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Regular season | |||
Duration | September 7, 2006 | – December 31, 2006||
Playoffs | |||
Start date | January 6, 2007 | ||
AFC Champions | Indianapolis Colts | ||
NFC Champions | Chicago Bears | ||
Super Bowl XLI | |||
Date | February 4, 2007 | ||
Site | Dolphin Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida | ||
Champions | Indianapolis Colts | ||
Pro Bowl | |||
Date | February 10, 2007 | ||
Site | Aloha Stadium | ||
National Football League seasons
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The 2006 NFL season was the 87th regular season of the National Football League.
Regular season play was held from September 7 to December 31, 2006. The NFL title was eventually won by the Indianapolis Colts when they defeated the Chicago Bears; the Super Bowl championship game, at Dolphin Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida on February 4.
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The was the first season that the NFL used a "flexible-scheduling" for the last few weeks of the season, allowing the league flexibility in selecting games to air on Sunday night, in order to feature the current hottest, streaking teams. This was implemented to prevent games featuring losing teams from airing during primetime late in the season, while at the same time allowing NBC to rake in more money off of the higher ratings from surprise, playoff-potential teams that more fans would enjoy watching.
Under the flexible-scheduling system, all Sunday games in the affected weeks tentatively had the start times of 1 p.m. ET/10 a.m. PT, except those played in the Pacific or Mountain time zones, which will have a tentative start time of 4 p.m. ET/1 p.m. PT (or 4:15 p.m. ET/1:15 p.m. PT if it is a doubleheader weekend). On the Tuesday 12 days before the games, the league moved one game to the primetime slot, and possibly one or more 1 p.m. slotted games to the 4 p.m. slots. During the last week of the season, the league could re-schedule games as late as six days before the contests so that all of the television networks will be able to broadcast a game that has playoff implications.
This was the first season that NBC held the rights to televise Sunday Night Football, becoming the beneficiaries by negotiating the new flexible-scheduling system.[1] ESPN became the new home of Monday Night Football, replacing sister network American Broadcasting Company, who chose to opt out of broadcasting league games.[1] Meanwhile, CBS and Fox renewed their television contracts to the American Football Conference and the National Football Conference packages, respectively.[2]
W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, PCT = Winning Percentage, PF= Points For, PA = Points Against
Clinched playoff seeds are marked in parentheses and shaded in green. No ties occurred this year.
AFC East | |||||||
Team | W | L | PCT | PF | PA | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(4) New England Patriots | 12 | 4 | .750 | 385 | 237 | Details | |
(5) New York Jets | 10 | 6 | .625 | 316 | 295 | Details | |
Buffalo Bills | 7 | 9 | .438 | 300 | 311 | Details | |
Miami Dolphins | 6 | 10 | .375 | 260 | 283 | Details | |
AFC North | |||||||
Team | W | L | PCT | PF | PA | ||
(2) Baltimore Ravens | 13 | 3 | .813 | 353 | 201 | Details | |
Cincinnati Bengals [a] | 8 | 8 | .500 | 373 | 331 | Details | |
Pittsburgh Steelers | 8 | 8 | .500 | 353 | 315 | Details | |
Cleveland Browns | 4 | 12 | .250 | 238 | 356 | Details | |
AFC South | |||||||
Team | W | L | PCT | PF | PA | ||
(3) Indianapolis Colts [d] | 12 | 4 | .750 | 427 | 360 | Details | |
Tennessee Titans [b] | 8 | 8 | .500 | 324 | 400 | Details | |
Jacksonville Jaguars | 8 | 8 | .500 | 371 | 274 | Details | |
Houston Texans | 6 | 10 | .375 | 267 | 366 | Details | |
AFC West | |||||||
Team | W | L | PCT | PF | PA | ||
(1) San Diego Chargers | 14 | 2 | .875 | 492 | 303 | Details | |
(6) Kansas City Chiefs [c] | 9 | 7 | .562 | 331 | 315 | Details | |
