1960 NFL season
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Regular season | |||
Duration | September 23 – December 18, 1960 | ||
East Champions | Philadelphia Eagles | ||
West Champions | Green Bay Packers | ||
Championship Game | |||
Champions | Philadelphia Eagles | ||
National Football League seasons
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The 1960 NFL season was the 41st regular season of the National Football League. Before the season, Pete Rozelle was elected NFL commissioner as a compromise choice on the twenty-third ballot. Meanwhile, the league expanded to 13 teams with the addition of the Dallas Cowboys. Also, the Cardinals relocated from Chicago, Illinois to St. Louis, Missouri, becoming the St. Louis Cardinals, the same moniker as the major league baseball team.
In the 1960 NFL Championship Game, the Philadelphia Eagles defeated the Green Bay Packers at Franklin Field. Two years earlier, in 1958, these teams had both finished in last place in their respective conferences. This loss was Vince Lombardi's only post-season defeat (excluding a loss in the third place Playoff Bowl game four years later) as an NFL head coach. Following this loss in 1960, Lombardi's Packers won five NFL championship games in seven years, and easily won the first two Super Bowls.
The NFL introduced the Playoff Bowl, a game for third place between the runners-up from each conference. Played at the Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida, after the NFL Championship game, it benefitted the players' pension fund.
During this season, the American Football League was established as a competitor to the NFL. The two leagues would co-exist for the entire 1960s, and merge into one combined league in 1970.
Conference Races
All teams but Dallas played a home-and-away game against the other five members of their own conference, one inter-conference game, and one game against the new team (Dallas). The Cowboys, although assigned to the Western Conference, was a "swing team", playing their 12 game schedule against each of the other teams in the league. (Byes would have been necessary because of the odd number of teams in the league.) The Cowboys' first game saw them take a 14–0 lead over the Steelers, with Jim Doran catching a pass from Eddie LeBaron for the first score, but Dallas went on to lose 35–28.
Philadelphia lost its opener, at home, to Cleveland, 41–24. After that, the Eagles went on a 9-game winning streak. The breakthrough came in Week Six (October 30), when the unbeaten (3–0–1) New York Giants lost at home to St. Louis, 20–13, and the Browns and Eagles were both at 4–1. In Week Seven, New York beat Cleveland, 17–13, and the Eagles beat Pittsburgh 34–7.[1] The Eagles kept on winning, finishing 10–2 and on top of the Eastern Conference. Two of those wins were in consecutive games (November 20 and 27) against New York. In the latter game, the Eagles trailed 17–0, then 23–17, before Norm Van Brocklin threw two touchdown passes in the final quarter for a 31–23 victory. The Giants' Frank Gifford was severely injured in a tackle by Chuck Bednarik [2] that almost ended his career.
The Western Conference race was one in which Baltimore, Chicago, Detroit, Green Bay and San Francisco all had a lead at one time. The Bears fell back after a Week Six loss to the 49ers, 25–7. In Week Seven, the 4–2 Colts and the 4–1 Packers met on November 6 in Green Bay. Baltimore, which had lost an earlier match, won 38–24, to take the lead in the Western. In Week Ten, the Colts lost at home to San Francisco, 30–22, and began a streak of defeats. Baltimore's 20–15 loss to the Lions, and Green Bay's 41–13 win at Chicago, tied the Colts and Packers at 6–4 in Week Eleven. After the Packers' 13–0 win at San Francisco, their record was 7–4, while the Colts, Lions and 49ers were all at 6–5. San Francisco and Detroit both won the next week, the former beating Baltimore 34–10, but the Packers won as well, beating Los Angeles 35–21 for the Western title.
The new Dallas Cowboys lost their first ten games, then on December 4, they managed a 31–31 tie against the Giants at Yankee Stadium in New York. At 0–11–1, they still finished at .000, rather than at .042, under the rules at the time (ties being ignored in computing winning percentage prior to 1972).
