Series of exhibition games before the NFL regular season
The
National Football League preseason
is the period each year during which
NFL
teams play several not-for-the-record
exhibition games
before the actual
"regular" season
starts. Beginning with the featured
Pro Football Hall of Fame game
in early August, three weekends of exhibition games are played in the NFL to date. The start of the preseason is intrinsically tied to the last week of
training camp
.
History
[
edit
]
Exhibition games have been played in professional football since the beginning of the sport. In fact, until league play was formalized in 1920, one could consider virtually all of an independent professional football team's schedule to be exhibitions (as in
test matches
). In the early years of the sport, teams often "
barnstormed
", and played squads from leagues outside their own, or against local college teams or other amateur groups, charging fans whatever the traffic would bear.
When the NFL was founded in 1920, all games counted in the standings and would be used to determine the league champion. In 1921, this was revised to only count games involving two league members, thus allowing non-league exhibitions, but effectively banning exhibitions between two league teams. This rule had a direct impact on
deciding the 1921 championship
, in which the losing team insisted that the deciding game only be considered an exhibition.
In 1924, the league again changed the rule to declare any games held in December or later to be exhibitions. By the mid-1930s, teams prepared for a standard 12-game regular season schedule, although even as late as 1939 teams would schedule non-league exhibition games both before and during the season (during
bye weeks
). The
Pittsburgh Steelers
(then known as the Pirates) were well known for playing both in the NFL and on a limited schedule in the decades-old
Western Pennsylvania circuit
in the 1930s.
In the 1960s, teams began playing 14 regular season games, with a corresponding decrease in the length of the preseason. Teams played four or five preseason games each year; for example, in 1966 each of the nine
American Football League
teams each played four preseason games. By the end of the decade, however, there would be a rapid increase in the number of preseason games.
With the AFL?NFL merger of 1970, the newly merged NFL was granted a
Sherman Anti-Trust Act
exemption, which emboldened some team owners to expand the exhibition schedule and to require season-ticket holders to pay for one, then two, then three home exhibition games if they wanted to keep their season tickets.
From 1970 through 1977, the NFL season consisted of 14 regular season games and six exhibition games, sometimes but not always three at home and three away (the
1973 Washington Redskins
, for instance, played all but one of six preseason games at home), with some played at neutral sites. From
1978
to
2019
, the regular season was lengthened to 16 games, and the exhibition season was cut from six to four games.
From 1999 to 2001, when the league consisted of an uneven 31 teams, some additional exhibition games (usually two or three) were played over
Hall of Fame weekend
. In order to account for the uneven number of teams, each team was required to have a bye week during the exhibition season. Most teams held their bye week in Hall of Fame weekend, while the others utilized them somewhere else during the exhibition season. This practice was abandoned after the
Houston Texans
were added to the league in 2002, giving it an even 32 teams.
The 2020 preseason was cancelled due to the
COVID-19 pandemic
.
In 2021, a rule change was enacted that abolished overtime in preseason games, the first time since
1973
. Additionally, with the expansion of the regular season to seventeen games and eighteen weeks, the preseason was reduced to three games (though the teams that play in the
Pro Football Hall of Fame Game
still play 4 preseason games).
[1]
That same year, the
Baltimore Ravens
and
John Harbaugh
claimed the record of consecutive preseason wins with 20, overtaking
Vince Lombardi
’s
Green Bay Packers
record.
Scheduling
[
edit
]
Unlike the regular season, the exhibition matchups are not based on any rotating or set formula.
The NFL schedules the matchups for all of the exhibition games. Since 2002, individual teams have been allowed to negotiate their own deals to play each other during the preseason: the league allows individual teams to provide input into desired matchups and determines the matchups for any games that were not individually negotiated, while the league sets all game dates and times.
The exhibition season schedule is released in the spring, shortly before the regular season schedule is announced. The NFL has set a loose precedent of determining exhibition matchups:
- No two teams have faced each other in the same exhibition season more than once since 1998, when San Francisco and Seattle played twice.
- No NFL team has played
any team outside the league
since 1976.
- Teams in the same division usually do not play one another during the exhibition season: the last intra-division preseason matchup occurred in 2000.
- Interconference game (
AFC
vs.
NFC
) matchups are common and encouraged, since regular season matchups between interconference teams are infrequent, with teams playing other-conference teams only once every four years during the regular season. These games allow teams to travel to particular markets more frequently than normal, and represent "fresh" matchups.
