Hubbry Logo
National Football LeagueNational Football LeagueMain
Open search
National Football League
Community hub
National Football League
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Contribute something
National Football League
National Football League
from Wikipedia

National Football League
Current season, competition or edition:
Current sports event 2025 NFL season
FormerlyAmerican Professional Football Conference (1920)
American Professional Football Association
(1920–1921)
SportAmerican football
FoundedSeptember 17, 1920 (105 years ago) (1920-09-17)
Canton, Ohio, U.S.[1][2]
First season1920
CommissionerRoger Goodell
No. of teams32
CountryUnited States[A]
Headquarters345 Park Avenue (New York City)[3]
Most recent
champions
Philadelphia Eagles
(5th title)
Most titlesGreen Bay Packers
(13 titles)
BroadcastersUnited States:[4]
CBS
Fox
NBC
ESPN/ABC/ESPN2
NFL Network
TUDN
Telemundo Deportes
ESPN Deportes
International:
See list
Streaming partnersUnited States:
Paramount+/Vix
Tubi
Peacock
ESPN+/Hulu/Disney+
Amazon Prime Video/Twitch
Netflix
International:
DAZN
Official websitewww.nfl.com Edit this at Wikidata

The National Football League (NFL) is a professional American football league in the United States. Composed of 32 teams, it is divided equally between the American Football Conference (AFC) and the National Football Conference (NFC). The NFL is one of the major professional sports leagues in the United States and Canada and the highest professional level of American football in the world.[5] Each NFL season begins annually with a three-week preseason in August, followed by the 18-week regular season, which runs from early September to early January, with each team playing 17 games and having one bye week. Following the conclusion of the regular season, seven teams from each conference, including the four division winners and three wild card teams, advance to the playoffs, a single-elimination tournament, which culminates in the Super Bowl, played in early February between the winners of the AFC and NFC championship games. The NFL is headquartered in Midtown Manhattan.

The NFL was formed in 1920 as the American Professional Football Association (APFA) before renaming itself the National Football League for the 1922 season. After initially determining champions through end-of-season standings, a playoff system was implemented in 1933 that culminated with the NFL Championship Game until 1966. Following an agreement to merge the NFL with the rival American Football League (AFL), the Super Bowl was first held in 1967 to determine a champion between the best teams from the two leagues and has remained as the final game of each NFL season since the merger was completed in 1970.[6] The NFL is the wealthiest professional sports league in the world by revenue,[7][8] and the sports league with the most valuable teams.[9] The NFL also has the highest average attendance (67,591) of any professional sports league in the world[10] and is the most popular sports league in the United States.[11] The Super Bowl is also among the most-watched sporting events in the world,[12] with the individual games accounting for many of the most watched television programs in American history and occupying the top five of Nielsen's all-time most-watched U.S. television broadcasts by 2015.[13]

The Green Bay Packers hold the most combined NFL championships with thirteen, winning nine titles before the Super Bowl era and four Super Bowls afterwards. Since the creation of the Super Bowl, the New England Patriots and Pittsburgh Steelers are tied for the most Super Bowl victories at six each. The reigning league champions are the Philadelphia Eagles.

History

[edit]

Founding and history

[edit]

On August 20, 1920, a meeting was held by representatives of the Akron Pros, Canton Bulldogs, Cleveland Indians, and Dayton Triangles at the Jordan and Hupmobile auto showroom in Canton, Ohio.[14] This meeting resulted in the formation of the American Professional Football Conference (APFC), a group who, according to the Canton Evening Repository, intended to "raise the standard of professional football in every way possible, to eliminate bidding for players between rival clubs and to secure cooperation in the formation of schedules".[15]

A second meeting was held on September 17, 1920, with representatives from teams within 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 (Chicago) Cardinals from Illinois.[16][17] The league was renamed to the American Professional Football Association (APFA).[15] The league elected Jim Thorpe as its first president, and consisted of 14 teams (the Buffalo All-Americans, Chicago Tigers, Columbus Panhandles and Detroit Heralds joined the league during the year). The Massillon Tigers from Massillon, Ohio was also at the September 17 meeting, but did not field a team in 1920. Only two of these teams, the Decatur Staleys (now the Chicago Bears) and the Chicago Cardinals (now the Arizona Cardinals), remain in the NFL.[18]

The Akron Pros won the first APFA (NFL) Championship in 1920.

Although the league did not maintain official standings for its 1920 inaugural season and teams played schedules that included non-league opponents, the APFA awarded the Akron Pros the championship by virtue of their 8–0–3 record.[19] The first event occurred on September 26, 1920, when the Rock Island Independents defeated the non-league St. Paul Ideals 48–0 at Douglas Park.[14][20] On October 3, 1920, the first full week of league play occurred.[21][22] The following season resulted in the Chicago Staleys controversially winning the title over the Buffalo All-Americans.[23] On June 24, 1922, the APFA changed its name to the National Football League (NFL).[24][25]

In 1932, the season ended with the Chicago Bears (6–1–6) and the Portsmouth Spartans (6–1–4) tied for first in the league standings.[26] At the time, teams were ranked on a single table and the team with the highest winning percentage (not including ties, which were not counted towards the standings) at the end of the season was declared the champion; the only tiebreaker was that in the event of a tie if two teams played twice in a season, the result of the second game determined the title (the source of the 1921 controversy). This method had been used since the league's creation in 1920, but no situation had been encountered where two teams were tied for first. The league quickly determined that a playoff game between Chicago and Portsmouth was needed to decide the league's champion. The teams were originally scheduled to play the playoff game, officially a regular-season game that would count towards the regular season standings, at Wrigley Field in Chicago, but a combination of heavy snow and extreme cold forced the game to be moved indoors to Chicago Stadium, which did not have a regulation-size football field. Playing with altered rules to accommodate the smaller playing field, the Bears won the game 9–0 and thus won the championship. Fan interest in the de facto championship game led the NFL, beginning in 1933, to split into two divisions with a championship game to be played between the division champions.[27] The 1934 season also marked the first of twelve seasons in which African Americans were absent from the league. The de facto ban was rescinded in 1946, following public pressure and coinciding with the removal of a similar ban in Major League Baseball.[28]

The NFL was always the largest professional football league in the United States; it nevertheless faced numerous rival professional leagues through the 1930s and 1940s. Rival leagues included at least three separate American Football Leagues and the All-America Football Conference (AAFC), on top of various regional leagues of varying caliber. Three NFL teams trace their histories to these rival leagues; the Los Angeles Rams who came from a 1936 iteration of the American Football League, and the Cleveland Browns and San Francisco 49ers, both from the AAFC. By the 1950s, the NFL had an effective monopoly on professional football in the United States; its only competition in North America was the professional Canadian football circuit, which formally became the Canadian Football League (CFL) in 1958. With Canadian football being a different football code than the American game, the CFL established a niche market in Canada and still survives as an independent league.

A new professional league, the fourth American Football League (AFL), began to play in 1960. The upstart AFL began to challenge the established NFL in popularity, gaining lucrative television contracts and engaging in a bidding war with the NFL for free agents and draft picks. The two leagues announced a merger on June 8, 1966, to take full effect in 1970. In the meantime, the leagues would hold a common draft and championship game. The game, the Super Bowl, was held four times before the merger, with the NFL winning Super Bowl I and Super Bowl II, and the AFL winning Super Bowl III and Super Bowl IV.[29] After the league merged, it was reorganized into two conferences: the National Football Conference (NFC), consisting of most of the pre-merger NFL teams, and the American Football Conference (AFC), consisting of all of the AFL teams as well as three pre-merger NFL teams.[30]

Today, the NFL is the most popular sports league in North America[31] – with much of the league's growth and popularity attributable to former commissioner Pete Rozelle, who led the league from 1960 to 1989. Overall annual attendance increased from 3 million at the beginning of his tenure to 17 million by the end of his tenure, and 400 million global viewers watched 1989's Super Bowl XXIII.[32] The NFL established NFL Properties in 1963. The league's licensing wing, NFL Properties, earns the league billions of dollars annually; Rozelle's tenure also marked the creation of NFL Charities and a national partnership with United Way.[32] Paul Tagliabue was elected as commissioner to succeed Rozelle; his 17-year tenure, which ended in 2006, was marked by large increases in television contracts and the addition of four expansion teams,[33] as well as the introduction of league initiatives to increase the number of minorities in league and team management roles.[34]

The league's current commissioner, Roger Goodell, has focused on reducing the number of illegal hits and making the sport safer, mainly through fining or suspending players who break rules.[35] These actions are among many the NFL is taking to reduce concussions and improve player safety.[36] Prior to 2021, the NFL had utilized race-based adjustments of dementia claims in the $1 billion settlement of concussion claims, which had been criticized by critics before the NFL decided to end what was called "race-norming".[37][38] On May 21, 2024, the NFL announced the NFL Source initiative, aimed at increasing the number of minority- and women-owned businesses that work with the league throughout the year.[39] NFL Source will be mandatory for teams that host major events, such as the Super Bowl and the NFL draft, and their organizing committees, but will be optional for other contracts at the team level.[39] The NFL will partner with the U.S. Black Chambers, Inc to help local businesses across the country obtain the certifications necessary to do business with the league in furtherance of its efforts to increase partnerships with certified and underrepresented businesses that are 51% owned and operated or led by a veteran, woman, minority, person with disabilities or LGBTQ+.[40]

In 2015, a class-action lawsuit was filed on behalf of NFL Sunday Ticket subscribers, alleging that the NFL, its member teams, its broadcast partners, and DirecTV engaged in a conspiracy to violate antitrust law, by granting DirecTV exclusive rights to sell the Sunday Ticket product, thereby restricting competition and forcing viewers to pay super competitive prices to view out-of-market games.[41][42] On June 27, 2024, a jury in Los Angeles found that the NFL had violated antitrust law in setting the price of the Sunday ticket package and ordered a penalty totaling more than $4.7 billion. With triple damages allowed under federal antitrust laws, the NFL could ultimately be liable for $14.39 billion. The league said it would ask the judge to set the verdict aside then appeal the verdict if needed.[43]

Season and playoff development

[edit]

From 1920 to 1934, the NFL did not have a set number of games for teams to play, instead setting a minimum. The league mandated a twelve-game regular season for each team beginning in 1935, later shortening this to eleven games in 1937 and ten games in 1943, mainly due to World War II. After the war ended, the number of games returned to eleven games in 1946, and later back to twelve in 1947. The NFL went to a 14-game schedule in 1961, which it retained until switching to a 16-game schedule in 1978.[44] In March 2021, the NFL officially adopted a 17-game schedule after gaining the agreement of the National Football League Players Association (NFLPA).[45]

Having an odd number of games in the schedule will give half the teams nine games as the home team, while half the teams have only eight home games. To minimize the perceived benefit on competition of having more home games, the extra home game will be rotated between the two conferences each year. This is because playoff berths are allocated at the conference level, so all teams within the conference will have played the same number of home games.

The NFL operated in a two-conference system from 1933 to 1966, where the champions of each conference would meet in the NFL Championship Game. If two teams tied for the conference lead, they would meet in a one-game playoff to determine the conference champion. In 1967, the NFL expanded from 15 teams to 16 teams. Instead of just evening out the conferences by adding the expansion New Orleans Saints to the seven-member Western Conference, the NFL realigned the conferences and split each into two four-team divisions. The four division champions would meet in the NFL playoffs, a two-round playoff.[46] The NFL also operated the Playoff Bowl (officially the Bert Bell Benefit Bowl) from 1960 to 1969. Effectively, a third-place game, pitting the two conference runners-up against each other, the league considers Playoff Bowls to have been exhibitions rather than playoff games. The league discontinued the Playoff Bowl in 1970 due to its perception as a game for losers.[47]

Following the addition of the former AFL teams into the NFL in 1970, the NFL split into two conferences with three divisions each. The expanded league, now with twenty-six teams,[30] would also feature an expanded eight-team playoff, the participants being the three division champions from each conference as well as one 'wild card' team (the team with the best win percentage that did not win its division) from each conference. In 1978, the league added a second wild card team from each conference, bringing the total number of playoff teams to ten, and a further two wild card teams were added in 1990 to bring the total to twelve. When the NFL expanded to 32 teams in 2002, the league realigned, changing the division structure from three divisions in each conference to four divisions in each conference. As each division champion gets a playoff bid, the number of wild card teams from each conference dropped from three to two.[48] The playoffs expanded again in 2020, adding two more wild card teams to bring the total to 14 playoff teams.[49]

Teams

[edit]

The NFL consists of 32 teams divided into two conferences of 16 teams each. Each conference is divided into four divisions of four teams each. During the regular season, each team is allowed a maximum of 55 players on its roster; only 48 of these may be active (eligible to play) on game days.[50] Each team can also have a sixteen-player practice squad separate from its main roster.[51]

Each NFL club is granted a franchise, the league's authorization for the team to operate in its home city. This franchise covers "Home Territory" (the 75 miles surrounding the city limits, or, if the team is within 100 miles of another league city, half the distance between the two cities) and "Home Marketing Area" (Home Territory plus the rest of the state the club operates in, as well as the area the team operates its training camp in for the duration of the camp). Each NFL member has the exclusive right to host professional football games inside its Home Territory and the exclusive right to advertise, promote, and host events in its Home Marketing Area. There are a couple of exceptions to this rule, mostly relating to teams with close proximity to each other: teams that operate in the same city (e.g. New York City and Los Angeles) or the same state (e.g. California, Florida, and Texas) share the rights to the city's Home Territory and the state's Home Marketing Area, respectively.[52]

The Dallas Cowboys, valued at $12.8 billion, are the most valuable sport franchise in the world as of 2025 according to Sportico.[53] The average NFL team is worth $7.13 billion and collectively worth $228 billion.[53]