Week | WESTERN | EASTERN | ||
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1 | Tie (Bal, Chi) | 1–0–0 | 4 teams (Cle, NYG, Pit, St.L) | 1–0–0 |
2 | BALTIMORE COLTS | 2–0–0 | Tie (Cle, NYG) | 2–0–0 |
3 | 4 teams (Bal, Chi, GB, SF) | 2–1–0 | Tie (Cle, NYG) | 3–0–0 |
4 | Tie (Bal, Chi) | 3–0–0 | Tie (Cle, NYG) | 3–0–0 |
5 | Tie (Chi, GB) | 3–1–0 | NEW YORK GIANTS | 3–0–1 |
6 | GREEN BAY PACKERS | 4–1–0 | Tie (Cle, Phi) | 4–1–0 |
7 | BALTIMORE COLTS | 5–2–0 | PHILADELPHIA EAGLES | 5–1–0 |
8 | BALTIMORE COLTS | 6–2–0 | PHILADELPHIA EAGLES | 6–1–0 |
9 | BALTIMORE COLTS | 6–2–0 | PHILADELPHIA EAGLES | 7–1–0 |
10 | BALTIMORE COLTS | 6–3–0 | PHILADELPHIA EAGLES | 8–1–0 |
11 | Tie (Bal, GB, SF) | 6–4–0 | PHILADELPHIA EAGLES | 9–1–0 |
12 | GREEN BAY PACKERS | 7–4–0 | PHILADELPHIA EAGLES | 9–2–0 |
13 | GREEN BAY PACKERS | 8–4–0 | PHILADELPHIA EAGLES | 10–2–0 |
Final standings
W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, PCT= Winning Percentage, PF= Points For, PA = Points Against
Note: Prior to 1972, the NFL did not include tie games when calculating a team's winning percentage in the official standings
Eastern Conference | ||||||
Team | W | L | T | PCT | PF | PA |
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Philadelphia Eagles | 10 | 2 | 0 | .833 | 321 | 246 |
Cleveland Browns | 8 | 3 | 1 | .727 | 362 | 217 |
New York Giants | 6 | 4 | 2 | .600 | 271 | 261 |
St. Louis Cardinals | 6 | 5 | 1 | .545 | 288 | 230 |
Pittsburgh Steelers | 5 | 6 | 1 | .455 | 240 | 275 |
Washington Redskins | 1 | 9 | 2 | .100 | 178 | 309 |
Western Conference | ||||||
Team | W | L | T | PCT | PF | PA |
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Green Bay Packers | 8 | 4 | 0 | .667 | 332 | 209 |
Detroit Lions | 7 | 5 | 0 | .583 | 239 | 212 |
San Francisco 49ers | 7 | 5 | 0 | .583 | 208 | 205 |
Baltimore Colts | 6 | 6 | 0 | .500 | 288 | 234 |
Chicago Bears | 5 | 6 | 1 | .455 | 194 | 299 |
Los Angeles Rams | 4 | 7 | 1 | .364 | 265 | 297 |
Dallas Cowboys | 0 | 11 | 1 | .000 | 177 | 369 |
==NFL Championship Game==
- Philadelphia 17, Green Bay 13 at Franklin Field, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Monday, December 26, 1960
Playoff Bowl
The Playoff Bowl was between the conference runners-up, for third place in the league. This was its first year and it was played two weeks after the title game.
- Detroit 17, Cleveland 16 at Orange Bowl, Miami, Florida, January 7, 1961
Awards
Most Valuable Player | Norm Van Brocklin, Quarterback, Philadelphia |
Coach of the Year | Buck Shaw, Philadelphia |
See also
References
External links
- NFL Record and Fact Book (ISBN 1-932994-36-X)
- NFL History 1951–1960 (Last accessed July 8, 2007)
- 1960 season in details
- Total Football: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Football League (ISBN 0-06-270174-6)
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