Regular season | |
---|---|
Duration | September 10, 2009 – January 3, 2010 |
Playoffs | |
Start date | January 9, 2010 |
AFC Champions | Indianapolis Colts |
NFC Champions | New Orleans Saints |
Super Bowl XLIV | |
Date | February 7, 2010 |
Site | Sun Life Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida |
Champions | New Orleans Saints |
Pro Bowl | |
Date | January 31, 2010 |
Site | Sun Life Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida |
The 2009 NFL season was the 90th season in the history of the National Football League (NFL). The 50th anniversary of the original eight charter members of the American Football League was celebrated during this season.
The preseason started with the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game on August 9, 2009,[1] and the regular season began September 10, with the reigning Super Bowl XLIII champion Pittsburgh Steelers defeating the Tennessee Titans in overtime. The season ended with Super Bowl XLIV, the league's championship game, on February 7, 2010, at Sun Life Stadium with the New Orleans Saints defeating the Indianapolis Colts[2] in Miami Gardens, Florida.[3] The Colts and Saints began the season 14–0 and 13–0 respectively. This was the first time in NFL history two teams started 13–0 or better.
The 2009 NFL draft was held from April 25 to 26, 2009 at New York City's Radio City Music Hall. With the first pick, the Detroit Lions selected quarterback Matthew Stafford from the University of Georgia.
Bill Carollo resigned to become the Director of Officiating for the Big Ten Conference. Don Carey, brother of NFL referee Mike Carey, was promoted from back judge to take Carollo's place.
Several rule changes were passed at the league's annual owners meeting in Dana Point, California, during the week of March 23.
The following rules were passed to improve player safety and reduce injuries:[4]
The replay system will now be allowed to cover the following situations:[6]
Other new rules included:[6]
The Pro Football Hall of Fame Game was on August 9, 2009, at 8:00 pm EDT on NBC. The Tennessee Titans defeated the Buffalo Bills 21–18, and both wore "throwback" jerseys celebrating the two franchises' AFL origins.[9] It was the first time since 1970 that the teams have not been from opposing conferences; also, both Bills owner Ralph Wilson, a 2009 Hall of Fame inductee, and Titans owner Bud Adams have owned their teams continuously since the AFL's inception in 1960, making them the longest-tenured team owners in the league. Both teams made their first Hall of Fame Game appearance since the 1980s (Buffalo last played in Canton in 1989, Tennessee in 1985 as the former Houston Oilers).
The rest of the pre-season matchups were announced March 30, 2009. Highlights, among others, included a rematch of Super Bowl XLIII between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Arizona Cardinals on ESPN.[10]
The 2009 season began on September 10, 2009. Under the current scheduling system, this is the latest date the NFL can start its season as the season typically starts the weekend after Labor Day, which falls on its latest possible date in 2009.
For the 2009 season, the intraconference and interconference matchups were:
Intraconference
Interconference
The 2009 schedule was released on April 14, 2009.[11] Highlights of the 2009 season included:
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The playoffs began Saturday, January 9, 2010, with Wild Card Weekend. Divisional playoffs followed the next week. The defending world champions Pittsburgh Steelers did not take part in the post-season as they were eliminated from contention in the final week 17, thus this was the fifth year in a row the NFL crowned a new Super Bowl champion.
The AFC Championship Game was Sunday, January 24, 2010, at 3:00 pm, which saw the Indianapolis Colts come from behind to defeat the New York Jets, 30–17. It was followed by the NFC Championship Game at 6:30 pm which featured many back to back scoring drives by two high scoring Vikings and Saints offenses. But the Minnesota Vikings 4 fumbles and a Brett Favre interception late in the fourth quarter proved to be too much to handle as the New Orleans Saints won 31–28 in overtime which granted the franchise's first Super Bowl appearance in its 43-year history. Super Bowl XLIV was held February 7 at Miami Gardens, Florida's Sun Life Stadium (home of host team Miami Dolphins, who were also eliminated from post-season contention).