Key
Symbol Meaning
* Franchise has relocated at some point in its existence
Club was a founding member of the NFL
National Football League teams
Conference Division[54] Team[54] City Stadium[55] Capacity First
season[56]
Head
coach
AFC East Buffalo Bills Orchard Park, New York Highmark Stadium 71,608 1960 (AFL)
1970 (NFL)
Sean McDermott
Miami Dolphins Miami Gardens, Florida Hard Rock Stadium 64,767 1966 (AFL)
1970 (NFL)
Mike McDaniel
New England Patriots Foxborough, Massachusetts Gillette Stadium 65,878 1960 (AFL)
1970 (NFL)
Mike Vrabel
New York Jets East Rutherford, New Jersey MetLife Stadium[B] 82,500 1960 (AFL)
1970 (NFL)
Aaron Glenn
North Baltimore Ravens Baltimore, Maryland M&T Bank Stadium 71,008 1996[C] John Harbaugh
Cincinnati Bengals Cincinnati, Ohio Paycor Stadium 65,515 1968 (AFL)
1970 (NFL)
Zac Taylor
Cleveland Browns Cleveland, Ohio Huntington Bank Field 67,895 1946 (AAFC)
1950 (NFL)[C]
Kevin Stefanski
Pittsburgh Steelers Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Acrisure Stadium 68,400 1933 Mike Tomlin
South Houston Texans Houston, Texas NRG Stadium 71,995 2002 DeMeco Ryans
Indianapolis Colts* Indianapolis, Indiana Lucas Oil Stadium 63,000 1953 Shane Steichen
Jacksonville Jaguars Jacksonville, Florida EverBank Stadium[D] 67,814 1995 Liam Coen
Tennessee Titans* Nashville, Tennessee Nissan Stadium 69,143 1960 (AFL)
1970 (NFL)
Mike McCoy (interim)
West Denver Broncos Denver, Colorado Empower Field at Mile High 76,125 1960 (AFL)
1970 (NFL)
Sean Payton
Kansas City Chiefs* Kansas City, Missouri GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium 76,416 1960 (AFL)
1970 (NFL)
Andy Reid
Las Vegas Raiders* Paradise, Nevada Allegiant Stadium 65,000 1960 (AFL)
1970 (NFL)
Pete Carroll
Los Angeles Chargers* Inglewood, California SoFi Stadium[E] 70,240 1960 (AFL)
1970 (NFL)
Jim Harbaugh
NFC East Dallas Cowboys Arlington, Texas AT&T Stadium 80,000 1960 Brian Schottenheimer
New York Giants East Rutherford, New Jersey MetLife Stadium[B] 82,500 1925 Brian Daboll
Philadelphia Eagles Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Lincoln Financial Field 69,176 1933 Nick Sirianni
Washington Commanders* Landover, Maryland Northwest Stadium 62,000 1932 Dan Quinn
North Chicago Bears*† Chicago, Illinois Soldier Field 61,500 1920 Ben Johnson
Detroit Lions* Detroit, Michigan Ford Field 65,000 1930 Dan Campbell
Green Bay Packers Green Bay, Wisconsin Lambeau Field 81,441 1919[F]
1921 (NFL)
Matt LaFleur
Minnesota Vikings Minneapolis, Minnesota U.S. Bank Stadium 66,860 1961 Kevin O'Connell
South Atlanta Falcons Atlanta, Georgia Mercedes-Benz Stadium 71,000 1966 Raheem Morris
Carolina Panthers Charlotte, North Carolina Bank of America Stadium 75,523 1995 Dave Canales
New Orleans Saints New Orleans, Louisiana Caesars Superdome 73,208 1967 Kellen Moore
Tampa Bay Buccaneers Tampa, Florida Raymond James Stadium 65,618 1976 Todd Bowles
West Arizona Cardinals*† Glendale, Arizona State Farm Stadium 63,400 1898[G]
1920 (NFL)
Jonathan Gannon
Los Angeles Rams* Inglewood, California SoFi Stadium[E] 70,240 1936 (AFL)
1937 (NFL)
Sean McVay
San Francisco 49ers Santa Clara, California Levi's Stadium 68,500 1946 (AAFC)
1950 (NFL)
Kyle Shanahan
Seattle Seahawks Seattle, Washington Lumen Field 69,000 1976 Mike Macdonald

Organizational structure

[edit]
Roger Goodell, National Football League Commissioner since 2006 (pictured in 2012)

At the corporate level, the NFL considers itself a trade association made up of and financed by its 32 member teams.[64] Up until 2015, the league was an unincorporated nonprofit 501(c)(6) association.[65] Section 501(c)(6) of the Internal Revenue Code provides an exemption from federal income taxation for "Business leagues, chambers of commerce, real-estate boards, boards of trade, or professional football leagues (whether or not administering a pension fund for football players), not organized for profit and no part of the net earnings of which inures to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual."[66] In contrast, each individual team, with the exception of the non-profit Green Bay Packers,[67] is subject to tax because they make a profit.[68]

In 2015, the NFL gave up its tax-exempt status following public criticism; in a letter to the club owners, Commissioner Roger Goodell labeled it a "distraction", saying "the effects of the tax-exempt status of the league office have been mischaracterized repeatedly in recent years… Every dollar of income generated through television rights fees, licensing agreements, sponsorships, ticket sales, and other means is earned by the 32 clubs and is taxable there. This will remain the case even when the league office and Management Council file returns as taxable entities, and the change in filing status will make no material difference to our business." As a result, the league office might owe around US$10 million in income taxes, but it is no longer required to disclose the salaries of its executive officers.[69]

The league has three defined officers: the commissioner, secretary, and treasurer. Each conference has one defined officer, the president, which is essentially an honorary position with few powers and mostly ceremonial duties, including awarding the conference championship trophy.

The commissioner is elected by the affirmative vote of two-thirds or 18, whichever is greater, of the members of the league, while the president of each conference is elected by an affirmative vote of three-fourths or 10, whichever is greater, of the conference members.[70] The commissioner appoints the secretary and treasurer and has broad authority in disputes between clubs, players, coaches, and employees. He is the "principal executive officer"[70] of the NFL and also has authority in hiring league employees, negotiating television contracts, disciplining individuals that own part or all of an NFL team, clubs, or employed individuals of an NFL club if they have violated league by-laws or committed "conduct detrimental to the welfare of the League or professional football".[70] The commissioner can, in the event of misconduct by a party associated with the league, suspend individuals, hand down a fine of up to US$500,000, cancel contracts with the league, and award or strip teams of draft picks.[70]

In extreme cases, the commissioner can offer recommendations to the NFL's executive committee, up to and including the "cancellation or forfeiture"[70] of a club's franchise or any other action, he deems necessary. The commissioner can also issue sanctions up to and including a lifetime ban from the league if an individual connected to the NFL has bet on games or failed to notify the league of conspiracies or plans to bet on or fix games.[70] The current Commissioner of the National Football League is Roger Goodell, who was elected in 2006 after Paul Tagliabue, the previous commissioner, retired.[71]

Finances

[edit]

NFL revenue is from three primary sources: NFL Ventures (merchandising), NFL Enterprises (NFL Network and NFL Sunday Ticket, which the league controls), and the television contract. The league distributes such revenue equally among teams, regardless of performance. As of February 2019, each team receives $255 million annually from the league's television contract, up 150% from $99.9 million in 2010.[72]

Most NFL teams' financial statements are secret.[73] The Kansas City Star obtained the Kansas City Chiefs' tax returns for 2008–2010. According to the Star, the team's revenue rose from $231 million in 2008 to $302 million in 2010. In 2010, two thirds of revenue came from the league: $99.8 million from NFL Ventures ($55.3 million) and NFL Enterprises ($44.6 million), and the $99.9 million share of the television contract. The remaining one third was from tickets ($42.4 million), corporate sponsorships ($6.6 million), food sales ($5 million), parking passes ($4.7 million), in-stadium advertising ($3.7 million), radio contract ($2.7 million), and miscellaneous sources.[72]

The largest Chiefs expense in 2010 was $148 million for players, coaches, and other employees. Of the $38 million in operating income, Clark, Lamar Jr., two other children, and widow of former team owner Lamar Hunt divided $17.6 million, and reinvested the remaining $20 million into the team.[72]

According to economist Richard D. Wolff, the NFL's revenue model is in contravention of the typical corporate structure. By redistributing profits to all teams the NFL is ensuring that one team will not dominate the league through excessive earnings.[74] Roger Noll described the revenue sharing as the league's "most important structural weakness", however, as there is no disincentive against a team playing badly and the largest cost item, player salaries, is capped.[72]

Season format

[edit]

The NFL season format consists of a three-week preseason, an 18-week regular season (each team plays 17 games), and a 14-team single-elimination playoff culminating in the Super Bowl, the league's championship game.

Preseason

[edit]

The NFL preseason begins with the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game, played at Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium in Canton, Ohio.[75] Each NFL team is required to schedule three preseason games. NFC teams must play at least two of these at home in odd numbered years and AFC teams must play at least two at home in even numbered years. However, the teams involved in the Hall of Fame game, as well as any team that played in an American Bowl game, play four preseason games.[76] Preseason games are exhibition matches and do not count towards regular-season totals.[77] Because the preseason does not count towards standings, teams generally do not focus on winning games; instead, they are used by coaches to evaluate their teams and by players to show their performance, both to their current team and to other teams if they get cut.[78] The quality of preseason games has been criticized by some fans, who dislike having to pay full price for exhibition games,[79] as well as by some players and coaches, who dislike the risk of injury the games have, while others have felt the preseason is a necessary part of the NFL schedule.[78][79]

Regular season

[edit]
2024 AFC team standings
POS AFC East AFC North AFC South AFC West
1st Bills Ravens Texans Chiefs
2nd Dolphins Steelers Colts Chargers
3rd Jets Bengals Jaguars Broncos
4th Patriots Browns Titans Raiders
2024 NFC team standings
POS NFC East NFC North NFC South NFC West
1st Eagles Lions Buccaneers Rams
2nd Commanders Vikings Falcons Seahawks
3rd Cowboys Packers Panthers Cardinals
4th Giants Bears Saints 49ers
This chart of the 2024 season standings displays an application of the NFL scheduling formula. The 2024 Eagles (highlighted in green) finished in first place in the NFC East. Thus, in 2025, the Eagles will play two games against each of their division rivals (highlighted in light blue), one game against each team in the NFC North and AFC West (highlighted in yellow), and one game each against the first-place finishers in the NFC South, NFC West (highlighted in orange), and AFC East (highlighted in pink).

Currently, the 14 opponents each team faces over the 17-game regular season schedule are set using a predetermined formula:[80] The league runs an 18-week, 272-game regular season.[81] Since 2021, the season has begun the week after Labor Day (the first Monday in September) and concluded the week after New Year.[82] The opening game of the season is normally a home game on a Thursday for the league's defending champion.[83]

Most NFL games are played on Sundays, with a Monday night game typically held at least once a week and Thursday night games occurring on most weeks as well.[83] NFL games are not normally played on Fridays or Saturdays until late in the regular season, as federal law prohibits professional football leagues from competing with college or high school football. Because high school and college teams typically play games on Friday and Saturday, respectively, the NFL cannot hold games on those days until the Friday before the third Saturday in December. While Saturday games late in the season are common, the league rarely holds Friday games, the most recent one being on Christmas Day in 2020.[84] NFL games are rarely scheduled for Tuesday or Wednesday, and those days have only been used three times since 1948: in 2010, when a Sunday game was rescheduled to Tuesday due to a blizzard; in 2012, when the Kickoff game was moved from Thursday to Wednesday to avoid conflict with the Democratic National Convention;[85][86] and in 2020, when a game was postponed from Sunday to Tuesday due to players testing positive for COVID-19.[87]

NFL regular season match-ups are determined according to a scheduling formula. Within a division, all four teams play 14 out of their 17 games against common opponents or each other– two games (home and away) are played against the other three teams in the division, while one game is held against all the members of a division from the NFC and a division from the AFC as determined by a rotating cycle (three years for the conference the team is in, and four years in the conference they are not in). Two of the other games are intraconference games, determined by the standings of the previous year – for example, if a team finishes first in its division, it will play two other first-place teams in its conference, while a team that finishes last would play two other last-place teams in the conference. The final game is an inter-conference based on a rotating cycle (four years) and determined by previous season's standings.[88] In total, each team plays 17 games and has one bye week, where it does not play a game.[89]

Although a team's home and away opponents are known by the end of the previous year's regular season, the exact dates and times for NFL games are not determined until much later because the league has to account for, among other things, the Major League Baseball postseason and local events that could pose a scheduling conflict with NFL games. During the 2010 season, over 500,000 potential schedules were created by computers, 5,000 of which were considered "playable schedules" and were reviewed by the NFL's scheduling team. After arriving at what they felt was the best schedule out of the group, nearly 50 more potential schedules were developed to try to ensure that the chosen schedule would be the best possible one.[90]

Postseason

[edit]

Following the conclusion of the regular season, the NFL Playoffs, a 14-team single-elimination tournament, is then held. Seven teams are selected from each conference: the winners of each of the four divisions as well as three wild card teams (the three remaining teams with the best overall record, with tiebreakers in the event of two or more teams having the same record). These teams are seeded according to overall record and tiebreakers, with the division champions always ranking higher than the wild card teams.[91] The top team (seeded one) from each conference are awarded a bye week, while the remaining six teams (seeded 2–7) from each conference compete in the first round of the playoffs, the Wild Card round, with the 2-seed competing against the 7-seed, the 3-seed competing against the 6-seed and the 4-seed competing against the 5-seed. The winners of the Wild Card round advance to the Divisional Round, which matches the lower seeded team against the 1-seed and the two remaining teams against each other. The winners of those games then compete in the Conference Championships, with the higher remaining seed hosting the lower remaining seed. The AFC and NFC champions then compete in the Super Bowl to determine the league champion.

The only other postseason event hosted by the NFL is the Pro Bowl, the league's all-star game. Since 2009, the Pro Bowl has been held the week before the Super Bowl; in previous years, the game was held the week following the Super Bowl, but in an effort to boost ratings, the game was moved to the week before.[92] Because of this, players from the teams participating in the Super Bowl are exempt from participating in the game. The Pro Bowl is not considered as competitive as a regular-season game because the biggest concern of teams is to avoid injuries to the players.[93]

Trophies and awards

[edit]

Team trophies

[edit]

The NFL has used three different trophies to honor its champion over its existence. The first trophy, the Brunswick-Balke-Collender Cup, was donated to the NFL (then APFA) in 1920 by the Brunswick-Balke-Collender Corporation. The trophy, the appearance of which is only known by its description as a "silver loving cup", was intended to be a traveling trophy and not to become permanent until a team had won at least three titles. The league awarded it to the Akron Pros, champions of the inaugural 1920 season; however, the trophy was discontinued and its current whereabouts are unknown.[94]

A second trophy, the Ed Thorp Memorial Trophy, was issued by the NFL from 1934 to 1967. The trophy's namesake, Ed Thorp, was a referee in the league and a friend to many early league owners; upon his death in 1934, the league created the trophy to honor him. In addition to the main trophy, which would be in the possession of the current league champion, the league issued a smaller replica trophy to each champion, who would maintain permanent control over it. The current location of the Ed Thorp Memorial Trophy, long thought to be lost,[95] is believed to be possessed by the Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame.[96]

The current trophy of the NFL is the Vince Lombardi Trophy. The Super Bowl trophy was officially renamed in 1970 after Vince Lombardi, who as head coach led the Green Bay Packers to victories in the first two Super Bowls.[97] Unlike the previous trophies, a new Vince Lombardi Trophy is issued to each year's champion, who maintains permanent control of it. Lombardi Trophies are made by Tiffany & Co. out of sterling silver and are worth anywhere from US$25,000 to US$300,000.[98] Additionally, each player on the winning team as well as coaches and personnel are awarded Super Bowl rings to commemorate their victory. The winning team chooses the company that makes the rings; each ring design varies, with the NFL mandating certain ring specifications (which have a degree of room for deviation), in addition to requiring the Super Bowl logo be on at least one side of the ring.[99] The losing team are also awarded rings, which must be no more than half as valuable as the winners' rings, but those are almost never worn.[100]

The conference champions receive trophies for their achievement. The champions of the NFC receive the George Halas Trophy,[101] named after Chicago Bears founder George Halas, who is also considered one of the co-founders of the NFL. The AFC champions receive the Lamar Hunt Trophy,[102] named after Lamar Hunt, the founder of the Kansas City Chiefs and the principal founder of the American Football League. Players on the winning team also receive a conference championship ring.[103][104]

Player and coach awards

[edit]

The NFL recognizes a number of awards for its players and coaches at its annual NFL Honors presentation. The most prestigious award is the AP Most Valuable Player (MVP) award.[105] Other major awards include the AP Offensive Player of the Year, AP Defensive Player of the Year, AP Comeback Player of the Year, and the AP Offensive and Defensive Rookie of the Year awards.[106] Another prestigious award is the Walter Payton Man of the Year award, which recognizes a player's off-field work in addition to his on-field performance.[107] The NFL Coach of the Year award is the highest coaching award.[108] The NFL also gives out weekly awards such as the FedEx Air & Ground NFL Players of the Week[109] and the Pepsi MAX NFL Rookie of the Week awards.[110]

Media coverage

[edit]

In the United States, the NFL is televised on eight networks across seven media partners: ESPN/ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC, Prime Video, Netflix, and NFL Network. The league offers its media rights in packages of games to prospective media partners. The packages can vary depending on conference, broadcast time slot, or both. CBS televises afternoon games from the AFC package, and Fox carries afternoon games from the NFC package. These afternoon games are not carried on all affiliates, as multiple games are being played at once; each network affiliate is assigned one game per time slot, according to a complicated set of rules.[111] Since 2011, the league has reserved the right to give Sunday games that, under the contract, would normally air on one network to the other network (known as "flexible scheduling").[112] The only way to legally watch a regionally televised game not being carried on the local network affiliates is to purchase NFL Sunday Ticket, the league's out-of-market sports package, which is available through YouTube TV starting with the 2023 season.[113] The league also provides NFL RedZone, an omnibus telecast that cuts to the most relevant plays in each game, live as they happen.