Denver Broncos | 9 | 7 | .562 | 319 | 305 | Details | |
Oakland Raiders | 2 | 14 | .125 | 168 | 332 | Details |
NFC East | |||||||
Team | W | L | PCT | PF | PA | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(3) Philadelphia Eagles | 10 | 6 | .625 | 398 | 328 | Details | |
(5) Dallas Cowboys | 9 | 7 | .562 | 425 | 350 | Details | |
(6) New York Giants [f] | 8 | 8 | .500 | 355 | 362 | Details | |
Washington Redskins | 5 | 11 | .313 | 307 | 376 | Details | |
NFC North | |||||||
Team | W | L | PCT | PF | PA | ||
(1) Chicago Bears | 13 | 3 | .813 | 427 | 255 | Details | |
Green Bay Packers | 8 | 8 | .500 | 301 | 366 | Details | |
Minnesota Vikings | 6 | 10 | .375 | 282 | 327 | Details | |
Detroit Lions | 3 | 13 | .188 | 305 | 398 | Details | |
NFC South | |||||||
Team | W | L | PCT | PF | PA | ||
(2) New Orleans Saints [e] | 10 | 6 | .625 | 413 | 322 | Details | |
Carolina Panthers | 8 | 8 | .500 | 270 | 305 | Details | |
Atlanta Falcons | 7 | 9 | .438 | 292 | 328 | Details | |
Tampa Bay Buccaneers | 4 | 12 | .250 | 211 | 353 | Details | |
NFC West | |||||||
Team | W | L | PCT | PF | PA | ||
(4) Seattle Seahawks | 9 | 7 | .562 | 335 | 341 | Details | |
St. Louis Rams | 8 | 8 | .500 | 367 | 381 | Details | |
San Francisco 49ers | 7 | 9 | .438 | 298 | 412 | Details | |
Arizona Cardinals | 5 | 11 | .313 | 314 | 389 | Details |
Playoff seeds | ||
Seed | AFC | NFC |
---|---|---|
1 | San Diego Chargers (West winner) | Chicago Bears (North winner) |
2 | Baltimore Ravens (North winner) | New Orleans Saints (South winner) |
3 | Indianapolis Colts (South winner) | Philadelphia Eagles (East winner) |
4 | New England Patriots (East winner) | Seattle Seahawks (West winner) |
5 | New York Jets | Dallas Cowboys |
6 | Kansas City Chiefs | New York Giants |
January 7 - Gillette Stadium | January 14 - Qualcomm Stadium | |||||||||||||||||
5 | N.Y. Jets | 16 | ||||||||||||||||
4 | New England | 24 | ||||||||||||||||
4 | New England | 37 | January 21 - RCA Dome | |||||||||||||||
1 | San Diego | 21 | ||||||||||||||||
AFC | ||||||||||||||||||
January 6 - RCA Dome | 4 | New England | 34 | |||||||||||||||
January 13 - M&T Bank Stadium | ||||||||||||||||||
3 | Indianapolis | 38 | ||||||||||||||||
6 | Kansas City | 8 | AFC Championship | |||||||||||||||
3 | Indianapolis | 15 | ||||||||||||||||
3 | Indianapolis | 23 | February 4 - Dolphin Stadium | |||||||||||||||
2 | Baltimore | 6 | ||||||||||||||||
Wild Card Playoffs | ||||||||||||||||||
Divisional Playoffs | ||||||||||||||||||
January 7 - Lincoln Financial Field | A3 | Indianapolis | 29 | |||||||||||||||
January 13 - Louisiana Superdome | ||||||||||||||||||
N1 | Chicago | 17 | ||||||||||||||||
6 | N.Y. Giants | 20 | Super Bowl XLI | |||||||||||||||
3 | Philadelphia | 24 | ||||||||||||||||
3 | Philadelphia | 23 | January 21 - Soldier Field | |||||||||||||||
2 | New Orleans | 27 | ||||||||||||||||
NFC | ||||||||||||||||||
January 6 - Qwest Field | 2 | New Orleans | 14 | |||||||||||||||
January 14 - Soldier Field | ||||||||||||||||||
1 | Chicago | 39 | ||||||||||||||||
5 | Dallas | 20 | NFC Championship | |||||||||||||||
4 | Seattle | 24 | ||||||||||||||||
4 | Seattle | 21 | ||||||||||||||||
1 | Chicago | 27* | ||||||||||||||||
The 2006 season marked the debut of new officiating uniforms which are supposed to be more comfortable for officials to wear in extreme weather over the old polyester uniforms. The uniforms were designed by Reebok using a proprietary material technology to keep officials both warm and dry during the winter months of the season. On the shirt, the position and number are removed from the front pocket and the lettering and numbers on the back side were black-on-white and are smaller print and the sleeve shows the uniform number. Officials also wore full-length black pants with white stripe during the winter months to stay warm, which was criticized by media and internet board posters. This was the first major design overhaul since 1979, when the position name was added to the shirt, but later abbreviated in 1982.