- Geographically close matchups are preferred, to provide teams with minimal (if possible) exhibition season travel. As such,
intrastate rivals
are frequent matchups, provided they are not already division foes:
Giants
/
Jets
(the
MetLife Bowl
),
Ravens
/
Commanders
(Battle of the Beltways),
Bucs
/
Dolphins
/
Jaguars
, and
Chargers
/
Rams
(Battle for Los Angeles) are all frequent exhibition matchups. The
Broncos
and
Cardinals
, the only two teams in the
Mountain Time Zone
, also play every preseason (though due to Arizona non observance of daylight saving time, Denver is one hour ahead of Arizona during the NFL preseason, which occurs in August). The
Eagles
and
Jets
have concluded the preseason by playing each other annually since 2001, due to close proximity.
- Teams with close personal ties often play each other.
- Since 2005, the
Giants
and the
Patriots
close out their preseason together, as the owners of the two teams are friends.
[2]
- The
Steelers
and the
Panthers
, since 2003, close out their preseason together despite a 450 mi (724.2 km) distance between
Pittsburgh
and
Charlotte
.
[3]
There are numerous Pittsburgh-area ties to the Panthers organisation, including former head coach
John Fox
(a former assistant at
Pitt
and the Steelers), ex-Steeler linebackers
Greg Lloyd
and
Kevin Greene
finishing out their careers at Carolina, and former Steelers safety
Donnie Shell
having served as the Panthers Director of Player Development since the team's inception. On the flip side, former Steelers head coach
Bill Cowher
attended
N.C. State
and currently lives in
Raleigh
. Former Steelers players
Willie Parker
and
Jeff Reed
both attended
UNC
. This also reflects on the increasing number of
Western Pennsylvania
natives in relocating to
the Carolinas
.
- The
Buffalo Bills
and
Detroit Lions
often play each other in the preseason, as a tribute to late Bills owner
Ralph Wilson
, who was a native of Detroit, and at one point owned a share of the Lions. In addition, both Buffalo and Detroit are the only NFL cities that border Canada, with each city located on opposite sides of
Southern Ontario
.
- Along with general in-state rivalries, some long-established "Governor's Cups" are played annually.
- After the division
realignment in 2002
, the NFL factors in former division rivalries which were broken due to teams moving to different divisions if possible. For a five-year period from 2002 to 2006, the league had the authority to schedule former division rivals for exhibition games (the Cardinals and
Seattle Seahawks
, who were switched from the
NFC East
and
AFC West
, respectively, to the
NFC West
, are the most notable examples). It was a move intended to recover potentially lost revenue due to the end of a popular annual
rivalry game
. In some rare cases, the league has scheduled "hot" regular-season matchups if they did not happen to be scheduled to play that season. For instance,
Tampa Bay
and
St. Louis
had a popular mini-rivalry from 1999 to 2004. The teams were not scheduled to play one another in 2003, so the league reacted by scheduling a Monday night preseason game for them that season.
- The Tennessee Titans and Pittsburgh Steelers are former division rivals in the old AFC Central. 2018 was the first time the two teams met in the preseason since the Titans became a member of the AFC South and the Steelers became a member of the AFC North.
[4]
- The Detroit Lions and Tampa Bay Buccaneers are former division rivals in the old NFC Central. 2018 was the first time the two teams met in the preseason since the Lions became a member of the NFC North and the Buccaneers became a member of the NFC South.
[5]
- The Seattle Seahawks and Green Bay Packers got scheduled to play each other in the 2013 preseason in a rematch of
Fail Mary
. Both teams were not scheduled to play each other in the 2013 regular season.
[6]
The teams that play in the
Pro Football Hall of Fame Game
are determined solely by the league (and the
Hall of Fame committee
), featuring one AFC team and one NFC team. Its matchup is announced well in advance, around the time of the
Super Bowl
, when the
Hall of Fame
inductees are announced. Under some circumstances, the matchup is planned well into the future. For example, the
Buccaneers
played the
Steelers
in the 1998 Hall of Fame Game, a matchup that had been announced in 1983. In recent times, if there has been an expansion team added to the league, that team will be invited to play in the Hall of Fame game (Carolina, Jacksonville, the new Cleveland Browns, and Houston all played in their expansion seasons in 1995, 1999, and 2002 respectively). The 2009 game, however, was between two original
American Football League
teams: the
Buffalo Bills
and the
Tennessee Titans
(formerly the
Houston Oilers
). This matchup was announced after
Ralph C. Wilson, Jr.