In addition to the regional games, the league also has packages of telecasts, mostly in prime time, that are carried nationwide. NBC broadcasts the primetime Sunday Night Football package, which includes the Thursday NFL Kickoff game that starts the regular season and a primetime Thanksgiving Day game. ESPN is the main broadcaster of the Monday Night Football package with ABC airing select games either exclusively or as a simulcast with ESPN. Amazon, through their Prime Video streaming service, is the exclusive carrier of the Thursday Night Football package. NFL Network, a U.S. pay cable channel owned by the league itself, broadcasts select games under the NFL Network Exclusive Game Series banner. Games under this banner usually consist of NFL International Series games and select Saturday games. In 2023, the NFL occupied the top three rates for a 30-second advertisement: $882,079 for Sunday Night Football, $562,524 for Monday Night Football, and $440,523 for Thursday Night Football.[114]

The league, in recent years, has expanded their televised broadcasts to over-the-top streaming services. Since 2022, Amazon holds the exclusive rights to broadcast the Thursday Night Football package.[115] Prior to then, Amazon streamed games from the same package as part of a tri-cast model that saw games aired on broadcast television (initially through CBS and NBC, then later with Fox), cable television (through NFL Network), and digital streaming (through Prime Video).[116][117][118] Amazon has also streamed games for free on Twitch since 2018.[118] CBS streams its AFC package games on Paramount+ as a simulcast with its CBS broadcasts.[119][120] NBC streams Sunday Night Football and select exclusive games on Peacock.[119][121][122] ESPN streams its games on ESPN+ in simulcast with the broadcasts on ESPN or ABC.[119][123] ESPN also holds exclusive rights to stream one Sunday morning international game on ESPN+.[123] Beginning in 2024, Netflix holds the global streaming rights for at least one Christmas Day game every season as part of a three-year deal.[124]

The Super Bowl television rights are rotated on a four-year basis between CBS, Fox, NBC, and ESPN/ABC. The NFL's most recent contract negotiation for the media rights deal was announced on March 18, 2021, to take effect beginning in the 2023 season. The deal renewed previous rights agreements made by the NFL and each of its network partners to air their respective game packages, while awarding Amazon the Thursday Night Football package. ESPN/ABC is set to return to the Super Bowl broadcast rotation and will broadcast the Super Bowl on U.S. television in 2027, 21 years after airing its last Super Bowl, Super Bowl XL. Digital and streaming distribution was expanded to allow CBS, NBC, and ESPN/ABC to stream games on their respective over-the-top streaming services. For each of the packages the respective network partners currently hold, ESPN/ABC is paying US$2.7 billion a year; CBS, Fox, and NBC are each paying more than US$2 billion a year; and Amazon is paying US$1 billion a year. The current deal runs through the 2033 season.[119][125][126]

The league also has deals with Spanish-language broadcasters NBC Universo, Fox Deportes, and ESPN Deportes, which air Spanish language dubs of their respective English-language sister networks' games.[127][128] The league's contracts do not cover preseason games, which individual teams are free to sell to local stations directly; a minority of preseason games are distributed among the league's national television partners.

Through the 2014 season, the NFL had a blackout policy in which games were 'blacked out' on local television in the home team's area if the home stadium was not sold out. Clubs could elect to set this requirement at only 85%, but they would have to give more ticket revenue to the visiting team; teams could also request a specific exemption from the NFL for the game. The vast majority of NFL games were not blacked out; only 6% of games were blacked out during the 2011 season,[129] and only two games were blacked out in 2013 and none in 2014.[130] The NFL announced in March 2015 that it would suspend its blackout policy for at least the 2015 season.[130] According to Nielsen, the NFL regular season since 2012 was watched by at least 200 million individuals, accounting for 80% of all television households in the United States and 69% of all potential viewers in the United States. NFL regular season games accounted for 31 out of the top 32 most-watched programs in the fall season and an NFL game ranked as the most-watched television show in all 17 weeks of the regular season. At the local level, NFL games were the highest-ranked shows in NFL markets 92% of the time.[131] Super Bowls account for the 22 most-watched programs (based on total audience) in US history, including a record 167 million people that watched Super Bowl XLVIII, the conclusion to the 2013 season.[132]

In addition to radio networks run by each NFL team, select NFL games are broadcast nationally by Westwood One (known as Dial Global for the 2012 season). These games are broadcast on over 500 networks, giving all NFL markets access to each primetime game. The NFL's deal with Westwood One was extended in 2012 and continued through 2017.[133] Other NFL games are nationally distributed by Compass Media Networks and Sports USA Radio Network under contracts with individual teams.

Some broadcasting innovations have either been introduced or popularized during NFL telecasts. Among them, the Skycam camera system was used for the first time in a live telecast, at a 1984 preseason NFL game in San Diego between the Chargers and 49ers, and televised by CBS.[134] Commentator John Madden famously used a telestrator during games between the early 1980s to the mid-2000s, boosting the device's popularity.[135]

The NFL has licensing agreements with X, Reddit and Meta Platforms to serve as authorized social media outlets for the league and its teams. The New England Patriots' attempt to launch a Bluesky account was met with a cease and desist order from the NFL headquarters.[136]

In 2025, the NFL began to take equity stakes in some of its media partners as part of business transactions. In August 2025, the NFL gained an equity stake in CBS parent company Paramount Skydance Corporation following the acquisition of Paramount Global by Skydance Media, by virtue of its existing investments and content partnerships with Skydance. The same month, the NFL announced that it would sell NFL Network, the NFL RedZone channel, and its fantasy football services to ESPN Inc. for an undisclosed amount, pending regulatory approval; as part of the agreement, the NFL will take a 10% stake in ESPN.[137][138][139][140]

Draft

[edit]
Tennessee Titans quarterback Cam Ward, the first overall pick of the 2025 NFL draft

Each April (excluding 2014 when it took place in May), the NFL holds a draft of college players. The draft consists of seven rounds, with each of the 32 clubs getting one pick in each round.[141] The draft order for non-playoff teams is determined by regular-season record; among playoff teams, teams are first ranked by the furthest round of the playoffs they reached, and then are ranked by regular-season record. For example, any team that reached the divisional round will be given a higher pick than any team that reached the conference championships, but will be given a lower pick than any team that did not make the divisional round. The Super Bowl champion always drafts last, and the losing team from the Super Bowl always drafts next-to-last.[142] All potential draftees must be at least three years removed from high school to be eligible for the draft.[143] Underclassmen that have met that criterion to be eligible for the draft must write an application to the NFL by January 15 renouncing their remaining college eligibility.[144] Clubs can trade away picks for future draft picks, but cannot trade the rights to players they have selected in previous drafts.[145]

Aside from the seven picks each club gets, compensatory draft picks are given to teams that have lost more compensatory free agents than they have gained. These are spread out from rounds 3 to 7, and a total of 32 are given.[146] Clubs are required to make their selection within a certain period, the exact time depending on which round the pick is made in. If they fail to do so on time, the clubs behind them can begin to select their players in order, but they do not lose the pick outright. This happened in the 2003 draft, when the Minnesota Vikings failed to make their selection on time. The Jacksonville Jaguars and Carolina Panthers were able to make their picks before the Vikings were able to use theirs.[147] Selected players are only allowed to negotiate contracts with the team that picked them, but if they choose not to sign they become eligible for the next year's draft.[148] Under the current collective bargaining contract, all contracts to drafted players must be four-year deals with a club option for a fifth. Contracts themselves are limited to a certain amount of money, depending on the exact draft pick the player was selected with.[149] Players who were draft eligible but not picked in the draft are free to sign with any club.[141]

The NFL operates several other drafts in addition to the NFL draft. The league holds a supplemental draft annually. Clubs submit emails to the league stating the player they wish to select and the round they will do so, and the team with the highest bid wins the rights to that player. The exact order is determined by a lottery held before the draft, and a successful bid for a player will result in the team forfeiting the rights to its pick in the equivalent round of the next NFL draft.[150] Players are only eligible for the supplemental draft after being granted a petition for special eligibility.[151] The league holds expansion drafts, the most recent happening in 2002 when the Houston Texans began to play as an expansion team.[152] Other drafts held by the league include an allocation draft in 1950 to allocate players from several teams that played in the dissolved All-America Football Conference[153] and a supplemental draft in 1984 to give NFL teams the rights to players who had been eligible for the main draft but had not been drafted because they had signed contracts with the United States Football League or Canadian Football League.[154]

Like the other major sports leagues in the United States, the NFL maintains protocol for a disaster draft. In the event of a 'near disaster' (less than 15 players killed or disabled) that caused the club to lose a quarterback, they could draft one from a team with at least three quarterbacks. In the event of a 'disaster' (15 or more players killed or disabled) that results in a club's season being canceled, a restocking draft would be held. Neither of these protocols has ever had to be implemented.[155]

Free agency

[edit]

Free agents in the NFL are divided into restricted free agents, who have three accrued seasons and whose current contract has expired, and unrestricted free agents, who have four or more accrued seasons and whose contract has expired. An accrued season is defined as "six or more regular-season games on a club's active/inactive, reserved/injured or reserve/physically unable to perform lists".[156] Restricted free agents are allowed to negotiate with other clubs besides their former club, but the former club has the right to match any offer. If they choose not to, they are compensated with draft picks. Unrestricted free agents are free to sign with any club, and no compensation is owed if they sign with a different club.[156]

Clubs are given one franchise tag to offer to any unrestricted free agent. The franchise tag is a one-year deal that pays the player 120% of his previous contract or no less than the average of the five highest-paid players at his position, whichever is greater. There are two types of franchise tags: exclusive tags, which do not allow the player to negotiate with other clubs, and non-exclusive tags, which allow the player to negotiate with other clubs but gives his former club the right to match any offer and two first-round draft picks if they decline to match it.[157]

Clubs also have the option to use a transition tag, which is similar to the non-exclusive franchise tag but offers no compensation if the former club refuses to match the offer.[158] Due to that stipulation, the transition tag is rarely used,[159] even with the removal of the "poison pill" strategy (offering a contract with stipulations that the former club would be unable to match) that essentially ended the usage of the tag league-wide.[160] Each club is subject to a salary cap, which is set at US$188.2 million for the 2019 season,[161] US$11 million more than that of 2018.[161]

Members of clubs' practice squads, despite being paid by and working for their respective clubs, are also simultaneously a kind of free agent and are able to sign to any other club's active roster (provided their new club is not their previous club's next opponent within a set number of days) without compensation to their previous club; practice squad players cannot be signed to other clubs' practice squads, however, unless released by their original club first.[162]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The National Football League (NFL) is the highest level of professional , consisting of 32 franchises divided evenly between the (AFC) and the (NFC), each further subdivided into four divisions of four teams. Founded on September 17, 1920, as the American Professional Football Association (APFA) by representatives from ten teams in , the league rebranded to its current name on June 24, 1922, to reflect its national scope and distinguish it from . The NFL's regular season spans 17 games per team from early September through early January, followed by playoffs leading to the championship, which in 2025 for achieved a record average audience of 127.7 million viewers across broadcast and streaming platforms. Governed by Commissioner since 2006, the league has grown into a multibillion-dollar enterprise through media deals, sponsorships, and global expansion efforts, though it contends with empirical evidence of elevated (CTE) risks from repetitive head impacts, with one study of 376 former players' donated brains finding the degenerative condition in 345 cases—while cautioning against extrapolating prevalence to all players due to selection biases in brain donations.

History

Informal origins and founding (1920)

Professional football in the United States emerged in the late 19th century amid growing industrial towns and athletic clubs in and , where teams began compensating players openly after initial under-the-table payments. The first documented paid professional player was William "Pudge" Heffelfinger, who received $500 to play for the Allegheny Athletic Association against the Athletic Club on November 12, 1892. By 1896, the Allegheny Athletic Association fielded the first fully professional team, followed by the Latrobe Athletic Association's inaugural pro season in 1897. These early efforts operated without formal structure, relying on independent teams that drew crowds from local rivalries but faced challenges including inconsistent rules borrowed from , player poaching across teams, escalating salaries driven by bidding wars, and financial instability from sporadic scheduling. Informal regional groupings, such as Ohio's independent professional teams in the early 1900s—which discussed a statewide league in due to rising costs and rule variances—provided precursors, but no lasting organization materialized until after failed attempts like the 1902 National Football League, which dissolved after one season. By the 1910s, robust independent franchises solidified in the Midwest, including the (established 1915) and , which attracted top talent like and competed in high-stakes games that occasionally drew thousands despite the sport's secondary status to . Owners grappled with "player jumping," where athletes switched teams mid-season for better pay, alongside uneven competition and gate-sharing disputes, prompting calls for coordination to legitimize and stabilize the game akin to . On August 20, 1920, owner Ralph Hay hosted an exploratory meeting at his auto dealership in , where representatives outlined a new association to curb these issues and elevate professional standards. The formal founding occurred on September 17, 1920, when delegates from 11 franchises convened again in Hay's showroom in Canton's Building to establish the American Professional Football Association (APFA), later renamed the National Football League in 1922. Attendees represented the , , (Racine) Cardinals, Indians, , Decatur Staleys, , , , and Rochester Jeffersons; the withdrew prior to final organization. , the multisport star and Bulldogs , was unanimously elected the league's first president, with the group agreeing to basic governance for scheduling coordination, elimination of bidding wars through player contracts, and adherence to standard rules without immediate formal championships—the 1920 season's top team, , was later recognized retrospectively. This assembly marked the transition from chaotic independents to a structured entity, though early operations remained rudimentary with only partial participation among members.

Early years and challenges (1920s-1930s)

The American Professional Football Association (APFA) was formed on September 17, 1920, in , when representatives from ten independent professional football teams convened to establish standardized rules, schedules, and player contracts amid widespread disorganization. , a prominent athlete, was elected as the league's first president, and the were retroactively awarded the inaugural championship based on their 8-0-3 record. On June 24, 1922, the organization renamed itself the National Football League (NFL). From inception, the NFL grappled with rampant player mobility and escalating salaries, as athletes frequently jumped teams for better pay without contractual restrictions, eroding team stability and inflating costs. This chaos, coupled with competition from established , limited the league's appeal and revenue, confining most franchises to small Midwestern cities like Canton and Decatur where fan support proved insufficient for sustained operations. Between 1920 and 1930, approximately 46 teams joined and folded, reflecting chronic financial undercapitalization and inability to draw crowds beyond local interest. A pivotal boost occurred in November 1925 when the signed University of Illinois star , whose debut drew 36,000 fans and subsequent barnstorming tour across 19 cities elevated the league's national profile, generating unprecedented publicity and gate receipts. Despite such moments, the intensified hardships in the 1930s, shrinking membership to eight teams by 1930—the league's historic low—and prompting innovations like the first championship game in 1933 between the and to determine a true titleholder beyond regular-season records. Persistent small-market woes persisted, with franchises like the Providence Steam Roller enduring grueling schedules amid financial strain before folding. The introduction of the player draft in 1936 aimed to curb bidding wars and stabilize talent distribution.

