American Football Database
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For the championship game of the American Indoor Football League formerly known as the "American Bowl,", see AIFA Championship Bowl.

The American Bowl was a series of National Football League pre-season exhibition games that were held at sites outside the United States between 1986 and 2005.

Overview[]

The league started the American Bowl series in 1986 primarily to promote American football in other countries. After successful games in London's Wembley Stadium, the series was expanded to Japan. Since 1990, games have also been played in Montreal and Berlin to promote the new WLAF (later NFL Europe) which started in 1991. The 1997 game was played in Dublin, Ireland. These games usually played at times of local convenience; in the case of games in Japan, it was common for games to start at 5:00 AM local time.

The largest crowd in NFL history was recorded at the American Bowl game at Mexico City August 15, 1994, when 112,376 people attended the Governor's Cup game between the Dallas Cowboys and Houston Oilers.

The American Bowl was a fifth pre-season game, played the same weekend as the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game, and did not take away a game from the participating teams' pre-season schedules.

At least one American Bowl game was played annually from 1986-2003. As many as four were played per year in the early 1990s. There were three games in 1998, two in 2000 and since then not more than one per year. There was no American Bowl game played in 2004, and in its last few years all American Bowl games were played in either Mexico or Japan.

The two teams that play in an American Bowl game are selected by the league. This game is always the fifth pre-season game for the teams involved instead of the normal four.

Not considered American Bowl games were several earlier pre-season contests played outside the United States. Between 1950 and 1983, there were 13 football games involving NFL or AFL teams played on foreign soil. Six games between 1950-1961 pitted NFL teams against CFL teams with the NFL team winning all six games. These games were a hybrid of US and Canadian football. One game was played between the AFL and the CFL (AFL's Buffalo Bills and CFL's Hamilton Tiger-Cats, with Hamilton winning 38-21). All these games were held in Canada. There was also a game in 1960 that pitted the Chicago Bears against the New York Giants played in Canada; this was in return for a 1958 CFL matchup that was played in Philadelphia.[3]

The next five games were of the same format as the American Bowl (without the name) and featured four games between NFL teams and one game between an AFL team and an NFL team (Boston vs. Detroit, 8/25/69). The first two of these games were played in Montreal (1969), then in Tokyo (1976), Mexico City (1978), and London (1983) before the term American Bowl was coined. The game in London was called the Global Cup.

There have been three international pre-season games during the American Bowl era that did not receive the American Bowl name: two 1988 matches in Montreal and Gothenburg, Sweden and a 1993 match in Toronto. These games were not part of the American Bowl series because they were not arranged by the NFL but, rather, the scheduled home team elected to play there. The Montreal match, as well as an American Bowl in the same venue in 1990, came during a time when Montreal did not have a Canadian Football League team (the Concordes/Alouettes had folded in preseason in 1987, while the new Alouettes would not relocate to the city until 1996). Montreal would also host the Montreal Machine of the NFL-backed World League of American Football in 1991 and 1992.

The last American Bowl was held in 2005. NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell cited the league's new international strategy in the abandonment of international pre-season games as well as the closure of NFL Europe, instead focusing on playing regular season games in foreign countries.

The pre-season game that was scheduled to take place in August 2007 (later postponed to 2009) between the New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks at Beijing National Stadium in Beijing, China has been named the China Bowl instead of the American Bowl; that game, too, was eventually canceled before being played.

Post-American Bowl[]

The first regular season NFL game played outside the United States was held on October 2, 2005 at Estadio Azteca in Mexico City before an NFL regular-season record of 103,467 fans. The Arizona Cardinals defeated the San Francisco 49ers, 31-14. The New York Giants and Miami Dolphins played a regular season game at Wembley Stadium in London on October 28, 2007 (with the Giants winning 13-10), the first ever NFL regular season game to be played outside of North America; similarly, the San Diego Chargers and New Orleans Saints followed suit in October 2008. These games are not recorded as American Bowls (as they are played during the regular season and not the pre-season); instead, the name for this series is the International Series. In addition to these games, the Buffalo Bills began playing in a series of games (some pre-season. some regular season) in Toronto, Ontario; the Miami Dolphins beat the Bills 16-3 in the first such game, on December 7, 2008.

Game history[]

