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Encyclopedia > NFL Pro Bowl


The Pro Bowl is the National Football League's All-Star game. The game is the last game of the season. It's officially called the AFC-NFC Pro Bowl. The game has been played at Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaii since February 1980.


A postseason All-Star game between the new league champion and a team of professional all-stars was added to the NFL schedule in January 1939, at the end of the 1938 season. In the first game at Wrigley Field in Los Angeles, California the New York Giants beat a team made up of players from NFL teams and two independent clubs the Los Angeles Bulldogs and the Hollywood Stars. An all-NFL All-Star team provided the opposition over the next four seasons, but the event was cancelled after the game at the close of the 1942 season.


The NFL revived the game in January 1951, after the 1950 pro football season. It was a contest between conference all-star teams: American vs National (1951-53), Eastern vs Western (1954-1970), and AFC vs NFC (since 1971).



Games are listed below by the season they represented, although beginning with 1950, the games were played in January or February of the following calendar year. The listed year reflects the football season involved: for example, the teams in the game listed under 2002 were comprised of players who were all-stars during the 2002 pro football season, while the game was played following the season, in February 2003. After the AFL-NFL Merger of 1970, the name of the NFL's all-star game was changed to the "AFC-NFC Pro Bowl". Since the merger, the head coaches of the teams that lost in the AFC and NFC championship games have been selected as the coaches for the respective Pro Bowl squads — a compromise that arose from the decision to discontinue the Playoff Bowl, which had it been retained, would have matched up the two teams that lost the conference title games.

Contents

NFL All-Star games

NFL Pro Bowls

Year: (January or February of following year)


1950s

  • 1951 American, 28-27
  • 1952 National, 30-13
  • 1953 National, 27-7
  • 1954 East, 20-9
  • 1955 West, 26-19
  • 1956 East, 31-30
  • 1957 West, 19-10
  • 1958 West, 26-7
  • 1959 East, 28-21
  • 1960 West, 38-21
  • 1961 West, 35-31
  • 1962 West, 31-30
  • 1963 East, 30-20
  • 1964 West, 31-17
  • 1965 West, 34-14
  • 1966 East, 36-7
  • 1967 East, 20-10
  • 1968 West, 38-20
  • 1969 West, 10-7
  • 1970 West, 16-13

AFC-NFC Pro Bowls

Year: (January or February of following year)

  • 1971 NFC, 27-6
  • 1972 AFC, 26-13
  • 1973 AFC, 33-28
  • 1974 AFC, 15-13
  • 1975 NFC, 17-10
  • 1976 NFC, 23-20
  • 1977 AFC, 24-14
  • 1978 NFC, 14-13
  • 1979 NFC, 13-7
  • 1980 NFC, 37-27
  • 1981 NFC, 21-7
  • 1982 AFC, 16-13
  • 1983 NFC, 20-19
  • 1984 NFC, 45-3
  • 1985 AFC, 22-14
  • 1986 NFC, 28-24
  • 1987 AFC, 10-6
  • 1988 AFC, 15-6
  • 1989 NFC, 34-3
  • 1990 NFC, 27-21
  • 1991 AFC, 23-21
  • 1992 NFC, 21-15
  • 1993 AFC, 23-20 (OT)
  • 1994 NFC, 17-3
  • 1995 AFC, 41-13
  • 1996 NFC, 20-13
  • 1997 AFC, 26-23 (OT)
  • 1998 AFC, 29-24
  • 1999 AFC, 23-10
  • 2000 NFC, 51-31
  • 2001 AFC, 38-17
  • 2002 AFC, 38-30
  • 2003 AFC, 45-20
  • 2004 NFC, 55-52

Most Valuable Players

  • 1951 Otto Graham, Cleveland, QB
  • 1952 Dan Towler, LA Rams, HB
  • 1953 Don Doll, Detroit, DB
  • 1954 Chuck Bednarik, Philadelphia, LB
  • 1955 Billy Wilson, San Francisco, E
  • 1956 Ollie Matson, Chicago Cards, HB
  • 1957 B: Bert Rechichar, Baltimore
 L: Ernie Stautner, Pittsburgh 
  • 1958 B: Hugh McElhenny, San Francisco
 L: Gene Brito, Washington 
 L: Doug Atkins, Chicago 
 L: Big Daddy Lipscomb, Pittsburgh 
 L: Sam Huff, NY Giants 
 L: Henry Jordan, Green Bay 
 L: Big Daddy Lipscomb, Pittsburgh 
 L: Gino Marchetti, Baltimore 
 L: Terry Barr, Detroit 
 L: Dale Meinhart, St. Louis 
 L: Floyd Peters, Philadelphia 
 L: Dave Robinson, Green Bay 
  • 1969 B: Roman Gabriel, LA Rams
 L: Merlin Olsen, LA Rams 
 L: George Andrie, Dallas 
 L: Fred Carr, Green Bay 
 D: Willie Lanier, Kansas City 

Playing sites:

The National Football League
AFC NFC
Baltimore Ravens | Buffalo Bills | Cincinnati Bengals | Cleveland Browns | Denver Broncos | Houston Texans | Indianapolis Colts | Jacksonville Jaguars | Kansas City Chiefs | Miami Dolphins | New England Patriots | New York Jets | Oakland Raiders | Pittsburgh Steelers | San Diego Chargers | Tennessee Titans Arizona Cardinals | Atlanta Falcons | Carolina Panthers | Chicago Bears | Dallas Cowboys | Detroit Lions | Green Bay Packers | Minnesota Vikings | New Orleans Saints | New York Giants | Philadelphia Eagles | San Francisco 49ers | Seattle Seahawks | St. Louis Rams | Tampa Bay Buccaneers | Washington Redskins
The Super Bowl | The Pro Bowl | NFLPA | AFL | NFL Europe

  Results from FactBites:
 
Pro Bowl Tickets - 2007 Pro Bowl Tickets (1343 words)
In the Pro Bowl the NFC came back with a time consuming drive that spanned the end of the first quarter to the beginning of the second and ended with a 12 yard run by Brian Westbrook to bring the NFC within 7.
The Pro Bowl third quarter was all NFC, who started off the half by scoring within the first 3 minutes, when Michael Vick hit Holt with a 27 yard pass to make the score 28-17.
The NFC made one final drive late in the Pro Bowl, but Vick was intercepted (the third pick of the Pro Bowl for the AFC) by Nate Clements and Drew Brees kneeled to end the Pro Bowl.
Pro Bowl - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1351 words)
Since the Pro Bowl has absolutely no effect upon players' or teams' statistics and records, and the fact that the game is played at the very end of the season, players generally take the contest much less seriously than the average regular season games.
Examples from the 2004 Pro Bowl are Roy Williams' hit on Todd Heap and Ed Reed blocking a punt and returning it for a touchown, the only blocked punt so returned in Pro Bowl history.
Because of the new NFL television contract, the network which airs the Super Bowl will air the Pro Bowl; the 2007 game is held on the Saturday after Super Bowl XLI because of the 2007 Grammy Awards.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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