Post-war expansion and AFL merger (1940s-1960s)

During , the NFL faced significant player shortages as over 638 players served in the military, with 21 fatalities, leading to temporary team mergers such as the and forming the Phil-Pitt Combine in 1943 and the and Steelers merging as in 1944. The suspended operations for the 1943 season, reducing the league to eight teams, but it adopted free substitution rules to adapt to limited rosters. Despite these disruptions, the league completed full seasons from 1943 onward, maintaining its schedule amid wartime travel and enlistment challenges. Post-war recovery accelerated in 1946 with the relocating from to become the first NFL team on the West Coast, expanding the league's geographic reach. The rival (AAFC), formed in 1946, competed aggressively for talent and markets until financial difficulties forced its dissolution after the 1949 season. In 1950, the NFL absorbed three AAFC franchises—the , , and —expanding to 13 teams and recognizing AAFC statistics for historical purposes, though the Colts folded after one season. The 1950s marked further stabilization and growth, with the restoration of unlimited free substitution in 1950 enabling the two-platoon system of specialized offense and defense units, which increased game pace and scoring. A new franchise was awarded in 1953, acquiring assets from the folded Dallas Texans, restoring the league to 12 teams. Television broadcasts expanded nationwide, culminating in the between the and —decided in sudden-death overtime—which drew record viewership and is credited with propelling professional football's popularity surge. The (AFL) emerged as a challenger in 1960, founded by with eight teams: Boston Patriots, , , , , New York Titans, , and Dallas Texans. The AFL secured a five-year television deal with ABC and engaged in bidding wars for college talent, escalating player salaries as both leagues spent millions in the mid-1960s to secure top draft picks. In response, the NFL added the in 1960 and Minnesota Vikings in 1961, while the AFL expanded modestly before the rivalry intensified. To avert financial ruin from the competition, Commissioner and AFL leaders announced a merger agreement on June 8, 1966, planning to combine into a 24-team league expanding to 28 by 1970, with shared draft rights and an annual AFL- World Championship Game. exempted the merger from antitrust laws via H.R. 17607, passed by the 161-76 on October 20, 1966, and signed by President on November 8, 1966. The integration proceeded with separate schedules through 1969, forming the (AFC) and (NFC) in 1970, incorporating AFL teams and new expansions like the (1966), (1966), (1967), and (1968).

Modern professionalization and globalization (1970s-present)

The AFL-NFL merger, finalized in 1966 but with unified operations commencing in the 1970 season, consolidated the league into a 26-team structure, enabling centralized scheduling, revenue sharing, and draft uniformity that professionalized operations and reduced competitive fragmentation. This era saw the introduction of significant television contracts, including a 1970 deal with ABC, CBS, and NBC that distributed approximately $100 million annually across teams, fueling stadium upgrades and player compensation growth. Rule changes in the 1970s, such as loosening restrictions on downfield contact and emphasizing forward passing to boost scoring—evidenced by average points per game rising from 33.9 in 1970 to 42.2 by 1978—shifted the game toward a more offensive, spectator-friendly product, aligning with television's demands for excitement. Labor disputes marked the push for player professionalization, with the NFL Players Association (NFLPA) securing minimum salary increases to $12,500 for rookies and $13,000 for veterans by 1970, alongside improved pensions and agent bargaining rights. Strikes in (57 days, canceling seven weeks of games) and (24 days, featuring replacement players) highlighted tensions over free agency and revenue splits, culminating in a 1993 antitrust settlement that introduced unrestricted free agency after four accrued seasons and a hard set at 67% of designated gross revenues, initially $34.6 million per team. These mechanisms professionalized player mobility and financial planning, with average salaries escalating from $55,000 in 1970 to over $2.7 million by 2023, tied to escalating media revenues exceeding $10 billion annually by the . Television deals drove economic , evolving from $14 million yearly in the early to a 1982 package worth $2 billion over four years, and ballooning to over $100 billion for the 2023-2033 cycle, comprising 70-80% of league revenue through national broadcasts on networks like , , , and . ensured parity, funding advanced facilities, analytics-driven , and year-round training regimens that elevated player conditioning and strategic sophistication, as seen in the adoption of schemes and later data analytics post-2000s. Globalization efforts accelerated under Commissioner from 2006, with the first regular-season game abroad in on October 28, 2007 ( vs. at ), initiating the International Series to cultivate overseas fandom. By 2025, the league hosted up to eight international games annually across markets like the , , and , supported by the Global Markets Program granting teams exclusive marketing rights in regions such as and , adding four teams and two markets in 2025 expansions. Plans include a 2026 regular-season game in , , and potential Asian venues, aiming for 16 international games per season pending adjustments, though domestic focus persists with no franchise relocations abroad. These initiatives prioritize via streaming, merchandise, and academies, generating supplementary revenue while leveraging U.S. core popularity, with international viewership surpassing 100 million for select games by the .

League Structure and Teams

Conferences, divisions, and scheduling

The National Football League operates with 32 teams divided equally into two conferences: the (AFC) and the (NFC), each containing 16 franchises. This bifurcation traces to the merger of the NFL and the rival , wherein all ten AFL teams joined three established NFL clubs to constitute the AFC, while the NFL's remaining thirteen teams formed the NFC core. Over subsequent decades, expansions and realignments refined the setup, culminating in the current balanced 16-team conferences by 2002 following the addition of the Houston Texans. Each conference further subdivides into four regional divisions—East, North, South, and West—with four teams per division, organized primarily by geographic clustering to minimize travel and foster regional rivalries. For instance, the includes the , , , and , all situated in the . Division alignment influences playoff qualification, as the top team from each division plus three wild-card entries per advance to postseason contention, prioritizing intradivisional competition. The NFL's regular-season scheduling adheres to a rotational formula ensuring each team plays 17 games over an 18-week period, incorporating one bye week. Specifically, teams contest six divisional matchups—home and away against each of the three division foes—four games against all teams from one intraconference division on a three-year rotation, four interconference games against a counterpart division on a four-year cycle, and three contests against other-conference opponents matching their prior-season divisional standing (two home or away fixed, one rotating). This yields nine home and eight away games (or vice versa) in alternating seasons, balancing workload and revenue. The full schedule, released annually in May, factors in stadium conflicts, international directives, and broadcast preferences via algorithmic optimization by NFL operations staff. Flexible adjustments, such as shifting prime-time slots up to six days pre-kickoff, accommodate viewer interest and competitive equity, with expanded windows for Sunday and Monday nights implemented for the 2025 season.

Current franchises and ownership

The National Football League comprises 32 franchises as of October 2025, organized into two conferences—the (AFC) and the (NFC)—with 16 teams each. These conferences are further divided into four divisions per conference, each containing four teams, facilitating regional rivalries and scheduling. Ownership of NFL franchises is predominantly private, held by individuals, families, or investment groups, and requires unanimous approval from the league's other owners under Article 4.3 of the NFL Constitution and Bylaws, ensuring alignment with league standards for financial stability and operational competence. The represent the sole exception, operated as a publicly owned with shares held by approximately 537,460 shareholders across five classes of stock, prohibiting private sale or transfer of controlling interest. Recent transitions in 2025 include assuming principal ownership of the following the death of his mother, , on February 6 at age 102; she had held the role since 1983 as the daughter of founder . Similarly, became principal owner of the after her father Jim Irsay's death in May 2025; Irsay had controlled the team since 1997. These changes underscore the familial continuity prevalent in ownership, where 20 of the 32 teams remain under founding or inherited family control. The following table lists the current franchises by conference and division, including their principal owners:
ConferenceDivisionTeamPrincipal Owner(s)
AFC EastBuffalo BillsTerry and Kim Pegula
Miami DolphinsStephen M. Ross
New England PatriotsRobert Kraft
New York JetsWoody and Christopher Johnson
AFC NorthBaltimore RavensSteve Bisciotti
Cincinnati BengalsMike Brown
Cleveland BrownsJimmy and Dee Haslam
Pittsburgh SteelersArt Rooney II (Rooney family)
AFC SouthHouston TexansCal McNair
Indianapolis ColtsCarlie Irsay-Gordon
Jacksonville JaguarsShahid Khan
Tennessee TitansAmy Adams Strunk
AFC WestDenver BroncosGreg Penner
Kansas City ChiefsClark Hunt
Las Vegas RaidersMark and Carol Davis
Los Angeles ChargersDean Spanos
NFC EastDallas CowboysJerry Jones
New York GiantsJohn Mara and Steve Tisch
Philadelphia EaglesJeffrey Lurie
Washington CommandersJosh Harris
NFC NorthChicago BearsGeorge McCaskey
Detroit LionsSheila Ford Hamp
Green Bay PackersGreen Bay Packers, Inc.
Minnesota VikingsZygi Wilf and family
NFC SouthAtlanta FalconsArthur Blank
Carolina PanthersDavid Tepper
New Orleans SaintsGayle Benson
Tampa Bay BuccaneersGlazer family
NFC WestArizona CardinalsMichael Bidwill
Los Angeles RamsStan Kroenke
San Francisco 49ersDenise DeBartolo York and John York
Seattle SeahawksJody Allen
Franchise valuations vary significantly, with the estimated at $9 billion under Jerry Jones's ownership since 1989, reflecting aggressive business strategies including stadium development and merchandising, while maintaining operational control without external investors. Owners wield substantial influence over league policies through the NFL's ownership committee structure, where decisions on expansion, relocations, and require three-fourths approval.

Relocations and expansion history

The National Football League originated with 14 franchises in 1920, but early financial precariousness resulted in over 20 teams folding or relocating by the 1930s, including the ' move to in 1929 as the Bulldogs and the ' relocation to in 1934, where they became the Lions. Such shifts reflected causal pressures from low attendance and regional market limitations, prioritizing viable urban centers over original locales. Post-World War II stabilization enabled targeted expansions and absorptions, such as the ' relocation to in 1946, marking the NFL's West Coast entry, and the 1950 integration of survivors like the and . The 1960 addition of the as an addressed Southern market potential, followed by the in 1966. Relocations persisted amid competition from the rival , including the ' shift to in 1960 and the ' move to in 1961. The 1970 AFL-NFL merger, agreed upon in 1966 and fully implemented that year, constituted the league's largest structural expansion by incorporating 10 AFL franchises—, , , , Baltimore/Indianapolis , , Houston/Tennessee , , , and Oakland/Las Vegas [Raiders](/page/Las Vegas_Raiders)—into the AFC alongside three NFL teams, yielding 26 total franchises and establishing the modern conference-divisional format. This consolidation ended destructive bidding wars for talent and markets, driven by mutual recognition of unsustainable rivalry costs. Further pure expansions occurred in 1976 with the and , capitalizing on and demographics. The saw aggressive growth via the 1995 additions of the and , targeting viability, and the 1996 as a new entity after the ' franchise suspension (with reactivation in Cleveland in 1999 retaining historical assets). The Houston Texans joined in 2002, replacing the departed Oilers. No expansions have followed, as the league deems 32 teams optimal for revenue distribution and scheduling balance. Relocations in this era often stemmed from stadium disputes and economic incentives, including the ' 1982 departure to (returning to Oakland in 1995), the ' midnight move to in 1984, the St. Louis Cardinals' shift to Phoenix in 1988, the ' 1995 relocation to , and the ' 1997-1998 transition to as the Titans. Recent moves reversed some westward trends: the returned to in 2016 after subsidies proved insufficient, the Chargers followed to in 2017 for shared-market synergies, and the Raiders relocated to in 2020 amid Oakland infrastructure failures. These decisions, approved by league owners, underscore causal emphasis on public funding, fan base size, and facility quality over sentimental continuity.
YearExpansion Team(s)Notes
1960Initial post-war push into Texas markets.
1966Pre-merger addition for Southeastern coverage.
1976, Dual entry to reach 28 teams.
1995, Rapid growth to 30 teams.
1996New franchise post-Browns deactivation.
2002Houston TexansFilled vacancy after Oilers' exit.
YearTeamFrom → ToPrimary Driver
1946RamsLarger .
1960CardinalsCompetition with Bears.
1982RaidersOakland → Stadium revenue disputes (returned 1995).
1984ColtsOwnership pursuit of better facilities.
1988Cardinals → PhoenixAttendance and lease issues.
1995RamsPublic stadium funding.
1997Oilers/TitansDome lease expiration.
2016RamsFailed subsidy negotiations.
2017ChargersJoined Rams for cost-sharing.
2020RaidersOakland → New stadium incentives.

Governance and Administration

Commissioner role and powers

The of the National Football League functions as the league's , with the league office headquartered at 345 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10154, United States, elected by a three-fourths vote of the 32 member club owners and serving at their discretion. This role, outlined in Article VIII of the Constitution and Bylaws, empowers the Commissioner to interpret, apply, and enforce the league's governing documents, rules, and policies, ensuring operational uniformity and competitive integrity across franchises. The position's authority stems from a deliberate by owners to a single executive, enabling swift decision-making in a high-stakes industry while maintaining ultimate through the owners' ability to remove the Commissioner by the same three-fourths vote. Central to the Commissioner's powers is the authority to investigate and penalize "conduct detrimental to the of, or public confidence in, the game of football," a invoked against players, coaches, executives, and clubs for violations ranging from on-field infractions to off-field legal issues. Penalties may include fines up to $500,000 per club or individual without prior owner approval, suspensions for any duration, forfeiture of draft choices, or cancellation of games, with the Commissioner acting as both investigator and adjudicator in initial proceedings. Appeals of such decisions route back to the Commissioner unless the specifies otherwise, though federal courts have occasionally limited this arbitral role in employment-related disputes not directly tied to game , as seen in rulings narrowing over certain player contract arbitrations. Additional powers encompass appointing and supervising game officials, licensing personnel, and directing enforcement staff; recommending rule changes to owners; arbitrating disputes between clubs, employees, or the league office; and exerting power over certain club actions, such as player trades or contracts deemed injurious to interests. The also negotiates major league-wide agreements, including media rights deals valued at over $100 billion for the 2023-2033 period, though these require owner . While these authorities promote efficiency and deterrence against misconduct, critics argue they concentrate unchecked discretion, as evidenced by high-profile suspensions under , who assumed the role on September 1, 2006, including the 2014 case where initial leniency drew scrutiny for inconsistent application. Owners retain oversight via committees and veto rights on structural changes, balancing the Commissioner's operational autonomy.

