Yanks. The team was coached by former Boston
head coach Herb Kopf. In December, the Brooklyn franchise withdrew
from the NFL to join the new All-America Football Conference; all
the players on its active and reserve lists were assigned to The
Yanks, who once again became the Boston Yanks.
Halas rejoined
the Bears late in the season after service with the U.S. Navy. Although
Halas took over much of the coaching duties, Anderson and Johnsos
remained the coaches of record throughout the season.
Steve Van Buren
of Philadelphia led the NFL in rushing, kickoff returns, and scoring.
After the Japanese
surrendered ending World War II, a count showed that the NFL service
roster, limited to men who had played in league games, totaled 638,
21 of whom had died in action.
Rookie quarterback
Bob Waterfield led Cleveland to a 15-14 victory over Washington
in the NFL Championship Game, December 16.
1946
The contract of Commissioner
Layden was not renewed, and Bert Bell, the co-owner of the Steelers,
replaced him, January 11. Bell moved the league headquarters from
Chicago to the Philadelphia suburb of Bala- Cynwyd.
Free substitution
was withdrawn and substitutions were limited to no more than three
men at a time. Forward passes were made automatically incomplete
upon striking the goal posts, January 11.
The NFL took on
a truly national appearance for the first time when Reeves was granted
permission by the league to move his NFL champion Rams to Los Angeles.
Halfback Kenny
Washington (March 21) and end Woody Strode (May 7) signed with the
Los Angeles Rams to become the first African-Americans to play in
the NFLin the modern era. Guard Bill Willis (August 6) and running
back Marion Motley (August 9) joined the AAFC with the Cleveland
Browns.
The rival All-America
Football Conference began play with eight teams. The Cleveland Browns,
coached by Paul Brown, won the AAFC's first championship, defeating
the New York Yankees 14-9.
Bill Dudley of
the Steelers led the NFL in rushing, interceptions, and punt returns,
and won the league's most valuable player award.
Backs Frank Filchock
and Merle Hapes of the Giants were questioned about an attempt by
a New York man to fix the championship game with the Bears. Bell
suspended Hapes but allowed Filchock to play; he played well, but
Chicago won 24-14, December 15.
1947
The NFL added a fifth official,
the back judge.
A bonus choice
was made for the first time in the NFL draft. One team each year
would select the special choice before the first round began. The
Chicago Bears won a lottery and the rights to the first choice and
drafted back Bob Fenimore of Oklahoma A&M.
The Cleveland Browns
again won the AAFC title, defeating the New York Yankees 14-3.
Charles Bidwill,
Sr., owner of the Cardinals, died April 19, but his wife and sons
retained ownership of the team. On December 28, the Cardinals won
the NFL Championship Game 28-21 over the Philadelphia Eagles, who
had beaten Pittsburgh 21-0 in a playoff.
1948
Plastic helmets were prohibited.
A flexible artificial tee was permitted at the kickoff. Officials
other than the referee were equipped with whistles, not horns, January
14.
Fred Mandel sold
the Detroit Lions to a syndicate headed by D. Lyle Fife, January
15.
Halfback Fred Gehrke
of the Los Angeles Rams painted horns on the Rams' helmets, the
first modern helmet emblems in pro football.
The Cleveland Browns
won their third straight championship in the AAFC, going 14-0 and
then defeating the Buffalo Bills 49-7.
In a blizzard,
the Eagles defeated the Cardinals 7-0 in the NFL Championship Game,
December 19.
1949
Alexis Thompson sold the
champion Eagles to a syndicate headed by James P. Clark, January
15. The Boston Yanks became the New York Bulldogs, sharing the Polo
Grounds with the Giants.
Free substitution
was adopted for one year, January 20.
The NFL had two
1,000-yard rushers in the same season for the first time-Steve Van
Buren of Philadelphia and Tony Canadeo of Green Bay.
The AAFC played
its season with a one-division, seven-team format. On December 9,
Bell announced a mer-ger agreement in which three AAFC franchises-Cleveland,
San Francisco, and Baltimore-would join the NFL in 1950. The Browns
won their fourth consecutive AAFC title, defeating the 49ers 21-7,
December 11.
In a heavy rain,
the Eagles defeated the Rams 14-0 in the NFL Championship Game,
December 18.
TOP
NFL History 1950 - 1959
1950
Unlimited free substitution
was restored, opening the way for the era of two platoons and specialization
in pro football, January 20.
Curly Lambeau,
founder of the franchise and Green Bay's head coach since 1921,
resigned under fire, February 1.
The name National
Football League was restored after about three months as the National-American
Football League. The American and National conferences were created
to replace the Eastern and Western divisions, March 3.
The New York Bulldogs
became the Yanks and divided the players of the former AAFC Yankees
with the Giants. A special allocation draft was held in which the
13 teams drafted the remaining AAFC players, with special consideration
for Baltimore, which received 15 choices compared to 10 for other
teams.
The Los Angeles
Rams became the first NFL team to have all of its games-both home
and away-
televised. The
Washington Redskins followed the Rams in arranging to televise their
games; other teams made deals to put selected games on television.
In the first game
of the season, former AAFC champion Cleveland defeated NFL champion
Philadelphia 35-10. For the first time, deadlocks occurred in both
conferences and playoffs were necessary. The Browns defeated the
Giants in the American and the Rams defeated the Bears in the National.
Cleveland defeated Los Angeles 30-28 in the NFL Championship Game,
December 24.
1951
The Pro Bowl game, dormant
since 1942, was revived under a new format matching the all-stars
of each conference at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. The American
Conference defeated the National Conference 28-27, January 14.
Abraham Watner
returned the Baltimore franchise and its player contracts back to
the NFL for $50,000. Baltimore's former players were made available
for drafting at the same time as college players, January 18.
A rule was passed
that no tackle, guard, or center would be eligible to catch a forward
pass, January 18.
