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2018 National Football League season
Regular season
Duration September 6, 2018 (2018-09-06) – December 30, 2018 (2018-12-30)
Playoffs
Start date January 5, 2019
AFC Champions New England Patriots
NFC Champions Los Angeles Rams
Super Bowl LIII
Date February 3, 2019
Site Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta, Georgia
Champions New England Patriots
Pro Bowl
Date January 27, 2019
Site Camping World Stadium, Orlando, Florida
National Football League seasons
 < 2017 2019 > 

The 2018 NFL season was the 99th season of the National Football League (NFL). The season began on September 6, 2018, with the NFL Kickoff Game with the defending Super Bowl LII champion Philadelphia Eagles defeating the Atlanta Falcons 18–12. The season concluded with Super Bowl LIII, the league's championship game, on February 3, 2019, at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia between NFC Champions Los Angeles Rams and AFC Champions New England Patriots. The Patriots defeated the Rams 13–3 for their sixth Super Bowl championship and their third in their last five seasons.

Player movement[]

The 2018 NFL League year and trading period began on March 14. On March 9, clubs were allowed to exercise options for 2018 on players who have option clauses in their contracts, submit qualifying offers to their pending restricted free agents and submit a Minimum Salary Tender to retain exclusive negotiating rights to their players with expiring 2017 contracts and who have fewer than three accrued seasons of free agent credit. Teams were required to be under the salary cap using the "Top-51" definition (in which the 51 highest paid-players on the team's payroll must have a combined salary cap hit below the actual cap). On March 12, clubs were allowed to contact and enter into contract negotiations with the agents of players who were set to become unrestricted free agents.

Free agency[]

Over 550 players were eligible for some form of free agency during the free agency period.[1] Notable players to change teams include:

Trades[]

Retirements[]

  • Kam Chancellor: The four-time Pro Bowler and two-time second team All-Pro safety retired July 1 due to a neck injury. He played his entire eight-year career with the Seattle Seahawks.
  • Antonio Cromartie: The four-time Pro Bowler and one-time All-Pro cornerback, who shares the league record for most yards gained on a play (109 on a missed field goal return) and led the league in interceptions in 2008, announced his retirement after an 11-year career. Cromartie played for the then-San Diego Chargers, New York Jets, Arizona Cardinals, and Indianapolis Colts over the course of his career, before spending the entire 2017 season as an unsigned free agent.[30]
  • Dwight Freeney: The 16-year veteran defensive end, who spent most of his career with the Indianapolis Colts, retired April 19. He appeared in seven Pro Bowls, was a four-time All-Pro and led the NFL in sacks during the 2004 season.[31]
  • James Harrison: The 15-year NFL veteran linebacker, four-time All-Pro, and five-time Pro Bowler who spent the peak of his career with the Pittsburgh Steelers announced his retirement, at the age of 39, on April 16.[32]
  • Devin Hester: The four-time Pro Bowler and three-time All-Pro return specialist holds the NFL record for most all-time return touchdowns (punt and kickoff combined) and most all-time punt return touchdowns.[33] He is widely regarded as one of the best return specialists in NFL history, and was the first person to return the opening kick of the Super Bowl back for a touchdown. Hester, who had spent 2017 out of football, played 11 seasons in the NFL, the majority of them with the Chicago Bears.[34][35][36]
  • Richie Incognito announced his retirement April 10. The retirement was part of a string of erratic behavior and inconsistent statements on Incognito's part, the only consistent thread being an ongoing contract dispute with his current team, the Buffalo Bills, who have listed him as retired on their roster. Incognito has appeared in four Pro Bowls over the course of a 12-season career with the Bills, Miami Dolphins and then-St. Louis Rams, with most of his success coming in Buffalo. He was released from his contract on May 21 and was free to sign with any team. After being in retirement for the 2018 season, he came out of retirement to sign with the Oakland Raiders.
  • Nick Mangold: The seven-time Pro Bowler and three-time All-Pro retired after 11 seasons, all with the New York Jets. He had spent the 2017 season out of football after the Jets released him.[37]
  • Carson Palmer: The 38 year old quarterback for the Arizona Cardinals, who had previously played on the Cincinnati Bengals (who drafted Palmer first overall in 2003) and Oakland Raiders, retired after the 2017 season. The 2002 Heisman Trophy winner appeared in three Pro Bowls, was a second team All-Pro in 2015, and led the NFL in passing yards in 2005.[38][39]
  • Darrelle Revis: The seven-time Pro Bowler and four-time All-Pro spent 11 seasons in the NFL, eight of them with the New York Jets. At his peak, he was one of the most dominant, well-paid, and awarded cornerbacks in the league (only Deion Sanders has had more All-Pro nominations at the position); his level of play had diminished rapidly by the time of his retirement. He announced his retirement July 18.[40]
  • Joe Thomas: The ten-time Pro Bowler and seven-time All-Pro offensive tackle retired after an 11-year career with the Cleveland Browns, a career in which he spent much of that time as the Browns' franchise player in an era where the team otherwise performed poorly on the field.[41] A deteriorating left knee contributed to Thomas's retirement.[42]
  • Jason Witten: The eleven time Pro Bowler and two time First-team All-Pro Tight end played 15 seasons, all with the Dallas Cowboys. He ranks second all time among tight ends in career receptions and receiving yards. He now works for ESPN as their Monday Night Football color commentator.[43] However he came out of retirement for the 2019 NFL season

Other retirements

Draft[]

The 2018 NFL Draft was held from April 26 to 28 at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. This was the first draft to take place in an NFL stadium, and the first to be held in Texas.[65] The Cleveland Browns selected Baker Mayfield with the first overall pick.

Officiating changes[]

Offseason[]

Four referees retired during the 2018 off-season, the most to do so since records on the statistics have been kept.[66]

  • Ed Hochuli: At the time of his retirement, Hochuli was the league's longest-tenured referee, having served with the league for 28 seasons, 26 as a head referee. He was succeeded by his son, Shawn Hochuli.[67]
  • Terry McAulay: McAulay spent 20 seasons as an official, 17 as a head referee, and officiated three Super Bowls. McAulay will work as a rules analyst for NBC's Sunday Night Football.[66] Shawn Smith, an umpire since 2015, was promoted to replace McAulay.[68][69]
  • Gene Steratore: Steratore spent 15 seasons as an official and was the referee of Super Bowl LII. Steratore was involved in the controversial ruling known as the Calvin Johnson rule, as well as the infamous use of an index card during a game between the Oakland Raiders and Dallas Cowboys. He was one of two officials who also covered NCAA Division I basketball games. Steratore accepted an offer from CBS to fill its rules analyst position, which had been vacant since 2015.[66] Umpire Clay Martin was promoted to referee to replace Steratore.[70]
  • Jeff Triplette: Triplette had spent 22 years as an official with the NFL, 19 as a head referee. Alex Kemp replaced Triplette.[67]

In total, 10 officials left the league in the offseason, and seven were hired. Four officials were promoted to the referee position.[71]

In-season[]

Down judge Hugo Cruz was fired for performance-related issues culminating with a missed false start during a Week 6 game between the Los Angeles Chargers and Cleveland Browns. It was the first time in the Super Bowl era that an official was dismissed in-season.[72]

Rule changes[]

The following playing rule changes have been approved by the Competition Committee for the 2018 season:[73]

  • Make permanent the current rule that changes the spot of the ball after a touchback on a kickoff to the 25-yard line. Prior to 2017, the ball was placed at the 20-yard line.
  • Update the standards for a "catch" to have:
    • Two feet down or any body part other than the hands
    • Control of the ball
    • Make a "football move" such as making a 3rd step, reaching/extending to the line to gain, tucking the ball away, warding off defensive players, or have the ability to perform such an act.
    The rule for receivers who were going to the ground during the catch process has been deleted. This is in response to several issues regarding the "going to the ground" rule, especially catches by Dallas Cowboys WR Dez Bryant in the 2014 NFL playoffs and one by Pittsburgh Steelers TE Jesse James in 2017 that were overturned due to this rule.
  • Allow a designated member of the officiating department (for 2018, senior vice president of officiating Al Riveron, vice president officiating evaluation and development Wayne Mackie, and vice president of instant replay and administration Russel Yurk[74]) to instruct game officials to disqualify any player who commits a flagrant non-football act on the field for a foul called on the field. This is in response to a situation where New England Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski intentionally inflicted a late hit on Buffalo Bills defensive back Tre'Davious White causing a concussion to White. Gronkowski was not ejected for the foul on the field, but did receive a one-game suspension after the NFL's review of the play.
  • Illegally batting a ball on a scrimmage down will incur a loss of down in addition to the previous 10-yard penalty.
  • In overtime, when a team is ahead by 3 points, a down will run to its conclusion and all applicable points will score, even if there is a loss of possession. Previously, the offense of the trailing team could not legally score if they lost and regained possession and reached the opponent's end zone all on the same play. The rule remains that if there is a double change of possession on a play with one team in the lead, it is the last play of the game.
  • If a team scores a touchdown on the final play of regulation which gives them the victory, no extra-point conversion try will be needed.[75]
  • A ball carrier may slide either head first or feet first to be considered giving himself up on the play, and he is afforded all protections previously provided to a runner sliding feet first.

