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1973 NFL season





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The 1973 NFL season was the 54th regular season of the National Football League. The season was highlighted by O. J. Simpson becoming the first player to rush for 2,000 yards in one season.

1973 NFL season
Regular season
DurationSeptember 16 – December 16, 1973
Playoffs
Start dateDecember 22, 1973
AFC ChampionsMiami Dolphins
NFC ChampionsMinnesota Vikings
Super Bowl VIII
DateJanuary 13, 1974
SiteRice Stadium, Houston, Texas
ChampionsMiami Dolphins
Pro Bowl
DateJanuary 20, 1974
SiteArrowhead Stadium,
Kansas City, Missouri
  • NFL seasons
  • 1974
  • 1973 NFL season is located in the United States
    Colts

    Colts

    Patriots

    Patriots

    Bills

    Bills

    Dolphins

    Dolphins

    Jets

    Jets

    Bengals

    Bengals

    Browns

    Browns

    Oilers

    Oilers

    Steelers

    Steelers

    Broncos

    Broncos

    Chiefs

    Chiefs

    Raiders

    Raiders

    Chargers

    Chargers

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    AFC teams: West, Central, East
    1973 NFL season is located in the United States
    Cowboys

    Cowboys

    Giants

    Giants

    Eagles

    Eagles

    Cardinals

    Cardinals

    Redskins

    Redskins

    Bears

    Bears

    Lions

    Lions

    Packers

    Packers

    Vikings

    Vikings

    Falcons

    Falcons

    Rams

    Rams

    Saints

    Saints

    49ers

    49ers

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    NFC teams: West, Central, East
    Simpson pictured in the game where he became the first running back to gain over 2,000 yards in a season on Dec. 16, 1973.

    The season ended with Super Bowl VIII when the Miami Dolphins repeated as league champions by defeating the Minnesota Vikings 24–7atRice StadiuminHouston, Texas. The Pro Bowl took place on January 20, 1974, at Arrowhead StadiuminKansas City, Missouri; the AFC beat the NFC 15–13.

    Draft

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    The 1973 NFL Draft was held from January 30 to 31, 1973 at New York City's Americana Hotel. With the first pick, the Houston Oilers selected defensive end John Matuszak from the University of Tampa.

    Major rule changes

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    Jersey numbering system

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    The system would later be modified throughout the years to increase the available numbers to different positions due to increasing team rosters and teams retiring numbers (see also National Football League uniform numbers § Post-1973 changes ).

    Other new rules

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    Division races

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    Starting in 1970, and until 2002, there were three divisions (Eastern, Central and Western) in each conference. The winners of each division, and a fourth "wild card" team based on the best non-division winner, qualified for the playoffs. The tiebreaker rules were changed to start with head-to-head competition, followed by division records, records against common opponents, and records in conference play.

    National Football Conference

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    Week Eastern Central Western Wild Card
    1 4 teams 1–0–0 2 teams 1–0–0 2 teams 1–0–0 5 teams 1–0–0
    2 Dallas, St. Louis (tie) 2–0–0 Minnesota 2–0–0 Los Angeles 2–0–0 Dallas, St. Louis (tie) 2–0–0
    3 Dallas 3–0–0 Minnesota 3–0–0 Los Angeles 3–0–0 St. Louis 2–1–0
    4 Washington* 3–1–0 Minnesota 4–0–0 Los Angeles 4–0–0 Dallas 3–1–0
    5 Washington 4–1–0 Minnesota 5–0–0 Los Angeles 5–0–0 Dallas 3–2–0
    6 Washington 5–1–0 Minnesota 6–0–0 Los Angeles 6–0–0 Dallas 4–2–0
    7 Washington 5–2–0 Minnesota 7–0–0 Los Angeles 6–1–0 Dallas* 4–3–0
    8 Washington* 5–3–0 Minnesota 8–0–0 Los Angeles 6–2–0 Atlanta* 5–3–0
    9 Washington* 6–3–0 Minnesota 9–0–0 Los Angeles 7–2–0 Atlanta* 6–3–0
    10 Washington* 7–3–0 Minnesota 9–1–0 Los Angeles 8–2–0 Atlanta* 7–3–0
    11 Washington 8–3–0 Minnesota 10–1–0 Los Angeles 9–2–0 Atlanta 8–3–0
    12 Washington* 9–3–0 Minnesota 10–2–0 Los Angeles 10–2–0 Atlanta* 8–4–0
    13 Dallas* 9–4–0 Minnesota 11–2–0 Los Angeles 11–2–0 Washington 9–4–0
    14 Dallas 10–4–0 Minnesota 12–2–0 Los Angeles 12–2–0 Washington 10–4–0