The 2010 Pro Bowl was held on January 31, one week before Super Bowl XLIV, at the same site of the league championship game, Sun Life Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.[25] This was the first time since 1979 (held for the 1978 season) that the Pro Bowl was held in the Continental United States as opposed to Hawaii. The NFL also announced that the site and date of Pro Bowl games after 2010 will include playing the game on a rotating basis in Honolulu.[25] NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said the move was made after looking at alternatives to strengthen the Pro Bowl and to make the end of the season more climactic.[25] As a result of the move, players will not be allowed to play in both the Super Bowl and the Pro Bowl in the same year. In addition, ESPN replaced CBS as broadcaster for that game only.[26]
Within each conference, the four division winners and the top two non-division winners with the best overall regular season records) qualified for the playoffs. The four division winners are seeded 1–4 based on their overall won-lost-tied record, and the wild card teams are seeded 5–6. The NFL does not use a fixed bracket playoff system, and there are no restrictions regarding teams from the same division matching up in any round. In the first round, dubbed the wild-card playoffs or wild-card weekend, the third-seeded division winner hosts the sixth-seed wild card, and the fourth seed hosts the fifth. The 1 and 2 seeds from each conference received a first-round bye. In the second round, the divisional playoffs, the number 1 seed hosts the worst-surviving seed from the first round (seed 4, 5, or 6), while the number 2 seed will play the other team (seed 3, 4, or 5). The two surviving teams from each conference's divisional playoff games met in the respective AFC and NFC Conference Championship games, hosted by the higher seed. Although the Super Bowl, the championship round of the playoffs, is played at a neutral site, the designated home team is based on an annual rotation by conference.[27]
Playoff seeds | ||
Seed | AFC | NFC |
---|---|---|
1 | Indianapolis Colts (South winner) | New Orleans Saints (South winner) |
2 | San Diego Chargers (West winner) | Minnesota Vikings (North winner) |
3 | New England Patriots (East winner) | Dallas Cowboys (East winner) |
4 | Cincinnati Bengals (North winner) | Arizona Cardinals (West winner) |
5 | New York Jets (wild card) | Green Bay Packers (wild card) |
6 | Baltimore Ravens (wild card) | Philadelphia Eagles (wild card) |
Jan 9 – Cowboys Stadium | Jan 17 – Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome | |||||||||||||||||
6 | Philadelphia | 14 | ||||||||||||||||
3 | Dallas | 3 | ||||||||||||||||
3 | Dallas | 34 | Jan 24 – Louisiana Superdome | |||||||||||||||
2 | Minnesota | 34 | ||||||||||||||||
NFC | ||||||||||||||||||
Jan 10 – University of Phoenix Stadium | 2 | Minnesota | 28 | |||||||||||||||
Jan 16 – Louisiana Superdome | ||||||||||||||||||
1 | New Orleans | 31* | ||||||||||||||||
5 | Green Bay | 45 | NFC Championship | |||||||||||||||
4 | Arizona | 14 | ||||||||||||||||
4 | Arizona | 51* | Feb 7 – Sun Life Stadium | |||||||||||||||
1 | New Orleans | 45 | ||||||||||||||||
Wild Card playoffs | ||||||||||||||||||
Divisional playoffs | ||||||||||||||||||
Jan 9 – Paul Brown Stadium | N1 | New Orleans | 31 | |||||||||||||||
Jan 17 – Qualcomm Stadium | ||||||||||||||||||
A1 | Indianapolis | 17 | ||||||||||||||||
5 | NY Jets | 24 | Super Bowl XLIV | |||||||||||||||
5 | NY Jets | 17 | ||||||||||||||||
4 | Cincinnati | 14 | Jan 24 – Lucas Oil Stadium | |||||||||||||||
2 | San Diego | 14 | ||||||||||||||||
AFC | ||||||||||||||||||
Jan 10 – Gillette Stadium | 5 | NY Jets | 17 | |||||||||||||||
Jan 16 – Lucas Oil Stadium | ||||||||||||||||||
1 | Indianapolis | 30 | ||||||||||||||||
6 | Baltimore | 33 | AFC Championship | |||||||||||||||
6 | Baltimore | 3 | ||||||||||||||||
3 | New England | 14 | ||||||||||||||||
1 | Indianapolis | 20 | ||||||||||||||||