The following bylaws and resolutions were passed:[76]

  • Make permanent the liberalization of workout rules for draft prospects.
  • For a one-year trial period, liberalize the rules for re-signing a player on waivers.
  • Players on injured reserve can be traded.
  • Players with injuries deemed major can be placed directly on injured reserve without clearing waivers.
  • The 10-day postseason waiver claiming period has been reduced to 1 day.
  • Players can be activated from injured reserve after eight games instead of eight weeks.
  • Teams have seven business days to complete an injury settlement instead of five.
  • Players in certain reserve list categories cannot be reinstated after a team's week 13 game. This restriction was previously applied to the last 30 days of the regular season.
  • Clarify roster procedures for players with military obligations.
  • For a one-year trial period, teams may contact a player who has been publicly announced to be released before the NFL lists the transaction on a Player Personnel Notice.

The following changes to the kickoff rules were approved at the NFL Spring Owners' Meeting on May 23, 2018:[77]

  • Players are required to line up for the kickoff as follows:
    • Five players on the kicking team must be on either side of the kicker
    • Two players on each side must be lined up outside of the numbers and two additional players on each side must be lined up between the numbers and the hashmarks
    • Players on the kicking team (excluding the kicker) may only line up within one yard of the kickoff spot (currently this is limited to five yards)
    • The receiving team must have eight players in a fifteen-yard "set-up zone" (from the restraining line ten yards from the kickoff spot, fifteen yards back)
  • No wedge blocks. Players would only be able to do a double-team block within the "set-up zone".
  • Blocking is prohibited inside the restraining zone (10 yards from the kickoff spot) until the ball touches the ground or is touched in the field of play.
  • Once a kickoff lands in the end zone, it would become an automatic touchback. Players will no longer have to "kneel" in the end zone to stop the play.
  • Any player(s) being disqualified are subject to replay review.
  • It is now a foul (15 yards) for players to lower their helmet to initiate and make contact with an opposing player. The fouling player risks disqualification if:
    • Player lowers his helmet to establish a linear body posture prior to initiating or making contact with the helmet
    • Player delivering the blow had an unobstructed path to his opponent
    • Contact was clearly avoidable (player delivering the blow had other options)

The chain crew was reduced by one member; the "X" marker, usually unseen on television but used to mark the start of an offensive drive, was eliminated.[78]

In response to the recent National Anthem protests in the league the past two seasons, any player or staff member who is on the field during the performance of "The Star-Spangled Banner" must stand for the duration of the performance. Such players and staff members are not required to be on the field at that time and may wait in the locker room as an alternative. The NFL will not directly fine offending players or staff members for defying the rule, instead fining the teams, who will in turn have power to fine the players or staff members at their own discretion. The National Football League Players Association filed a grievance with the league over the policy on July 11.

2018 deaths[]

The following people associated with the NFL (or AFL) died in 2018.

Members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame[]

Tommy McDonald
A 1998 inductee of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, McDonald played 12 seasons in the NFL, the majority of them with the Philadelphia Eagles, where he had the majority of his success. The six-time Pro Bowler and four-time All-Pro (first or second team) led the league in both receiving yards and receiving touchdowns in 1961 and was the last non-kicking position player to play without a facemask. He died September 24 at the age of 84.[79]
Jim Taylor
The nine-year veteran of the Green Bay Packers was the first member of the team's 1961–1968 dynasty to be inducted into the Hall as a 1976 inductee. The fullback, who played from 1958 through the first World Championship, appeared in five Pro Bowls, was named first or second team All-Pro six times, and led the league in both rushing touchdowns and yards in 1962, leading the latter category in 1961 as well. He finished his career on the inaugural roster of the New Orleans Saints. He died October 13, aged 83.

Team owners[]

Paul Allen
Allen owned the Seattle Seahawks from 1996 until his death on October 15, at the age of 65. Allen left no wife or children, and his estate is believed to be in control of his sister, Jody Allen.[80] Allen was also the owner of the NBA's Portland Trail Blazers, and part owner of MLS's Seattle Sounders FC.
Tom Benson
Benson owned the New Orleans Saints from 1985 until his death on March 15, at the age of 90. His wife Gayle Benson inherited the team.
Bob McNair
McNair died November 23 at the age of 81. He had owned the Houston Texans from the time of its establishment in 2002 until his death. His son Cal McNair and his wife Janice McNair are in line to take over as owners, and the government of Harris County, Texas' minority stake in the team would preclude any incoming owner from relocating the team.[81]
Alex Spanos
Spanos owned the Chargers from 1984 until his death; he had been suffering from senile dementia since 2008 and was not directly involved in the team's relocation from San Diego back to Los Angeles, which was largely orchestrated by his son Dean Spanos, who will head the family consortium that inherits the team. Spanos died October 9, aged 95.

Others[]

Preseason[]

Training camps for the 2018 season were held in late July through August. Teams started training camp no earlier than 15 days before the team's first scheduled preseason game.

The Pro Football Hall of Fame Game, in which the Baltimore Ravens defeated the Chicago Bears 17–16, was played on August 2;[82] and was televised nationally by NBC. The Ravens, who made their first Hall of Fame Game appearance, were represented in the 2018 Hall of Fame class by former linebacker Ray Lewis, while the Bears were represented by former linebacker Brian Urlacher.

Regular season[]

The 2018 regular season's 256 games were played over a 17-week schedule that began on September 6. Each of the league's 32 teams played a 16-game schedule, with one bye week for each team. The regular season concluded with a full slate of 16 games on December 30, all of which were intra-division matchups, as it had been since 2010.

Scheduling formula

Under the NFL's current scheduling formula, each team plays the other three teams in its own division twice. In addition, a team plays against all four teams in one other division from each conference. The final two games on a team's schedule are against the two remaining teams in the same conference that finished in the same position in their respective divisions (e.g., the team that finished fourth in its division will play all three other teams in the conference that also finished fourth). The division pairings for 2018 will be as follows:

    Intra-conference
AFC East vs AFC South
AFC West vs AFC North
NFC East vs NFC South
NFC West vs NFC North

   Inter-conference
AFC East vs NFC North
AFC North vs NFC South
AFC South vs NFC East
AFC West vs NFC West

The entire season schedule was released on April 19, 2018. Highlights of the 2018 season included:

Saturday flexible scheduling[]

When the entire season schedule was released on April 19, 2018, the league announced flexible scheduling for Saturday games in weeks 15 and 16. The final times of these games were announced on October 24, 2018:[95]

  • In week 15, the TexansJets started off at 4:30 p.m., while the BrownsBroncos game started at 8:20 p.m. EST, both games broadcast by NFL Network.
  • In week 16, two games were moved to Saturday, December 22 on NFL Network: The RedskinsTitans game started at 4:30 p.m. EST, while the RavensChargers game started at 8:20 p.m. EST. This marked the first time that games were rescheduled to a different day (excluding games rescheduled due to severe weather).

In-season scheduling changes[]

  • Week 7: The BengalsChiefs game was flexed from 1:00 p.m. ET on CBS to the 8:20 p.m. EDT slot on NBC, replacing the originally-scheduled Rams49ers game, which was moved to 4:25 p.m. ET on CBS. This is the earliest NBC flex game since NBC Sports took over the Sunday Night package in 2006.[96]
  • Week 10: The DolphinsPackers game was moved from 1:00 p.m. ET to 4:25 p.m. ET on CBS. Additionally, the CardinalsChiefs game, originally scheduled at 1:00 p.m. ET on Fox, was cross-flexed to CBS, in the same time slot.[95]
  • Week 11: The VikingsBears game was flexed from 1:00 p.m. ET on Fox to 8:20 p.m. ET on NBC, replacing the originally scheduled SteelersJaguars game which was moved to 1:00 p.m. ET on CBS. Additionally, the EaglesSaints game was moved from 1:00 p.m. ET to 4:25 p.m. ET on Fox.[97]
  • Week 12: The DolphinsColts game was moved from 1:00 p.m. ET to 4:25 p.m. ET on CBS.[98]
  • Week 13: The ChargersSteelers game originally scheduled for 1:00 p.m. ET on CBS was flexed to 8:20 p.m. ET on NBC, replacing the originally scheduled 49ersSeahawks game which was moved to 4:25 p.m. ET on Fox.[99]
  • Week 14: The RamsBears game originally scheduled for 1:00 p.m. ET on Fox was flexed to 8:20 p.m. ET on NBC, replacing the originally scheduled SteelersRaiders game which was moved to 4:25 p.m. ET on Fox.[99]
  • Week 15: The RedskinsJaguars game originally scheduled at 1:00 p.m. ET on Fox was cross-flexed to CBS, in the same time slot.
  • Week 16: The GiantsColts game originally scheduled at 1:00 p.m. ET on Fox was cross-flexed to CBS, in the same time slot.
  • Week 17: The ColtsTitans game originally scheduled for 1:00 p.m. ET on CBS, was selected as the final 8:20 p.m. NBC Sunday Night Football game of the season, which decided the final AFC wild card spot.[100] Also, the BengalsSteelers, BrownsRavens, RaidersChiefs, EaglesRedskins, and BearsVikings games were moved from 1:00 p.m. ET to 4:25 p.m. ET. with no change in network assignment.