    American Football Conference

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    Week Eastern Central Western Wild Card
    1 Buffalo, Miami (tie) 1–0–0 Cleveland, Pittsburgh (tie) 1–0–0 Denver 1–0–0 2 teams 1–0–0
    2 NY Jets 1–1–0 Pittsburgh 2–0–0 4 teams 1–1–0 7 teams 1–1–0
    3 Buffalo 2–1–0 Pittsburgh 3–0–0 Kansas City 2–1–0 3 teams 2–1–0
    4 Buffalo, Miami (tie) 3–1–0 Pittsburgh 4–0–0 Kansas City 3–1–0 Buffalo, Miami (tie) 3–1–0
    5 Buffalo, Miami (tie) 4–1–0 Pittsburgh 4–1–0 Kansas City 3–1–1 Buffalo, Miami (tie) 4–1–0
    6 Miami 5–1–0 Pittsburgh 5–1–0 Kansas City 3–2–1 Cincinnati* 4–2–0
    7 Miami 6–1–0 Pittsburgh 6–1–0 Oakland 4–2–1 Buffalo 5–2–0
    8 Miami 7–1–0 Pittsburgh 7–1–0 Oakland 5–2–1 Buffalo 5–3–0
    9 Miami 8–1–0 Pittsburgh 8–1–0 Oakland* 5–3–1 Kansas City* 5–3–1
    10 Miami 9–1–0 Pittsburgh 8–2–0 Kansas City 6–3–1 Cleveland 6–3–1
    11 Miami 10–1–0 Pittsburgh 8–3–0 Denver 6–3–2 Cleveland 7–3–1
    12 Miami 11–1–0 Cincinnati* 8–4–0 Oakland 7–4–1 Pittsburgh 8–4–0
    13 Miami 11–2–0 Cincinnati* 9–4–0 Oakland 8–3–1 Pittsburgh 9–4–0
    14 Miami 12–2–0 Cincinnati* 10–4–0 Oakland 9–4–1 Pittsburgh 10–4–0

    Final standings

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    Tiebreakers

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    Playoffs

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    Note: Prior to the 1975 season, the home teams in the playoffs were decided based on a yearly rotation. Had the 1973 playoffs been seeded, the AFC divisional matchups would have been #3 Oakland at #2 Cincinnati and #4 wild card Pittsburgh at #1 Miami; the NFC matchups would not have changed, although #3 Dallas would have had to travel to #2 Los Angeles, and #1 Minnesota would have had home field for the NFC championship game.
    Dec 22 – Metropolitan Stadium
    WC Washington 20
    Dec 30 – Texas Stadium
    Cent. Minnesota 27
    NFC
    Cent. Minnesota 27
    Dec 23 – Texas Stadium
    East Dallas 10
    NFC Championship
    West Los Angeles 16
    Jan 13 – Rice Stadium
    East Dallas 27
    Divisional playoffs
    NFC Minnesota 7
    Dec 22 – Oakland Coliseum
    AFC Miami 24
    Super Bowl VIII
    WC Pittsburgh 14
    Dec 30 – Miami Orange Bowl
    West Oakland 33
    AFC
    West Oakland 10
    Dec 23 – Miami Orange Bowl
    East Miami 27
    AFC Championship
    Cent. Cincinnati 16
    East Miami 34


  • talk
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  • Awards

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    Most Valuable Player O. J. Simpson, running back, Buffalo
    Coach of the Year Chuck Knox, Los Angeles
    Offensive Player of the Year O. J. Simpson, running back, Buffalo
    Defensive Player of the Year Dick Anderson, safety, Miami
    Offensive Rookie of the Year Chuck Foreman, running back, Minnesota
    Defensive Rookie of the Year Wally Chambers, defensive tackle, Chicago
    Man of the Year Len Dawson, quarterback, Kansas City
    Comeback Player of the Year Roman Gabriel, quarterback, Eagles
    Super Bowl Most Valuable Player Larry Csonka, running back, Miami

    Coaching changes

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    Offseason

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    In-season

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    Stadium changes

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    The Buffalo Bills moved from their original home at War Memorial Stadium and played their first season at Rich Stadium.