The Rams reversed
their television policy and televised only road games.
The NFL Championship
Game was televised coast-to-coast for the first time, December 23.
The DuMont Network paid $75,000 for the rights to the game, in which
the Rams defeated the Browns 24-17.
1952
Ted Collins sold the New
York Yanks' franchise back to the NFL, January 19. A new franchise
was awarded to a group in Dallas after it purchased the assets of
the Yanks, January 24. The new Texans went 1-11, with the owners
turning the franchise back to the league in midseason. For the last
five games of the season, the commissioner's office operated the
Texans as a road team, using Hershey, Pennsylvania, as a home base.
At the end of the season the franchise was canceled, the last time
an NFL team failed.
The Pittsburgh
Steelers abandoned the Single-Wing for the T-formation, the last
pro team to do so.
The Detroit Lions
won their first NFL championship in 17 years, defeating the Browns
17-7 in the title game, December 28.
1953
A Baltimore group headed
by Carroll Rosenbloom was granted a franchise and was awarded the
holdings of the defunct Dallas organization, January 23. The team,
named the Colts, put together the largest trade in league history,
acquiring 10 players from Cleveland in exchange for five.
The names of the
American and National conferences were changed to the Eastern and
Western conferences, January 24.
Jim Thorpe died,
March 28.
Mickey McBride,
founder of the Cleveland Browns, sold the franchise to a syndicate
headed by Dave R. Jones, June 10.
The NFL policy
of blacking out home games was upheld by Judge Allan K. Grim of
the U.S. District Court in Philadelphia, November 12.
The Lions again
defeated the Browns in the NFL Championship Game, winning 17-16,
December 27.
1954
The Canadian Football League
began a series of raids on NFL teams, signing quarterback Eddie
LeBaron and defensive end Gene Brito of Washington and defensive
tackle Arnie Weinmeister of the Giants, among others.
Fullback Joe Perry
of the 49ers became the first player in league history to gain 1,000
yards rushing in consecutive seasons.
Cleveland defeated
Detroit 56-10 in the NFL Championship Game, December 26.
1955
The sudden-death overtime
rule was used for the first time in a pre- season game between the
Rams and Giants at Portland, Oregon, August 28. The Rams won 23-17
three minutes into overtime.
A rule change declared
the ball dead immediately if the ball carrier touched the ground
with any part of his body except his hands or feet while in the
grasp of an opponent.
The Baltimore Colts
made an 80-cent phone call to Johnny Unitas and signed him as a
free agent. Another quarterback, Otto Graham, played his last game
as the Browns defeated the Rams 38-14 in the NFL Championship Game,
December 26. Graham had quarterbacked the Browns to 10 championship-game
appearances in 10 years.
NBC replaced DuMont
as the network for the title game, paying a rights fee of $100,000.
1956
The NFL Players Association
was founded.
Grabbing an opponent's
facemask (other than the ball carrier) was made illegal. Using radio
receivers to communicate with players on the field was prohibited.
A natural leather ball with white end stripes replaced the white
ball with black stripes for night games.
The Giants moved
from the Polo Grounds to Yankee Stadium.
Halas retired as
coach of the Bears, and was replaced by Paddy Driscoll.
CBS became the
first network to broadcast some NFL regular-season games to selected
television markets across the nation.
The Giants routed
the Bears 47-7 in the NFL Championship Game, December 30.
1957
Pete Rozelle was named
general manager of the Rams. Anthony J. Morabito, founder and co-owner
of the 49ers, died of a heart attack during a game against the Bears
at Kezar Stadium, October 28. An NFL-record crowd of 102,368 saw
the 49ers-Rams game at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, November
10.
The Lions came
from 20 points down to post a 31-27 playoff victory over the 49ers,
December 22. Detroit defeated Cleveland 59-14 in the NFL Championship
Game, December 29.
1958
The bonus selection in
the draft was eliminated, January 29. The last selection was quarterback
King Hill of Rice by the Chicago Cardinals.
Halas reinstated
himself as coach of the Bears.
Jim Brown of Cleveland
gained an NFL-record 1,527 yards rushing. In a divisional playoff
game, the Giants held Brown to eight yards and defeated Cleveland
10-0.
Baltimore, coached
by Weeb Ewbank, defeated the Giants 23-17 in the first sudden-death
overtime in an NFL Championship Game, December 28. The game ended
when Colts fullback Alan Ameche scored on a one-yard touchdown run
after 8:15 of overtime.
1959
Vince Lombardi was named
head coach of the Green Bay Packers, January 28.
Tim Mara,
the co-founder of the Giants, died, February 17. Lamar Hunt of Dallas
announced his intentions to form a second pro football league. The
first meeting was held in Chicago, August 14, and consisted of Hunt
representing Dallas; Bob Howsam, Denver; K.S. (Bud) Adams, Houston;
Barron Hilton, Los Angeles; Max Winter and Bill Boyer, Minneapolis;
and Harry Wismer, New York City. They made plans to begin play in
1960.
The new league
was named the American Football League, August 22. Buffalo, owned
by Ralph Wilson, became the seventh franchise, October 28. Boston,
owned by William H. Sullivan, became the eighth team, November 22.
The first AFL draft, lasting 33 rounds, was held, November 22. Joe
Foss was named AFL Commissioner, November 30. An additional draft
of 20 rounds was held by the AFL, December 2.
NFL Commissioner
Bert Bell died of a heart attack suffered at Franklin Field, Philadelphia,
during the last two minutes of a game between the Eagles and the
Steelers, October 11. Treasurer Austin Gunsel was named president
in the office of the commissioner, October 14.
The Colts again
defeated the Giants in the NFL Championship Game, 31-16, December
27.
TOP
NFL History 1960 - 1969
1960
Pete Rozelle was elected
NFL Commissioner as a compromise choice on the twenty-third ballot,
January 26. Rozelle moved the league offices to New York City.