, an AFL founder and the only owner ever of the Bills, was inducted to the
Pro Football Hall of Fame
on February 1, 2009, while the late Titans' owner,
Bud Adams
, was also the only owner his team had to that time. Wilson and Adams were also the two last surviving members of the
original AFL ownership cabal
, and are two of the only three men who have majority-owned a professional football franchise continuously for fifty years or more (the late
George Halas
, who owned the
Chicago Bears
from 1920 to 1983, is the third). The Hall of Fame game served as a kickoff to the 2009 season, which would have been the 50th season of play for the AFL had it survived as an independent entity. The 2011 (canceled), 2012, and 2016 (canceled) games were between two NFC teams. Normally, the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game has an AFC and NFC matchup, but that is not always the case.
Prior to the 1970 AFL?NFL merger, it was common for teams to play each other twice in the same pre-season. Among the most recent occurrences were in 1992 when the Dallas Cowboys and
Houston Oilers
played on August 1 in Tokyo, then again on August 15, in Dallas, and in a more recent season, the Buccaneers and the Dolphins played each other twice in one preseason. To this day, although multiple preseason games against the same two teams are no longer common, two teams may hold a joint practice and scrimmage in addition to a preseason contest (see, for example, the
Buffalo Bills
and
Pittsburgh Steelers
in 2014). It is still somewhat common to see teams that play each other during the regular season once play a preseason game (either the two teams split in playing at the other's home stadium, or the two teams play at one of the other's home both times); the majority of preseason contests each year are between teams that do not play each other in the regular season that year.
It was also commonplace for division opponents to play each other in the preseason, due to the larger size of pre-merger divisions, but has not happened since 2000, when the Seattle Seahawks played the Oakland Raiders.
[7]
As recently as 1984, the
Cleveland Browns
and
Pittsburgh Steelers
played a preseason game
[8]
despite the two being
bitter rivals
. In 1999 the San Diego Chargers played their division rivals the Denver Broncos and Kansas City Chiefs in the preseason.
[9]
Since the league realignment in 2002, when the NFL began to have 32 teams, teams more than two time zones apart normally do not play each other, to save teams from long travelling times. However, there have been some exceptions.
Non-league opponents
[
edit
]
The
College All-Star Game
, usually the first game of the preseason, was played annually in Chicago from 1934 to 1976 (except 1974), and featured the NFL (from 1966 World) champion against an all-rookie team of college all-stars.
Between 1950 and 1961, the NFL also played exhibition matches against teams from
Interprovincial Rugby Football Union
, which became the
eastern section
of
Canadian Football League
in 1958. These games used a mix of U.S. and
Canadian rules
. NFL preseason games against Canadian opposition were abandoned after the 1961 preseason. While this was, in part because the NFL won all six matchups, an additional factor was that the CFL gradually moved up the start of its regular season so that it overlapped the NFL preseason (today, the CFL regular season typically starts in early summer, before NFL training camps even open). The CFL did win a game against American opposition in August 1961, but this was against an
American Football League
team; as a result of the perceived embarrassment, the AFL opted not to play the CFL again beyond that one game.
A number of factors precluded the NFL from playing the
western section
of the CFL (formerly the
Western Interprovincial Football Union
). For decades, the WIFU was seen especially in Eastern Canada as an inferior competition to the IRFU; however, even without this, preseason play between the NFL and Western Canadian teams was considered as impractical because, even at this time, the Western Canadian regular season started much earlier than other professional leagues including the IRFU: further, the travel distances between NFL cities and Western Canadian cities in an era when professional sports teams still traveled mostly by rail was another obstacle. It was not until 1961 that the NFL had a team in any city reasonably close by rail to any Western CFL city, and as previously mentioned, that was the last year of CFL-NFL interleague play.
From 1967 to 1969, during the transition period leading up to the formal
AFL?NFL merger
, the NFL and
American Football League
played each other in a series of exhibition matches; notably, the 1969 match between the
Buffalo Bills
and
Washington Redskins
was the only time
Vince Lombardi
ever lost to an AFL team. However, it could be argued that these were not truly interleague contests, since the NFL had already agreed to recognize the AFL's history as part of its own and include AFL teams in a "
common draft
" with those already in the NFL, while the AFL was already under the authority of the NFL Commissioner by this point.
[10]
The 1968 games were played under an experimental rule that eliminated
extra point
kicks and required a
play from scrimmage
to score one point (this rule was later implemented by the
World Football League
in 1974, and the
XFL
in 2001).