Regular season standings[]

Division[]

AFC East
view · talk · edit W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
(2) New England Patriots 11 5 0 .688 5–1 8–4 436 325 W2
Miami Dolphins 7 9 0 .438 4–2 6–6 319 433 L3
Buffalo Bills 6 10 0 .375 2–4 4–8 269 374 W1
New York Jets 4 12 0 .250 1–5 3–9 333 441 L3
AFC North
view · talk · edit W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
(4) Baltimore Ravens 10 6 0 .625 3–3 8–4 389 287 W3
Pittsburgh Steelers 9 6 1 .594 4–1–1 6–5–1 428 360 W1
Cleveland Browns 7 8 1 .469 3–2–1 5–6–1 359 392 L1
Cincinnati Bengals 6 10 0 .375 1–5 4–8 368 455 L2
AFC South
view · talk · edit W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
(3) Houston Texans 11 5 0 .688 4–2 9–3 402 316 W1
(6) Indianapolis Colts 10 6 0 .625 4–2 7–5 433 344 W4
Tennessee Titans 9 7 0 .563 3–3 5–7 310 303 L1
Jacksonville Jaguars 5 11 0 .313 1–5 4–8 245 316 L1
AFC West
view · talk · edit W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
(1) Kansas City Chiefs 12 4 0 .750 5–1 10–2 565 421 W1
(5) Los Angeles Chargers 12 4 0 .750 4–2 9–3 428 329 W1
Denver Broncos 6 10 0 .375 2–4 4–8 329 349 L4
Oakland Raiders 4 12 0 .250 1–5 3–9 290 467 L1
NFC East
view · talk · edit W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
(4) Dallas Cowboys 10 6 0 .625 5–1 9–3 339 324 W2
(6) Philadelphia Eagles 9 7 0 .563 4–2 6–6 367 348 W3
Washington Redskins 7 9 0 .438 2–4 6–6 281 359 L2
New York Giants 5 11 0 .313 1–5 4–8 369 412 L3
NFC North
view · talk · edit W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
(3) Chicago Bears 12 4 0 .750 5–1 10–2 421 283 W4
Minnesota Vikings 8 7 1 .531 3–2–1 6–5–1 360 341 L1
Green Bay Packers 6 9 1 .406 1–4–1 3–8–1 376 400 L1
Detroit Lions 6 10 0 .375 2–4 4–8 324 360 W1
NFC South
view · talk · edit W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
(1) New Orleans Saints 13 3 0 .813 4–2 9–3 504 353 L1
Atlanta Falcons 7 9 0 .438 4–2 7–5 414 423 W3
Carolina Panthers 7 9 0 .438 2–4 5–7 376 382 W1
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 5 11 0 .313 2–4 4–8 396 464 L4
NFC West
view · talk · edit W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
(2) Los Angeles Rams 13 3 0 .813 6–0 9–3 527 384 W2
(5) Seattle Seahawks 10 6 0 .625 3–3 8–4 428 347 W2
San Francisco 49ers 4 12 0 .250 1–5 2–10 342 435 L2
Arizona Cardinals 3 13 0 .188 2–4 3–9 225 425 L4

Conference[]

AFCv · d · e
# Team Division W L T PCT DIV CONF SOS SOV STK
Division leaders
1[lower-alpha 1] Kansas City Chiefs West 12 4 0 .750 5–1 10–2 .480 .401 W1
2[lower-alpha 2] New England Patriots East 11 5 0 .688 5–1 8–4 .482 .494 W2
3[lower-alpha 2] Houston Texans South 11 5 0 .688 4–2 9–3 .471 .435 W1
4 Baltimore Ravens North 10 6 0 .625 3–3 8–4 .496 .450 W3
Wild Cards
5[lower-alpha 1] Los Angeles Chargers West 12 4 0 .750 4–2 9–3 .477 .422 W1
6 Indianapolis Colts South 10 6 0 .625 4–2 7–5 .465 .456 W4
Did not qualify for the playoffs
7 Pittsburgh Steelers North 9 6 1 .594 4–1–1 6–5–1 .504 .448 W1
8 Tennessee Titans South 9 7 0 .563 3–3 5–7 .520 .465 L1
9 Cleveland Browns North 7 8 1 .469 3–2–1 5–6–1 .516 .411 L1
10 Miami Dolphins East 7 9 0 .438 4–2 6–6 .469 .446 L3
11[lower-alpha 3] Denver Broncos West 6 10 0 .375 2–4 4–8 .523 .464 L4
12[lower-alpha 3] Cincinnati Bengals North 6 10 0 .375 1–5 4–8 .535 .448 L2
13[lower-alpha 3] Buffalo Bills East 6 10 0 .375 2–4 4–8 .523 .411 W1
14 Jacksonville Jaguars South 5 11 0 .313 1–5 4–8 .549 .463 L1
15[lower-alpha 4] New York Jets East 4 12 0 .250 1–5 3–9 .506 .438 L3
16[lower-alpha 4] Oakland Raiders West 4 12 0 .250 1–5 3–9 .547 .406 L1
Tiebreakers[lower-alpha 5]
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  11. "Eagles Acquire DE Michael Bennett From Seahawks". http://www.philadelphiaeagles.com/news/article-1/Eagles-Acquire-DE-Michael-Bennett-From-Seahawks/740f9d1d-4895-47ed-8434-638961b689a0. Retrieved March 16, 2018.
  12. "CB Daryl Worley Comes To Philadelphia In Exchange For WR Torrey Smith". http://www.philadelphiaeagles.com/news/article-1/CB-Daryl-Worley-Comes-To-Philadelphia-In-Exchange-For-WR-Torrey-Smith/4fa498e7-fc35-4867-81da-4a4581d45b3a. Retrieved March 16, 2018.
  13. "Miami Dolphins Trade For Kilgore". http://www.miamidolphins.com/news/press-releases/article-1/Miami-Dolphins-Trade-For-Kilgore/9c19a922-74cb-462c-b414-c9facc7b07b3. Retrieved March 15, 2018.
  14. "Browns trade DB Jason McCourty". http://www.clevelandbrowns.com/news/article-5/Browns-trade-DB-Jason-McCourty/cbd2cfc9-e3ae-450d-9f2f-f81e082dffc3. Retrieved March 15, 2018.
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  57. "By Adding Kellen Moore, Cowboys Eager To Keep Continuity Around Dak" (in en). Dallas Cowboys. January 23, 2018. http://www.dallascowboys.com/news/2018/01/23/adding-kellen-moore-cowboys-glad-keep-continuity-around-dak.
  58. Patra, Kevin (March 13, 2018). "Jaguars LB Paul Posluszny announces retirement". http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000920878/article/jaguars-lb-paul-posluszny-announces-retirement. Retrieved March 13, 2018.
  59. Asberry, Derrek. "Former Gamecock QB Connor Shawjoins Furman coaching staff" (in en). https://www.postandcourier.com/sports/former-gamecock-qb-connor-shaw-joins-furman-coaching-staff/article_ef75d2ae-f576-11e7-96ee-4f29332215dd.html.
  60. "Devon Still Announces Retirement from NFL at Age 28". December 23, 2017. http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2750758-devon-still-announces-retirement-from-nfl-at-age-28.
  61. "Niners' Cedric Thornton retires; team signs Chris Jones" (in en). NFL.com. http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000950151/article/niners-cedric-thornton-retires-team-signs-chris-jones.
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  63. Eric Wood's statement on his career-ending injury. The Buffalo News. Retrieved January 26, 2018.
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  65. "Dallas, AT&T Stadium chosen as site of 2018 NFL draft". ESPN. http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/21063926/dallas-cowboys-host-2018-nfl-draft-att-stadium-sources. Retrieved October 18, 2017.
  66. 66.0 66.1 66.2 Seifert, Kevin (July 11, 2018). "Should NFL worry about referee turnover? Here's why there's concern". ESPN.com. http://www.espn.com/blog/nflnation/post/_/id/277725/should-nfl-worry-about-referee-turnover-heres-why-theres-concern. Retrieved July 11, 2018.
  67. 67.0 67.1 "NFL referees Ed Hochuli, Jeff Triplette retiring". http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000919752/article/nfl-referees-ed-hochuli-jeff-triplette-retiring?sf183787181=1.
  68. Alper, Josh (June 21, 2018). "Terry McAulay retires, Shawn Smith promoted to referee". NBC Sports. https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2018/06/21/terry-mcaulay-retires-shawn-smith-promoted-to-referee/. Retrieved June 21, 2018.
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  78. Lukas, Paul (December 12, 2018). "Everything you ever wanted to know about the crew that moves the chains in the NFL". ESPN.com. http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/25509360/everything-ever-wanted-know-crew-moves-chains-nfl. Retrieved December 12, 2018.
  79. Fitzpatrick, Frank. "Tommy McDonald, Eagles Hall of Famer, dies". http://www.philly.com/philly/sports/eagles/tommy-mcdonald-philadelphia-eagles-pro-football-hall-of-fame-dies-obituary-20180924.html.
  80. "Statement On The Death Of Paul G. Allen". https://www.seahawks.com/news/statement-on-the-death-of-paul-g-allen?campaign=sf:fanshare:facebook.
  81. "Houston Texans owner Bob McNair dies at age 81" (in en). NFL.com. http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000991639/article/houston-texans-owner-bob-mcnair-dies-at-age-81.
  82. "Ravens to play Bears in 2018 Hall of Fame Game". http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000916032/article/ravens-to-play-bears-in-2018-hall-of-fame-game. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
  83. Patra, Kevin. "Who will Eagles face to kickoff 2018 NFL season?". NFL. http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000914618/article/who-will-eagles-face-to-kick-off-2018-nfl-season. Retrieved February 5, 2018.
  84. "Urgent Stadium Update". Tottenham Hotspur. https://www.tottenhamhotspur.com/news/2018/august/urgent-stadium-update/. Retrieved August 13, 2018.
  85. Seifert, Kevin. "NFL reduces London slate to 3 games in 2018; to be played in consecutive weeks". ESPN. http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/22041701/seattle-seahawks-philadelphia-eagles-tennessee-titans-set-london-debuts. Retrieved January 11, 2018.
  86. Patra, Kevin. "NFL announces three enticing London 2018 matchups". http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000905327/article/nfl-announces-three-enticing-london-2018-matchups. Retrieved January 11, 2018.
  87. 87.0 87.1 Around the NFL staff. "NFL announces times, dates for 2018 London games". NFL. http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000927291/article/nfl-announces-times-dates-for-2018-london-games. Retrieved April 19, 2018.
  88. "NFL moves Chiefs-Rams from Mexico City to L.A." (in en). ESPN.com. http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/25268527/nfl-cancels-mexico-city-trip-moves-chiefs-rams-game-la-monday-night-football.
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  93. "Woody Paige: Broncos vs Raiders may not be a good night for football, but the rivalry remains" (in en). https://gazette.com/sports/woody-paige-broncos-vs-raiders-may-not-be-a-good/article_d35abcc0-0640-11e9-a30d-57d840c48502.html.
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NFCv · d · e
# Team Division W L T PCT DIV CONF SOS SOV STK
Division leaders
1[lower-alpha 6] New Orleans Saints South 13 3 0 .813 4–2 9–3 .482 .488 L1
2[lower-alpha 6] Los Angeles Rams West 13 3 0 .813 6–0 9–3 .480 .428 W2
3 Chicago Bears North 12 4 0 .750 5–1 10–2 .430 .419 W4
4 Dallas Cowboys East 10 6 0 .625 5–1 9–3 .488 .444 W2
Wild cards
5 Seattle Seahawks West 10 6 0 .625 3–3 8–4 .484 .400 W2
6 Philadelphia Eagles East 9 7 0 .563 4–2 6–6 .518 .486 W3
Did not qualify for the playoffs
7 Minnesota Vikings North 8 7 1 .531 3–2–1 6–5–1 .504 .355 L1
8[lower-alpha 7] Atlanta Falcons South 7 9 0 .438 4–2 7–5 .482 .348 W3
9[lower-alpha 7] Washington Redskins East 7 9 0 .438 2–4 6–6 .486 .371 L2
10[lower-alpha 7] Carolina Panthers South 7 9 0 .438 2–4 5–7 .508 .518 W1
11 Green Bay Packers North 6 9 1 .406 1–4–1 3–8–1 .488 .417 L1
12 Detroit Lions North 6 10 0 .375 2–4 4–8 .504 .427 W1
13[lower-alpha 8] New York Giants East 5 11 0 .313 1–5 4–8 .527 .487 L3
14[lower-alpha 8] Tampa Bay Buccaneers South 5 11 0 .313 2–4 4–8 .523 .506 L4
15 San Francisco 49ers West 4 12 0 .250 1–5 2–10 .504 .406 L2
16 Arizona Cardinals West 3 13 0 .188 2–4 3–9 .527 .302 L4
Tiebreakers[lower-alpha 9]