Owners' committees and decision-making

The NFL's 32 franchise owners constitute the league's supreme governing authority, collectively approving policies on , finances, relocations, expansions, and structural changes through structured voting processes. This owner-centric model stems from the league's constitution, which vests primary decision-making power in the membership to ensure alignment with franchise interests, with the serving in an executive capacity to implement approved directives rather than unilaterally dictate terms. Owners deliberate via standing committees, each led by a principal owner and comprising a subset of peers to scrutinize specific domains before escalating proposals to the full assembly. Prominent committees encompass the Finance Committee, which oversees revenue distribution and economic policies; the Compensation Committee, evaluating executive pay including the commissioner's; the , reviewing financial compliance; and specialized groups like the and International Committees for infrastructure and global outreach. Recent appointments, such as Washington Commanders owner Josh Harris to the Finance Committee and Denver Broncos co-owner to the in August 2025, illustrate ongoing rotations to distribute influence among owners. These bodies rely on data-driven analyses, expert consultations, and franchise inputs to formulate recommendations, mitigating risks from disparate owner incentives such as market sizes or regional priorities. Major decisions occur at biannual league meetings—spring and fall sessions—where owners vote on -vetted items. Routine operational changes pass by simple majority, but competitive rule alterations demand 75% approval (24 of 32 clubs) to balance innovation with stability, as evidenced by the March 2025 proposals requiring 24 affirmative votes for adoption. Supramajority thresholds apply to high-stakes matters: franchise relocations and expansions historically necessitate three-fourths consent under constitutional guidelines to protect territorial equities, while ownership rule amendments, like the , 2024, vote permitting minority stakes up to 10% (with controlling owners retaining at least 30%), achieved to broaden capital access without diluting core control. This veto-prone structure enforces consensus, often stalling proposals amid owner rivalries, as seen in protracted debates over kickoff reforms or expansions approved only after iterative refinements.

Collective bargaining with players' union

The National Football League Players Association (NFLPA), founded in 1956 to represent player interests, achieved its first agreement (CBA) with the league in 1968 after players threatened to strike over demands for higher minimum salaries, improved pensions, and severance pay. This pact marked the NFL's formal recognition of the union and established foundational revenue-sharing mechanisms, though it lacked a or unrestricted free agency. Subsequent negotiations in 1970 and 1977 introduced limited player movement rules, such as revisions to the restrictive Rozelle Rule, which had previously allowed the broad discretion in compensating teams for losing players. Major labor disputes have punctuated CBA cycles, often centering on revenue splits, player mobility, and health protections. The 1982 strike, initiated by players seeking a larger share of league income, lasted 57 days and forced the cancellation of seven regular-season games, with owners ultimately rejecting demands for guaranteed percentages and imposing a salary cap in the ensuing 1982-1987 CBA. In 1987, another player strike aimed at free agency reforms collapsed after three weeks, prompting owners to field replacement players for three games amid legal challenges over union decertification attempts. The 2011 lockout, owner-initiated and spanning 132 days, resolved key conflicts over uncapped years, revenue guarantees, and rookie wage scales through a new CBA that extended player revenue shares to a minimum of 47% of designated gross revenue and introduced structured free agency. The current CBA, ratified on March 15, 2020, following tense negotiations that highlighted divisions within the NFLPA player vote (209-188 approval), runs through the 2030 season and incorporates expansions like a 17-game starting in , a 14-team , and accelerated vesting for pensions after three accrued seasons. It mandates a minimum 48% player revenue share from onward, enhances minimum salaries (e.g., $610,000 for in 2020, rising annually), and allocates additional funds for health, safety, and legacy benefits, including $1 billion over the term for former players' programs. Enforcement mechanisms include audited financial transparency for revenue calculations, with disputes arbitrated jointly, reflecting ongoing tensions over league profitability and player compensation amid rising media deals.

Business Operations and Finances

Revenue streams and economic model

The National Football League employs a centralized economic model characterized by extensive revenue pooling and equal distribution of national revenues among its 32 franchises, designed to foster competitive balance and financial stability across teams of varying market sizes. This structure divides revenues into national (league-wide) and local (team-specific) categories, with national sources comprising approximately 67-68% of total league revenue in recent years. In fiscal year 2023, the NFL generated about $20 billion in total revenue, including $13 billion in national revenue shared equally, yielding roughly $406 million per team; by 2024, national distributions rose to $432.6 million per team, reflecting overall league revenue exceeding $22 billion. National revenue, the model's cornerstone, derives primarily from media rights agreements, which accounted for the bulk of the $13.8 billion pooled in 2024. These include multi-year contracts valued at $125.5 billion over 11 years starting in 2023, covering broadcast, streaming, and international rights with networks like , , , , and Amazon, generating over $10 billion annually through advertising and subscription fees tied to high viewership. Additional national streams encompass league sponsorships (e.g., partnerships with brands like Nike and ), royalties from licensed merchandise sales via NFL Properties, and shared royalties from affiliates such as and the , collectively contributing several billion dollars yearly and distributed after deductions for league operations. Local revenue, retained primarily by individual teams but subject to partial sharing, includes ticket sales, concessions, premium seating, and stadium-related income, totaling around $7 billion league-wide in 2023. Gate receipts are shared 66% to home teams and 34% to visitors after a standard 15% deduction for game-day expenses, mitigating disparities from uneven attendance; local sponsorships, such as stadium (e.g., SoFi Stadium's deal with ), and team-specific merchandising further bolster this category, though larger-market teams like the generate disproportionately higher local earnings—up to $1 billion annually for top franchises—highlighting the model's role in subsidizing smaller markets. This revenue-sharing framework underpins the NFL's , set at 48% of total revenue allocated to player compensation, enforcing parity by limiting spending advantages and tying franchise economics to league-wide growth rather than isolated market dominance. The model's efficacy is evident in sustained revenue increases— from $6 billion in 2004 to over $20 billion by 2024—driven by media escalation and antitrust exemptions enabling , though it constrains local revenue maximization to prioritize collective viability.

Media rights and broadcasting deals

The National Football League derives the majority of its from media rights, which have evolved into multi-billion-dollar contracts reflecting the sport's dominance in American television viewership. These deals distribute , playoff, and broadcasts across linear networks and streaming platforms, ensuring broad accessibility while maximizing income through exclusivity and package segmentation. The current framework stems from agreements signed in March 2021, encompassing an 11-year period from 2023 to 2033 valued at over $110 billion collectively with partners including , , , /ABC, and . Core packages under these contracts assign Sunday afternoon games by conference: CBS broadcasts (AFC) matchups, while Fox airs (NFC) contests, each for approximately $2.1 billion and $2.2 billion annually, respectively. holds Sunday Night Football rights for about $2.0 billion per year, ESPN/ABC manages (with ABC simulcasting select primetime games) at roughly $2.7 billion yearly, and Amazon exclusively streams alongside playoff contests. These allocations total over $10 billion in annual media revenue, distributed equally among the 32 teams to fund operations and player salaries.
BroadcasterPrimary Package(s)Approximate Annual ValueContract Term
(Paramount)AFC Sunday Afternoon$2.1 billion2023–2033
FoxNFC Sunday Afternoon$2.2 billion2023–2033
Sunday Night Football$2.0 billion2023–2033
ESPN/ABC (Disney)$2.7 billion2023–2033
Included in total2023–2033
Streaming expansions have supplemented traditional broadcasts, with Amazon securing additional rights to the annual Black Friday game as of October 2025. Netflix entered a three-year agreement in 2024 to stream Day games exclusively, including two such contests during the 2025 season. NFL Commissioner stated in September 2025 that the league anticipates renegotiating these deals as early as 2026—four years ahead of the 2029 opt-out clause—citing untapped value from surging demand and digital shifts. Historically, NFL broadcasting rights have ballooned from $9.3 million for a two-year CBS deal entering 1964 to the current scale, driven by competitive bidding and the league's consolidation post-AFL merger in 1970, which centralized negotiations under the NFL umbrella. Playoff and rights rotate among partners, with the championship game alternating between networks to sustain bidding wars and viewer interest. These arrangements prioritize national over local carriage, limiting over-the-air exclusivity to maintain premium pricing.

Stadium financing and public subsidies

The National Football League has historically secured substantial public subsidies for stadium construction, renovation, and operations, with state and local governments contributing over $10.6 billion toward current NFL venues as of 2025. Between 1970 and 2020, public funding for major-league sports facilities, including NFL stadiums, totaled approximately $33 billion, often financed through taxpayer-backed bonds, hotel taxes, sales taxes, and direct appropriations. These subsidies persist despite the league's exemption from federal antitrust laws, which enhances its market power to negotiate favorable terms by threatening franchise relocation. Recent deals illustrate the scale of public involvement. For instance, the ' new domed in Nashville, under construction as of 2025 with a total cost of $2.1 billion, includes over $1.2 billion in public funding sourced from sales taxes and bonds. The sought $855 million in public funds in September 2025 for infrastructure supporting a proposed suburban enclosed estimated at $3.5 billion overall, despite claims of private financing for the core structure. In 2024 alone, proposals for subsidies across 12 U.S. cities hosting professional teams, including NFL franchises, exceeded $13 billion, highlighting ongoing reliance on public resources even as team valuations soar into billions. Empirical studies consistently demonstrate that these subsidies yield negligible net economic benefits for host communities. A comprehensive review of research finds no statistically significant positive correlation between stadium presence and local economic growth, as spending on games merely displaces other consumer expenditures without creating substantial new activity. Analysis by the Brookings Institution concludes that promised revenues from ticket and sales taxes rarely offset subsidy costs, with benefits accruing primarily to team owners through increased franchise values rather than taxpayers. Independent assessments, including those from the Federal Reserve, affirm that job creation is temporary and construction-focused, failing to justify the long-term debt burdens imposed on localities. This pattern underscores a causal dynamic where the NFL's monopsonistic leverage extracts transfers from public coffers to private profits, often without verifiable returns exceeding alternative investments like infrastructure or education.

Competition Format

Preseason and training camps

Training camps for NFL teams typically commence in mid-July, with reporting as early as July 15 and veteran players arriving by July 22 or 23, depending on the team. These sessions, held primarily at team facilities or affiliated campuses, last approximately three to four weeks until the conclusion of preseason s. The primary objectives include conditioning players after , installing offensive and defensive schemes under new or returning coordinators, fostering team chemistry, and evaluating talent for final roster decisions. Practices emphasize drills such as individual position work, 7-on-7 passing sessions, team scrimmages, and limited full-contact periods to minimize injury risk while simulating conditions; joint practices with other teams are common to heighten without the stakes of games. Each team enters with an expanded roster of up to 90 players, including draft picks, undrafted free agents, and incumbents, allowing coaches to assess depth across positions. By the mandatory cutdown date—typically late August—rosters must shrink to 53 active players, with additional spots allocated afterward. This process drives intense , particularly for marginal players, as in camp and preseason directly influences retention; data from recent seasons shows that over 30% of final rosters often include undrafted or late-round talents who excel in these evaluations. Injuries during camp, however, remain a persistent concern, with empirical tracking indicating hundreds of reported cases annually, prompting ongoing debates about practice intensity and protective protocols like helmet-only sessions mandated by the agreement. The preseason consists of exhibition games that follow , with the schedule structured around four weeks of play plus the Game. In 2025, the Hall of Fame Game occurred on July 31 in , featuring two teams (such as the and Los Angeles team), who thus play four preseason contests while the other 30 teams participate in three each. Subsequent weeks unfold from August 7–13 (Week 1), August 14–20 (Week 2), and August 21–September 3 (Week 3), culminating before the regular season opener on September 4. Games are scheduled by the league with input from teams, balancing home/away designations and avoiding excessive travel; for instance, divisional matchups or regional rivalries often appear to facilitate logistics. Preseason contests operate under modified rules to prioritize player evaluation over competitive outcomes, including no overtime since 2021—resulting in ties if games end regulation even— and expanded rosters on gameday (up to 90 active). Starters typically play limited snaps (10–20 per game) to preserve health for the regular season, while backups, rookies, and fringe players receive the bulk of action to demonstrate skills in live scenarios. These games serve to finalize the 53-man roster, test game-day operations like special teams alignments, and identify injury replacements, though critics note their limited predictive value for regular-season success due to vanilla play-calling and uneven effort. Broadcasting is fragmented across networks like NFL Network, ESPN, and local outlets, with national exposure for select matchups. Recent innovations, such as the 2025 touchback adjustment to the 35-yard line on kickoffs, carry over from regular-season rules to familiarize teams with ongoing reforms aimed at reducing high-speed collisions.

Regular season structure

The National Football League's regular season features each of its 32 competing in 17 games spread across an , during which every receives one bye week without a game. This format, adopted starting in 2021, expanded from the prior 16-game structure used from 1978 to 2020, following a 14-game schedule from 1961 to 1977 and earlier variations with fewer games, such as 12 games per team from 1947 to 1960. The expansion accommodates the odd number of teams while maintaining competitive balance through a predetermined opponent rotation. The season typically commences on the Thursday following in early September and concludes in early January, with the final week featuring all divisional matchups to heighten stakes for playoff positioning. The league's teams are organized into two conferences—the American Football Conference (AFC) and National Football Conference (NFC)—each containing four divisions (East, North, South, and West) with four teams per division. Opponents for each team are determined by a fixed formula that ensures rotation across conferences and divisions, preventing any two teams from facing each other more than twice in a four-year cycle except for divisional rivals. Specifically, the 17 games break down as follows:
CategoryGamesDetails
Divisional6Home and away against each of the three other teams in the team's division.
Intra-conference, non-divisional6Four games (two home, two away) against teams from one rotating division within the same ; plus one game each against teams from the other two intra-conference divisions that finished in the same divisional standings position the previous season.
Inter-conference5Four games (two home, two away) against teams from one rotating division in the opposite ; plus one additional game against a team from the opposite conference that finished in the same divisional standings position the prior year.
This rotation promotes parity by varying strength-of-schedule factors, such as travel and timing, though it can lead to imbalances if a team draws tougher opponents based on prior results. Teams alternate between seasons with nine home games (and eight away) and eight home games (and nine away), including the preseason finale. Bye weeks are distributed from Week 5 through Week 14 to minimize clustering, ensuring no team plays on short rest around or while avoiding byes in the opening and closing weeks. The full , including dates and times, is released annually in mid-May after logistical coordination involving stadium availability, broadcast preferences, and international games.

Playoffs, wild cards, and Super Bowl

The NFL playoffs feature a involving 14 teams—seven from the (AFC) and seven from the (NFC)—that qualify based on performance in the 18-game ending in early January. Qualification requires either winning one of the four divisions in a team's or securing a wild-card berth as one of the three non-division-winning teams with the highest winning percentages in that ; ties are broken by head-to-head results, record, strength of victory, and other metrics defined in league rules. Teams are seeded from 1 to 7 within their , with the division winner holding the best record receiving the No. 1 seed regardless of comparative strength among division champions, and higher seeds hosting all playoff games through the to provide competitive balance favoring regular-season performance. The wild-card system, which allows non-division winners to enter the playoffs, originated in 1970 following the AFL-NFL merger, initially granting one such berth per to the team with the best record outside the three division , expanding the postseason from eight to ten teams total and enabling broader competition beyond divisional dominance. This evolved in 1978 to two per , introducing byes for division and totaling ten playoff teams, a format that persisted until 1990 when a third wild card was added per —pairing the weakest division against it in the first round—for 12 teams overall, a structure designed to reward more consistent performers amid growing league parity. The current seven-team format per , with three , took effect for the 2020 season after owners approved expansion in March 2020 to enhance postseason inclusivity without diluting regular-season incentives, eliminating byes for all but the top and scheduling six wild-card games over a weekend. Playoff games unfold over four rounds: the wild-card round pits the No. 2 seed against the No. 7, No. 3 against the No. 6, and No. 4 against the No. 5 in each conference, with the No. 1 seed receiving a bye and hosting the lowest-remaining seed in the subsequent divisional round; winners advance to the divisional round, where matchups feature the top seed versus the lowest wild-card victor and the other two winners against each other, followed by conference championship games between the surviving divisional winners. All games use regular-season rules except for , which since 2022 allows both teams a possession in playoff contests unless the team scoring first on its initial drive agrees to end the game via a attempt. The tournament culminates in the , the league's annual championship contest between the AFC and NFC champions, held on the first or second in at a predetermined neutral-site stadium selected by the up to five years in advance through a bidding process favoring major markets, domed venues, or warm-weather locations to maximize attendance and broadcast viewership. The , numbered sequentially with (e.g., for the 2024 season's conclusion), awards the to the victor and determines draft order incentives, with the champion selecting last in the subsequent NFL Draft.