The 2009 season marked the fiftieth season of nine of the league's 32 teams: the Dallas Cowboys, and the Original Eight charter members of the American Football League, whose owners became collectively known as "The Foolish Club". The fifth league to use the AFL moniker (previous leagues in 1926, 1934, 1936–37, and 1940–41, all had failed) began play in 1960 and would form the major portion of the American Football Conference (AFC) when the NFL completed its merger with the AFL in 1970:
The Bills and Jets used AFL-era throwback uniforms as their alternate jerseys prior to 2009, and continued them beyond that. The league had the other six teams use a third jersey replicating those from the AFL in their heyday. Each of the Original Eight played against another original AFL team, one at home and one away, on two "AFL Legacy Weekends", and had a special 50th Anniversary AFL patch on the throwback uniforms. In a waiver given by these eight, they would wear the anniversary throwbacks a maximum of four times a season, whereas all of the other teams have a limit of twice per season. The Patriots and Raiders wore the throwbacks the maximum four times, while the Bills, Chiefs (Texans), Chargers, Jets (Titans), and Titans (Oilers) were worn three times. The Chargers also wore their regular powder blue alternate jersey of the current design for two other allowed games.[28] In the second game of two meetings opposite of the first game for their divisional matches against the Raiders and Chiefs, the Chargers wore their newer look powder blue jerseys against the Raiders in week 8, and also celebrated their 50th Anniversary in the modern powder blue jerseys against the Chiefs later in the season during Week 12, when the meeting against those two clubs shifted to San Diego. The Broncos elected to wear their throwbacks only twice (the team wore the infamous 1960–1961 brown and yellow throwbacks with the vertically-striped socks) and wore their regular orange alternate jersey of the current design in the other two allowed games,[29] giving the team six different uniforms over a 16-game season. Both of the games involving the orange jerseys involved the Dallas Cowboys and the Pittsburgh Steelers—two "old" NFL teams before the merger, with the Steelers joining the Broncos in the AFC in 1970 as a result of the merger.
An AFL patch is already a permanent part of the Kansas City Chiefs' jerseys, in honor of team and AFL founder Lamar Hunt, who died in December 2006. The program kicked off on August 9 in the 2009 Pro Football Hall of Fame Game with the Bills playing the Titans (Oilers). Besides the Legacy Games, the Chiefs wore Dallas Texans uniforms in one home game against the NFC's Dallas Cowboys, who also wore throwbacks, while the Cowboys hosted the Raiders in a Thanksgiving Day game in Arlington, Texas. (The Chiefs and Cowboys throwbacks both feature team-colored jerseys, making it the first dark color vs. dark color game since the Bears-Cowboys 2004 Thanksgiving game.) For all games other than those cited above, the Original Eight wore their 2009 uniforms, each with a team-specific 50th Anniversary shoulder patch, save for the Titans, who wore the AFL 50th Anniversary logo on all uniforms. For the legacy weekends, on-field officials working the Original Eight's games also had their own throwbacks – shirts with Chinese-red stripes, and an AFL chest and cap logo. The fields for the regular season games were painted in the innovative designs introduced by the AFL in the 1960s (for instance, the Broncos' end zones are painted in an argyle pattern).
Although the Dolphins and Bengals were both part of the AFL, they did not join the league until 1966 and 1968, respectively. The Dolphins played in three of the Legacy games (wearing their current uniforms), while the Bengals were not part of the events.
After the season, the Patriots adopted their AFL-era throwbacks as their new third uniform for 2010, while the Broncos continue to paint their end zones at Invesco Field at Mile High in the argyle pattern, similar to the Steelers decision to paint the south end zone at Heinz Field in plain diagonal white lines after their 2003 preseason game against the Philadelphia Eagles honoring the 60th anniversary of the Steagles season.