Postseason[]

The 2018 playoffs began on the weekend of January 5–6, 2019, with the Wild Card Playoff round. The four winners of those playoff games visited the top two seeds in each conference in the Divisional round games the weekend of January 12–13. The winners of those games advanced to the Conference Championship games on January 20. (In the event that both Los Angeles teams had advanced to their respective conference championships with both teams as the home team, one of the two games would have been postponed to the evening of January 21.)[1] The 2019 Pro Bowl was held at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Florida on January 27. Super Bowl LIII was held on February 3 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta.

Bracket[]

                                   
Jan. 6 – M&T Bank Stadium   Jan. 13 – Gillette Stadium          
  5   LA Chargers   23
  5   LA Chargers   28
  4   Baltimore   17     Jan. 20 – Arrowhead Stadium
  2   New England   41  
AFC
Jan. 5 – NRG Stadium   2   New England   37*
Jan. 12 – Arrowhead Stadium
    1   Kansas City   31  
  6   Indianapolis   21 AFC Championship
  6   Indianapolis   13
  3   Houston   7   Feb. 3 – Mercedes-Benz Stadium
  1   Kansas City   31  
Wild card playoffs  
Divisional playoffs
Jan. 5 – AT&T Stadium  A2   New England   13
Jan. 12 – Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
   N2   LA Rams   3
  5   Seattle   22 Super Bowl LIII
  4   Dallas   22
  4   Dallas   24     Jan. 20 – Mercedes-Benz Superdome
  2   LA Rams   30  
NFC
Jan. 6 – Soldier Field   2   LA Rams   26*
Jan. 13 – Mercedes-Benz Superdome
    1   New Orleans   23  
  6   Philadelphia   16 NFC Championship
  6   Philadelphia   14
  3   Chicago   15  
  1   New Orleans   20  


* Indicates overtime victory

This bracket: view · talk · edit

Records, milestones, and notable statistics[]

Week 1
Week 2
  • Frank Gore passed Curtis Martin to move up to fourth on the all-time rushing yards list with 14,103 career rushing yards.[3]
  • Patrick Mahomes became the youngest quarterback to throw six touchdown passes in a game, at age 22 years and 364 days.[4]
Week 3
  • Ryan Fitzpatrick became the first quarterback in NFL history to throw for at least 400 yards in three consecutive games.[4]
Week 4
Week 5
  • Tom Brady threw his 500th career touchdown pass, becoming the third quarterback in NFL history to do so (joining Brett Favre and Peyton Manning) and becoming the first to do so playing on one team.[6] On the same pass, Brady threw a touchdown pass to a 71st different receiver, breaking an NFL record previously held by Vinny Testaverde.[7]
  • Drew Brees became the NFL's all-time leading passer with 71,941 passing yards, surpassing Brett Favre and Peyton Manning in the process.
Week 6
  • Tom Brady became the first quarterback in NFL history to reach 200 regular season wins.[8]
Week 7
  • Drew Brees became the third quarterback in NFL history to defeat all 32 teams, joining Brett Favre and Peyton Manning.[9] He also became the fourth quarterback to throw 500 career touchdown passes, joining Favre, Manning, and Tom Brady.
Week 8
Week 10
  • Julio Jones became the fastest player in NFL history to reach 10,000 receiving yards, doing so in 104 games. Jones broke the record previously held by Calvin Johnson, who took 115 games.[12]
  • Larry Fitzgerald passed Terrell Owens to move to second on the all-time receiving yards list with 15,952 career receiving yards.[13]
Week 11
  • The Kansas City Chiefs scored 51 points in a 54–51 loss to the Los Angeles Rams, the most points ever scored by a losing team in NFL history. The 105-point aggregate total is also the third highest in NFL history.[14]
Week 12
  • The Houston Texans won their eighth straight game following an 0–3 start, becoming the first team in NFL history to do so.[16]
  • Philip Rivers completed 25 consecutive passes to start a game, breaking the record of 22 consecutive completions to start a game previously held by Mark Brunell. This streak also tied Ryan Tannehill's record of 25 consecutive passes at any point in a game. Rivers finished the game completing 28 out of 29 passes (96.6%), breaking the record for completion percentage (92.3%) previously held by Kurt Warner.[17]
Week 14
  • Derrick Henry became the second player in NFL history to record a 99 yard rushing touchdown, joining Hall of Famer Tony Dorsett who achieved this in 1982.[18]
Week 15
  • Tom Brady became the fourth quarterback to reach 70,000 career passing yards.[19]
Week 16
  • The New England Patriots won at least ten games for the 16th straight season, tying a record set by the 1983–98 San Francisco 49ers. They also clinched the AFC East for the tenth consecutive season (extending an NFL record for most consecutive years winning any division) and their tenth straight playoff berth, breaking the previous record of nine straight playoff berths previously held by the Dallas Cowboys (1975–1983) and Indianapolis Colts (2002–2010).
  • Zach Ertz set a new NFL record for the most catches in a single season by a tight end with 113, breaking a record previously held by Jason Witten.[20]
Week 17
  • George Kittle had 1,377 receiving yards on the season, breaking the record for most receiving yards by a tight end previously held by Travis Kelce.[21]
  • Baker Mayfield threw his 27th touchdown pass of the season breaking the record for most touchdown passes by a rookie quarterback, previously shared by Peyton Manning and Russell Wilson.[22]
  • Nick Foles completed 25 consecutive passes, tying a record held by Ryan Tannehill and Philip Rivers.[23]
  • Chris Jones recorded a sack in his 11th consecutive games this season, marking a new NFL record.[24]
Divisional round
Super Bowl
  • The Patriots defeated the Rams, 13–3, setting a new record for fewest total points (16) scored in a Super Bowl, five points fewer than Super Bowl VII when the Dolphins defeated the Redskins, 14–7.[27]
  • Tom Brady became the first player to win six Super Bowls, surpassing Charles Haley's five.[28]