Player Personnel and Labor

Annual draft system

The National Football League holds an annual entry draft each spring, typically over three days in late April, to distribute amateur players—predominantly from NCAA programs—among its 32 franchises in a structured selection process designed to promote competitive balance. The draft consists of seven rounds, with each team initially allocated one pick per round, though the total number of selections exceeds 224 due to trades and compensatory awards; for instance, the 2025 draft featured approximately 259 picks after adjustments. This system originated in to curb bidding wars for college talent and has since evolved to seven rounds since 1994, reducing from earlier formats with up to 30 rounds, as longer drafts yielded diminishing returns in talent value. Draft order for non-playoff teams is determined in reverse order of the prior regular season's win-loss records, with the team holding the worst record selecting first to aid parity by giving underperformers priority access to elite prospects. Playoff participants select after non-qualifiers, ordered inversely by their postseason advancement, such that participants pick last among their peers regardless of regular-season records; tiebreakers include , head-to-head results, and conference play outcomes. Teams may trade draft picks—and often players—during the event, altering the order dynamically; trades require league approval and have become integral, with data showing teams frequently exchange future picks for immediate selections to target specific needs. Player eligibility mandates that domestic prospects be at least three years removed from high school graduation and have exhausted their four-year eligibility or declared early after their junior year, ensuring maturity and development; international players face separate pathways but rarely enter via the main draft. The NFL verifies eligibility through its Football Operations department prior to the event, disqualifying underclassmen who fail to meet criteria or withdraw improperly. Selections proceed sequentially by round, with the commissioner—currently —or designated guests announcing first-round picks from a stage, while later rounds use electronic submissions to expedite proceedings; time limits per pick vary, such as 10 minutes in Round 1, to maintain pace. Compensatory picks, awarded in Rounds 3 through 7, offset net losses of unrestricted free agents from the prior offseason, calculated via a weighing departed players' snap counts, approximate value metrics, and postseason play against incoming signees; teams can receive up to four such picks annually, with at least 32 distributed league-wide to preserve equity without directly compensating for financial spending. These selections, ineligible for until the 2017 draft, add roughly 35-40 extra picks per year and have produced notable talents, though empirical indicates they rarely yield franchise-altering players due to their later positioning. The system enforces a "no tampering" rule pre-draft, fining violations to prevent circumvention, underscoring the draft's role in maintaining a merit-based talent allocation amid the league's constraints.

Free agency, trades, and contracts

Free agency in the NFL commences with the new league year on March 12 at 4:00 p.m. ET, marking the start of the signing period for unrestricted free agents (UFAs), who are players with at least four accrued seasons whose contracts have expired. Prior to this, a legal tampering window opens on March 10 at noon ET, allowing teams to negotiate contracts with UFA agents, though no agreements can be finalized until the league year begins. Restricted free agents (RFAs), typically players with three accrued seasons who receive a qualifying offer (a one-year tender based on prior-year averages at their position), can negotiate with other teams but are subject to draft-pick compensation if they sign elsewhere without the original team's . Exclusive rights free agents (ERFAs), with fewer than three accrued seasons, receive a one-year minimum-salary tender and cannot negotiate with other clubs. Teams may retain key UFAs via the , a one-year fully guaranteed tender equivalent to the average of the top five at the player's position from the prior five years (or 120% of their previous , whichever is higher), applicable to one player per team annually. The , a lesser-used variant, matches the average of the top 10 but offers no compensation if the player signs elsewhere. Free agency operates under the league's , set at $279.2 million per team for 2025, which limits spending and promotes competitive balance by preventing wealthier franchises from dominating talent acquisition. This cap, derived from 48% of projected league revenues shared with players under the agreement, influences free-agent signings, as teams with excess space (e.g., over $100 million in some cases) pursue high-value players while cap-strapped clubs restructure or release veterans. Player trades can occur year-round but are most active during the preseason, , and before the regular-season trade deadline of November 4 at 4:00 p.m. ET, extended by one week starting in to allow more midseason maneuvering. Trades require mutual consent from both teams and the player (mandatory post-June 1 under CBA rules to avoid holdouts), with compensation often involving draft picks calibrated via the NFL's trade value chart, though negotiations prioritize strategic fit over strict valuation. Post-deadline trades are rare until , as they do not affect playoff eligibility, but the extension has increased activity, with teams exchanging assets like edge rushers or quarterbacks to bolster rosters amid injuries or performance slumps. NFL contracts emphasize flexibility for teams, featuring base salaries, signing bonuses (fully guaranteed and prorated for purposes over up to five years), roster bonuses, and workout incentives, with guarantees conditionally to mitigate . Fully guaranteed money, covering , , or skill clauses, is common in signing bonuses but rare for entire deals; for instance, guarantees vest if a player reports to healthy, while skill guarantees activate based on snap counts or performance thresholds. Void years—non- clauses extending for proration—allow deferred hits but dead money if cut, enabling management without full guarantees. Restructures, converting base salary to bonuses, lower immediate burdens but accelerate future hits, a tactic used by contenders to retain talent under the cap's constraints. Average guarantees have risen with growth, but teams avoid total guarantees beyond elite quarterbacks to preserve roster turnover.

Salary cap, guarantees, and player economics

The NFL maintains a hard salary cap on team player expenditures to promote competitive balance among its 32 franchises, a mechanism established in the 1993 collective bargaining agreement (CBA) and implemented starting with the 1994 season. This cap limits the total value of player contracts, including base salaries, signing bonuses, roster bonuses, incentive bonuses, and certain other compensation, but excludes benefits like 401(k) contributions or postseason pay. Unlike soft caps in leagues such as Major League Baseball (MLB), the NFL's is strictly enforced without a luxury tax, requiring teams to comply by the start of the league year, typically mid-March, under penalty of fines up to $5 million, contract cancellations, or draft pick forfeitures. The cap amount is derived from approximately 48% of league-wide revenue, projected annually by the NFL and NFL Players Association (NFLPA), with final adjustments based on audited figures from the prior year. For the 2025 season, the cap stands at a record $279.2 million per team, reflecting a $23.8 million increase (9.3%) from the 2024 figure of $255.4 million, driven by rising media rights and ticket revenues. This yields a league total of roughly $8.92 billion in player compensation across all teams, though actual spending varies due to dead money from prior guarantees and restructurings. Teams manage cap space through cuts, trades, extensions that defer costs via signing bonuses (prorated over contract length), or void years, which accelerate future hits but provide short-term relief. Player contracts in the feature guarantees compared to other major U.S. sports leagues, where MLB, the (NBA), and National Hockey League (NHL) routinely offer fully guaranteed multi-year deals regardless of performance or injury. Guarantees typically cover signing bonuses (fully vested upon payment) and portions designated for skill, injury, or cap purposes, but base salaries beyond the first year or two are often non-guaranteed and subject to release without further obligation. First-round draft picks receive the most security, with contracts up to four years often fully guaranteed, while veterans negotiate for injury-only protections; overall, only about 57% of contract value is guaranteed on average. This structure stems from football's high injury risk and short career spans (averaging 3.3 years), incentivizing teams to avoid long-term commitments that could hamstring cap flexibility amid roster turnover. Player economics reflect stark disparities, with quarterbacks commanding the highest averages—such as Dak Prescott's $60 million annual value from his 2024 extension—while running backs and linemen earn far less despite physical demands. The league-wide average salary is approximately $5.2 million annually (as of 2025), fluctuating with the salary cap and revenue growth, but this masks realities: and fringe players often earn near the minimum ($1.03 million for veterans in 2025), and over 50% of players face cuts or retirements within three years, leading to uneven wealth accumulation. Top earners like benefit from restructurings to extend careers, but the cap's parity focus limits team spending concentration, contributing to frequent financial distress post-retirement due to injuries, poor planning, and lack of guaranteed security. In 2025, new deals totaled a record $26.8 billion, underscoring revenue growth but also the cap's role in distributing talent rather than enabling superteams.

Rules, Officiating, and Innovations

Core rules and differences from other leagues

The (NFL) governs play through rules codified in its annual rulebook, which establish a framework of discrete plays called "downs" separated by resets, prioritizing territorial advancement and scoring opportunities within time constraints. Each team fields 11 players on offense and defense, competing on a rectangular field 100 yards long between goal lines (plus 10-yard end zones at each end) and 53 1/3 yards wide, marked by yard lines every five yards. The offense gains possession after kickoffs, punts, or turnovers and must advance the ball at least 10 yards in four downs (attempts) to earn a new first down and retain possession; otherwise, it typically punts or risks . Plays end when the ball carrier is downed (by contact in NFL rules), goes , or the kneels, with forward passes allowed only from behind the and subject to eligibility restrictions (e.g., only eligible receivers downfield). Scoring comprises touchdowns (six points, by crossing the goal line or catching a pass in the end zone), extra points (one via kick or two via play from the 2-yard line), field goals (three points), and safeties (two points, when the offense concedes points in its end zone). Games divide into four 15-minute quarters separated by two-minute warnings and a intermission, though cumulative stoppages for incomplete passes, out-of-bounds runs, penalties, and challenges extend real-time duration to approximately three hours. Overtime in regular-season games activates after a tie at the end of : a coin toss determines possession, with a 10-minute period where the team receiving first gets one untimed play if the initial drive ends in a , ensuring both sides a chance unless a occurs immediately, after which standard sudden-death rules apply; ties remain possible only if the period expires without a winner, though playoff rules mandate continuation until resolution. Penalties enforce fair play, such as 10-yard offsides for defensive encroachment or 15-yard personal fouls for unnecessary roughness, with replay review available for certain calls like scoring plays or turnovers. The 40-second play clock restarts after most plays, compelling rapid huddles and snaps to prevent delay-of-game flags. NFL rules diverge from those of the (NCAA) in ways that reflect professional pacing and physicality. In the NFL, a runner is not downed until contacted by an opponent after initial ground contact, preserving risk, whereas NCAA rules deem a player down upon any body part touching the ground except hands or feet during the run. NFL guarantees the second team a possession in regular-season games (modified since to avoid first-score advantages), contrasting NCAA's alternating possessions from the 25-yard line with unlimited overtimes until a winner, eliminating ties. The NFL prohibits targeting ejections based solely on helmet-to-helmet intent (though unnecessary roughness penalties apply), a rule central to NCAA player safety protocols. differs, with the NFL running continuously on completed runs inside the final two minutes of halves unless specified stoppages, unlike NCAA's potential stops on first downs in those periods. Relative to the Canadian Football League (CFL), the mandates 11 players per side on a shorter (100 yards vs. 110 yards between goal lines) and narrower field (53 1/3 vs. 65 yards), fostering denser defenses and shorter passes. The grants four downs for 10 yards, enabling conservative strategies like running on third-and-short, while the CFL's three downs compel more aggressive passing and motion (up to all backs moving pre-snap). CFL rules allow unlimited backfield motion toward the line at the snap and eliminate the , permitting aggressive returns with blockers downfield; the restricts motion to one player and requires es for touchback protection. Play clocks vary (40 seconds in vs. 20 seconds in CFL post-whistle), accelerating CFL tempo, and CFL end zones extend 20 yards (vs. 's 10), altering rouge points (single from missed field goals out of bounds) absent in the .

Recent rule changes (e.g., 2024-2025 kickoff reforms)

Recent seasons have witnessed a decline in league-wide passing yards, with per-game totals dropping from 496 in early 2020 weeks to approximately 403 in 2024, driven by stylistic shifts toward more designed quarterback runs and rushing emphasis featuring mobile dual-threat quarterbacks, resulting in fewer pass attempts, alongside defensive adaptations including advanced schemes that promote shorter throws and increased pressures. In March 2024, NFL owners unanimously approved a one-year trial of a redesigned kickoff format, known as the Dynamic Kickoff, aimed at increasing return rates while reducing high-speed collision injuries that had declined returns to historic lows. The changes positioned the kicker at their own 35-yard line, with the other 10 kicking team players aligned at the receiving team's 40-yard line in two lines of five, while nine receiving team players stood in a "setup zone" between their 30- and 35-yard lines, with up to two returners unrestricted in the "" from the goal line to the 20-yard line. Kicks landing in the required returns without fair catches inside the 25-yard line, with s awarded at the 30-yard line if the ball entered the end zone on the fly or after bouncing into it from the ; onside kicks were limited to traditional four-over-one alignments and only in the fourth quarter or . This reform, modeled after the XFL's higher-return setup, sought to restore the play's excitement and competitiveness after touchback rates exceeded 70% in prior seasons due to injury risks. The 2024 implementation yielded measurable impacts: return rates rose to 32.8% from 21.8% in 2023, marking 332 additional returns league-wide, while rates on kickoffs dropped by 28% compared to 2023, validating the rationale despite initial skepticism from teams favoring touchbacks. In March 2025, owners voted to make the Dynamic Kickoff permanent with refinements, including shifting touchbacks to the 35-yard line for kicks entering the end zone untouched or after short bounces, further incentivizing returns by penalizing conservative kicking strategies. Additional tweaks adjusted receiving team alignment in the setup zone and clarified recovery windows, addressing gameplay fluidity observed in 2024 data where hang times decreased and non-standard kicks fell to 7%. Concurrent recent reforms include the March 2024 prohibition of the "hip-drop tackle," a 15-yard penalty for defenders lowering their body weight by rotating their hips into a ball carrier's legs during tackling, intended to curb lower-leg injuries amid rising non-contact knee damage; enforcement began in 2024 preseason with mixed compliance due to subjective calls. For 2025, owners equalized regular-season and postseason overtime rules, guaranteeing both teams a possession unless the first scores a followed by a defensive score, reducing abrupt endings while maintaining sudden-death elements thereafter. Replay assistance expanded in 2025 to cover roughing-the-passer and on hauls, empowering booth officials with direct input to on-field crews for faster, more accurate reviews. These adjustments reflect the NFL's Committee's data-driven approach, prioritizing empirical injury metrics and play balance over tradition.

