National Football League Century Division

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The NFL Century Division was one of the four divisions of the National Football League that was created prior to the 1967 season when the league realigned its existing Eastern and Western Conferences. The division existed for three seasons until 1970 when the National Football League and American Football League merged.

During the 1960s, the NFL labeled all of its divisions with the first letter "C." The other three divisions were all based upon their geographic locations: the Capitol division centered around Washington, DC, the Central in the upper Midwest, and the Coastal had two teams on each coast. The Century's name, however, appears not to have any association to geography. Its host cities varied widely: Cleveland was in the midwest, Pittsburgh in the Appalachians, New Orleans in the Deep South, St. Louis in the Great Plains and New York was on the East Coast.

The NFL Century Division had four teams in any given year. However, in the three year period of its existence it had five different members: Cleveland Browns, New Orleans Saints, New York Giants, Pittsburgh Steelers, and St. Louis Cardinals. In 1967 and 1969 the four teams were: Cleveland, New York, Pittsburgh, and St. Louis. In 1968 New York and New Orleans switched divisions with New York spending the year in the NFL Capitol Division. After the AFL-NFL Merger in 1970, the conference was disbanded; New York rejoined what was the Capitol Division and had become the NFC East; St. Louis also joined the NFC East. Cleveland and Pittsburgh joined the AFC Central and New Orleans became a member of the NFC West.

[edit] Division champions

Season Team Record Playoff Results
NFL Century
1967 Cleveland Browns 9-5-0 Lost NFL Divisional Playoffs
1968 Cleveland Browns 10-4-0 Lost NFL Championship
1969 Cleveland Browns 10-3-1 Lost NFL Championship

[edit] See also

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