Winning and losing streaks •
The Atlanta Falcons accomplished their first back to back winning seasons in franchise history. They still hold the record among all major American sports leagues for the longest streak of seasons without consecutive winning seasons. The streak lasted for 43 years from
1966. •
The New Orleans Saints won their first 13 games in the NFC of the regular season, breaking the record of 12 straight by the
1985 Chicago Bears who also won the Super Bowl. •
The Indianapolis Colts won their 23rd consecutive regular season game with a 35–31 victory over
the Jacksonville Jaguars on December 16, 2009. The previous week, the Colts had broken the previous record (21-games) held by
the 2003–2004 New England Patriots. They lost the following week to
the New York Jets after resting many of their starters with a 15–10 lead in the third quarter of that game. •
The Denver Broncos became the third team since 1970 to miss the NFL playoffs after a 6–0 start. The other two teams to miss the playoffs since the AFL/NFL merger were
the 1978 Washington Redskins and
the 2003 Minnesota Vikings. •
The Tennessee Titans started the season losing their first six games, then, led by second-string quarterback
Vince Young, won their next five games, the first NFL team to have such a turnaround. •
The Pittsburgh Steelers became the first team since
the 1987 New York Giants to lose five consecutive games in the season after winning
the Super Bowl. • Two teams tied an NFL record for most kickoff returns for touchdowns in a single game, with two:
the Miami Dolphins (November 1, vs.
the New York Jets) and
the Cleveland Browns (December 20, vs.
the Kansas City Chiefs).
Rams achieve worst peacetime three-season streak until mid-2010s Browns The St. Louis Rams finish as the NFL's tenth 1–15 or 0–16 team, giving them a record from to 2009 of six wins and forty-two losses. Since a regular schedule began
in 1936, only two teams have achieved a comparably bad record over three seasons: •
the wartime Cardinals going 1–29 between and if one includes
Card-Pitt, and 4–27 if one only includes Cardinals seasons. •
the 2015 to
2017 Cleveland Browns, who went 4–44 over three seasons
First team to go to the Super Bowl with a losing streak The New Orleans Saints became the first team in NFL history to lose their last three regular season games and then go on to the
Super Bowl and win.
Two top seeds face each other in Super Bowl For the first time since
the 1993 season, the AFC's and NFC's top seeds, the
Indianapolis Colts and the
New Orleans Saints respectively, played one another in the
Super Bowl, where the Saints defeated the Colts, 31–17.
Tom Brady's record-setting quarter In a Week 6 game against
the Tennessee Titans, the
New England Patriots'
Tom Brady threw five touchdown passes in the second quarter, an NFL record. The Patriots led the Titans 45–0 at halftime, also a league record, before winning the game 59–0, tied for the league's largest shutout margin since the 1970
AFL–NFL merger.
Panthers produce two 1,100+ yard rushers DeAngelo Williams and
Jonathan Stewart of the
Carolina Panthers became the first teammates in NFL history to rush for 1,100 yards in the same season. Williams rushed for 1,117 yards, and Stewart ran for 1,133 yards.
Kurt Warner sets single-game regular-season completion percentage record In Week 2, the
Arizona Cardinals'
Kurt Warner set a new NFL record for completion percentage, completing 92.3% of his passes (24 completions in 26 attempts) in a 31–17 win over the
Jacksonville Jaguars. The previous record had been set by
Vinny Testaverde in
1993. If postseason games are included, the record holder is
Tom Brady of the
New England Patriots, who completed 26 of 28 attempts on January 12, 2008, also against the Jaguars.
Brandon Marshall breaks single-game reception record In Week 13, the
Denver Broncos'
Brandon Marshall caught a record 21 catches in a losing effort against the
Indianapolis Colts. (The record was previously held by the
San Francisco 49ers'
Terrell Owens, who had 20 catches in a
2001 game.)
Aaron Rodgers strong start Aaron Rodgers of the
Green Bay Packers became the first quarterback to throw for 4,000 yards in each of his first two seasons as a starter. (Rodgers, Cam Newton of the Carolina Panthers,
Andrew Luck of the
Indianapolis Colts, and
Kurt Warner of the
St. Louis Rams are the only quarterbacks to throw for 4,000 in their first season as a starter. Warner, however, passed for only 3,429 in
2000. Rodgers passed for 4,038 in
2008 and 4,434 in 2009.)
2,000-yard season for Chris Johnson On January 3, 2010,
Chris Johnson of the
Tennessee Titans became the sixth rusher in NFL history to eclipse 2,000 rushing yards in a season. Johnson also broke the all-purpose yards from scrimmage record previously held by
Marshall Faulk.
Joshua Cribbs breaks NFL's career returns record In a Week 15 game against the
Kansas City Chiefs on December 20, 2009, the
Cleveland Browns'
Joshua Cribbs returned two kickoffs for touchdowns, giving him eight for his career, and setting a new league record. Cribbs also became one of only two players to score two 100-plus yard touchdowns in the same game. (The feat was first accomplished by
Ted Ginn Jr. of the
Miami Dolphins in Week 8 of the 2009 season.)
Cowboys set single-game attendance record For the opening game of their new stadium, the
Dallas Cowboys distributed 105,121 tickets, setting an NFL record for attendance in a single game. The old mark of 103,467 occurred in October 2005 at a 49ers-Cardinals game at
Azteca Stadium in Mexico.
Drew Brees sets season completion percentage record Drew Brees of the
New Orleans Saints set an NFL record for
completion percentage in a season. Brees was 363 of 514, a completion percentage of 70.6. (The record of 70.55% had previously been set in the strike-shortened
1982 season by
Ken Anderson of the
Cincinnati Bengals. Brees sat out the last game of the 2009 season since New Orleans had secured home-field advantage throughout the NFC Playoffs.)
Highest scoring playoff game in NFL history On
January 10, 2010, the
Arizona Cardinals defeated the
Green Bay Packers 51–45 for a combined total of 96 points, setting a new NFL playoff record for total combined points scored. This game has been given the nicknames "The Shootout", and the "Nobody Stopping Nobody Game".
Conference championships become most viewed playoff games in history On January 24, 2010, the NFC and AFC championship games averaged 52.9 million viewers, making it the most-viewed conference championship day since the two games in 1982 averaged 60.2 million viewers.
Fox's telecast of the
Saints' 31–28 overtime win over the
Vikings earned a 30.6 fast-national Nielsen rating (57.9 million viewers), marking Fox's biggest audience ever for an NFC championship game. It was also the second largest all-time audience for any conference title telecast, trailing only the
1982 49ers-Cowboys game (68.7 million viewers on
CBS). Excluding Super Bowl telecasts, the Saints-Vikings game was the most-viewed television program since the "
Seinfeld" finale in 1998. Meanwhile, CBS earned a 26.3 fast-national rating (46.9 million viewers) for the
Colts–
Jets AFC championship game in the early window, marking the largest audience for an AFC title game since
NBC earned 47.5 million viewers for
Patriots–Dolphins in 1986. Compelling story lines included the city of
New Orleans and its ongoing recovery from
Hurricane Katrina, as well as Colts quarterback
Peyton Manning's attempt at a second
Super Bowl ring. ==Regular season statistical leaders==