| Chronology
of how the modern-day NFL came to pass
The seed that sprouted the 32-team National Football
League was planted Nov. 6, 1869, when Rutgers and
Princeton played a college soccer game. The game
used modified London Football Association rules.
During the next seven years, rugby gained favor
over soccer with the major eastern schools, and
modern football began to develop from rugby.
From the official NFL Record & Fact Book, here
is an abbreviated chronology of the league:
In 1876, the first rules for American football were
written during the Massasoit convention. Walter
Camp, who would become known as the father of American
football, f irst became involved with the game.
The Pittsburgh Athletic Club signed one of its
players (probably halfback Grant Dilbert) to the
first known pro football contract in 1893. Three
years later, the Allegheny Athletic Association
team fielded the first completely professional team
for its abbreviated two-game schedule.
In 1899, Chris O'Brien formed the Morgan Athletic
Club on the south side of Chicago.
The team later became known as the Normals, then
the Racine Cardinals, the Chicago Cardinals, the
St. Louis Cardinals, the Phoenix Cardinals and,
in 1994, the Arizona Cardinals. The team is the
oldest continuing operation in pro football.
The Philadelphia Athletics and Philadelphia Phillies
-- professional baseball teams --
joined the Pittsburgh Stars in the first attempt
to form a pro football league: the National Football
League. The Athletics defeated Kanaweoia AC 39-0
on Nov. 21, 1902, in the first night football game.
In another first, New York and Syracuse played
Dec. 28 at Madison Square Garden -- the first indoor
football game.
In 1904, halfback Charles Follis signed a contract
with the Shelby (Ohio) AC,
making him the first known black football player.
The forward pass was legalized in 1906. George
"Peggy" Parratt of Massillon completed
the first authenticated pass to Dan "Bullet"
Riley in a win against a combined
Benwood-Moundsville team.
Earl "Curly" Lambeau and George Calhoun
organized the Green Bay Packers in 1919.
Indian Packing Company -- Lambeau's employer --
provided $500 for equipment and allowed the team
to use the company field for practices. The Packers
went 10-1.
| NFL Commissioners |
| Date |
Name |
| 1920 |
Jim Thorpe * |
| 1921-39 |
Joe Carr * |
| 1939-41 |
Carl Stock * |
| 1941-46 |
Elmer Layden |
| 1946-59 |
Bert Bell |
| 1960-89 |
Pete Rozelle |
| 1989-Present |
Paul Tagliabue |
* NFL President
Note: NFL treasurer Austin Gunsel served as
president in the office of commissioner following
the death of Bell (Oct. 11, 1959) until the
election of Rozelle (Jan. 26, 1960). |
In 1920, A.E. Staley turned the Decatur Staleys
over to player-coach George Halas, who moved the
team to Cubs Park in Chicago.
The American Professional Football Association,
founded in 1920, officially changed its name to
the National Football League on June 24, 1922.
Five franchises, including the New York Giants,
were admitted to the NFL.
The first American Football League began -- and
folded -- in 1926. The catalyst was a dispute between
Red Grange and the Bears. He demanded a five-figure
salary and one-third ownership of the team; the
Bears refused. C.C. Pyle, Grange's manager, petitioned
the NFL for a franchise and was turned down. Pyle
then formed the nine-team AFL, which included Grange's
New York Yankees
Between 1926 and 1928, the NFL's membership ranged
from 22 teams ('26) to 12 ('27) to 10 ('28). In
1932, only eight teams -- the lowest number in league
history -- remained. However, three new franchises
joined the league in 1933, including the
Philadelphia Eagles and Art Rooney's Pittsburgh
Pirates.
Chicago won the first NFL Championship Game on
Dec. 17, 1933. The Western Division's Bears defeated
the Eastern champion Giants 23-21 at Wrigley Field
G.A. "Dick" Richards purchased the Portsmouth
Spartans in 1934,
moved them to Detroit and renamed them the Lions.