Date Winning Team Score Losing Team Score Stadium City
August 3, 1986 Chicago Bears 17 Dallas Cowboys 6 Wembley Stadium File:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg London
August 9, 1987 Los Angeles Rams 28 Denver Broncos 27 Wembley Stadium File:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg London
July 31, 1988 Miami Dolphins 27 San Francisco 49ers 21 Wembley Stadium File:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg London
August 5, 1989 Los Angeles Rams 16 San Francisco 49ers 13 Tokyo Dome Japan Tokyo
August 6, 1989 Philadelphia Eagles 17 Cleveland Browns 13 Wembley Stadium File:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg London
August 4, 1990 Denver Broncos 10 Seattle Seahawks 7 Tokyo Dome Japan Tokyo
August 5, 1990 New Orleans Saints 17 Los Angeles Raiders 10 Wembley Stadium File:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg London
August 9, 1990 Pittsburgh Steelers 30 New England Patriots 14 Olympic Stadium Canada Montreal
August 11, 1990 Los Angeles Rams 19 Kansas City Chiefs 3 Olympiastadion File:Flag of Germany.svg West Berlin
July 28, 1991 Buffalo Bills 17 Philadelphia Eagles 13 Wembley Stadium File:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg London
August 3, 1991 San Francisco 49ers 21 Chicago Bears 7 Olympiastadion Germany Berlin
August 3, 1991 Miami Dolphins 19 Los Angeles Raiders 17 Tokyo Dome Japan Tokyo
August 1, 1992 Houston Oilers 34 Dallas Cowboys 23 Tokyo Dome Japan Tokyo
August 15, 1992 Miami Dolphins 31 Denver Broncos 27 Olympiastadion Germany Berlin
August 16, 1992 San Francisco 49ers 17 Washington Redskins 15 Wembley Stadium File:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg London
July 31, 1993 New Orleans Saints 28 Philadelphia Eagles 16 Tokyo Dome Japan Tokyo
August 1, 1993 San Francisco 49ers 21 Pittsburgh Steelers 14 Estadi Olímpic Spain Barcelona
August 7, 1993 Minnesota Vikings 20 Buffalo Bills 6 Olympiastadion Germany Berlin
August 8, 1993 Dallas Cowboys 13 Detroit Lions 13 Wembley Stadium File:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg London
July 31, 1994 Los Angeles Raiders 25 Denver Broncos 22 Estadi Olímpic Spain Barcelona
August 6, 1994 Minnesota Vikings 17 Kansas City Chiefs 9 Tokyo Dome Japan Tokyo
August 13, 1994 New York Giants 28 San Diego Chargers 20 Olympiastadion Germany Berlin
August 15, 1994 Houston Oilers 6 Dallas Cowboys 0 Estadio Azteca Mexico Mexico City
August 5, 1995 Denver Broncos 24 San Francisco 49ers 10 Tokyo Dome Japan Tokyo
August 12, 1995 Buffalo Bills 9 Dallas Cowboys 7 SkyDome Canada Toronto
July 27, 1996 San Diego Chargers 20 Pittsburgh Steelers 10 Tokyo Dome Japan Tokyo
August 5, 1996 Kansas City Chiefs 32 Dallas Cowboys 6 Estadio Universitario Mexico Monterrey
July 27, 1997 Pittsburgh Steelers 30 Chicago Bears 17 Croke Park File:Flag of Ireland.svg Dublin
August 4, 1997 Miami Dolphins 38 Denver Broncos 19 Estadio Guillermo Canedo Mexico Mexico City
August 16, 1997 Green Bay Packers 35 Buffalo Bills 3 SkyDome Canada Toronto
August 1, 1998 Green Bay Packers 27 Kansas City Chiefs 24 Tokyo Dome Japan Tokyo
August 15, 1998 San Francisco 49ers 24 Seattle Seahawks 21 BC Place Stadium Canada Vancouver
August 17, 1998 New England Patriots 21 Dallas Cowboys 3 Estadio Azteca Mexico Mexico City
August 7, 1999 Denver Broncos 20 San Diego Chargers 17 Stadium Australia File:Flag of Australia.svg Sydney
August 5, 2000 Atlanta Falcons 20 Dallas Cowboys 9 Tokyo Dome Japan Tokyo
August 19, 2000 Indianapolis Colts 24 Pittsburgh Steelers 23 Estadio Azteca Mexico Mexico City
August 27, 2001 Dallas Cowboys 21 Oakland Raiders 6 Estadio Azteca Mexico Mexico City
August 3, 2002 Washington Redskins 38 San Francisco 49ers 7 Osaka Dome Japan Osaka
August 2, 2003 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 30 New York Jets 14 Tokyo Dome Japan Tokyo
August 6, 2005 Atlanta Falcons 27 Indianapolis Colts 21 Tokyo Dome Japan Tokyo

Standings[]

(GP (Games Played), W (Wins), L (Losses), T (Ties), PCT (Winning Percentage), PTS FOR (Points For), PTS AG (Points Against))

Rank Team GP W L T PCT PTS FOR PTS AG
1 Miami Dolphins 4 4 0 0 1.000 115 84
2 San Francisco 49ers 8 4 4 0 0.500 134 162
3 Los Angeles Rams 3 3 0 0 1.000 63 43
4 Denver Broncos 7 3 4 0 0.429 149 156
5 Green Bay Packers 2 2 0 0 1.000 62 27
6 Atlanta Falcons 2 2 0 0 1.000 47 30
7 New Orleans Saints 2 2 0 0 1.000 45 26
8 Houston Oilers 2 2 0 0 1.000 40 23
9 Minnesota Vikings 2 2 0 0 1.000 37 15
10 Buffalo Bills 4 2 2 0 0.500 35 75
11 Pittsburgh Steelers 5 2 3 0 0.400 107 96
12 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 1 1 0 0 1.000 30 14
13 New York Giants 1 1 0 0 1.000 28 20
14 Washington Redskins 2 1 1 0 0.500 53 24
15 Indianapolis Colts 2 1 1 0 0.500 45 50
16 New England Patriots 2 1 1 0 0.500 35 33
17 San Diego Chargers 3 1 2 0 0.333 57 58
18 Philadelphia Eagles 3 1 2 0 0.333 46 58
19 Chicago Bears 3 1 2 0 0.333 41 57
20 Kansas City Chiefs 4 1 3 0 0.250 68 69
21 Oakland/L.A. Raiders 4 1 3 0 0.250 58 79
22 Dallas Cowboys 9 1 7 1 0.111 88 158
23 Seattle Seahawks 2 0 2 0 0.000 28 34
24 New York Jets 1 0 1 0 0.000 14 30
25 Detroit Lions 1 0 0 1 0.000 13 13

References[]


This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at American Bowl.
The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with American Football Database, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.

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