Hunt was elected
AFL president for 1960, January 26. Minneapolis withdrew from the
AFL, January 27, and the same ownership was given an NFL franchise
for Minnesota (to start in 1961), January 28. Dallas received an
NFL franchise for 1960, January 28. Oakland received an AFL franchise,
January 30.
The AFL adopted
the two-point option on points after touchdown, January 28. A no-tampering
verbal pact, relative to players' contracts, was agreed to between
the NFL and AFL, February 9.
The NFL owners
voted to allow the transfer of the Chicago Cardinals to St. Louis,
March 13.
The AFL signed
a five-year television contract with ABC, June 9.
The Boston Patriots
defeated the Buffalo Bills 28-7 before 16,000 at Buffalo in the
first AFL preseason game, July 30. The Denver Broncos defeated the
Patriots 13-10 before 21,597 at Boston in the first AFL regular-season
game, September 9.
Philadelphia defeated
Green Bay 17-13 in the NFL Championship Game, December 26.
1961
The Houston Oilers defeated
the Los Angeles Chargers 24-16 before 32,183 in the first AFL Championship
Game, January 1.
Detroit defeated
Cleveland 17-16 in the first Playoff Bowl, or Bert Bell Benefit
Bowl, between second-place teams in each conference in Miami, January
7.
End Willard Dewveall
of the Bears played out his option and joined the Oilers, becoming
the first player to move deliberately from one league to the other,
January 14.
Ed McGah, Wayne
Valley, and Robert Osborne bought out their partners in the ownership
of the Raiders, January 17. The Chargers were transferred to San
Diego, February 10. Dave R. Jones sold the Browns to a group headed
by Arthur B. Modell, March 22. The Howsam brothers sold the Broncos
to a group headed by Calvin Kunz and Gerry Phipps, May 26.
NBC was awarded
a two-year contract for radio and television rights to the NFL Championship
Game for $615,000 annually, $300,000 of which was to go directly
into the NFL Player Benefit Plan, April 5.
Canton, Ohio, where
the league that became the NFL was formed in 1920, was chosen as
the site of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, April 27. Dick McCann,
a former Redskins executive, was named executive director.
A bill legalizing
single-network television contracts by professional sports leagues
was introduced in Congress by Representative Emanuel Celler. It
passed the House and Senate and was signed into law by President
John F. Kennedy, September 30.
Houston defeated
San Diego 10-3 for the AFL championship, December 24. Green Bay
won its first NFL championship since 1944, defeating the New York
Giants 37-0, December 31.
1962
The Western Division defeated
the Eastern Division 47-27 in the first AFL All-Star Game, played
before 20,973 in San Diego, January 7.
Both leagues prohibited
grabbing any player's facemask. The AFL voted to make the scoreboard
clock the official timer of the game.
The NFL entered
into a single-network agreement with CBS for telecasting all regular-season
games for $4.65 million annually, January 10.
Judge Roszel Thompson
of the U.S. District Court in Baltimore ruled against the AFL in
its antitrust suit against the NFL, May 21. The AFL had charged
the NFL with monopoly and conspiracy in areas of expansion, television,
and player signings. The case lasted two and a half years, the trial
two months.
McGah and Valley
acquired controlling interest in the Raiders, May 24. The AFL assumed
financial responsibility for the New York Titans, November 8. With
Commissioner Rozelle as referee, Daniel F. Reeves regained the ownership
of the Rams, outbidding his partners in sealed-envelope bidding
for the team, November 27.
The Dallas Texans
defeated the Oilers 20-17 for the AFL championship at Houston after
17 minutes, 54 seconds of overtime on a 25-yard field goal by Tommy
Brooker, December 23. The game lasted a record 77 minutes, 54 seconds.
Judge Edward Weinfeld
of the U.S. District Court in New York City upheld the legality
of the NFL's television blackout within a 75-mile radius of home
games and denied an injunction that would have forced the championship
game between the Giants and the Packers to be televised in the New
York City area, December 28. The Packers beat the Giants 16-7 for
the NFL title, December 30.
1963
The Dallas Texans transferred
to Kansas City, becoming the Chiefs, February 8. The New York Titans
were sold to a five-man syndicate headed by David (Sonny) Werblin,
March 28. Weeb Ewbank became the Titans' new head coach and the
team's name was changed to the Jets, April 15. They began play in
Shea Stadium.
NFL Properties,
Inc., was founded to serve as the licensing arm of the NFL.
Rozelle indefinitely
suspended Green Bay halfback Paul Hornung and Detroit defensive
tackle Alex Karras for placing bets on their own teams and on other
NFL games; he also fined five other Detroit players $2,000 each
for betting on one game in which they did not participate, and the
Detroit Lions Football Company $2,000 on each of two counts for
failure to report information promptly and for lack of sideline
supervision.
Paul Brown, head
coach of the Browns since their inception, was fired and replaced
by Blanton Collier. Don Shula replaced Weeb Ewbank as head coach
of the Colts.
The AFL allowed
the Jets and Raiders to select players from other franchises in
hopes of giving the league more competitive balance, May 11.
NBC was awarded
exclusive network broadcasting rights for the 1963 AFL Championship
Game for $926,000, May 23.
The Pro Football
Hall of Fame was dedicated at Canton, Ohio, September 7.
The U.S. Fourth
Circuit Court of Appeals reaffirmed the lower court's finding for
the NFL in the $10-million suit brought by the AFL, ending three
and a half years of litigation, November 21.
Jim Brown of Cleveland
rushed for an NFL single-season record 1,863 yards.
Boston defeated
Buffalo 26-8 in the first divisional playoff game in AFL history,
December 28.
The Bears defeated
the Giants 14-10 in the NFL Championship Game, a record sixth and
last title for Halas in his thirty-sixth season as the Bears' coach,
December 29.