Officiating controversies and replay

The National Football League has faced persistent scrutiny over officiating decisions, attributed to the high-stakes nature of professional football where split-second judgments can alter outcomes. remains inherent despite technological aids, with empirical data showing that even with multiple camera angles, subjective calls like or catches defy unanimous consensus among officials and observers. The league's officiating department, comprising full-time professionals since , oversees a system where crews of seven officials enforce rules, but controversies arise from inconsistent enforcement, particularly in contact-heavy plays. Instant replay was first implemented league-wide in to review scoring plays and turnovers, but it was discontinued after the 1991 season due to excessive game delays—averaging several minutes per review—and a mere 10% overturn rate across 374 reviews, as officials and owners deemed it inefficient for correcting clear errors without disrupting flow. Reintroduced in 1999 with coach challenges limited to three per game (successful ones earning a timeout back), the system expanded in 2004 to include booth-initiated reviews for all reviews, and by 2014, centralized replay review in under a , allowing remote officials to assist on-site crews. Further evolutions included automatic reviews for all scoring plays and turnovers since 2011, and a brief 2019 experiment with reviewable that yielded only a 5% overturn rate before non-renewal due to inconsistent application. A landmark controversy erupted during the 2012 referee lockout, stemming from a between the and the Referees Association over contract terms, which began in June 2012 and led to replacement officials—drawn from lower and non-professionals—officiating the first of the . These substitutes drew widespread criticism for erratic rulings, including improper down-and-distance signals and missed penalties, culminating in the September 24, 2012, "Fail Mary" game between the and , where replacement officials controversially awarded a game-winning to Seahawks receiver on a despite clear evidence of simultaneous possession favoring an by Packers M.D. Jennings. Public backlash, amplified by players, coaches, and declining viewership metrics, prompted an eight-year agreement on September 27, 2012, reinstating regular officials and increasing their average salary from $149,000 to $205,000 by 2019. Super Bowl games have amplified officiating disputes due to their visibility, as seen in on February 5, 2006, where defeated the 21-10 amid allegations of 10 questionable calls favoring the Steelers, including a phantom holding penalty on Seahawks tackle Sean Locklear and an upheld on a disputed catch by . More recently, LVII's March 2023 holding call on Eagles cornerback with 1:45 remaining allowed the Chiefs to run out the clock for a 38-35 victory, a decision referees later defended as contact impeding the receiver despite minimal impact on the play. Replay reviews in have similarly sparked debate, such as the October 2024 overturn of a Vikings catch by , upheld by league VP Mark Butterworth as lacking indisputable visual evidence of breaking the plane, highlighting replay's "clear and convincing" standard that prioritizes on-field presumptions. Critics argue the replay system, while reducing egregious errors, introduces new issues like prolonged delays—sometimes exceeding two minutes—and inconsistent overturn thresholds, with coach-initiated challenges succeeding at rates around 40-50% in recent seasons, though subjective plays like catches yield lower reversals due to interpretive variances among officials. In 2024, success rates rose by approximately 50% thanks to enhanced pylon camera angles providing clearer downfield views, yet fan and media perceptions of bias persist, often unsubstantiated but fueled by high-profile non-calls in divisional games, such as unpenalized facemasks in the 2024 AFC Championship. The NFL maintains officiating accuracy exceeds 95% on reviewable plays, supported by internal grading where crews average over 90% correct calls, but ongoing refinements, including potential expansions to review roughing the passer, reflect causal pressures from and viewer demands for precision.

Awards and Recognitions

Championship trophies (Super Bowl)

The is awarded annually to the winner of the , the National Football League's championship game that determines the league's season champion. First presented after on January 15, 1967, to the , the trophy symbolizes ultimate professional supremacy and has been given to 58 different teams across 58 editions as of . Commissioned in 1966 by NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle, the trophy's design originated from a sketch by Tiffany & Co. executive Oscar Riedener on a cocktail napkin, depicting a regulation-sized football mounted upright in kicking position atop a three-sided pyramidal base evoking a kicking tee. Crafted from sterling silver by Tiffany & Co. silversmiths at their Cumberland, Rhode Island facility, each trophy measures approximately 22 inches in height, weighs about 6.7 pounds (107.3 ounces), and requires several months of hand-assembly from raw metal, including molding, soldering, polishing, and engraving with the Super Bowl roman numeral, year, and winning team. Tiffany & Co. has exclusively produced the trophy since its inception, with the process emphasizing precision to ensure the football's seams and laces are accurately rendered. Originally unnamed, the award was retroactively designated the in 1971 following the death of legendary coach on September 3, 1970, from colon cancer at age 57; Lombardi had guided the Packers to victories in the first two Super Bowls () with a combined 35-10 scoreline, establishing the modern championship era after the 1970 AFL-NFL merger. The naming honors Lombardi's coaching record of 96 wins in 10 seasons with Green Bay (1959-1967), including five NFL titles before the Super Bowl era, and his emphasis on disciplined execution, though it predates his personal involvement in the trophy's creation. The winning team retains the original trophy for one year before returning it to the NFL, receiving a half-sized replica for permanent display; full-sized replicas are also distributed to players, coaches, and executives, often customized with individual engravings. Presentation occurs immediately after the game by the commissioner, typically amid and celebrations, underscoring the trophy's role as the league's preeminent hardware—distinct from conference-level prizes like the Trophy (NFC) or Trophy (AFC), which lack comparable cultural weight. No monetary value is attached to the original, estimated at production cost exceeding $25,000 due to materials and craftsmanship, but its intangible prestige drives fan and collector interest in replicas.

Individual and coaching honors

The (AP) award, established in 1957 and voted on by a nationwide panel of media members, recognizes the league's top performer during the regular season, with quarterbacks dominating recent winners; holds the record with five awards, followed by with four. of the received the 2024 honor for leading his team to a 13-4 record with 4,918 passing yards, 44 total touchdowns, and strong rushing contributions. Other key player awards include the AP Offensive Player of the Year, first given in 1972 and typically awarded to running backs or quarterbacks for exceptional statistical output, with and tying for most wins at three each; earned the 2024 award after rushing for 2,005 yards and 14 touchdowns in his debut Eagles season. The AP Defensive Player of the Year, originating in 1971, honors defensive excellence, often based on sacks, interceptions, and tackles for loss. Rookie awards, split into offensive and defensive categories since 1967 and voted by the , spotlight first-year standouts, such as quarterbacks or edge rushers who exceed expectations in production. Additional honors encompass the NFL Man of the Year, combining on-field achievement with community service since 1970; the Comeback Player of the Year for resilient recoveries; and annual teams selected by AP voters, which designate first- and second-team honors across positions based on peer performance metrics like yards, touchdowns, and efficiency. selections, determined by fan, player, and coach voting since 1950, provide an showcase, though participation has declined due to injury risks and perceived lack of competitiveness. Coaching honors feature the AP NFL Coach of the Year award, initiated in 1957 and awarded for dramatic team turnarounds or sustained success, with holding the record at four wins across his tenure with the Colts and Dolphins; Kevin O'Connell of the Minnesota Vikings claimed the 2024 edition after guiding his team to an 11-win improvement despite quarterback instability. The , inducting since 1963 in , enshrines coaches for career impact, with 29 total as of 2024, including pioneers like (founder and six-time champion coach) and modern figures like (six wins); eligibility requires five seasons retired, evaluated by a 40-plus member committee on wins, innovations, and influence.

Media Coverage and Popularity

Evolution of broadcasting

The National Football League's broadcasting history began with radio coverage, as the first national broadcast occurred on , , when aired the ' Thanksgiving Day game against the . Early radio broadcasts were sporadic and local, but they helped build fan interest by describing plays in real-time, with announcers like Graham McNamee providing commentary for 's national feed. Television entered the picture experimentally on October 22, 1939, when NBC's station W2XBS in telecast the Philadelphia Eagles' game against the to approximately 1,000 sets in the area, using rudimentary equipment with two cameras. Post-World War II, network involvement grew; ABC initiated regular telecasts in , followed by DuMont in 1951, though coverage remained limited due to technological constraints and concerns over attendance impacts. By the mid-1950s, secured rights for Sunday games from 1956 to 1969, marking the shift to more consistent national exposure, while the between the and —televised by —drew 45 million viewers and is credited with elevating professional football's profile amid competition from college and baseball. The AFL-NFL merger in 1970 spurred broadcasting innovation, with handling NFC games and covering AFC contests, alongside ABC's introduction of that year, which averaged 18 million viewers and pioneered prime-time sports entertainment with celebrity analysts like . Congress's 1961 Sports Broadcasting Act enabled league-wide TV contracts, pooling revenues and eliminating blackouts by 1973, which expanded reach and stabilized finances. The 1980s saw cable entry, as acquired its first NFL package in 1987 for 13 preseason and regular-season games, introducing 24-hour sports channels to the mix. The 1990s realignments intensified competition; outbid in 1994 for NFC rights in a $4.4 billion deal over four years, revolutionizing production with enhanced graphics and booth talent poaching, while retained Sunday Night Football until 1997. Into the 2000s, cable proliferation added in 2006 for exclusive games, and technological advances like the virtual first-down line (debuted 1998 by ) and (2001) improved viewer engagement. Streaming emerged with securing exclusively from 2022 under the NFL's $113 billion, 11-year media rights agreement announced in 2021, covering 2023–2033 and distributing games across , , , /ABC, and digital platforms. By 2025, broadcasting encompassed traditional networks alongside streaming giants; broadcast select Christmas Day games starting in 2024, reaching 55.6 million viewers for its debut slate, while streamed preseason and international games, reflecting the shift toward audiences and global accessibility. Annual rights fees exceeded $10 billion by the mid-2020s, with (/ABC) paying about $2.7 billion yearly for and wild-card games, underscoring football's dominance in U.S. media economics driven by high viewership—such as the 2024 Super Bowl's 123.7 million average audience. This evolution has prioritized production quality and multi-platform delivery, though it has raised antitrust scrutiny over blackouts and exclusivity.

Viewership metrics and cultural dominance

The National Football League's regular season games in 2025 averaged 18.7 million viewers across all platforms, the second-highest mark since records began in 1988 and a 10% increase from the 2024 average of 17.5 million. NFL programs accounted for 89 of the top 100 most-watched shows on television since the season's start, with four of the five highest-viewed games featuring the Kansas City Chiefs, including the Thanksgiving Day Chiefs-Cowboys matchup that drew 57.23 million viewers—the most-watched regular-season game in NFL history. Super Bowl LVIII, held on February 11, 2024, drew a record 123.7 million average viewers across , streaming platforms, and other outlets, marking the largest television audience in U.S. history and a 7% increase from LVII's 115 million. This figure included 62.1 million concurrent streaming viewers at peak, highlighting the event's integration of traditional and digital consumption, with an estimated total reach of 210 million Americans—nearly two-thirds of the population. In terms of cultural dominance, American football remains the most popular in the United States, with 41% of adults citing it as their favorite to watch, compared to 10% for and 9% for . Among adults who follow sports, 80% report following football, outpacing at 62% and establishing the as a central element of and weekend rituals. Surveys indicate over 75% of Americans identify as fans, with 35% classifying themselves as avid followers, a status reinforced by the league's ability to command premium advertising rates and media deals exceeding $100 billion over 11 years starting in 2023. The functions as America's preeminent annual cultural event, blending sports with halftime spectacles, commercials, and social gatherings that eclipse comparable offerings from other leagues in scale and societal permeation. Despite competition from emerging entertainment and a noted softening of interest among younger demographics, the 's viewership metrics continue to dwarf those of the NBA, MLB, and NHL, with regular-season games routinely outperforming their finals in audience size.

International broadcasting and games

The National Football League (NFL) initiated regular-season games outside the in 2005, with the defeating the 31–14 in on October 2, marking the league's first such contest. The formal International Series began in 2007, featuring the ' 13–10 victory over the at 's on October 28, establishing a recurring presence in the . Through the 2024 season, the NFL had hosted 50 regular-season games abroad, including 36 in London, five in , six in , two in , and one in . Expansion accelerated in recent years, with games in starting in 2022 (e.g., vs. in ) and a debut in in 2024 ( vs. in São Paulo). For the 2025 season, the NFL announced seven international games across five countries—the most in league history—including one in São Paulo, (Week 1), one in , , three in , one in , , and one in , , with also hosting a matchup. These efforts support the league's Global Markets Program, launched in 2022, which grants select teams exclusive marketing rights in designated international territories to cultivate fan bases and commercial opportunities. Internationally, NFL games are distributed through region-specific broadcast partners to maximize accessibility. In the , Channel 5 secured a groundbreaking agreement on August 28, 2025, enabling broader domestic viewership of select games hosted by presenters including , , and . expanded global reach with a 2025 deal to stream the Black Friday Eagles-Bears game in over 240 countries and territories without requiring a local subscription, representing the first fully worldwide NFL broadcast on the platform. These arrangements complement the league's domestic media contracts, which indirectly bolster international streaming and syndication options via platforms like NFL Game Pass in non-U.S. markets.

Cultural and Economic Impact

Societal influence and American identity

The National Football League (NFL) occupies a central place in American societal fabric, serving as a primary vehicle for communal bonding and collective ritual. With regular season games averaging 18.58 million viewers through early 2025—the highest such figure since 2010—the league commands widespread attention that transcends mere entertainment, fostering shared experiences across diverse demographics. A 2025 poll indicated that 48% of Americans follow football to some degree, outpacing other sports by nearly 20 percentage points and underscoring its status as the nation's dominant athletic pursuit. This engagement peaks during the Super Bowl, which drew a record 127.7 million viewers for its 2025 edition (LIX), establishing it as a de facto national holiday that halts routine activities for millions. The intertwines with American traditions, particularly holidays, amplifying its role in reinforcing cultural continuity. Since 1934, the have hosted an annual Day game, a practice rooted in the league's early efforts to align with family gatherings and evolving into a fixture watched by tens of millions annually. The joined as a consistent afternoon host from the , and a third rotating game was added in 2006, solidifying the holiday's association with football as a backdrop for familial and communal meals. These events evoke themes of and unity, mirroring broader American values of perseverance and inherent to the sport's physical demands and strategic depth. In shaping American identity, the NFL embodies ideals of competition, resilience, and local pride, often portrayed as a microcosm of meritocratic striving. It promotes a sense of belonging through fan communities that span urban-rural divides, with teams like the —uniquely community-owned—symbolizing grassroots investment in civic success. The league's pageantry, including military flyovers and halftime spectacles, aligns with narratives of national , though critics argue this risks conflating commercial spectacle with . Linguistically, NFL terminology permeates everyday discourse, with phrases like "" denoting desperate innovation, "blitz" for aggressive tactics, and "game plan" for structured strategy, influencing business, politics, and media . This permeation reflects football's causal role in embedding disciplined, high-stakes decision-making into cultural , distinct from less confrontational pursuits. Despite its unifying potential, the NFL's societal sway invites scrutiny for prioritizing spectacle over substance amid , yet empirical metrics affirm its enduring grip: 87% of self-identified football fans actively consume NFL content, far exceeding engagement with other leagues. As a cultural unifier in fragmented times, it channels collective energies into vicarious triumphs, though reliance on such rituals may mask underlying social atomization.

Economic contributions and job creation

The National Football League (NFL) generates substantial revenue, exceeding $23 billion in the 2024 financial year, with the majority derived from broadcasting rights, sponsorships, ticket sales, and merchandise. This revenue stream supports ancillary economic activity estimated at $5 billion annually, encompassing expenditures on production, , and related industries that amplify the league's footprint in the U.S. economy. Individual NFL franchises contribute to local economies through direct spending and induced effects, such as the injecting $213 million and supporting 1,619 jobs in 2022 via operations, fan spending, and events. Stadium developments tied to NFL teams further stimulate commercial real estate markets, fostering construction jobs, hospitality growth, and long-term urban revitalization in host cities. The alone generates $300 million to $1.3 billion in host-city revenue from , sales, and media, though net profits after leakages approximate $150 million. In terms of employment, the NFL sustains over 110,000 jobs across its 32 franchise cities, including direct roles in operations, , player support, and administrative functions, as well as indirect positions in supply chains, , and event under a 2011 labor agreement framework. Proposed stadium projects, such as those accommodating multiple s, could create upward of 13,000 operational jobs annually through sustained game-day staffing, concessions, security, and maintenance. These figures reflect the league's role in seasonal and year-round employment, particularly in and retail sectors boosted by game attendance and fan .