Games against non-league opponents were occasionally played after that time, usually with the NFL teams sending a rookie "split squad" to the game. In 1969, the
Atlanta Falcons
rookies defeated the
Alabama Hawks
of the
Continental Football League
55?0,
[11]
and in 1972, the
New York Jets
rookies defeated the Long Island Chiefs of the
Seaboard Football League
29?3.
[12]
In 1974, the
Houston Oilers
rookies narrowly defeated the San Antonio Toros 13?7.
[13]
The 1976 All-Star Classic is the last game between an NFL team and a non-NFL team as of 2021. This is in contrast to current practice in MLS, NBA and NHL, and recent practice in baseball, in which teams play exhibition games against non-league teams.
Schedule
[
edit
]
The exhibition season typically begins the first weekend of August with the
Hall of Fame Game
; though in some years it can be on the second weekend. Previous seasons have seen the
American Bowl
game held the last weekend of July. The first full schedule of exhibition games is held the following weekend. Most games are held on Thursday, Friday, or Saturday nights, with one nationally televised game each night of the week:
NFL Network
airs any night that no other national tv providers will air a game,
CBS
airs a Friday night game
Fox
airs a Sunday night game (not the same night as NBC), NBC with the opening Thursday night game, and ESPN a Monday night game on the same week. Unlike the regular season, CBS's and Fox's national exhibition game opponents are selected regardless of conference. Three full weekends of games are held, followed by a league-wide bye week over Labor Day weekend.
There is usually a conflict with the Major League Baseball season, a situation seen in the 2015 preseason when the
Pittsburgh Steelers
moved a Sunday evening game against the
Green Bay Packers
at
Heinz Field
to a traditional 1 p.m. kickoff to avoid parking conflicts with the
Pittsburgh Pirates
across their shared lot at
PNC Park
, when the Pirates had a game moved to Sunday evening as part of
ESPN
's
Sunday Night Baseball
.
On various occasions, severe weather or other factors, have postponed or outright canceled some preseason games. Due to their exhibition nature, suspended or canceled preseason games are normally not made up. In 2004,
Hurricane Charley
postponed a Tampa Bay game against Cincinnati from Saturday until Monday. In 2001, a preseason game between Philadelphia and Baltimore was canceled due to turf problems at
Veterans Stadium
.
[14]
Similar turf concerns prompted the league to cancel the 2016 Hall of Fame Game at the last minute. The 2017 Cowboys-Texans preseason game, originally scheduled for Houston, was at first switched to Arlington due to the flooding spawned by
Hurricane Harvey
in southeast Texas. The day prior to the scheduled game, it was cancelled to allow the Texans, who departed Houston the previous Friday to play at New Orleans and then were diverted to
Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport
after the Saints game, to return to Houston to be with their families.
International and neutral-site games
[
edit
]
Prior to the commencement of the
NFL International Series
, the NFL had another "featured" exhibition game called the
American Bowl
. This matchup was an extra exhibition game for the two teams involved and was often played on the same weekend as the Hall of Fame Game. It was played outside the United States, usually in Mexico or Japan. The American Bowl was held from 1986 to 2005; similar international matches had occurred regularly since 1969.
In addition, teams previously played home games at stadiums on the fringes of their markets or in markets not currently served by NFL teams. The
Alamodome
in
San Antonio
hosted games in this fashion, as did
Rogers Centre
(as part of the
Bills Toronto Series
), with
Camp Randall Stadium
, the on-campus home of
Wisconsin Badgers football
in
Madison, Wisconsin
, hosting one preseason Green Bay Packers game per year until the late 1990s. The
Citrus Bowl
was previously a common venue for games. The
Carrier Dome
in
Syracuse, New York
has been mentioned as a potential site for such a game, with the host team not yet mentioned.
[15]
In June 2019, the
Green Bay Packers
and
Oakland Raiders
announced that they would play a preseason game at
Investors Group Field
in
Winnipeg, Manitoba
, home of the
Canadian Football League
's
Winnipeg Blue Bombers
, on August 22, 2019. The game was originally proposed for
Regina, Saskatchewan
's
Mosaic Stadium
, but its
CFL tenant
rejected the proposal, fearing that they couldn't convert the field back to its
Canadian football
configuration (
which uses a longer field than the NFL
) in time for a game the next day.