1964
The Chargers defeated the
Patriots 51-10 in the AFL Championship Game, January 5.
William Clay Ford,
the Lions' president since 1961, purchased the team, January 10.
A group representing the late James P. Clark sold the Eagles to
a group headed by Jerry Wolman, January 21. Carroll Rosenbloom,
the majority owner of the Colts since 1953, acquired complete ownership
of the team, January 23.
The AFL signed
a five-year, $36-million television contract with NBC to begin with
the 1965 season, January 29.
Commissioner Rozelle
negotiated an agreement on behalf of the NFL clubs to purchase Ed
Sabol's Blair Motion Pictures, which was renamed NFL Films, March
5.
Hornung and Karras
were reinstated by Rozelle, March 16.
CBS submitted the
winning bid of $14.1 million per year for the NFL regular-season
television rights for 1964 and 1965, January 24. CBS acquired the
rights to the champion-ship games for 1964 and 1965 for $1.8 million
per game, April 17.
Pete Gogolak of
Cornell signed a contract with Buffalo, becoming the first soccer-style
kicker in pro football.
Buffalo defeated
San Diego 20-7 in the AFL Championship Game, December 26. Cleveland
defeated Baltimore 27-0 in the NFL Championship Game, December 27.
1965
The NFL teams pledged not
to sign college seniors until completion of all their games, including
bowl games, and empowered the Commissioner to discipline the clubs
up to as much as the loss of an entire draft list for a violation
of the pledge, February 15.
The NFL added a
sixth official, the line judge, February 19. The color of the officials'
penalty flags was changed from white to bright gold, April 5.
Atlanta was awarded
an NFL franchise for 1966, with Rankin Smith, Sr., as owner, June
30. Miami was awarded an AFL franchise for 1966, with Joe Robbie
and Danny Thomas as owners, August 16.
Field Judge Burl
Toler became the first black official in NFL history, September
19.
According to a
Harris survey, sports fans chose professional football (41 percent)
as their favorite sport, overtaking baseball (38 percent) for the
first time, October.
Green Bay defeated
Baltimore 13-10 in sudden-death overtime in a Western Conference
playoff game. Don Chandler kicked a 25-yard field goal for the Packers
after 13 minutes, 39 seconds of overtime, December 26. The Packers
then defeated the Browns 23-12 in the NFL Championship Game, January
2.
In the AFL Championship
Game, the Bills again defeated the Chargers, 23-0, December 26.
CBS acquired the
rights to the NFL regular-season games in 1966 and 1967, with an
option for 1968, for $18.8 million per year, December 29.
1966
The AFL-NFL war reached
its peak, as the leagues spent a combined $7 million to sign their
1966 draft choices. The NFL signed 75 percent of its 232 draftees,
the AFL 46 percent of its 181. Of the 111 common draft choices,
79 signed with the NFL, 28 with the AFL, and 4 went unsigned.
Buddy Young became
the first African-American to work in the league office when Commissioner
Rozelle named him director of player relations, February 1.
The rights to the
1966 and 1967 NFL Championship Games were sold to CBS for $2 million
per game, February 14.
Foss resigned as
AFL Commissioner, April 7. Al Davis, the head coach and general
manager of the Raiders, was named to replace him, April 8.
Goal posts offset
from the goal line, painted bright yellow, and with uprights 20
feet above the cross-bar were made standard in the NFL, May 16.
A series of secret
meetings regarding a possible AFL-NFL merger were held in the spring
between Hunt of Kansas City and Tex Schramm of Dallas. Rozelle announced
the merger, June 8. Under the agreement, the two leagues would combine
to form an expanded league with 24 teams, to be increased to 26
in 1968 and to 28 by 1970 or soon thereafter. All existing franchises
would be retained, and no franchises would be transferred outside
their metropolitan areas. While maintaining separate schedules through
1969, the leagues agreed to play an annual AFL-NFL World Championship
Game beginning in January, 1967, and to hold a combined draft, also
beginning in 1967. Preseason games would be held between teams of
each league starting in 1967. Official regular-season play would
start in 1970 when the two leagues would officially merge to form
one league with two conferences. Rozelle was named Commissioner
of the expanded league setup.
Davis rejoined
the Raiders, and Milt Woodard was named president of the AFL, July
25.
The St. Louis Cardinals
moved into newly constructed Busch Memorial Stadium.
Barron Hilton sold
the Chargers to a group headed by Eugene Klein and Sam Schulman,
August 25.
Congress approved
the AFL-NFL merger, passing legislation exempting the agreement
itself from antitrust action, October 21.
New Orleans was
awarded an NFL franchise to begin play in 1967, November 1. John
Mecom, Jr., of Houston was designated majority stockholder and president
of the franchise, December 15.
The NFL was realigned
for the 1967-69 seasons into the Capitol and Century Divisions in
the Eastern Conference and the Central and Coastal Divisions in
the Western Conference, December 2. New Orleans and the New York
Giants agreed to switch divisions in 1968 and return to the 1967
alignment in 1969.
The rights to the
Super Bowl for four years were sold to CBS and NBC for $9.5 million,
December 13.
1967
Green Bay earned the right
to represent the NFL in the first AFL-NFL World Championship Game
by defeating Dallas 34-27, January 1. The same day, Kansas City
defeated Buffalo 31-7 to represent the AFL. The Packers defeated
the Chiefs 35-10 before 61,946 fans at the Los Angeles Memorial
Coliseum in the first game between AFL and NFL teams, January 15.
The winning players' share for the Packers was $15,000 each, and
the losing players' share for the Chiefs was $7,500 each. The game
was televised by both CBS and NBC.
The "sling-shot"
goal post and a six-foot-wide border around the field were made
standard in the NFL, February 22.
Baltimore made
Bubba Smith, a Michigan State defensive lineman, the first choice
in the first combined AFL-NFL draft, March 14.