Awards[]

Individual season awards[]

Award Winner Position Team
AP Most Valuable Player Patrick Mahomes QB Kansas City Chiefs
AP Offensive Player of the Year Patrick Mahomes QB Kansas City Chiefs
AP Defensive Player of the Year Aaron Donald DT Los Angeles Rams
AP Coach of the Year Matt Nagy HC Chicago Bears
AP Assistant Coach of the Year Vic Fangio DC Chicago Bears
AP Offensive Rookie of the Year Saquon Barkley RB New York Giants
AP Defensive Rookie of the Year Darius Leonard LB Indianapolis Colts
AP Comeback Player of the Year Andrew Luck QB Indianapolis Colts
Pepsi Rookie of the Year Saquon Barkley RB New York Giants
Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Chris Long DE Philadelphia Eagles
PFWA NFL Executive of the Year Chris Ballard GM Indianapolis Colts
Super Bowl Most Valuable Player Julian Edelman WR New England Patriots

All-Pro team[]

The following players were named First Team All-Pro by the Associated Press:

Offense
Quarterback Patrick Mahomes, Kansas City
Running back Todd Gurley, Los Angeles Rams
Flex Tyreek Hill, Kansas City
Wide receiver Michael Thomas, New Orleans
DeAndre Hopkins, Houston
Tight end Travis Kelce, Kansas City
Left tackle David Bakhtiari, Green Bay
Left guard Quenton Nelson, Indianapolis
Center Jason Kelce, Philadelphia
Right guard Zack Martin, Dallas
Right tackle Mitchell Schwartz, Kansas City
Defense
Edge rusher J. J. Watt, Houston
Khalil Mack, Chicago
Interior lineman Aaron Donald, Los Angeles Rams
Fletcher Cox, Philadelphia
Linebacker Luke Kuechly, Carolina
Bobby Wagner, Seattle
Darius Leonard, Indianapolis
Cornerback Kyle Fuller, Chicago
Stephon Gilmore, New England
Safety Eddie Jackson, Chicago
Derwin James, Los Angeles Chargers
Special teams
Placekicker Justin Tucker, Baltimore
Punter Michael Dickson, Seattle
Kick returner Andre Roberts, New York Jets
Special teams Adrian Phillips, Los Angeles Chargers

Players of the week/month[]

The following were named the top performers during the 2018 season:

Week/
Month
Offensive
Player of the Week/Month
Defensive
Player of the Week/Month
Special Teams
Player of the Week/Month
AFC NFC AFC NFC AFC NFC
1[29] Patrick Mahomes QB
(Chiefs)
Ryan Fitzpatrick QB
(Buccaneers)
T. J. Watt OLB
(Steelers)
Harrison Smith FS
(Vikings)
Jakeem Grant WR-KR
(Dolphins)
Greg Zuerlein K
(Rams)
2[30] Patrick Mahomes QB
(Chiefs)
Ryan Fitzpatrick QB
(Buccaneers)
Darius Leonard OLB
(Colts)
Danny Trevathan ILB
(Bears)
Dane Cruikshank SS
(Titans)
Robbie Gould K
(49ers)
3[31] Ben Roethlisberger QB
(Steelers)
Drew Brees QB
(Saints)
Matt Milano OLB
(Bills)
Efe Obada DE
(Panthers)
Justin Tucker K
(Ravens)
Blake Countess SS
(Rams)
4[32] Marcus Mariota QB
(Titans)
Jared Goff QB
(Rams)
Jadeveon Clowney OLB
(Texans)
Demario Davis ILB
(Saints)
Dwayne Harris WR-KR
(Raiders)
Brett Maher K
(Cowboys)
Sept.[33] Patrick Mahomes QB
(Chiefs)
Jared Goff QB
(Rams)
J. J. Watt DE
(Texans)
Khalil Mack OLB
(Bears)
Justin Tucker K
(Ravens)
Wil Lutz K
(Saints)
5[34] Isaiah Crowell RB
(Jets)
Drew Brees QB
(Saints)
T. J. Watt OLB
(Steelers)
Chandler Jones DE
(Cardinals)
Denzel Ward CB
(Browns)
Graham Gano K
(Panthers)
6[35] Albert Wilson WR
(Dolphins)
Todd Gurley RB
(Rams)
Za'Darius Smith OLB
(Ravens)
Frank Clark DE
(Seahawks)
Jason Myers K
(Jets)
Mason Crosby K
(Packers)
7[36] Emmanuel Sanders WR
(Broncos)
Cam Newton QB
(Panthers)
Mike Mitchell FS
(Colts)
Aaron Donald DT
(Rams)
Dont'a Hightower OLB
(Patriots)
Giorgio Tavecchio K
(Falcons)
8[37] James Conner RB
(Steelers)
Adrian Peterson RB
(Redskins)
Dee Ford OLB
(Chiefs)
P. J. Williams CB
(Saints)
Adam Vinatieri K
(Colts)
Michael Dickson P
(Seahawks)
Oct.[38] James Conner RB
(Steelers)
Todd Gurley RB
(Rams)
Dee Ford OLB
(Chiefs)
Aaron Donald DT
(Rams)
Stephen Gostkowski K
(Patriots)
Graham Gano K
(Panthers)
9[39] Kareem Hunt RB
(Chiefs)
Michael Thomas WR
(Saints)
Desmond King CB
(Chargers)
Danielle Hunter DE
(Vikings)
Matt Haack P
(Dolphins)
Bradley Pinion P
(49ers)
10[40] Ben Roethlisberger QB
(Steelers)
Mitchell Trubisky QB
(Bears)
Wesley Woodyard ILB
(Titans)
Leighton Vander Esch MLB
(Cowboys)
Stephen Hauschka K
(Bills)
Tress Way P
(Redskins)
11[41] Andrew Luck QB
(Colts)
Saquon Barkley RB
(Giants)
Von Miller OLB
(Broncos)
Samson Ebukam OLB
(Rams)
Daniel Carlson K
(Raiders)
Cody Parkey K
(Bears)
12[42] Philip Rivers QB
(Chargers)
Amari Cooper WR
(Cowboys)
J. J. Watt DE
(Texans)
Eddie Jackson S
(Bears)
Cyrus Jones CB-PR
(Ravens)
Sebastian Janikowski K
(Seahawks)
Nov.[43] Andrew Luck QB
(Colts)
Drew Brees QB
(Saints)
Chris Jones DE
(Chiefs)
Eddie Jackson S
(Bears)
Justin Tucker K
(Ravens)
Michael Dickson P
(Seahawks)
13[44] Phillip Lindsay RB
(Broncos)
Todd Gurley RB
(Rams)
Xavien Howard CB
(Dolphins)
Bobby Wagner LB
(Seahawks)
Desmond King CB-KR
(Chargers)
Aldrick Rosas K
(Giants)
14[45] Derrick Henry RB
(Titans)
Amari Cooper WR
(Cowboys)
Denico Autry DE
(Colts)
Darius Slay CB
(Lions)
Michael Badgley K
(Chargers)
Taysom Hill QB-KR
(Saints)
15[46] Mike Williams WR
(Chargers)
Dalvin Cook RB
(Vikings)
Joe Haden CB
(Steelers)
Grady Jarrett DT
(Falcons)
Ka'imi Fairbairn K
(Texans)
Robbie Gould K
(49ers)
16[47] Baker Mayfield QB
(Browns)
Nick Foles QB
(Eagles)
Patrick Onwuasor LB
(Ravens)
Aaron Donald DT
(Rams)
Dwayne Harris WR-KR
(Raiders)
Brett Maher K
(Cowboys)
17[48] Josh Allen QB
(Bills)
Blake Jarwin TE
(Cowboys)
Darius Leonard OLB
(Colts)
Fletcher Cox DT
(Eagles)
Justin Tucker K
(Ravens)
Matt Prater K
(Lions)
Dec.[49] Derrick Henry RB
(Titans)
Chris Carson RB
(Seahawks)
Darius Leonard OLB
(Colts)
Aaron Donald DT
(Rams)
Ka'imi Fairbarn K
(Texans)
Robbie Gould K
(49ers)
Week FedEx Air
Player of the Week
(Quarterbacks)[50]
FedEx Ground
Player of the Week
(Running backs)[50]
Pepsi
Rookie of the Week[51]
1 Ryan Fitzpatrick
(Buccaneers)
James Conner
(Steelers)
Denzel Ward CB
(Browns)
2 Patrick Mahomes
(Chiefs)
Matt Breida
(49ers)
Darius Leonard OLB
(Colts)
3 Drew Brees
(Saints)
Adrian Peterson
(Redskins)
Baker Mayfield QB
(Browns)
4 Mitchell Trubisky
(Bears)
Alvin Kamara
(Saints)
Nick Chubb RB
(Browns)
5 Drew Brees
(Saints)
Isaiah Crowell
(Jets)
Denzel Ward CB
(Browns)
6 Aaron Rodgers
(Packers)
Todd Gurley
(Rams)
Saquon Barkley RB
(Giants)
7 Patrick Mahomes
(Chiefs)
Kerryon Johnson
(Lions)
Baker Mayfield QB
(Browns)
8 Patrick Mahomes
(Chiefs)
James Conner
(Steelers)
Darius Leonard OLB
(Colts)
9 Drew Brees
(Saints)
Kareem Hunt
(Chiefs)
Baker Mayfield QB
(Browns)
10 Mitchell Trubisky
(Bears)
Nick Chubb
(Browns)
Nick Chubb RB
(Browns)
11 Drew Brees
(Saints)
Saquon Barkley
(Giants)
Tre'Quan Smith WR
(Saints)
12 Andrew Luck
(Colts)
Christian McCaffrey
(Panthers)
Baker Mayfield QB
(Browns)
13 Philip Rivers
(Chargers)
Phillip Lindsay
(Broncos)
Phillip Lindsay RB
(Broncos)
14 Dak Prescott
(Cowboys)
Derrick Henry
(Titans)
Baker Mayfield QB
(Browns)
15 Philip Rivers
(Chargers)
Derrick Henry
(Titans)
Jaylen Samuels RB
(Steelers)
16 Nick Foles
(Eagles)
C. J. Anderson
(Rams)
Baker Mayfield QB
(Browns)
17 Dak Prescott
(Cowboys)
Jordan Howard
(Bears)
Baker Mayfield QB
(Browns)
Month Rookie of the Month
Offensive Defensive
Sept.[52] Calvin Ridley WR
(Falcons)
Darius Leonard OLB
(Colts)
Oct.[53] Quenton Nelson G
(Colts)
Bradley Chubb OLB
(Broncos)
Nov.[54] Baker Mayfield QB
(Browns)
Leighton Vander Esch OLB
(Cowboys)
Dec.[49] Lamar Jackson QB
(Ravens)
Tremaine Edmunds MLB
(Bills)