[16]
[17]
Due to the anchor points for the regular Canadian goalposts being within the NFL field and the concrete pad covering it being deemed a safety hazard by the teams, it was decided near game time to play the game on a reduced 80-yard field without kickoffs, making the 10 yard-line the actual goal line for the game (though field goals and PAT attempts were still allowed).
[18]
Also in 2019, the
Dallas Cowboys
and
Los Angeles Rams
announced that they would play a preseason game at
Aloha Stadium
in
Hawaii
on August 17, which would be the last NFL game held at the constant site for the
Pro Bowl
until the
2016 edition
, as the stadium would be condemned at the end of 2020.
[19]
Television and radio
[
edit
]
While selected preseason games are televised nationally by the NFL's main broadcast partners (including, most prominently, the Hall of Fame Game, which has been part of the
Sunday Night Football
package outside of
Summer Olympics
years ? where the game is usually aired by
ESPN
,
NFL Network
and most recently
Fox
due to
NBC's coverage of the Games
), the majority of them are in-house productions of the individual teams, often in association with a local television broadcaster,
regional sports network
, or an outside producer such as
Raycom Sports
. Especially if a team's flagship station is affiliated with or
owned by
one of the NFL's network partners, rightsholders may also subcontract with their respective sports department or co-owned regional sports networks, such as
CBS Sports
(in the case of the
Atlanta Falcons
, whose flagship is CBS-owned independent
WUPA
),
[20]
Fox Sports Networks
(in the case of the
Detroit Lions
, whose games are aired by
WJBK
and produced by former sister network
Bally Sports Detroit
),
[21]
or
NBC Sports
(in the case of the
New York Giants
) to provide resources such as camera crews and graphics, or produce the entire broadcast, giving those networks their own ability to evaluate their production teams and the chemistry of network announcing teams before the season starts.
Preseason broadcasts are typically
syndicated
to a network of stations within the team's market region, which also typically includes a package of team-produced programming throughout the season (such as analysis and coach's shows), local rights to games broadcast on cable, and the right to brand themselves as the "official" station of the team in the market.
Exhibition games are almost exclusively played at night due to hot summer weather, and are frequently scheduled based on local convenience. When applicable, the
NFL blackout restrictions
apply, although stations are allowed to play the game on a tape delay if the game does not sell out (unlike the regular season policy, when rights revert to
NFL Films
). However, the blackout restrictions have never been applied since 2015 as a result of a passed vote during the league's owners' meeting in March in which the league, as an experiment because no regular season games in the
2014 season
were blacked out and an FCC vote in September 2014 to no longer enforce blackouts, eliminated blackout rules for at least the last two seasons. Many more exhibition games fail to sell out than do regular-season games.
Since 2015,
Compass Media Networks
carries select preseason contests involving the
Las Vegas Raiders
and
Dallas Cowboys
nationwide.
[22]
Criticism
[
edit
]
Currently, every NFL team requires its season ticket holders to purchase tickets at full price for two exhibition games as a requirement to purchase regular-season tickets. Complaints regarding this policy have gone all the way to the
U.S. Supreme Court
, but have failed to change the policy. A judgment in 1974 stated:
"No fewer than five lawsuits have been instituted from Dallas to New England, each claiming that the respective National Football League (NFL) team had violated the
Sherman Act
by requiring an individual who wishes to purchase a season ticket for all regular season games to buy, in addition, tickets for one or more exhibition or preseason games."
[23]
Additionally, some players, coaches, and journalists, and numerous fans, objected to the four-week exhibition schedule. Players have little monetary incentive to play in exhibitions, since they are paid only a training-camp per diem for these games, as their salaries are not paid until the regular season; thus, they are essentially playing in exhibitions "for free". Regardless of these objections, owners continued to endorse the four-game exhibition season.
The games are an easy source of revenue, and thus are unlikely to be dispensed with in the foreseeable future.
[24]
Proposed reductions and 2021 changes
[
edit
]
In 2008, NFL commissioner
Roger Goodell
raised the possibility of shortening the exhibition season, in favor of lengthening the regular season.
There was a possibility that by 2012, the league would switch to two primary exhibition games (down from four) and an 18-game regular season (up from 16). Reasons cited were solutions to future labor concerns about revenue, and the overall dissatisfaction with the exhibitions among players and fans. Also, since the NFL is now widely considered a competitive year-round business, veteran players normally train and condition year round, and do not need the extensive exhibition season to get back into playing shape after the previous regular season. This proposal was eventually rejected in negotiations for the
NFL Collective Bargaining Agreement
, due to objections and concerns over fatigue and injuries raised by the
National Football League Players Association
.