Original Eight AFL League Uniforms | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Team | Year | Uniform feature | ||||||
Buffalo Bills | 1965 | AFL Championship season (Dark jerseys current third uniform). | ||||||
Denver Broncos | 1960 | Featured infamous brown and yellow (or brown and white) vertically striped socks | ||||||
Kansas City Chiefs (Dallas Texans) |
1962 | AFL Championship season; same as current but with State of Texas outline. | ||||||
New England Patriots (Boston Patriots) |
1963 | First divisional championship. | ||||||
New York Jets (The Titans of New York) |
1961 | Dark jerseys are current third uniform. | ||||||
Oakland Raiders | 1963 | White jerseys with silver numbers trimmed in black. | ||||||
San Diego Chargers | 1963 | AFL Championship Season. | ||||||
Tennessee Titans (Houston Oilers) |
1960 | First season of existence. |
AFL Legacy Game Schedule | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Site | Teams | ||||||
August 9 | Canton, Ohio[30] | Bills vs. Houston Oilers (Tennessee Titans) | ||||||
September 14 | Foxborough, Massachusetts | Bills at Boston Patriots (New England Patriots) | ||||||
Oakland | Chargers at Raiders | |||||||
September 27 | East Rutherford, New Jersey | Houston Oilers at The Titans of New York (Tennessee Titans at NY Jets) | ||||||
October 11 | Kansas City | Dallas Cowboys at Dallas Texans (Kansas City Chiefs) | ||||||
Denver | Boston Patriots (New England Patriots) at Broncos | |||||||
October 18 | Foxborough, Massachusetts | Houston Oilers at Boston Patriots (Tennessee Titans at New England Patriots) | ||||||
October 19 | San Diego | Broncos at Chargers | ||||||
October 25 | Kansas City | Chargers at Dallas Texans (Kansas City Chiefs) | ||||||
Oakland | The Titans of New York (NY Jets) at Raiders | |||||||
November 1 | East Rutherford | Dolphins at The Titans of New York (NY Jets) | ||||||
November 15 | Nashville | Bills at Houston Oilers (Tennessee Titans) | ||||||
Oakland | Dallas Texans (Kansas City Chiefs) at Raiders | |||||||
November 26 | Arlington, Texas | Raiders at Dallas Cowboys | ||||||
November 29 | Orchard Park, New York | Dolphins at Bills | ||||||
December 6 | Miami Gardens, Florida | Boston Patriots (New England Patriots) at Dolphins |
It was the fortieth season since the AFL–NFL merger was officially completed in 1970, and also the sixtieth season since the All-America Football Conference merged with the NFL, adding the Cleveland Browns and San Francisco 49ers to the league.[31] No celebrations were held for any of those teams, but San Francisco reverted to their old colors (lighter shades of red and gold from their glory seasons of five Super Bowl victories) in an unrelated move.
The NFC's Dallas Cowboys also celebrated their fiftieth season in 2009. After the NFL had rebuffed Lamar Hunt's overtures to place an NFL team in Dallas, saying they had no plans to expand, the league granted the Cowboys a franchise in 1960 in reaction to Hunt's AFL Dallas Texans. The NFL's Cowboys franchise started out in 1960 with a record of no wins, eleven losses and one tie, but has since gone on to appear in eight Super Bowls (the only other teams to appear in eight was the Pittsburgh Steelers on February 6, 2011, the New England Patriots on February 1, 2015), and the Denver Broncos on February 7, 2016, winning five of them, tied for second with the San Francisco 49ers and the New England Patriots, behind only the Pittsburgh Steelers. Ironically, the Texans' franchise, which left Dallas to become the Kansas City Chiefs, won Super Bowl IV, two years before the Cowboys won their first. Though there was never an actual game between the Dallas Texans and the Cowboys, the 2009 "throwback" game played against Kansas City (Dallas Texans) and the Dallas Cowboys was played as "The Game that Never Was". The [Dallas] Cowboys won the game at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri, 26–20 in overtime. Interestingly, the visiting Cowboys wore home throwback jerseys, so both teams wore home uniforms.
All four members of the NFC North celebrated significant anniversaries.
The Green Bay Packers and Chicago Bears, two of the oldest teams of the NFL remaining in the league, marked their 90th seasons in 2009. While the Packers did not join the NFL until 1921, the team marks its founding with the team's creation in 1919. The first Sunday Night Football game of the season featured the two teams, pitted in "The League's Oldest Rivalry".