Head coaching and front office personnel changes[]

Head coaches[]

Off-season[]

Team 2017 head coach 2017 interim 2018 replacement Reason for leaving Notes
Arizona Cardinals Bruce Arians Steve Wilks Retired Arians retired from coaching following the 2017 season, finishing the season with a record of .500 and a cumulative record of .619 with two playoff appearances.[55] Wilks was hired on January 22, after serving as a defensive coach for the Chicago Bears, San Diego Chargers, and Carolina Panthers since 2006. Wilks's only previous head coaching experience was at Savannah State in 1999.[56]
Chicago Bears John Fox Matt Nagy Fired Fox was fired after the final game of the 2017 season, finishing the season with a record of .313 and a cumulative record of .292 with no playoff appearances.[57] Nagy spent the past five seasons as an offensive assistant with the Kansas City Chiefs, the last two as offensive coordinator; the Bears hired Nagy on January 8 and this will be his first NFL head coaching job.[58]
Detroit Lions Jim Caldwell Matt Patricia Caldwell was fired after the final game of the 2017 season, finishing the season with a record of .563 and a cumulative record of .563 with two playoff appearances, but having never won a playoff game as head coach of the Lions.[59] Patricia was hired on February 5, the day after losing Super Bowl LII as the New England Patriots defensive coordinator. He had spent his entire NFL career with the Patriots, starting in 2004 as an offensive assistant before working his way up to defensive coordinator in 2012, winning 3 Super Bowls. This will be his first head coaching job.[60]
Indianapolis Colts Chuck Pagano Frank Reich Pagano was fired after the final game of the 2017 season, finishing the season with a record of .250, his first losing season as Colts' head coach, and a cumulative record of .552 with three playoff appearances.[61] On February 6, the Colts announced that they had planned to hire New England Patriots offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels as the team's next head coach, however, McDaniels informed the Colts that he had changed his mind and was returning to the Patriots.[62] The Colts then hired Philadelphia Eagles offensive coordinator Frank Reich, who was previously a Colts' assistant from 2008–2011. This will be Reich's first head coaching job.[63]
New York Giants Ben McAdoo Steve Spagnuolo Pat Shurmur McAdoo became the Giants' head coach in 2016, leading the Giants to a .464 record over parts of two seasons with one playoff appearance. After accruing a .167 record and benching starter Eli Manning during the season, he was fired on December 4, 2017, and replaced in the interim by defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo.[64] Shurmur was announced as the Giants' new head coach on January 22. He had previously served as the head coach of the Cleveland Browns from 2011 to 2012, compiling a record of .281, and an offensive coach for the Philadelphia Eagles and Minnesota Vikings since 2013.[65]
Oakland Raiders Jack Del Rio Jon Gruden Del Rio was fired after the 2017 season, finishing the season with a record of .375 and a cumulative record of .521 with one playoff appearance.[66] Gruden, who previously coached the Raiders from 1998 to 2001 and won a Super Bowl with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at the end of the 2002 season, confirmed on-air on January 6, that he would be returning to the team as coach. He had spent the previous nine seasons as an on-air analyst for Monday Night Football.[67]
Tennessee Titans Mike Mularkey Mike Vrabel Mutual decision Mularkey and the Titans agreed to part ways after they "couldn't come to an agreement over the future," two days after the Titans' playoff loss to the Patriots. Mularkey had a cumulative record of .488 with one playoff appearance in parts of three seasons with the Titans and guided Tennessee to back-to-back .563 records in his two years as the team's full-time head coach.[68] Vrabel spent the past three seasons as a defensive assistant with the Houston Texans, the last as defensive coordinator; the Titans hired Vrabel on January 20 and this will be his first NFL head coaching job.[69]

In-season[]

Team Departing coach Reason for leaving Interim replacement Notes
Cleveland Browns Hue Jackson Fired Gregg Williams Jackson was fired on October 29, accumulating a 2–5–1 (.313) record during the 2018 season and a 3–36–1 (.088) record for his 2.5-season tenure with the Browns. His dismissal follows a power struggle with offensive coordinator Todd Haley (who was fired at the same time) and the team's 25th consecutive loss away from home; Jackson failed to win a single road game during his tenure and lost every game in 2017.[70] Williams, the team's defensive coordinator, was previously the head coach of the Buffalo Bills from 2001 to 2003, with a record of 17–31 (.354). Jackson currently serves as the Special Assistant to the Head Coach for the Cincinnati Bengals.
Green Bay Packers Mike McCarthy Joe Philbin McCarthy was fired on December 2, shortly after the Packers loss to the Arizona Cardinals. McCarthy leaves with a record of 135–85–2 with nine playoff appearances and one Super Bowl championship. Philbin, the team's offensive coordinator, was previously the head coach of the Miami Dolphins from 2012-2015, with a record of 24–28 (.462).[71]

Front office personnel[]

Off-season[]

Team Position 2017 office holder 2017 interim 2018 replacement Reason for leaving Notes
Cleveland Browns VP/GM Sashi Brown John Dorsey Fired Brown was fired on December 7, 2017. He had been the team's attorney since 2013 and de facto general manager since 2016.[72] Dorsey was named the new general manager hours later.[73]
Green Bay Packers GM Ted Thompson Brian Gutekunst Reassigned Thompson, who had been the team's general manager since 2005, became the team's senior advisor to football operations.[74] Brian Gutekunst, who had been the team's director of player personnel since 2016, was promoted to become the team's new general manager on January 7.[75]
Houston Texans GM Rick Smith Brian Gaine Medical leave Smith announced that he would take a leave of absence to care for his wife, who is battling breast cancer. He will remain Executive Vice President of Football Operations.[76] Former Buffalo Bills' vice president of player personnel, Brian Gaine, was named the new general manager on January 13, 2018. Previously, Gaine was Texans' director of pro personnel and then director of player personnel from 2014 to 2016.[77]
New York Giants GM Jerry Reese Kevin Abrams Dave Gettleman Fired Having been in the organization since 1994, Reese was the Giants' general manager since 2007, leading them to two Super Bowl championships and several years of success. He was fired on December 4 along with head coach Ben McAdoo. He was replaced in the interim by assistant general manager Kevin Abrams.[78] Dave Gettleman, previously general manager of the Carolina Panthers and a 14-year veteran of the Giants' front office (from 1999 to 2012), was hired on December 28, 2017.[79]
Buffalo Bills President Russ Brandon Kim Pegula Resigned Brandon resigned his position on May 1, 2018. A newspaper report claimed that Brandon was the subject of an internal investigation regarding his personal conduct and workplace behavior, which neither the Bills nor Brandon mentioned in separate statements regarding his departure; Brandon stated he is seeking other opportunities after spending 20 years with the Bills franchise. He was immediately succeeded by co-owner Kim Pegula.[80]

In-season[]

Team Position 2018 office holder Interim replacement 2018 Replacement Reason for leaving Notes
Oakland Raiders GM Reggie McKenzie Shaun Herock Mike Mayock Fired McKenzie was fired on December 10, 2018 after six-plus seasons as Raiders' GM.[81] Herock, current teams' Director of College Scouting, served as the Raiders’ interim General Manager until Oakland hired Mike Mayock on December 31, 2018.[82]

Stadiums[]

Two teams, the Carolina Panthers and Oakland Raiders, are entering the final year of their lease agreements with their current stadium.