On March 20, 2006, Paul Tagliabue announced his plans to retire as NFL commissioner. During an NFL meeting in Northbrook, Illinois, on August 8, league team owners selected Roger Goodell, the NFL's then-current chief operating officer, as the new commissioner. Tagliabue continued to serve as commissioner until Goodell officially replaced him on Friday September 1.
Tagliabue became NFL commissioner on October 26, 1989. During his tenure, the league has added four new teams; saw four franchises move (including two franchises—the Rams and Raiders—from Los Angeles, the second-largest television market in the U.S.); the construction of seventeen new stadiums; began its own in-house television specialty cable network, the NFL Network; has greatly increased television rights fees with its broadcasters, including the addition of the Fox network; and has maintained labor peace with the players' union.
For the first time since Super Bowl IV at the conclusion of the 1969 season, the official NFL game ball was known as "The Duke" in honor of Wellington Mara, whose family owns the New York Giants. Son John is the current CEO of the team. The NFL first used "The Duke" ball in honor of Mara in 1941 after then-Chicago Bears owner George Halas and then-Giants owner Tim Mara (Wellington's father) made a deal with Wilson Sporting Goods to become the league's official supplier of game balls, a relationship that continued into its sixty-fifth year in 2006.[4]
"The Duke" ball was discontinued after the 1970 AFL-NFL Merger, and the merged league began using a different standardized ball made by Wilson. The only other time that "The Duke" ball name was used was during the two Thanksgiving Classic games in 2004.
One side of the new 2006 "Duke" football featured the NFL shield logo in gold, the words "The Duke", and the NFL commissioner's signature. The obverse side has a small NFL logo above the needle bladder hole, the conference names between the hole, and the words "National Football League" in gold. As per the custom, specially branded balls were used for the first week of the 2006 season ("Opening Kickoff"), Thanksgiving Classic, conference championships, Super Bowl XLI and Pro Bowl games.
Through week 11 of the season, all NFL games had been sold out, and for the 24th time, all blackout restrictions had been lifted.[5] The streak was ended by the Jacksonville at Buffalo game in Week 12.[6]
The New Orleans Saints returned to their home at the Louisiana Superdome in Week Three. The Saints played home games during the 2005 NFL Season in San Antonio, TX, Baton Rouge, LA, and East Rutherford, NJ, due to the damage to the Superdome caused by Hurricane Katrina. The Saints finished the regular season 10–6, clinched a 1st Round Bye, and beat the Philadelphia Eagles in the Divisional Round of the playoffs. The Chicago Bears defeated the Saints in the NFC Championship, 39–14.
Starting September 18, fans were able to download highlights of their teams' games through Apple's iTunes Store. Each video costs US$1.99 each but fans have the chance of buying a "Follow Your Team season ticket" which brings every game of that team to the fan for $24.99.[5]
Also available will be NFL GameDay, the NFL Network's comprehensive Sunday night review which features post-game reactions and game analysis, all for $1.99 a show or $19.99 for the full season.
Lamar Hunt died in Dallas, Texas on December 13 from complications from prostate cancer at the age of 74. He is credited with challenging the NFL with the formation of the American Football League, which led to the subsequent merger of the two leagues.
At 3 a.m. on January 1, 2007, Denver Broncos cornerback Darrent Williams was shot and killed in Denver, within hours after the last regular season game against the San Francisco 49ers. Less than two months after, on February 24, 2007, Broncos running back Damien Nash collapsed and died after a charity basketball game at a high school. Both players died at the age of 24.