Another proposal said to be gaining "growing sentiment among NFL owners" as of 2016 is a proposal to eliminate the last preseason game and give a league-wide
bye week
leading into the regular season.
[25]
In 2021, the NFL Competition Committee voted to extend the regular season to 17 games, thus reducing the preseason to three games per team (with the exception of the two teams that compete in the Hall Of Fame Game, who play four).
2020 elimination
[
edit
]
On June 10, 2020, the
NFL Network
reported that the NFL and the
NFL Players Association
were discussing plans to shorten or even eliminate the scheduled four-game pre-season,
[26]
after off-season activities had been disrupted by the
COVID-19 pandemic
.
On June 25, the 2020
Pro Football Hall of Fame Game
(scheduled for August 6) was canceled along with the 2020
Hall of Fame induction ceremony
. On July 1, 2020, various media outlets reported that the league had decided to reduce the pre-season schedule to two weeks, by canceling Weeks 1 and 4, and changing a few fixtures to make sure every team played one home & road game each. The regular season would start as originally scheduled on Thursday, September 10, 2020.
[27]
The NFLPA voted July 3 to push for the elimination of the 2020 preseason entirely, with extended isolated practice sessions replacing the games.
[28]
On July 21, 2020, a week before the scheduled opening of training camp, the NFLPA told its members that the league had decided to cancel all preseason games.
[29]
References
[
edit
]
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Smith, Scott (April 21, 2021).
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.
Buccaneers.com
. Retrieved
April 22,
2021
.
- ^
Battista, Judy (4 February 2012).
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.
The New York Times
. Retrieved
9 August
2018
.
- ^
"Pittsburgh Steelers | News"
. Archived from
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on 2012-07-13
. Retrieved
2009-09-01
.
- ^
"Titans Take on Steelers Saturday at Heinz Field"
.
- ^
https://start.att.net/news/read/category/news/article/gannett-lions_vs_buccaneers_how_to_watch_listen_stream_pre-rgannett
[
dead link
]
- ^
"
'Fail Mary' reunion adds drama to Packers-Seahawks preseason game"
.
- ^
"2000 NFL Preseason Schedule"
.
Pro-Football-Reference.com
.
- ^
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.
- ^
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.
- ^
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.
- ^
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(PDF)
.
The Coffin Corner
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on October 14, 2010
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January 19,
2010
.
Note: The PFRA erroneously refers to this matchup as the last such contest.
- ^
"Hartford Gets Grid Franchise",
Reading Eagle
? May 31, 1972, p58 The Chiefs played an exhibition game against the
New York Jets
rookies on July 29, 1972, losing 29-3,
"Packer Excels at Quarterback As Jets Top L.I. Chiefs, 29-3"
,
New York Times
, July 30, 1972, pS-3;
"Rookie QB Fires Jets"
,
Pittsburgh Press
, July 30, 1972, pD-8
- ^
Today in SA history
(July 16)
- ^
Game canceled because of turf problem
- ^
pontiac59 says.
"Galaxy Extends SU Sports Deal Through 2013 ? CNYRadio.com / CNYTVNews.com"
. Cnyradio.com
. Retrieved
2022-08-28
.
{{
cite web
}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link
)
- ^
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.
CTV News Winnipeg
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. Retrieved
2019-06-08
.
- ^
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.
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. Retrieved
March 30,
2019
.
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.
NFL.com
. Retrieved
21 February
2020
.
- ^
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.
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. 2019-03-21
. Retrieved
2019-08-18
.
- ^
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.
atlantafalcons.com
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on 19 October 2014
. Retrieved
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2014
.
- ^
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.
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2020-01-22
.
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.
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Angelo F. Coniglio v. Highwood Services, Inc.
,
495 F.2d 1286
(
2d Cir.
1974-04-17).
- ^
Starkey, Joe (2006-08-17).
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.
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. Archived from
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on 2007-03-30
. Retrieved
2006-11-17
.
- ^
Gaughan, Mark.
For the love of God, spare us NFL preseason
.
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. Retrieved August 29, 2016.
- ^
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.
NFL.com
.
- ^
"Source: NFL to shorten preseason to two weeks"
. July 2020.
- ^
Shook, Nick (4 July 2020).
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.
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.
- ^
"NFLPA tells players there will be no preseason games in 2020"
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NFL.com
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