There have also been rare occasions in which games had to be pushed back one night because of a last-minute scheduling conflict in the facility of those games, most notably when an NFL team has shared a home stadium with a team from
Major League Baseball (MLB) and the baseball team has needed the building for a post-season game. This was a frequent occurrence when there were several shared stadiums across the country, but after 2012 only one such venue remained:
Oakland Coliseum in Oakland, home of the NFL's
Raiders and MLB's
Athletics; this arrangement ended in 2020 when the Raiders moved to
Las Vegas. Most of the stadiums listed required day-long conversions from a football gridiron to a baseball diamond and outfield, or vice versa, including the maneuvering of stadium seating designed to be angled for each sport, the building of temporary stands, and the marking of the field for either sport, along with removal of the pitcher's mound and bases. Additionally until the
FieldTurf era, an additional step taken was the filling or covering of the base sliding pits on
artificial turf fields. Although no NFL/MLB-shared stadiums remain, there are eight teams whose current NFL stadiums share the same parking lots and other ancillary facilities with an adjacent MLB ballpark (
Baltimore Ravens,
Cincinnati Bengals,
Dallas Cowboys,
Detroit Lions,
Kansas City Chiefs,
Philadelphia Eagles,
Pittsburgh Steelers, and
Seattle Seahawks), thus also preventing both teams from playing simultaneously. Since the NFL knows the MLB schedule well in advance of its own schedule being released, it is able to schedule its September games in particular in order to avoid facility conflicts, and even simply to avoid unnecessary competition with local MLB teams for an audience in markets where the venues are not in close proximity to one another. Scheduling conflicts with MLB are more likely to occur in October, i.e. during the MLB postseason since the venues for these games are not known in advance. Some tactics used to prevent conflicts include scheduling a team that shares a stadium with an MLB team to a schedule of road games, home division games that could be swapped for a road game in the event of a conflict caused by an MLB team making the postseason, or home games with a team that has a mutual bye week that the game could be moved to said bye week if an MLB team makes the postseason through the end of October. On October 12, 1964, the
St. Louis Cardinals were forced to move their scheduled home game against the
Baltimore Colts to
Memorial Stadium, since St. Louis'
Busch Stadium I was being used for the
1964 World Series by the
St. Louis Cardinals baseball team. Even though Game 5 of the World Series was played that day at
Yankee Stadium, the football Cardinals could not use the stadium until the baseball team, the stadium's owner, had completed its season. The Minnesota Twins' 1965 World Series appearance led to the Sunday afternoon October 10,
New York Giants at
Minnesota Vikings game to be moved forward to Saturday night, October 9. The
Atlanta Falcons were forced to move their October 5, 1969, home game against the
Baltimore Colts from
Atlanta Stadium to
Grant Field at
Georgia Tech because the
Atlanta Braves hosted Game 2 of the
1969 National League Championship Series. The same day, the
Minnesota Vikings moved their home game against the
Green Bay Packers from
Metropolitan Stadium to
Memorial Stadium at the
University of Minnesota because of an
American League Championship Series game hosted by the
Minnesota Twins. One week later, the
Philadelphia Eagles’ game in Baltimore against the
Baltimore Colts was pushed from Sunday, October 12, to Monday night, October 13, to accommodate Game 2 of the
1969 World Series hosted by the
Baltimore Orioles. The following week, the World Series prompted the
American Football League to move the game at
Shea Stadium between the
Houston Oilers and the
New York Jets from Sunday, October 19, to Monday night, October 20 due to the
New York Mets hosting a game. In 1973, the
New York Jets faced the same situation as the 1964 Cardinals. The
New York Mets unexpectedly reached the
1973 World Series, and under the terms of the Jets’ lease at
Shea Stadium in place at the time, there could be no football games at the stadium in Queens until the Mets’ season was complete. Thus, the Jets were forced to move their October 21 game against the
Pittsburgh Steelers from Shea Stadium to
Three Rivers Stadium, even though the final game of the Series at Shea Stadium was played October 18 (Games 6 and 7 were scheduled away games for the Mets). In 1979, the