Carolina Panthers[]

On December 17, 2017, Jerry Richardson, the Panthers' founding owner, announced he was putting the team up for sale.[83][84] Richardson had previously indicated the team would be put up for sale after his death,[85] but Richardson was accused of paying hush money to cover up questionable conduct, including racial slurs and sexually suggestive requests of employees, hastening Richardson's decision.[86] The Panthers' lease on Bank of America Stadium expires after the 2018 season,[87] which would allow any incoming owner to relocate the team out of Charlotte, North Carolina, to another market if they so desired, only being liable for the remaining debt from stadium renovation. At an estimated $35 million, the debt payment would be a small expense compared to the relocation fee the NFL charged for the two teams that relocated in 2016 and 2017.[88] The two most likely candidates to buy the team as of 2018 were David Tepper, a hedge fund manager with a higher net worth and a minority stake in the Pittsburgh Steelers but fewer ties to Charlotte; and Ben Navarro, a financial services CEO based in Charlotte who had the backing of Richardson's only living son.[89] Tepper was announced as the new owner on May 16, with the announcement coming in time for the league to vote on his bid at the owners meeting on May 19.[90] The sale closed on July 9 with Richardson-era chief operating officer Tina Becker (who ran the franchise after Richardson stepped away from operations) resigning. Tepper immediately stated the franchise would retain the Carolina Panthers name for the time being, but that a new stadium would likely be necessary; he stated that he hoped to build said stadium in Charlotte but would not guarantee the team remains there, claiming he did not know enough about the situation to guarantee the team stays in the Charlotte area.[91]

Oakland Raiders[]

The Raiders, prior to the 2017 season, committed to relocating to Las Vegas, Nevada, once a new stadium is constructed for them in 2020. In 2016, the Raiders signed a three-year extension with the Oakland Coliseum.[92] The Raiders could choose to stay in the Oakland Coliseum for 2019 with another year-to-year extension or move to Sam Boyd Stadium in Las Vegas, which is undersized but (because of the Los Angeles Chargers' use of the even smaller StubHub Center) would not be the smallest stadium in the NFL. Management at the Oakland Coliseum has indicated they are unwilling to extend their agreement with the Raiders after 2018, which could force the team to move to Sam Boyd Stadium in 2019.[93] In order to secure another season in Oakland, California, Coliseum management indicated in September 2017 that the Raiders would need to offer major concessions to compensate for the financial losses the Coliseum incurs by hosting Raiders games.[94]

With the city of Oakland filing a lawsuit against the Raiders and the NFL in December 2018, the Raiders management has indicated that the team will leave Oakland after the 2018 season and find a temporary stadium elsewhere until Las Vegas Stadium is finished.[95]

Naming rights agreements[]

Arizona Cardinals[]

On September 4, University of Phoenix Stadium, the home field of the Arizona Cardinals, was renamed State Farm Stadium. The naming rights agreement is for 18 years; however, the cost of the deal was not disclosed.[96]

Denver Broncos[]

On June 20, the Denver Broncos' home stadium was renamed Broncos Stadium at Mile High.[97] The sporting goods chain Sports Authority had held naming rights to the stadium's field (as "Sports Authority Field at Mile High") but had gone out of business in 2016. The previous signage referring to Sports Authority was removed in March.[98][99] The Broncos hope to resell the naming rights to the stadium to another corporate sponsor in the near future.[97]

Jacksonville Jaguars[]

On February 16, EverBank Field, the home field of the Jacksonville Jaguars, was renamed TIAA Bank Field, after TIAA's 2017 acquisition of EverBank. The naming rights agreement was for 10 years and $43 million.[100]

Uniforms[]

Color Rush discontinuation[]

The Color Rush program was discontinued, and teams were no longer required to wear the special uniforms for Thursday Night Football. Initial plans, which were finalized at the league's owners meeting in May, are for teams to have the option to continue using the existing Nike designs for the program as standard third jerseys.[101][102]

Uniform changes[]

  • Chicago Bears: The Bears brought back their orange alternate jerseys that the team wore from 2005–2009 and 2011. The team announced that the orange uniforms will be worn twice in 2018, and the team will use the navy blue "Monsters of the Midway" throwbacks for one game.[103]
  • Jacksonville Jaguars: On April 19, the Jaguars simplified their uniforms in a similar look they had used before 2013. Gold was also eliminated from their previous jerseys and the gradient black and gold helmet was reverted to an all-black gloss shell.[104]
  • Los Angeles Rams: On July 27, the Rams announced that due to overwhelming fan demand the NFL relaxed their alternate uniform policy and has permitted them to use their royal blue and yellow throwbacks as their color jerseys for the next two seasons until they present entirely new ones in 2020. When using their white jerseys, the team will still have to use their current set carried over from St. Louis albeit from slight modifications they made to them in 2017.[105]
  • Miami Dolphins: On April 19, the Dolphins simplified their uniform outlines to take after their classic aqua-and-orange look. Dark blue was removed from everything but the logo. For the second straight year, the Dolphins will wear their official throwback jerseys twice in 2018.[106]
  • Tennessee Titans: On April 4, the Titans introduced new uniforms. Most prominent among the changes is the helmet, which is changing from the white color the team had used since the 1970s (as the Houston Oilers) to navy blue. The color patterns are also simplified, with a new number typeface inspired both by Greek lettering and the shape of the state of Tennessee.[107]

Throwback uniforms[]

  • Pittsburgh Steelers: On May 30, the Steelers unveiled a throwback uniform, that was worn in the late 1970s. Team owner Art Rooney II announced that the team will wear the uniforms for one game.[108]
  • San Francisco 49ers: On May 23, 49ers unveiled a new all-white throwback uniform, that was worn in 1994, the year the team won its most recent Super Bowl. The team announced that they will be worn for one game.[109]

Patches[]

  • Green Bay Packers: On April 9, the Packers unveiled a patch to commemorate their 100th season.[110]
  • Indianapolis Colts: On April 10, the Colts unveiled a patch to commemorate their 35th season in Indianapolis.[111]
  • Los Angeles Chargers: The Chargers silently added a patch to commemorate the death of team owner Alex Spanos (and his wife Faye, who died in August) before Week 9's game against the Seahawks.
  • New Orleans Saints: On August 9, the Saints unveiled a patch to commemorate the death of team owner Tom Benson, featuring Benson in silhouette holding his second line umbrella above his initials.[112]
  • Seattle Seahawks: On October 26, the Seahawks unveiled a patch to commemorate the death of team owner Paul Allen, featuring his "PGA" initials below the team's 12th Man flag.[113]

Media[]

Broadcast rights[]

Television[]

This will be the fifth year under the current broadcast contracts with ESPN, CBS, Fox, and NBC. This includes "cross-flexing" (switching) Sunday afternoon games between CBS and Fox before or during the season (regardless of the conference of the visiting team). NBC will continue to air Sunday Night Football, the annual Kickoff game, and the primetime Thanksgiving game. ESPN will continue to air Monday Night Football and the Pro Bowl. CBS will broadcast Super Bowl LIII.

