1933–1965: NFL Championship Game Starting in , the NFL decided its champion through a single postseason playoff game, called the
NFL Championship Game. During this period, the league divided its teams into two groups, through as
divisions and from 1950 onward as
conferences. making a touchdown reception in the 1950 NFL Championship • Divisions (1933–1949):
Eastern and
Western • Conferences (1950–1952):
American and
National • Conferences (1953–1966):
Eastern and
Western • Conferences and Divisions (1967–1969):
Eastern (Capitol and Century) and
Western (Central and Coastal) Home field for the
1933 title game was determined by the won-lost percentage in use at the time; the Western Division champion
Chicago Bears (10–2–1, ), having a better record than the Eastern Division champion
New York Giants (11–3–0, ), won the right to host the first title playoff. Thereafter, from
1934 onward, the divisions alternated the site of the playoff, with the East/American hosting in even years and the West/National in odd years. If there was a tie for first place within the conference, an extra playoff game decided who would go to the NFL Championship Game, with a coin toss deciding where the game would be played. (This occurred nine times in these 34 seasons:
1941,
1943,
1947,
1950 (both conferences),
1952,
1957,
1958, and
1965.) This last occurred during the
1965 season, when the
Green Bay Packers and
Baltimore Colts tied for first place in the Western Conference at 10–3–1. Green Bay had won both its games with Baltimore during the regular season, but because no tie-breaker system was in place, a conference playoff game was held on December 26 (what was scheduled to be an off-week between the end of the regular schedule and the NFL Championship Game). The
Cleveland Browns, the Eastern champion at 11–3–0, did not play that week. The
championship game was then held on its originally scheduled date, January 2, 1966—the first time the NFL champion was crowned in January. Green Bay won both post-season games at home, beating the injury-riddled Colts (with third-string QB
Tom Matte) in
overtime by a controversial field goal, and taking the title 23–12 on a very muddy field (in what turned out to be
Jim Brown's final NFL game). For the 1960 through 1969 seasons, the NFL staged an additional postseason game called the "
Playoff Bowl" (aka the "
Bert Bell Benefit Bowl" or the "Runner-up Bowl"). These games matched the second-place teams from the two conferences; the
CBS television network advertised them as
"playoff games for third place in the NFL." All ten of these consolation games were played in the
Orange Bowl in
Miami in January, the week
after the NFL championship game. The NFL now classifies these contests as exhibition games and does not include the records, participants, or results in the official league playoff statistics. The Playoff Bowl was discontinued after the
AFL–NFL merger; the final edition was played in January 1970. Starting with the 1934 game the winning team received the
Ed Thorp Memorial Trophy. The trophy was named after Ed Thorp, a noted referee, rules expert, and sporting goods dealer. Thorp died in 1934 and a large, traveling trophy was made that year, passed along from champion to champion each season with each championship team's name inscribed on it. Teams would also receive a replica trophy. The trophy was last awarded to the Minnesota Vikings in 1969. Late in the 1940 season, NFL President
Carl Storck announced that sudden death periods would be authorized for any playoff game needed to decide either division title. It was emphasized that this did not apply to the final championship game, which would crown co-champions in the event of a tie. While a shared championship was deemed an acceptable solution, it must have become obvious that an elimination game leading to the championship must necessarily produce a winner. Commissioner
Elmer Layden approved a similar arrangement for the 1941 season, with the same limitation. A coin toss would decide possession of the Ed Thorp trophy that accompanied the league title should the championship game result in a tie. Sudden death overtime was finally approved for the NFL championship game in 1946. The first playoff game requiring overtime was the
1958 NFL Championship Game. The 1955 and 1960 NFL championship games were played on Monday afternoons, Christmas having fallen on a Sunday in those years.
1946–1949: AAFC championship game The
All-America Football Conference was created in June 1944 to compete against the
NFL. Even though the league drew comparable crowds to the NFL in its final three seasons, the continuing dominance of the
Cleveland Browns led to the league's downfall. For its first three seasons, the league was divided into two divisions:
Eastern and
Western (1946–1948). The league had no divisions in 1949. The site of the championship game during the first three was determined just as it was in the NFL—a divisional rotation. In 1949, the league held a four-team playoff, with home field based upon won-lost record. The Browns, led by Quarterback
Otto Graham, won all four of the league championship games. A tiebreaker playoff game was played in 1948 to break a tie between the
Baltimore Colts and
Buffalo Bills (AAFC) for the Eastern Division championship. Semifinal playoff games were held in 1949, setting up a championship final between the first-place Browns and the second-place
San Francisco 49ers. In 1948, the Browns became the first professional football team to complete an entire season undefeated and untied — 24 years before the
1972 Miami Dolphins of the
NFL would accomplish the task, but this feat is not recognized by NFL record books. Unlike the AFL statistics which are treated as NFL statistics, records of the AAFC and its teams (most of which folded) are not recognized. However, individual
AAFC player statistics are included in
Pro Football Hall of Fame records, and the defunct conference is memorialized in the Hall. From 1946 to 1948 the champions of each division met in the AAFC championship game. In 1949, there was only one seven-team division, so the championship game was the final round of a four team tournament. :1946 December 22
Cleveland Browns 14–9
New York Yankees, Cleveland Municipal Stadium, 41,181 :1947 December 14
Cleveland Browns 14–3
New York Yankees, Yankee Stadium, 60,103 :1948 December 19
Cleveland Browns 49–7
Buffalo Bills, Cleveland Municipal Stadium, 22,981 :1949 December 11
Cleveland Browns 21–7
San Francisco 49ers, Cleveland Municipal Stadium, 22,550
1960–1969: AFL Championship Game With its creation in 1960, the AFL determined its champion via a single playoff game between the winners of its two divisions, the
Eastern and
Western. The AFL Championship games featured classics such as the 1962 double-overtime championship game between the
Dallas Texans and the defending champion
Houston Oilers. At the time it was the longest
professional football championship game ever played. Also in 1963, an Eastern Division playoff was needed to determine the division winner between the
Boston Patriots and
Buffalo Bills. ==1966–1969: NFL vs. AFL—The beginning of the Super Bowl era==