Philadelphia Eagles and the
Washington Redskins switched the dates of their two games with the Eagles hosting on October 7 (instead of October 21) and the Redskins hosting on October 21 (instead of October 7). This was due to the visit of
Pope John Paul II to
Washington on October 7. A similar situation happened to the Eagles in 1983 where they were forced to switch the dates of their games with the
Dallas Cowboys because the
Philadelphia Phillies were playing in the
1983 World Series. The Eagles were originally scheduled to play the Cowboys at
Veterans Stadium on October 16, 1983; however this game conflicted with Game 5 of the World Series. The game was moved to
Texas Stadium and the November 6 game was moved to
Veterans Stadium. In 1987, Game 5 of the
1987 National League Championship Series was hosted by
San Francisco Giants at
Candlestick Park, prompting the
San Francisco 49ers and the
Atlanta Falcons to switch home dates for their two games that season; the 49ers visited Atlanta on October 11, and the Falcons went to San Francisco on December 20. In 1987, Game 2 of the
1987 World Series hosted by the
Minnesota Twins led to the
Minnesota Vikings and the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers to switch home dates for their two games that season. The following week, Game 7 of that Series led NFL to reschedule the
Denver Broncos at Minnesota Vikings game to the following Monday night, October 26. In 1989, the October 8,
New Orleans Saints and
San Francisco 49ers switched home dates (October 8 originally in San Francisco and November 6 originally in New Orleans) as a result of the
San Francisco Giants hosting National League Championship Series games on October 7, 8 and 9. In 1997, Game 7 of the
1997 World Series hosted by the
Florida Marlins on October 26 caused the NFL to reschedule the
Chicago Bears at
Miami Dolphins game for the following Monday night, October 27. In 2009, the
New York Giants–
Philadelphia Eagles game at
Lincoln Financial Field was moved from 4:15 p.m. ET to 1:00 p.m. to accommodate the
Philadelphia Phillies hosting Game 4 of the
2009 World Series at adjacent
Citizens Bank Park. In 2013, the
Oakland Athletics playing in the
2013 American League Division Series forced the
Oakland Raiders to postpone their originally scheduled Sunday afternoon game against the
San Diego Chargers from a 1:25 p.m.
PT kickoff to 8:35 p.m. (11:35 p.m. ET). The opening game of the
2013 season on September 5, which would traditionally have been hosted by the
Baltimore Ravens as the defending
Super Bowl XLVII champions, was instead a road contest at the
Denver Broncos. A
Baltimore Orioles home game against the
Chicago White Sox was scheduled for
Oriole Park at Camden Yards that night. The Ravens'
M&T Bank Stadium is next door to Camden Yards, and the Ravens and Orioles were unable to resolve issues which centered on parking and traffic. In , the
Kansas City Chiefs, the defending
Super Bowl champions, and the
Kansas City Royals, Kansas City's MLB team, both playing games on the same day, September 10. The Royals play at
Kauffman Stadium, which is next door to the Chiefs’ home stadium
Arrowhead Stadium, with both teams sharing the same parking lots. The Royals, Chiefs, NFL, and MLB had agreed to have the Royals move their game to September 8, as part of a doubleheader against the
Oakland Athletics. The
COVID-19 pandemic beginning a month later made the coordination moot, as the Royals didn't host fans through their delayed season (and were away that day in their revised schedule), and the Chiefs opened the season with 20% capacity. On Sunday, October 16, 2022, the Seattle Seahawks were scheduled to play the
Arizona Cardinals at 1:05 pm PT. The preceding night, the
Seattle Mariners played Game 3 of the
American League Division Series (ALDS) against the
Houston Astros. Had the Mariners won that game, making Game 4 necessary, the Mariners would have played Game 4 on Sunday at 12:07 pm, and the Seahawks would have delayed their kickoff time to 2:30 pm PT. Because the Mariners lost Game 3, and lost the ALDS 3–0, the Seahawks game was not rescheduled. Week 2 of the
2025 NFL season coincided with the
77th Primetime Emmy Awards which marked the first Emmy Awards ceremony to be held at
YouTube Theater in
Inglewood, California, which is attached to
SoFi Stadium. Because of this, the
Los Angeles Rams had to play at
Tennessee the day of the ceremony, while the
Chargers traveled to
Las Vegas to play the
Raiders the following night. ==Notes==