The AFL awarded
a franchise to begin play in 1968 to Cincinnati, May 24. A group
with Paul Brown as part owner, general manager, and head coach,
was awarded the Cincinnati franchise, September 27.
Arthur B. Modell,
the president of the Cleveland Browns, was elected president of
the NFL, May 28.
Defensive back
Emlen Tunnell of the New York Giants became the first black player
to enter the Pro Football Hall of Fame, August 5.
An AFL team defeated
an NFL team for the first time, when Denver beat Detroit 13-7 in
a preseason game, August 5.
Green Bay defeated
Dallas 21-17 for the NFL championship on a last-minute 1-yard quarterback
sneak by Bart Starr in 13-below-zero temperature at Green Bay, December
31. The same day, Oakland defeated Houston 40-7 for the AFL championship.
1968
Green Bay defeated Oakland
33-14 in Super Bowl II at Miami, January 14. The game had the first
$3-million gate in pro football history.
Vince Lombardi
resigned as head coach of the Packers, but remained as general manager,
January 28.
Werblin sold his
shares in the Jets to his partners Don Lillis, Leon Hess, Townsend
Martin, and Phil Iselin, May 21. Lillis assumed the presidency of
the club, but then died July 23. Iselin was appointed president,
August 6.
Halas retired for
the fourth and last time as head coach of the Bears, May 27.
The Oilers left
Rice Stadium for the Astrodome and became the first NFL team to
play its home games in a domed stadium.
The movie Heidi
became a footnote in sports history when NBC didn't show the last
1:05 of the Jets-Raiders game in order to permit the children's
special to begin on time. The Raiders scored two touchdowns in the
last 42 seconds to win 43-32, November 17.
Ewbank became the
first coach to win titles in both the NFL and AFL when his Jets
defeated the Raiders 27-23 for the AFL championship, December 29.
The same day, Baltimore defeated Cleveland 34-0.
1969
The AFL established a playoff
format for the 1969 season, with the winner in one division playing
the runner-up in the other, January 11.
An AFL team won
the Super Bowl for the first time, as the Jets defeated the Colts
16-7 at Miami, January 12 in Super Bowl III. The title Super Bowl
was recognized by the NFL for the first time.
Vince Lombardi
became part owner, executive vice-president, and head coach of the
Washington Redskins, February 7.
Wolman sold the
Eagles to Leonard Tose, May 1.
Baltimore, Cleveland,
and Pittsburgh agreed to join the AFL teams to form the 13-team
American Football Conference of the NFL in 1970, May 17. The NFL
also agreed on a playoff format that would include one "wild-card"
team per conference-the second-place team with the best record.
Monday Night Football
was signed for 1970. ABC acquired the rights to televise 13 NFL
regular-season Monday night games in 1970, 1971, and 1972.
George Preston
Marshall, president emeritus of the Redskins, died at 72, August
9.
The NFL marked
its fiftieth year by the wearing of a special patch by each of the
16 teams.
TOP
NFL History 1970 - 1979
1970
Kansas City defeated Minnesota
23-7 in Super Bowl IV at New Orleans, January 11. The gross receipts
of approximately $3.8 million were the largest ever for a one-day
sports event.
Four-year television
contracts, under which CBS would televise all NFC games and NBC
all AFC games (except Monday night games) and the two would divide
televising the Super Bowl and AFC-NFC Pro Bowl games, were announced,
January 26.
Art Modell resigned
as president of the NFL, March 12. Milt Woodard resigned as president
of the AFL, March 13. Lamar Hunt was elected president of the AFC
and George Halas was elected president of the NFC, March 19.
The merged 26-team
league adopted rules changes putting names on the backs of players'
jerseys, making a point after touchdown worth only one point, and
making the scoreboard clock the official timing device of the game,
March 18.
The Players Negotiating
Committee and the NFL Players Association announced a four-year
agreement guaranteeing approximately $4,535,000 annually to player
pension and insurance benefits, August 3. The owners also agreed
to contribute $250,000 annually to improve or implement items such
as disability payments, widows' benefits, maternity benefits, and
dental benefits. The agreement also provided for increased preseason
game and per diem payments, averaging approximately $2.6 million
annually.
The Pittsburgh
Steelers moved into Three Rivers Stadium. The Cincinnati Bengals
moved to Riverfront Stadium.
Lombardi died of
cancer at 57, September 3.
Tom Dempsey of
New Orleans kicked a game-winning NFL-record 63-yard field goal
against Detroit, November 8.
1971
Baltimore defeated Dallas
16-13 on Jim O'Brien's 32-yard field goal with five seconds to go
in Super Bowl V at Miami, January 17. The NBC telecast was viewed
in an estimated 23,980,000 homes, the largest audience ever for
a one-day sports event.
The NFC defeated
the AFC 27-6 in the first AFC-NFC Pro Bowl at Los Angeles, January
24.
The Boston Patriots
changed their name to the New England Patriots, March 25. Their
new stadium, Schaefer Stadium, was dedicated in a 20-14 preseason
victory over the Giants.
The Philadelphia
Eagles left Franklin Field and played their games at the new Veterans
Stadium.
The San Francisco
49ers left Kezar Stadium and moved their games to Candlestick Park.
Daniel F. Reeves,
the president and general manager of the Rams, died at 58, April
15.
The Dallas Cowboys
moved from the Cotton Bowl into their new home, Texas Stadium, October
24.
Miami defeated
Kansas City 27-24 in sudden-death overtime in an AFC Divisional
Playoff Game, December 25. Garo Yepremian kicked a 37-yard field
goal for the Dolphins after 22 minutes, 40 seconds of overtime,
as the game lasted 82 minutes, 40 seconds overall, making it the
longest game in history.
1972
Dallas defeated Miami 24-3
in Super Bowl VI at New Orleans, January 16. The CBS telecast was
viewed in an estimated 27,450,000 homes, the top-rated one-day telecast
ever.