International expansion and challenges

The NFL initiated its international expansion through the International Series, beginning with the first regular-season game on October 28, 2007, when the New York Giants defeated the Miami Dolphins 13–10 at Wembley Stadium in London, drawing an attendance of 39,000 despite initial skepticism about overseas viability. This marked the league's deliberate push to cultivate global audiences, evolving into annual fixtures primarily in London, with expansions to Germany (Munich and Frankfurt starting in 2022) and Brazil (São Paulo in 2024). By 2025, the NFL scheduled a record seven international games, including three in London, one in Madrid, Spain, and others in Brazil and Germany, reflecting a strategy to distribute marketing rights to all 32 teams across 21 international home marketing areas as of May 2025. League commissioner has outlined ambitions for sustained growth, including up to eight international games annually—the current maximum under rules—and long-term visions of each team playing one overseas contest per season, supported by a reported $25 billion investment plan targeting markets like , , with teams such as the and assigned exploratory roles. Future milestones include Australia's first regular-season game in in 2026 and flag football's Olympic debut in 2028, aimed at leveraging grassroots programs to build participation and viewership. games have demonstrated commercial viability, with consistent sellouts averaging over 80,000 attendees—such as 86,000 for the 2024 Patriots-Jaguars matchup—and local economic boosts, including 150% revenue spikes for nearby businesses from and spending. Despite these advances, expansion faces substantial logistical hurdles, including transatlantic travel's toll on player recovery—evidenced by mandatory bye weeks post-international games to mitigate and fatigue, which disrupts schedule equity as affected teams forfeit a domestic home game in a 17-game season. High costs for transportation, accommodations, and stadium adaptations strain team budgets, while cultural barriers persist in soccer-dominant regions, where building authentic fanbases requires years of pre-game marketing but often relies heavily on American expatriates and tourists rather than organic local growth. Competitive imbalances arise from uneven preparation, with visiting teams adapting to unfamiliar environments, and broader questions the sustainability of revenue gains against these disruptions, as international attendance, while robust, has not yet translated to proportional domestic-style or participation rates abroad.

Controversies and Reforms

Health and safety issues (concussions, CTE)

The National Football League has faced longstanding concerns over concussions, defined as mild traumatic brain injuries resulting from biomechanical forces causing rapid brain movement within the skull, often from helmet-to-helmet or body collisions inherent to the sport's physics. In the 2024 season, the NFL reported 182 diagnosed concussions across preseason and regular-season games and practices, a 17% decrease from 219 in 2023 and the lowest total since tracking began in 2015, attributed partly to equipment innovations like Guardian Caps and rule enforcement. Despite reductions, concussions remain prevalent due to the cumulative impact of sub-concussive hits, with historical data showing averages of 142-148 per year from 1996-2007, underscoring the sport's risk profile even as protocols evolve. Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE), a progressive characterized by accumulation in the , has been pathologically confirmed in numerous former players post-mortem, linked to repeated head trauma but with debated direct causality for specific symptoms like mood disorders or cognitive decline. researchers identified CTE in 345 of 376 deceased former players examined (91.7%), and in 96% of a separate cohort of , though these figures derive from self-selected brain bank donations—often from players or families suspecting neurological issues—potentially inflating estimates beyond the general retired player . A 2024 survey of former professional players found 34% self-reported belief in having CTE, correlating with higher rates of depression and anxiety, though living diagnosis remains impossible and self-perception may amplify perceived risks. Broader meta-analyses estimate CTE at 53.7% among athletes with repetitive trauma histories, emphasizing dose-response patterns where longer careers correlate with severity. High-profile cases illustrate CTE's potential consequences, including suicides among affected players. , a Hall of Fame linebacker who died by self-inflicted gunshot in 2012, showed severe CTE with widespread deposits; similarly, , convicted of murder before his 2017 , exhibited the most advanced stage IV CTE ever seen in a 27-year-old, compounded by possible genetic factors. Other confirmed cases include (mild CTE, died 2015), (stage I, died 2015), and (severe, 2006), highlighting patterns of , , and neurodegeneration, though critics note incomplete causation evidence as studies rely on retrospective pathology rather than prospective controls. In response, the NFL implemented a standardized Concussion Protocol in collaboration with medical experts, mandating sideline evaluations, neuropsychological testing, and graduated return-to-play steps, with independent spotters empowered to remove players. Since 2002, over 50 rule changes have targeted injury reduction, including penalties for helmet-led contact (expanded in recent years), bans on hip-drop tackles (2024), and dynamic kickoff rules to limit high-speed collisions, contributing to preseason concussion lows in 2024. Innovations like advanced helmets and padded caps have shown efficacy in lab tests, though experts argue no equipment fully mitigates rotational forces causing diffuse axonal injury. Legally, a 2015 settlement exceeding $1 billion (uncapped since 2021) compensates retired players for diagnoses like dementia or ALS linked to football trauma, disbursing over $821 million by 2021 after eliminating race-norming in cognitive testing; however, claim denials persist, with investigations revealing high rejection rates for non-NFL-affiliated diagnoses. These measures reflect ongoing causal realism in addressing trauma's biomechanical realities, yet fundamental risks endure given football's design.

On-field integrity (scandals like )

The National Football League has encountered multiple scandals alleging systematic cheating by teams to gain competitive advantages during games, eroding perceptions of fair play and prompting investigations into rule enforcement. These incidents, often involving signal stealing, equipment tampering, or incentivized injuries, have led to fines, suspensions, and draft pick forfeitures, with Commissioner imposing penalties that faced legal challenges and appeals. In September 2007, the were implicated in "Spygate," where staff filmed the ' defensive coaches' signals from an unauthorized sideline location during a game on September 9. The investigation revealed the team had recorded opponents' signals, violating rules against electronic surveillance, though the league destroyed evidence tapes, limiting full assessment of prior occurrences. Belichick received a $500,000 personal fine, the Patriots were fined $250,000 and forfeited their 2008 first-round draft pick, and the scandal fueled debates over the extent of systematic advantages in their 2007 perfect regular season. The 2012 New Orleans Saints "Bountygate" scandal involved a pay-for-performance program from 2009 to 2011, where defensive players received cash incentives for hits causing opponents to leave games, including 5,0005,000-10,000 bounties targeting quarterbacks like in the 2009 NFC Championship and in 2010. An probe, prompted by whistleblower allegations, confirmed head coach authorized the scheme; he was suspended for the entire 2012 season without pay, general manager for eight games in 2012 and the full 2013 season, assistant coach for six games, and former defensive coordinator indefinitely (reduced to one year in 2013). The Saints forfeited second-round draft picks in 2012 and 2013 and paid a $500,000 fine, highlighting risks of incentivizing dangerous play beyond standard tackling rewards. Deflategate emerged during the January 18, 2015, , where officials noted 11 of 12 game balls measured below the required 12.5-13.5 psi pressure limit, potentially aiding grip in cold weather. The independent Wells Report, released May 6, 2015, concluded it more probable than not that was aware of and authorized equipment staff to deflate balls, based on text messages and attendant testimonies, though no direct order was proven and scientific analyses debated environmental factors like the . received a four-game suspension (initially announced May 11, 2015, upheld on appeal), the a $1 million fine and forfeiture of a 2016 first-round and 2017 fourth-round pick; federal courts vacated then reinstated the penalty, which served at the 2016 season's start, amid criticisms of the 's chain-of-command protocol and inconsistent enforcement. These cases underscore recurring tensions between competitive pressures and rule adherence, with Goodell's disciplinary record showing five overturned high-profile appeals by 2015, raising questions about procedural fairness and deterrence efficacy. Despite penalties, the involved teams achieved subsequent successes, prompting scrutiny of whether fines and lost picks sufficiently restore integrity without structural reforms like enhanced monitoring.

Player conduct and criminality

Since 2000, NFL players have faced over 1,000 arrests for offenses more serious than traffic violations, including assault, , DUI, weapons possession, and drug-related charges, as tracked in a comprehensive database. This averages roughly 40-50 arrests annually among approximately 1,700 active players, with common categories encompassing 215 DUIs, 99 drug violations, 96 incidents, and 71 assaults through mid-2024 data compilations. Arrest rates appear stable over time, with no pronounced decline evident despite increased media scrutiny, though individual team variations exist—such as higher incidences among certain franchises like the or Minnesota Vikings. Comparative analyses reveal that NFL players exhibit lower overall arrest rates than the general U.S. male population aged 20-39, a demographic with elevated criminal involvement due to factors like youth and . However, rates for violent crimes—including assaults, homicides, and —exceed national averages in multiple years, with NFL players showing disproportionate involvement in such offenses relative to their cohort. For instance, between 2000 and 2014, about 6.8% of players experienced at least one arrest, often for violence-linked charges that correlate with the sport's physical demands, celebrity status, and access to high-risk environments. High-profile examples include tight end Aaron Hernandez's 2015 first-degree murder conviction and life sentence for a 2013 killing, committed while under contract with the . The league maintains a Personal Conduct Policy authorizing fines, suspensions, or terminations for criminal acts or behaviors undermining NFL standards, with penalties escalating for repeat offenders or severe violations. Enforcement has intensified post-2014, following scandals, yet controversies persist over consistency—such as Ray Rice's initial two-game suspension for assaulting his fiancée (caught on video in 2014), later escalated to indefinite before reinstatement after . Other significant cases include Deshaun Watson's 11-game ban and $5 million fine in 2022 for multiple sexual misconduct allegations during his time with the Houston Texans, and linebacker Von Miller's four-game suspension in October 2024 for an assault incident. These incidents have prompted mandatory counseling programs and partnerships with advocacy groups, though critics argue the policy's application remains influenced by public pressure rather than uniform standards.

Labor disputes and union actions

The National Football League Players Association (NFLPA), established in 1956, has engaged in multiple work stoppages to negotiate agreements (CBAs) covering salaries, benefits, free agency, and . Early disputes focused on pensions and basic player rights, evolving into battles over compensation tied to the league's growing revenues. These actions often pitted players against owners, who leveraged economic power from broadcast deals to resist concessions, resulting in mixed outcomes for the union. The first NFLPA strike occurred from July 3 to July 15, 1968, involving 36 of 48 players initially walking out over inadequate pension contributions; owners responded with a lockout, leading to a brief agreement that increased minimum salaries to $12,000 and improved pensions to $20,000 annually after retirement. A second strike followed from July 13 to August 3, 1970, after owners locked out veteran players from training camps; this yielded the league's inaugural CBA, guaranteeing salaries and establishing grievance procedures, though free agency remained elusive under the restrictive Rozelle Rule allowing commissioner vetoes on player movement. Subsequent actions included a 1974 demanding guaranteed pay and abolition of the Rozelle Rule, which ended after 43 days with modest pension enhancements but no free agency. The 1982 strike lasted 57 days, shortening the season to nine games and canceling $184 million in player salaries without significant gains, as players rejected a 55% share proposal amid internal divisions. The 1987 , from September 22 to October 15, sought a percentage of gross revenues and free agency; owners hired replacement players for three weeks of games, drawing 18% attendance drops and fan backlash, while some veterans crossed picket lines, leading the NFLPA to end the action without a deal—prompting union decertification and an antitrust that secured unrestricted free agency in the 1993 CBA. In the , the 2011 lockout, initiated by owners on after CBA expiration, lasted 132 days and halted free agency, workouts, and medical access, costing an estimated $4 billion in economic impact; players decertified to pursue antitrust claims, but federal mediation yielded a 10-year CBA on July 25, raising player revenue share to 55% (from 47% all-sources), introducing a wage scale capping first-round picks at $12-15 million over four years, and extending the season to 16 games by 2021—outcomes owners hailed for cost controls amid $9 billion annual revenues, while players gained health benefits but conceded on backloaded pay structures favoring veterans. Subsequent negotiations, including the 2020 CBA extension ratified by 59% of players, added $1 billion in benefits like expanded protocols but locked in the 17-game schedule, reflecting union compromises amid owners' leverage from escalating media deals exceeding $10 billion yearly. These disputes underscore the NFLPA's challenges in unifying players against owners' financial incentives, with strikes rarely achieving immediate demands but cumulatively enabling salary caps, guaranteed contracts, and average earnings surpassing $2.7 million per player by 2023.

Political activism and anthem protests

The protests originated in August 2016 when quarterback chose not to stand for the pre-game performance of "," initially sitting on the bench during preseason games to draw attention to what he described as racial injustice and police brutality against Black Americans. After discussions with former and player , Kaepernick switched to starting August 26, 2016, stating the posture showed greater respect for the flag while protesting systemic issues. The 49ers organization clarified that players were encouraged but not required to stand for the anthem, reflecting an initial tolerance for individual expression. The action spread unevenly across the league in 2016 and 2017, with a small number of players—fewer than 10 in most weeks—joining by , raising fists, or remaining in locker rooms, often citing solidarity with concerns over police violence and inequality. Participation peaked on September 24, 2017, when over 200 players protested, largely in response to comments by then-President , who during a speech in urged NFL owners to fire any player who "disrespects our " by , calling such individuals "sons of bitches" and encouraging fans to walk out. Trump reiterated opposition in subsequent statements, praising a potential NFL policy against and questioning whether protesters "should be in the country." Critics, including veterans and military families, argued the protests disrespected the anthem's symbolism of national unity and sacrifice, regardless of intent, while supporters framed them as protected speech highlighting empirical disparities in outcomes. Public opinion remained divided, with polls showing consistent majorities opposing during the as a protest method—typically 50-60% disapproval—while a larger share (around 84%) affirmed players' general right to express political views, often preferring alternative forms like post-game statements. A 2017 ESPN survey found 55% believed media coverage overemphasized the protests, and regional variations emerged, with stronger opposition in conservative areas. The NFL faced internal pressure from owners amid fan backlash; in May 2018, league owners approved a fining teams up to $14 million for uncorrected anthem non-compliance, allowing players to remain in locker rooms as an option, though Commissioner emphasized unity. The rule was suspended shortly after amid player union objections, and protests tapered off by 2018, with isolated instances thereafter. Empirical data linked the protests to measurable declines in NFL engagement, particularly viewership; a 2016 survey indicated 32% of adults were less likely to watch games due to the , correlating with an 8-10% drop in television ratings that season, sustained into 2017 before partial recovery. Studies confirmed unambiguous protests reduced demand by about 15%, disproportionately in Trump-voting regions, attributing causation to viewer alienation over perceived flag disrespect rather than the underlying issues protested. Kaepernick, unsigned after 2016, settled a against the in 2019 for a reported $80 million, alleging tied to his . The episode highlighted tensions between player expression and league commercial interests, with no return to widespread anthem protests by 2025.

References

  1. https://www.[espn.com](/page/ESPN.com)/nfl/story/_/id/44490561/sources-nfl-owners-ok-kickoff-ot-replay-rule-changes
  2. http://www.[espn.com](/page/ESPN.com)/nfl/topics/_/page/nfl-labor-negotiations
  3. https://thesportjournal.[org](/page/.org)/article/the-2011-national-football-league-labor-dispute/
  4. https://www.[forbes](/page/Forbes).com/sites/sportsmoney/2011/07/21/who-won-the-2011-nfl-lockout/
  5. https://onlabor.[org](/page/.org)/unity-and-the-1987-nfl-players-strike/
Add your contribution
Related Hubs
Contribute something
User Avatar
No comments yet.