On January 31, the NFL announced that Fox had acquired the broadcast television rights to the Thursday Night Football package under a five-year deal (aligned with the remainder of the NFL's current broadcast contracts). Fox aired 11 games,[114] in simulcast with NFL Network,[115][116] with the remaining games in the package airing exclusively on NFL Network to satisfy its carriage contracts (with local broadcasts syndicated broadcast stations in the markets of the teams in each game).[117] CBS and NBC had made bids to renew their previous contracts (CBS had held the rights since 2014, joined by NBC since 2016), but were reluctant to pay a higher rights fee due to the league's ratings downturn.[118]

Digital[]

The NFL agreed to an extension of its digital rights agreement with Verizon Communications under a 5-year, $2.5 billion deal. Unlike the previous deal, it no longer includes exclusivity for streaming in-market and nationally televised NFL games on mobile devices with screens 7 inches (18 cm) or less in size (such as smartphones), in order to account for changes in viewing habits, but still includes enhanced access to highlights and other digital content for Verizon-owned properties. In addition, Verizon announced that it would no longer make these streams exclusive to Verizon Wireless subscribers, and would leverage its portfolio of media brands (such as Yahoo!, which it acquired in 2017) to distribute them to a larger audience.[119][120] All of the NFL's current television partners have added mobile streaming rights (which were previously reserved to Verizon) to their existing contracts for the 2018 season, with telecasts becoming available via CBS All Access, the Fox Sports App, the ESPN app, and the NBC Sports app.[121][122] Under the terms of the agreement, Verizon must give the majority of the advertising revenue to the broadcast partners.[123]

On April 26, 2018, the NFL announced that it had reached a two-year extension of its agreement with Amazon for shared digital rights to the Thursday Night Football games simulcast with Fox, with a 15% increase in rights fees. To fulfill a request that the streams be available freely, the games will also be made available on Twitch, an Amazon-owned streaming service that was originally designed for video game streaming.[124]

Radio[]

Both of the NFL's national radio contracts, Westwood One for English language[125] and Entravision for Spanish language,[126] expired after the 2017 season. Westwood One's parent company Cumulus Media filed for bankruptcy in November 2017[127] and began terminating national broadcast contracts and sports agreements in January 2018,[128][129] putting any contract extensions on hold. The company emerged from bankruptcy on June 4, 2018.[130]

With the release of the 2018 schedule, NFL.com listed ESPN Deportes Radio (which had shared NFL rights with Entravision in 2017 and had carried Super Bowl LII[131]) as the league's national Spanish-language broadcaster. The national English-language broadcaster was still identified as Westwood One, which Westwood One has also confirmed;[132] no press release has been issued in regard to a contract extension with that network, and it is unknown when the current arrangement was signed or when it will end. Additionally, Westwood One removed Sunday afternoon games from their package, instead focusing on the primetime matchups as well as the postseason. SportsUSA, Compass and ESPN Radio, which also has broadcast select Sunday afternoon NFL games, will continue to do so.[133] Meanwhile, Entravision extended the Sunday night rights for 3 years, through 2021, and gained two Super Bowls, the entire AFC Playoff package, the Thursday Night Opener, and a Thanksgiving Day game as part of their new deal.[134]

Only one game into the pre-season, Indianapolis Colts announcer Bob Lamey, who had been with the team for most of the time since their 1984 relocation from Baltimore, retired suddenly after a complaint of him using a racial slur in the 1980s was revealed. Sideline reporter Matt Taylor was named his de facto replacement for the season.[135]

Greg Papa, after 21 years calling play-by-play for the Oakland Raiders, joined the San Francisco 49ers as their play-by-play announcer;[136] Papa cited an ongoing feud with Raiders owner Mark Davis for his departure.[137] Replacing Papa with the Raiders is Brent Musburger, who came out of retirement from sports announcing to sign a three-year deal with the team that will see him serve as broadcaster through the team's relocation to Las Vegas (Musburger maintains a side business, the Vegas Sports Information Network, in Las Vegas).[138][139]

Personnel changes[]

All four broadcast partners will employ rules analysts for the 2018 season, citing changes in the league's rules that have become too complicated for its broadcast teams to handle.[140] NBC hired Terry McAulay to be their rules analyst for Sunday Night Football. CBS hired Gene Steratore to fill their rules analyst position, a position that had been vacant since CBS released Mike Carey in 2015. ESPN hired Jeff Triplette for Monday Night Football. Fox retained both Mike Pereira and Dean Blandino. Additionally, Pereira assists with Fox's Thursday Night Football Coverage.

ESPN introduced a fully new broadcast team for Monday Night Football. Joe Tessitore replaced Sean McDonough as lead play-by-play man; McDonough will remain with ESPN as a college football announcer.[141][142] With previous color analyst Jon Gruden returning to coaching, Monday Night Football hired Jason Witten and Booger McFarland as their color commentators; while McFarland offers his commentary from the sidelines, he fills a role similar to the "non-football" player position that Monday Night Football has traditionally relied upon in its past three-person booths (such as Howard Cosell, Dennis Miller and Tony Kornheiser).[143] Lisa Salters, the sideline reporter, carries over from the previous broadcast team.[144] Jeff Triplette will replace Gerald Austin as rules analyst.[145]

Fox initially had planned to hire a new broadcast team for its Thursday Night Football, making an overture to Peyton Manning to serve as color commentator. Since Manning declined the offer, the network announced that it will be placing its existing lead broadcast team of Joe Buck and Troy Aikman on the package, reducing the number of games the duo will call on Sundays (Buck and Aikman will only call the nationally televised "America's Game of the Week" telecasts on Sundays).[146] A version of Fox NFL Sunday will serve as the lead-in to Thursday Night Football, without Curt Menefee or Jimmy Johnson; the show will instead be hosted by panelist Michael Strahan from New York City, displacing Rich Eisen, the studio host for Thursday night pregame since the package's inception in 2006.[147] Strahan will be joined by fellow Fox colleagues Terry Bradshaw and Howie Long.

In previous seasons, Buck did not call any NFL games during late October, working Major League Baseball playoff games instead. For 2018, Fox coordinated its schedule with MLB so that none of its scheduled broadcasts would land on a Thursday (Fox carries the NLCS and the World Series), so Buck will continue to broadcast both sports, crisscrossing the country in seven cities over a 22-day period.[148]

In addition, NBC introduced a new studio team for Football Night in America. Mike Tirico, who was the on-site host and secondary play-by-play announcer in 2017, became the show's studio host from Stamford, Connecticut, while Liam McHugh moved into Tirico's former role. Dan Patrick, who had been the studio host for FNiA since 2008, declined to sign a long-term contract and left NBC.[149]

On radio, Kurt Warner replaced Boomer Esiason as the color commentator for Westwood One's Monday Night Football broadcasts, after Esiason had filled the role for the previous 18 years. Esiason will continue as a studio host for CBS.[150]

In a surprise announcement made two days before its first game, Amazon announced it would provide its own broadcast team for its eleven games, with Hannah Storm and Andrea Kremer serving as the lead broadcast team. The announcement makes Kremer the first-ever female color analyst for an NFL game, the first time a game has been broadcast with no men involved in the broadcast team, and the first time since the 1987 season of ESPN Sunday Night NFL that no former coach or player served on the broadcast team in any capacity. Amazon will offer the standard Fox broadcast team, a British broadcasting team, and a Spanish language feed as alternate audio choices.[151]

Primetime game time shifts[]

The kick-off times for all three primetime series were moved up to start 5 to 15 minutes earlier to facilitate local newscasts and SportsCenter to start earlier and cause less disruption to late night television schedules in the Eastern and Central time zones. Thursday and Sunday Night games now kick off at 8:20 p.m. ET, while Monday Night games now kick off at 8:15 p.m. ET.[152]

Most watched regular season games[]

After two years of decline, television viewership for the NFL slightly rebounded in 2018, with ratings up 3% as a whole through the first ten weeks of the season, despite a major decline (16%) in other programming on the same networks.[153] The season finished with ratings up 5% compared to 2017.[154]

Rank Date Matchup Network Viewers (millions) TV rating [155] Window Significance
1 November 22, 4:30 ET Washington Redskins 23 Dallas Cowboys 31 Fox 30.5 12.5 Thanksgiving Cowboys–Redskins Rivalry
2 November 22, 12:30 ET Chicago Bears 23 Detroit Lions 16 CBS 26.5 12.3 Thanksgiving Bears–Lions Rivalry
3 December 9, 4:25 ET Philadelphia Eagles 23 Dallas Cowboys 29 Fox 25.1 14.2 Late DH[a] Cowboys–Eagles Rivalry
4 December 16, 4:25 ET New England Patriots 10 Pittsburgh Steelers 17 CBS 24.6 14.2 Late DH[b]
5 December 23, 4:25 ET Pittsburgh Steelers 28 New Orleans Saints 31 23.9 13.4 Late DH[c]
6 November 4, 8:20 ET Green Bay Packers 17 New England Patriots 31 NBC 23.7 13.7 SNF
7 November 25, 4:25 ET Pittsburgh Steelers 17 Denver Broncos 24 CBS 23.7 13.5 Late DH[d]
8 September 9, 4:25 ET Dallas Cowboys 8 Carolina Panthers 16 Fox 23.3 13.1 Late DH[e]
9 December 2, 4:25 ET Minnesota Vikings 10 New England Patriots 24 23.2 13.5 Late DH[f]
10 September 23, 4:25 ET Dallas Cowboys 13 Seattle Seahawks 24 22.2 12.7 Late DH[g]

*Note — Late DH matchups listed in table are the matchups that were shown to the largest percentage of the market.

  1. ^ PHI/DAL was shown in 84% of the markets durinig the late doubleheader time slot of Fox coverage.
  2. ^ NE/PIT was shown in 100% of the markets during the late doubleheader time slot of CBS coverage.
  3. ^ PIT/NO was shown in 100% of the markets during the late doubleheader time slot of CBS coverage.
  4. ^ PIT/DEN was shown in 87% of the markets during the late doubleheader time slot of CBS coverage.
  5. ^ DAL/CAR was shown in 80% of the markets during the late doubleheader time slot of Fox coverage.
  6. ^ MIN/NE was shown in 90% of the markets during the late doubleheader time slot of Fox coverage.
  7. ^ DAL/SEA was shown in 85% of the markets during the late doubleheader time slot of Fox coverage.

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