The inbounds lines
or hashmarks were moved nearer the center of the field, 23 yards,
1 foot, 9 inches from the sidelines, March 23. The method of determining
won-lost percentage in standings changed. Tie games, previously
not counted in the standings, were made equal to a half-game won
and a half-game lost, May 24.
Robert Irsay purchased
the Los Angeles Rams and transferred ownership of the club to Carroll
Rosenbloom in exchange for the Baltimore Colts, July 13.
William V. Bidwill
purchased the stock of his brother Charles (Stormy) Bidwill to become
the sole owner of the St. Louis Cardinals, September 2.
The National District
Attorneys Association endorsed the position of professional leagues
in opposing proposed legalization of gambling on professional team
sports, September 28.
Franco Harris's
"Immaculate Reception" gave the Steelers their first postseason
win ever, 13-7 over the Raiders, December 23.
1973
Rozelle announced that
all Super Bowl VII tickets were sold and that the game would be
telecast in Los Angeles, the site of the game, on an experimental
basis, January 3.
Miami defeated
Washington 14-7 in Super Bowl VII at Los Angeles, completing a 17-0
season, the first perfect-record regular-season and postseason mark
in NFL history, January 14. The NBC telecast was viewed by approximately
75 million people.
The AFC defeated
the NFC 33-28 in the Pro Bowl in Dallas, the first time since 1942
that the game was played outside Los Angeles, January 21.
A jersey numbering
system was adopted, April 5: 1-19 for quarterbacks and specialists,
20-49 for running backs and defensive backs, 50-59 for centers and
linebackers, 60-79 for defensive linemen and interior offensive
linemen other than centers, and 80-89 for wide receivers and tight
ends. Players who had been in the NFL in 1972 could continue to
use old numbers.
NFL Charities,
a nonprofit organi-zation, was created to derive an income from
monies generated from NFL Properties' licensing of NFL trademarks
and team names, June 26. NFL Charities was set up to support education
and charitable activities and to supply economic support to persons
formerly associated with professional football who were no longer
able to support themselves.
Congress adopted
experimental legislation (for three years) requiring any NFL game
that had been declared a sellout 72 hours prior to kickoff to be
made available for local televising, September 14. The legislation
provided for an annual review to be made by the Federal Communications
Commission.
The Buffalo Bills
moved their home games from War Memorial Stadium to Rich Stadium
in nearby Orchard Park. The Giants tied the Eagles 23-23 in the
final game in Yankee Stadium, September 23. The Giants played the
rest of their home games at the Yale Bowl in New Haven, Connecticut.
A rival league,
the World Football League, was formed and was reported in operation,
October 2. It had plans to start play in 1974.
O.J. Simpson of
Buffalo became the first player to rush for more than 2,000 yards
in a season, gaining 2,003.
1974
Miami defeated Minnesota
24-7 in Super Bowl VIII at Houston, the second consecutive Super
Bowl championship for the Dolphins, January 13. The CBS telecast
was viewed by approximately 75 million people.
Rozelle was given
a 10-year contract effective January 1, 1973, February 27.
Tampa Bay was awarded
a franchise to begin operation in 1976, April 24.
Sweeping rules
changes were adopted to add action and tempo to games: one sudden-death
overtime period was added for preseason and regular-season games;
the goal posts were moved from the goal line to the end lines; kickoffs
were moved from the 40- to the 35-yard line; after missed field
goals from beyond the 20, the ball was to be returned to the line
of scrimmage; restrictions were placed on members of the punting
team to open up return possibilities; roll-blocking and cutting
of wide receivers was eliminated; the extent of downfield contact
a defender could have with an eligible receiver was restricted;
the penalties for offensive holding, illegal use of the hands, and
tripping were reduced from 15 to 10 yards; wide receivers blocking
back toward the ball within three yards of the line of scrimmage
were prevented from blocking below the waist, April 25.
The Toronto Northmen
of the WFL signed Larry Csonka, Jim Kiick, and Paul Warfield of
Miami, March 31.
Seattle was awarded
an NFL franchise to begin play in 1976, June 4. Lloyd W. Nordstrom,
president of the Seattle Seahawks, and Hugh Culverhouse, president
of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, signed franchise agreements, December
5.
The Birmingham
Americans defeated the Florida Blazers 22-21 in the WFL World Bowl,
winning the league championship, December 5.
1975
Pittsburgh defeated Minnesota
16-6 in Super Bowl IX at New Orleans, the Steelers' first championship
since entering the NFL in 1933. The NBC telecast was viewed by approximately
78 million people.
The divisional
winners with the highest won-loss percentage were made the home
team for the divisional playoffs, and the surviving winners with
the highest percentage made home teams for the championship games,
June 26.
Referees were equipped
with wireless microphones for all preseason, regular-season, and
playoff games.
The Lions moved
to the new Pontiac Silverdome. The Giants played their home games
in Shea Stadium. The Saints moved into the Louisiana Superdome.
The World Football
League folded, October 22.
1976
Pittsburgh defeated Dallas
21-17 in Super Bowl X in Miami. The Steelers joined Green Bay and
Miami as the only teams to win two Super Bowls; the Cowboys became
the first wild-card team to play in the Super Bowl. The CBS telecast
was viewed by an estimated 80 million people, the largest television
audience in history.
Lloyd Nordstrom,
the president of the Seahawks, died at 66, January 20. His brother
Elmer succeeded him as majority representative of the team.
The owners awarded
Super Bowl XII, to be played on January 15, 1978, to New Orleans.
They also adopted the use of two 30-second clocks for all games,
visible to both players and fans to note the official time between
the ready-for-play signal and snap of the ball, March 16.
A veteran player
allocation was held to stock the Seattle and Tampa Bay franchises
with 39 players each, March 30-31. In the college draft, Seattle
and Tampa Bay each received eight extra choices, April 8-9.