Likewise, the Minnesota Vikings celebrated their being in existence for 50 years. The team traces its existence to the founding of the AFL in 1959, but although they participated in that league's inaugural draft, they were instead lured to the NFL before playing a game. (The Oakland Raiders replaced Minnesota in the AFL.) The Minnesota team, not named the Vikings until after they joined the NFL and did not take any of their drafted players with them, were granted their own expansion draft by the NFL and did not play until 1961. As such, the Vikings were only in their 49th season, and will celebrate their 50th NFL season in 2010, while the Detroit Lions will be in its 80th season in the NFL, and their 76th in Detroit. Last season, Detroit reintroduced its throwback jersey, while Minnesota continues using theirs. None of the teams held significant celebrations in 2009.
After one season with the New York Jets, Brett Favre retired again from football on February 11, 2009, and was released on April 28, 2009, making him a free agent. On May 4, 2009, rumors began nationwide on the Internet, radio and TV outlets about him coming out of retirement again and possibly joining the Minnesota Vikings, his division arch-rival when he was with the Green Bay Packers, also meeting with Vikings head coach Brad Childress that week. On May 11, in an indication of Favre's possible return, it was reported he was scheduled to have a procedure on his torn biceps tendon on his throwing arm he injured when he was with the Jets and it was either a surgical or non-surgical process but wasn't confirmed throughout May. On June 15, 2009, he revealed he had surgery on his right torn biceps tendon and considered on playing again. On July 15, 2009, he informed the Vikings that he would make his decision of coming out of retirement or not by July 30, 2009, the day Vikings training camp started. On July 28, 2009, two days early before training camp, he informed the Vikings that he would remain retired. On August 18, 2009, it was reported that Favre got on a private jet and was heading to Minnesota to join the Vikings. It was later confirmed and he officially signed with the Minnesota Vikings. He was signed to a two-year, $25 million deal with an option for 2010 for $13 million.[32] On December 6, 2009, Favre played in his 283rd consecutive game, breaking Jim Marshall's long-standing record. The Vikings finished their season with a record of 12–4 and made the playoffs as the number two seed. Favre was voted to the 2010 Pro Bowl, but did not participate and was replaced by Tony Romo.
Free agent quarterback Michael Vick was reinstated on July 27, 2009, after finishing his 2-year prison term and on August 13, 2009, he signed a one-year, $1.6 million contract with the Philadelphia Eagles also with an option in 2010 for 5 million.[33] Vick finished the season with one passing touchdown and two rushing touchdowns. He helped the Eagles to an 11–5 record and the NFC's number six seed.
After disagreements between Jay Cutler and the Denver Broncos management, on March 15, 2009, Cutler requested a trade from the team. On April 2, 2009, Cutler was traded to the Chicago Bears from the Broncos along with a fifth-round pick in the 2009 NFL draft. In return, the Broncos acquired quarterback Kyle Orton along with the Bears' first and third-round selections in 2009 also the first round pick in 2010. Later in the season on October 20, 2009, the Bears signed Cutler to a two-year, $30 million contract extension up to 2013.
The Indianapolis Colts started the season 14–0, and the New Orleans Saints started the season 13–0, the first time that two teams went that deep into the season without suffering a loss. Unlike the Saints who had not yet clinched home field throughout the playoffs and who legitimately lost their fourteenth game in Week 15, the Colts intentionally lost their fifteenth game in Week 16, giving an opportunity to the Jets to get into the playoffs. After setting the record for consecutive regular season wins over multiple seasons, running their mark to 23, the Colts were up at halftime at home, and then Coach Caldwell benched all his starters for the second half, allowing the Jets to win, and ruining the Colts' try at a perfect season. Indianapolis fans were incensed and heartily booed Caldwell.[34]
On August 17, 2009 Oakland Raiders head coach Tom Cable was accused of punching assistant coach Randy Hanson in the face and fracturing his jaw. The incident allegedly took place on August 5 during the Raiders training camp, held in Napa. On October 22, 2009, the Napa district attorney announced that no charges would be filed against Cable.[35] The Raiders finished their season with a record of 5–11.
On January 24, 2010, the New Orleans Saints defeated the Minnesota Vikings in the NFC Championship Game in overtime by a score of 31–28. The win secured their berth in Super Bowl XLIV, the franchise's first ever Super Bowl.
Later on February 7, the Saints defeated the Indianapolis Colts in the Super Bowl by a score of 31–17. Quarterback Drew Brees was named the MVP.