    From October 7, the New York Giants moved from Yankee Stadium to the Yale BowlinNew Haven, Connecticut, where they would play the rest of 1973 and all of 1974. The Giants were forced out of Yankee Stadium after it closed to be renovated to a baseball-only venue. Also, a new Giants StadiuminEast Rutherford, New Jersey was already under construction by 1973, but it would not open until 1976.

    Uniform changes

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    Television

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    This was the fourth and final year under the league's broadcast contracts with ABC, CBS, and NBC to televise Monday Night Football, the NFC package, and the AFC package, respectively. All three networks renewed their deals for another four years.[2]

    New television blackout rules

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    Through December 1972, all NFL home games (including championship games and Super Bowls) were blacked-out on television in each team's respective city. The first exception was Super Bowl VIIinLos Angeles in January 1973; the league changed their policy to black out home games only if tickets had not sold out. This expanded the league's television presence in teams' home cities on gameday.

    The policy was put into effect when, in 1972, the Washington Redskins made the playoffs for only the second time in 27 seasons. Because all home games were blacked-out, politicians — including devout football fan President Richard Nixon — were not able to watch their home team win. NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle refused to lift the blackout, despite a plea from Attorney General Richard Kleindienst, who then suggested that the U.S. Congress re-evaluate the NFL's antitrust exemption. Rozelle agreed to lift the blackout for Super Bowl VII on an "experimental basis", but Congress intervened before the 1973 season anyway, passing Public Law 93-107; it eliminated the blackout of games in the home market so long as the game was sold out by 72 hours before kickoff.[3]

    With the new rule, the NFL recorded over one million no-shows by ticketholders to regular season games in 1973.[4] On March 23, 2015, the NFL's owners voted to suspend the blackout rules for 2015, meaning that all games would be televised in their home markets, regardless of ticket sales.[5] The blackout rule has been suspended for every subsequent season through 2023.

    Week 8 Bay Area controversy

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    The Congressional action caused an issue for CBS affiliate KPIX in the Bay Area. For Week 8 of the season, the Oakland Raiders were scheduled to host the New York GiantsatOakland Coliseum while the San Francisco 49ers would travel to Tiger Stadium to play the Detroit Lions. As each game involved an NFC road team, CBS held the rights to both games.

    Since it was expected that the Raiders game would be blacked out in the Bay Area in any event, both games were scheduled for the 4:00 EST time slot, an uncontroversial arrangement at the time since it benefited both 49ers fans watching their game on television and Raiders fans attending their game in person. Following the enactment of Public Law 93-107 (and with concepts such as flexible scheduling decades away), KPIX had to decide which game to show once it became obvious the Oakland contest would sell out. Unwilling to sell the rights to either game to an independent station, KPIX (with the approval of CBS and the NFL) announced they would switch between both games, with an intent to screen the most consequential parts of each.

    Technical limitations and production miscues led to the effort being widely panned by pundits and fans of both teams. Among other issues, KPIX failed to show the Raiders' opening touchdown while both sets of announcers were frequently cut off mid-sentence. Following the season, NFL schedule makers would ensure similar network conflicts in New York City and the Bay Area (and, later, Los Angeles after the Raiders moved there) were avoided. However, later improvements to technology and production standards would eventually allow the NFL to replicate KPIX's innovation on a national scale, culminating with the successful introduction of NFL Red Zonein2009.

    References

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    1. ^ "Last Undefeated NFL Teams in Each Season". Archived from the original on January 17, 2013. Retrieved December 26, 2012.
  • ^ Brulia, Tim. "A CHRONOLOGY OF PRO FOOTBALL ON TELEVISION: Part 2" (PDF). Pro Football Researchers.
  • ^ Pro-Football-Reference.com blog: Rubin, Rozelle, the Redskins, and Super Bowl Blackouts
  • ^ "1 million no-shows recorded by NFL". Nashua Telegraph. (New Hampshire). Associated Press. December 17, 1973. p. 32.
  • ^ "NFL to suspend TV blackout policy". ESPN.com. Associated Press. March 23, 2015.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1973_NFL_season&oldid=1218759709"
     



    Last edited on 13 April 2024, at 17:36  





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    This page was last edited on 13 April 2024, at 17:36 (UTC).

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