The Giants moved
into new Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey.
The Steelers defeated
the College All-Stars in a storm-shortened Chicago College All-Star
Game, the last of the series, July 23. St. Louis defeated San Diego
20-10 in a preseason game before 38,000 in Korakuen Stadium, Tokyo,
in the first NFL game outside of North America, August 16.
1977
Oakland defeated Minnesota
32-14 in Super Bowl XI at Pasadena, January 9. The paid attendance
was a pro record 103,438. The NBC telecast was viewed by 81.9 million
people, the largest ever to view a sports event. The victory was
the fifth consecutive for the AFC in the Super Bowl.
The NFL Players
Association and the NFL Management Council ratified a collective
bargaining agreement extending until 1982, covering five football
seasons while continuing the pension plan-including years 1974,
1975, and 1976-with contributions totaling more than $55 million.
The total cost of the agreement was estimated at $107 million. The
agreement called for a college draft at least through 1986; contained
a no-strike, no-suit clause; established a 43-man active player
limit; reduced pension vesting to four years; provided for increases
in minimum salaries and preseason and postseason pay; improved insurance,
medical, and dental benefits; modified previous practices in player
movement and control; and reaffirmed the NFL Commissioner's disciplinary
authority. Additionally, the agreement called for the NFL member
clubs to make payments totaling $16 million the next 10 years to
settle various legal disputes, February 25.
The San Francisco
49ers were sold to Edward J. DeBartolo, Jr., March 28.
A 16-game regular
season, 4-game preseason was adopted to begin in 1978, March 29.
A second wild-card team was adopted for the playoffs beginning in
1978, with the wild-card teams to play each other and the winners
advancing to a round of eight postseason series.
The Seahawks were
permanently aligned in the AFC Western Division and the Buccaneers
in the NFC Central Division, March 31.
The owners awarded
Super Bowl XIII, to be played on January 21, 1979, to Miami, to
be played in the Orange Bowl; Super Bowl XIV, to be played January
20, 1980, was awarded to Pasadena, to be played in the Rose Bowl,
June 14.
Rules changes were
adopted to open up the passing game and to cut down on injuries.
Defenders were permitted to make contact with eligible receivers
only once; the head slap was outlawed; offensive linemen were prohibited
from thrusting their hands to an opponent's neck, face, or head;
and wide receivers were prohibited from clipping, even in the legal
clipping zone.
Rozelle negotiated
contracts with the three television networks to televise all NFL
regular-season and postseason games, plus selected preseason games,
for four years beginning with the 1978 season. ABC was awarded yearly
rights to 16 Monday night games, four prime-time games, the AFC-NFC
Pro Bowl, and the Hall of Fame games. CBS received the rights to
all NFC regular-season and postseason games (except those in the
ABC package) and to Super Bowls XIV and XVI. NBC received the rights
to all AFC regular-season and postseason games (except those in
the ABC package) and to Super Bowls XIII and XV. Industry sources
considered it the largest single television package ever negotiated,
October 12.
Chicago's Walter
Payton set a single-game rushing record with 275 yards
(40 carries) against Minnesota, November 20.
1978
Dallas defeated Denver
27-10 in Super Bowl XII, held indoors for the first time, at the
Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, January 15. The CBS telecast
was viewed by more than 102 million people, meaning the game was
watched by more viewers than any other show of any kind in the history
of television. Dallas's victory was the first for the NFC in six
years.
According to a
Louis Harris Sports Survey, 70 percent of the nation's sports fans
said they followed football, compared to 54 percent who followed
baseball. Football increased its lead as the country's favorite,
26 percent to 16 percent for baseball, January 19.
A seventh official,
the side judge, was added to the officiating crew, March 14.
The NFL continued
a trend toward opening up the game. Rules changes permitted a defender
to maintain contact with a receiver within five yards of the line
of scrimmage, but restricted contact beyond that point. The pass-blocking
rule was interpreted to permit the extending of arms and open hands,
March 17.
A study on the
use of instant replay as an officiating aid was made during seven
nationally televised preseason games.
The NFL played
for the first time in Mexico City, with the Saints defeating the
Eagles 14-7 in a preseason game, August 5.
Bolstered by the
expansion of the regular-season schedule from 14 to 16 weeks, NFL
paid attendance exceeded 12 million (12,771,800) for the first time.
The per-game average of 57,017 was the third-highest in league history
and the most since 1973.
1979
Pittsburgh defeated Dallas
35-31 in Super Bowl XIII at Miami to become the first team ever
to win three Super Bowls, January 21. The NBC telecast was viewed
in 35,090,000 homes, by an estimated 96.6 million fans.
The owners awarded
three future Super Bowl sites: Super Bowl XV to the Louisiana Superdome
in New Orleans, to be played on January 25, 1981; Super Bowl XVI
to the Pontiac Silverdome in Pontiac, Michigan, to be played on
January 24, 1982; and Super Bowl XVII to Pasadena's Rose Bowl, to
be played on January 30, 1983, March 13.
NFL rules changes
emphasized additional player safety. The changes prohibited players
on the receiving team from blocking below the waist during kickoffs,
punts, and field-goal attempts; prohibited the wearing of torn or
altered equipment and exposed pads that could be hazardous; extended
the zone in which there could be no crackback blocks; and instructed
officials to quickly whistle a play dead when a quarterback was
clearly in the grasp of a tackler, March 16.
Rosenbloom, the
president of the Rams, drowned at 72, April 2. His widow, Georgia,
assumed control of the club.
TOP
NFL History 1980 - 1989
1980
Pittsburgh defeated the
Los Angeles Rams 31-19 in Super Bowl XIV at Pasadena to become the
first team to win four Super Bowls, January 20.
The game was viewed
in a record 35,330,000 homes.