The St. Louis Rams finish as the NFL's tenth 1–15 or 0–16 team, giving them a record from 2007 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 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.
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.
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.[40]
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.
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.
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 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.)[41]
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.
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.)
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 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.)
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.[42] This game has been given the nicknames "The Shootout", and the "Nobody Stopping Nobody Game".[43]
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).[44]
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.[44]
Super Bowl XLIV surpassed the 1983 finale of M*A*S*H, as the most viewed program in history. It was watched by 153.4 million people.[45] 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.
Team[46] | |
---|---|
Points scored | New Orleans Saints (510) |
Total yards gained | New Orleans Saints (6461) |
Yards rushing | New York Jets (2756) |
Yards passing | Houston Texans (4654) |
Fewest points allowed | New York Jets (236) |
Fewest total yards allowed | New York Jets (4037) |
Fewest rushing yards allowed | Green Bay Packers (1333) |
Fewest passing yards allowed | New York Jets (2459) |
Individual[47] | |
Scoring leader | Nate Kaeding, San Diego (146) |
Touchdowns | Adrian Peterson, Minnesota (18 TDs) |
Most field goals made | David Akers, Philadelphia and Nate Kaeding, San Diego (32 FGs) |
Rushing | Chris Johnson, Tennessee (2,006 yards) |
Passer rating | Drew Brees, New Orleans (109.6 rating) |
Passing touchdowns | Drew Brees, New Orleans (34 TDs) |
Passing yards | Matt Schaub, Houston (4,770 yards) |
Pass receptions | Wes Welker, New England (123 catches) |
Pass receiving yards | Andre Johnson, Houston (1,569 yards) |
Tackles | Patrick Willis, San Francisco (114 tackles) |
Interceptions | Jairus Byrd, Buffalo, Asante Samuel, Philadelphia, Darren Sharper, New Orleans and Charles Woodson, Green Bay (9) |
Punting | Shane Lechler, Oakland (4,909 yards, 51.1 average yards) |
Sacks | Elvis Dumervil, Denver (17) |
Award | Player | Position | Team |
---|---|---|---|
Most Valuable Player | Peyton Manning | Quarterback | Indianapolis Colts |
Coach of the Year | Marvin Lewis | Head Coach | Cincinnati Bengals |
Offensive Player of the Year | Chris Johnson | Running Back | Tennessee Titans |
Defensive Player of the Year | Charles Woodson | Cornerback | Green Bay Packers |
Offensive Rookie of the Year | Percy Harvin | Wide Receiver | Minnesota Vikings |
Defensive Rookie of the Year | Brian Cushing | Linebacker | Houston Texans |
NFL Comeback Player of the Year | Tom Brady | Quarterback | New England Patriots |
Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year | Brian Waters | Guard | Kansas City Chiefs |
Super Bowl Most Valuable Player Award | Drew Brees | Quarterback | New Orleans Saints |
The following players were named first team All-Pro by the Associated Press:
Offense | |
---|---|
Quarterback | Peyton Manning, Indianapolis |
Running back | Adrian Peterson, Minnesota Chris Johnson, Tennessee |
Fullback | Leonard Weaver, Philadelphia |
Wide receiver | Andre Johnson, Houston Wes Welker, New England |
Tight end | Dallas Clark, Indianapolis |
Offensive tackle | Ryan Clady, Denver Joe Thomas, Cleveland |
Offensive guard | Steve Hutchinson, Minnesota Jahri Evans, New Orleans |
Center | Nick Mangold, New York Jets |
Defense | |
---|---|
Defensive end | Dwight Freeney, Indianapolis Jared Allen, Minnesota |
Defensive tackle | Jay Ratliff, Dallas Kevin Williams, Minnesota |
Outside linebacker | DeMarcus Ware, Dallas Elvis Dumervil, Denver |
Inside linebacker | Ray Lewis, Baltimore Patrick Willis, San Francisco |
Cornerback | Charles Woodson, Green Bay Darrelle Revis, New York Jets |
Safety | Darren Sharper, New Orleans Adrian Wilson, Arizona |