In 1935, the NFL adopted Bert Bell's proposal to
hold an annual draft of
college players, to begin in '36, with teams selecting
in an inverse order of finish.
Heisman Trophy winner Jay Berwanger of the University
of Chicago was the first player ever selected, by
Philadelphia. However, Berwanger's rights were traded
to Chicago, but he never played pro football. Riley
Smith of the University of Alabama, the No. 2 pick,
was the first player drafted to actually sign, with
the Boston Redskins.
In 1938, the Pro Bowl, a game between the NFL champions
and a team of pro all-stars, was established. The
New York Giants defeated the Pro All-Stars 13-10
in the inaugural Pro Bowl played Jan. 15, 1939,
at Wrigley Field in Los Angeles. Also in '39, an
NFL game was televised for the first time when NBC
broadcast the
Brooklyn-Philadelphia game from Ebbetts Field to
the approximately 1,000 sets then in New York.
On Dec. 8, 1940, Red Barber broadcast the first
NFL championship carried on network radio. Mutual
Broadcasting System paid $2,500 for the rights and
the game was on 120 stations. The Bears routed the
Redskins 73-0.
In 1946, the All-America Football Conference began
play with eight teams.
The Cleveland Browns won the first championship,
defeating the New York Yankees 14-9.
In 1948, Los Angeles Rams halfback Fred Gehrke
painted horns on the team's helmets, the first modern
helmet emblems in pro football.
The AAFC and NFL agreed to merge in 1949, with
the Browns, San Francisco 49ers and Baltimore Colts
joining the NFL.
On Dec. 23, 1951, the NFL Championship Game was
televised coast-to-coast for the first time. The
DuMont Network paid $75,000 for the rights to the
game, in which the Rams defeated the Browns 24-17.
The New York Yanks' franchise was sold back to
the NFL on Jan. 19, 1952.
The league awarded a new franchise to Dallas on
Jan. 24, 1953. 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 year,
the commissioner's office operated the
Texans as a road team. At the end of the season
the franchise was canceled, the last time an NFL
team failed.
In 1956, the NFL Players Association was founded,
and CBS became the first network to broadcast some
NFL regular-season games to selected television
markets.
Baltimore beat the New York Giants 23-17 on Dec.
28, 1958, in the first sudden-death overtime in
an NFL Championship Game. Colts fullback Alan Ameche
scored on a 1-yard run after 8:15 of OT.
On Aug. 14, 1959, Lamar Hunt announced a second
pro football league -- the American Football League.
A 33-round draft was held Nov. 22, and a second
draft (20 rounds) was held Dec. 2.
Pete Rozelle was elected NFL commissioner Jan.
26, 1960.
On Jan. 14, 1961, end Willard Dewveall of the Bears
played out his option and
joined the Houston Oilers. He was the first player
to move deliberately from one league to the other.
The NFL entered into a single-network agreement
with CBS on Jan. 10, 1962,
for telecasting all regular-season games for $4.65
million annually.
The Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio,
was dedicated Sept. 7, 1963.
In 1964, Rozelle negotiated an agreement on behalf
of the NFL clubs to purchase Ed Sabol's Blair Motion
Pictures, which was renamed NFL Films.
According to a Harris survey in October 1965, sports
fans chose professional football (41 percent) as
their favorite sport, overtaking baseball (38 percent)
for the first time.
In 1966, a series of secret meetings regarding
a possible AFL-NFL merger were held. The merger,
which eventually expanded the NFL to 26 teams by
1970,
was announced June 8.
Green Bay defeated Kansas City 35-10 on Jan. 15,
1967, at the Los Angeles Coliseum in the first AFL-NFL
World Championship Game.
An AFL team won the Super Bowl for the first time
on Jan. 12, 1969, when the
New York Jets defeated the Baltimore Colts 16-7
at Miami.
Monday Nigh Football was signed for 1970. ABC acquired
the rights to televise
13 NFL regular-season Monday night gamesin 1970,
'71 and '72.