The AFC-NFC Pro
Bowl, won 37-27 by the NFC, was played before 48,060 fans at Aloha
Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaii. It was the first time in the 30-year
history of the Pro Bowl that the game was played in a non-NFL city.
Rules changes placed
greater restrictions on contact in the area of the head, neck, and
face. Under the heading of "personal foul," players were prohibited
from directly striking, swinging, or clubbing on the head, neck,
or face. Starting in 1980, a penalty could be called for such contact
whether or not the initial contact was made below the neck area.
CBS, with a record
bid of $12 million, won the national radio rights to 26 NFL regular-season
games, including Monday Night Football, and all 10 postseason games
for the 1980-83 seasons.
The Los Angeles
Rams moved their home games to Anaheim Stadium in nearby Orange
County, California.
The Oakland Raiders
joined the Los Angeles Coliseum Commission's antitrust suit against
the NFL. The suit contended the league violated antitrust laws in
declining to approve a proposed move by the Raiders from Oakland
to Los Angeles.
NFL regular-season
attendance of nearly 13.4 million set a record for the third year
in a row. The average paid attendance for the 224-game 1980 regular
season was 59,787, the highest in the league's 61-year history.
NFL games in 1980 were played before 92.4 percent of total stadium
capacity.
Television ratings
in 1980 were the second-best in NFL history, trailing only the combined
ratings of the 1976 season. All three networks posted gains, and
NBC's 15.0 rating was its best ever. CBS and ABC had their best
ratings since 1977, with 15.3 and 20.8 ratings, respectively. CBS
Radio reported a record audience of 7 million for Monday night and
special games.
1981
Oakland defeated Philadelphia
27-10 in Super Bowl XV at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans,
to become the first wild-card team to win a Super Bowl, January
25.
Edgar F. Kaiser,
Jr., purchased the Denver Broncos from Gerald and Allan Phipps,
February 26.
The owners adopted
a disaster plan for re-stocking a team should the club be involved
in a fatal accident, March 20.
The owners awarded
Super Bowl XVIII to Tampa, to be played in Tampa Stadium on January
22, 1984, June 3.
A CBS-New York
Times poll showed that 48 percent of sports fans preferred football
to 31 percent for baseball.
The NFL teams hosted
167 representatives from 44 predominantly black colleges during
training camps for a total of 289 days. The program was adopted
for renewal during each training camp period.
NFL regular-season
attendance-13.6 million for an average of 60,745-set a record for
the fourth year in a row. It also was the first time the per-game
average exceeded 60,000. NFL games in 1981 were played before 93.8
percent of total stadium capacity.
ABC and CBS set
all-time rating highs. ABC finished with a 21.7 rating and CBS with
a 17.5 rating. NBC was down slightly to 13.9.
1982
San Francisco defeated
Cincinnati 26-21 in Super Bowl XVI at the Pontiac Silverdome, in
the first Super Bowl held in the North, January 24. The CBS telecast
achieved the highest rating of any televised sports event ever,
49.1 with a 73.0 share. The game was viewed by a record 110.2 million
fans. CBS Radio reported a record 14 million listeners for the game.
The NFL signed
a five-year contract with the three television networks (ABC, CBS,
and NBC) to televise all NFL regular-season and postseason games
starting with the 1982 season.
The owners awarded
the 1983, 1984, and 1985 AFC-NFC Pro Bowls to Honolulu's Aloha Stadium.
A jury ruled against
the NFL in the antitrust trial brought by the Los Angeles Coliseum
Commission and the Oakland Raiders, May 7. The verdict cleared the
way for the Raiders to move to Los Angeles, where they defeated
Green Bay 24-3 in their first preseason game, August 29.
The 1982 season
was reduced from a 16-game schedule to nine as the result of a 57-day
players' strike.
The strike was
called by the NFLPA at midnight on Monday, September 20, following
the Green Bay at New York Giants game. Play resumed November 21-22
following ratification of the Collective Bargaining Agreement by
NFL owners, November 17 in New York.
Under the Collective
Bargaining Agreement, which was to run through the 1986 season,
the NFL draft was extended through 1992 and the veteran free-agent
system was left basically unchanged. A minimum salary schedule for
years of experience was established; training camp and postseason
pay were increased; players' medical, insurance, and retirement
benefits were increased; and a severance-pay system was introduced
to aid in career transition, a first in professional sports.
Despite the players'
strike, the average paid attendance in 1982 was 58,472, the fifth-highest
in league history.
The owners awarded
the sites of two Super Bowls, December 14: Super Bowl XIX, to be
played on January 20, 1985, to Stanford University Stadium in Stanford,
California, with San Francisco as host team; and Super Bowl XX,
to be played on January 26, 1986, to the Louisiana Superdome in
New Orleans.
1983
Because of the shortened
season, the NFL adopted a format of 16 teams competing in a Super
Bowl Tournament for the 1982 playoffs. The NFC's number-one seed,
Washington, defeated the AFC's number-two seed, Miami, 27-17 in
Super Bowl XVII at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, January 30.
Super Bowl XVII
was the second-highest rated live television program of all time,
giving the NFL a sweep of the top 10 live programs in television
history. The game was viewed in more than 40 million homes, the
largest ever for a live telecast.
Halas, the owner
of the Bears and the last surviving member of the NFL's second organizational
meeting, died at 88, October 31.
1984
The Los Angeles Raiders
defeated Washington 38-9 in Super Bowl XVIII at Tampa Stadium, January
22. The game achieved a 46.4 rating and 71.0 share.
An 11-man group
headed by H.R. (Bum) Bright purchased the Dallas Cowboys from Clint
Murchison, Jr., March 20. Club president Tex Schramm was designated
as managing general partner.
Patrick Bowlen
purchased a majority interest in the Denver Broncos from Edgar Kaiser,
Jr., March 21.
The Colts relocated
to Indianapolis, March 28. Their new home became the Hoosier Dome.
The owners awarded
two Super Bowl |