The following teams and players set all-time NFL records during the regular season:
Record | Player/Team | Date/Opponent | Previous Record Holder[7] |
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Most Points, Career | Morten Andersen, Atlanta | December 16 vs. Dallas | Gary Anderson, 1982–2004 (2,434) |
Most Field Goals, Career | Morten Andersen, Atlanta | December 24 vs. Carolina | Gary Anderson, 1982–2004 (538) |
Most Passes Completed, Career | Brett Favre, Green Bay | December 17 vs. Detroit | Dan Marino, 1983–1999 (4,967) |
Most Touchdowns, Season | LaDainian Tomlinson, San Diego (31) | December 10 vs. Denver | Shaun Alexander, Seattle, 2005 (28) |
Most Rushing Touchdowns, Season | LaDainian Tomlinson, San Diego (28) | December 10 vs. Denver | Shaun Alexander, 2005 Priest Holmes, 2003 (27) |
Most Rushing Attempts, Season | Larry Johnson, Kansas City (416) | December 31 vs. Jacksonville | Jamal Anderson, Atlanta, 1998 (410) |
Most Kick Returns for a Touchdown, Season | Devin Hester, Chicago (5; 3 punts and 2 kickoffs) | December 11 at St. Louis | Tied by 9 players (4) |
Points scored | San Diego Chargers (492) |
Total yards gained | New Orleans Saints (6,264) |
Yards rushing | Atlanta Falcons (2,939) |
Yards passing | New Orleans Saints (4,503) |
Fewest points allowed | Baltimore Ravens (201) |
Fewest total yards allowed | Baltimore Ravens (4,225) |
Fewest rushing yards allowed | Minnesota Vikings (985) |
Fewest passing yards allowed | Oakland Raiders (2,413) |
Scoring | LaDainian Tomlinson, San Diego (186 points) |
Touchdowns | LaDainian Tomlinson, San Diego (31 TDs) |
Most field goals made | Robbie Gould, Chicago and Jeff Wilkins, St. Louis (32 FGs) |
Rushing | LaDainian Tomlinson, San Diego (1,815 yards) |
Passer rating | Peyton Manning, Indianapolis (101.0 rating) |
Passing touchdowns | Peyton Manning, Indianapolis (31 TDs) |
Passing yards | Drew Brees, New Orleans (4,418 yards) |
Pass receptions | Andre Johnson, Houston (103 catches) |
Pass receiving yards | Chad Johnson, Cincinnati (1,369 yards) |
Punt returns | Adam "Pacman" Jones, Tennessee (12.9 average yards) |
Kickoff returns | Justin Miller, New York Jets (28.3 average yards) |
Interceptions | Asante Samuel, New England and Champ Bailey, Denver (10) |
Punting | Mat McBriar, Dallas (48.2 average yards) |
Sacks | Shawne Merriman, San Diego (17) |
Most Valuable Player | LaDainian Tomlinson, Running Back, San Diego Chargers |
Coach of the Year | Sean Payton, New Orleans Saints |
Offensive Player of the Year | LaDainian Tomlinson, Running Back, San Diego Chargers |
Defensive Player of the Year | Jason Taylor, Defensive End, Miami Dolphins |
Offensive Rookie of the Year | Vince Young, Quarterback, Tennessee Titans |
Defensive Rookie of the Year | DeMeco Ryans, Linebacker, Houston Texans |
NFL Comeback Player of the Year | Chad Pennington, Quarterback, New York Jets |
Offense | |
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Quarterback | Drew Brees, New Orleans |
Running back | LaDainian Tomlinson, San Diego Larry Johnson, Kansas City |
Fullback | Lorenzo Neal, San Diego |
Wide receiver | Marvin Harrison, Indianapolis Chad Johnson, Cincinnati |
Tight end | Antonio Gates, San Diego |
Offensive tackle | Willie Anderson, Cincinnati Jammal Brown, New Orleans |
Offensive guard | Alan Faneca, Pittsburgh Shawn Andrews, Philadelphia |
Center | Olin Kreutz, Chicago |
Defense | |
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Defensive end | Jason Taylor, Miami Julius Peppers, Carolina |
Defensive tackle | Jamal Williams, San Diego Kevin Williams, Minnesota |
Outside linebacker | Shawne Merriman, San Diego Adalius Thomas, Baltimore |
Inside linebacker | Brian Urlacher, Chicago Zach Thomas, Miami |
Cornerback | Champ Bailey, Denver Rashean Mathis, Jacksonville |
Safety | Brian Dawkins, Philadelphia Ed Reed, Baltimore |
Special teams | |||||
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Kicker | Robbie Gould, Chicago | ||||
Punter | Brian Moorman, Buffalo | ||||
Kick returner | Devin Hester, Chicago |
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