On Jan. 24, 1971, the NFC defeated the AFC 27-6
in the first
AFC-NFC Pro Bowl at Los Angeles.
In 1974, Tampa Bay and Seattle were awarded NFL
franchises. Hugh Culverhouse of Tampa Bay and Lloyd
W. Nordstrom of Seattle signed the franchise agreements
Dec. 5.
A 16-game regular season was adopted on March 29,
1977. The new schedule
would begin in 1978, along with a second wild-card
team added to the playoffs.
A study on the use of instant replay as an officiating
aid was made during seven
nationally televised preseason games in 1978. Also,
on Aug. 5, the NFL played for the first time in
Mexico City; the New Orleans Saints beat the Philadelphia
Eagles 14-7 in a preseason game.
On Jan. 20, 1980, the Pittsburgh Steelers defeated
the Los Angeles Rams 31-19 in
Super Bowl XIV to become the first team to win four
Super Bowls.
A jury ruled against the NFL on May 7, 1982, in
the antitrust trial brought by the
Los Angeles Coliseum Commission and the Oakland
Raiders. The verdict cleared the way for the Raiders
to move to L.A. Also, the NFL season was reduced
to
nine games as the result of a 57-day players' strike.
The work stoppage was called by the NFLPA at midnight
Sept. 20. Play resumed Nov. 21 after ratification
of the collective bargaining agreement by NFL owners
Nov. 17.
In 1984, the Colts relocated to Indianapolis and
began playing in the Hoosier Dome.
Chicago defeated Dallas 17-6 on Aug. 3, 1986, at
Wembley Stadium in London in the first American
Bowl.
In 1988, NFL owners approved the transfer of the
Cardinals' franchise from
St. Louis to Phoenix. Also, on Sept. 4, Johnny Grier
became the first
black referee in NFL history.
NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle announced his retirement
March 22, 1989. On Oct. 3, Art Shell was named head
coach of the Los Angeles Raiders, making
him the league's first black head coach since Akron's
Fritz Pollard in 1921. On Oct. 26, Paul Tagliabue
was named the seventh commissioner of the NFL; he
took office Nov. 5.
On March 23, 1991, the NFL launched the World League
of American Football,
the first sports league to operate on a weekly basis
on two separate continents.
The league granted two expansion franchises in
1993 -- Carolina (Oct. 26),
the 29th team; Jacksonville (Nov. 30), No. 30.
The San Francisco 49ers defeated the San Diego
Chargers 49-26 in Super Bowl XXIX on Jan. 29, 1995,
to become the first team to win five Super Bowls.
Also, on April 12, the transfer of the Rams from
Los Angeles to St. Louis was approved, and on July
22 , the Raiders' move from L.A. back to Oakland
was OK'd.
On Feb. 9, 1996, an agreement between the NFL and
the city of Cleveland
regarding the Browns' relocation was approved. According
to the agreement, the city of Cleveland retained
the Browns' heritage and records and committed to
build a new stadium for a reactivated Browns franchise
to begin play there no later than 1999. Art Modell
received approval to move his franchise to Baltimore
and rename it. Also, on April 30, the transfer of
the Oilers from Houston to Nashville for the 1998
season was approved.
On March 23, 1998, the NFL clubs unanimously approved
an expansion team for Cleveland to fulfill the commitment
to return the Browns to the field in 1999. The Browns
defeated Dallas 20-17 in overtime in the annual
Hall of Fame Game at Canton, Ohio, on Aug. 9, 1999.
Also in '98, Oilers owner Bud Adams announced the
team would change its name to the Tennessee Titans
after the season. The NFL retired the nickname Oilers
-- a first in league history -- on Nov. 14.
Houston, Texas, and owner Robert McNair were awarded
the NFL's 32nd franchise Oct. 6, 1999. The team
will begin play in 2002.
On May 22, 2001, the NFL realigned into eight four-team
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