Special teams | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kicker | Nate Kaeding, San Diego | ||||
Punter | Shane Lechler, Oakland | ||||
Kick returner | Joshua Cribbs, Cleveland |
The following were the players of the week during the 2009 season:
The following were the players of the month during the 2009 season:
Month | Offense | Defense | Special Teams |
---|---|---|---|
December 9 | QB Philip Rivers, San Diego Chargers | CB Darrelle Revis, New York Jets | KR-WR Joshua Cribbs, Cleveland Browns |
November 9 | RB Chris Johnson, Tennessee Titans | DE Robert Mathis, Indianapolis Colts | KR-WR Ted Ginn Jr., Miami Dolphins |
October 9 | QB Tom Brady, New England Patriots | LB James Harrison, Pittsburgh Steelers | KR-WR Eddie Royal, Denver Broncos |
September 9 | QB Peyton Manning, Indianapolis Colts | DE Antwan Odom, Cincinnati Bengals | K Matt Prater, Denver Broncos |
Month | Offense | Defense | Special Teams |
---|---|---|---|
December | QB Tony Romo, Dallas Cowboys | CB Charles Woodson, Green Bay Packers | KR-WR DeSean Jackson, Philadelphia Eagles |
November | QB Brett Favre, Minnesota Vikings | CB Charles Woodson, Green Bay Packers | K David Akers, Philadelphia Eagles |
October | QB Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay Packers | S Darren Sharper, New Orleans Saints | KR-WR Johnny Knox, Chicago Bears |
September | QB Drew Brees, New Orleans Saints | CB Charles Woodson, Green Bay Packers | PR-WR DeSean Jackson, Philadelphia Eagles |
The following are the rookies of the month during the 2009 season:
Month | Offense (College) | Defense (College) |
---|---|---|
December | OT Michael Oher, Baltimore Ravens (University of Mississippi) | LB Brian Cushing, Houston Texans (University of Southern California) |
November | WR-KR Percy Harvin, Minnesota Vikings (University of Florida) | LB Brian Cushing, Houston Texans (University of Southern California) |
October | WR Hakeem Nicks, New York Giants (University of North Carolina) | S Jairus Byrd, Buffalo Bills (University of Oregon) |
September | QB Mark Sanchez, New York Jets (University of Southern California) | S Louis Delmas, Detroit Lions (Western Michigan University) |
Eight teams hired new head coaches prior to the start of the 2009 season, while two made their interim coaches permanent, and another moved from one team to another after being fired by a team:
Team | 2009 Coach | 2008 Coach(es) | Reason for leaving | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cleveland Browns | Eric Mangini, former head coach of the New York Jets (see below) | Romeo Crennel | Fired | Crennel compiled a 24–40 (.375) record in four seasons as the Browns' head coach. Browns GM Phil Savage was fired at the same time. |
Denver Broncos | Josh McDaniels, former offensive coordinator of the New England Patriots[50] | Mike Shanahan | Fired | Shanahan, the second-longest tenured head coach in the league (hired in 1995), was relieved of his duties after a 146–91 record (.616), two Super Bowl titles (XXXII and XXXIII), three division titles, and seven playoff appearances in fourteen seasons in Colorado. The Broncos let a three-game division lead slip away over the last month of the 2008 season and missed the playoffs for the third straight year. McDaniels, who has been an offensive and defensive assistant with the Patriots, led the Patriots offense (led by Matt Cassel, who had not started a football game since high school) to an 11-win season in 2008. Cassel became the starter after Tom Brady suffered a season ending knee injury. |
Detroit Lions | Jim Schwartz, former defensive coordinator for the Tennessee Titans | Rod Marinelli | Fired | Marinelli was fired after the Lions suffered the worst season in NFL history, a record 0–16 finish, the NFL's first perfectly bad season in 32 years. In three years with the Lions, he compiled a 10–38 (.208) record. (Earlier in the season, team president and general manager Matt Millen had also been fired.) Schwartz had been with the Titans since 2001, and in 2008, under Schwartz's leadership, the Titans allowed only 14.6 points per game, second in the NFL. Marinelli would later become the defensive line/assistant head coach for the Chicago Bears. |
Kansas City Chiefs | Todd Haley, former Arizona Cardinals offensive coordinator | Herman Edwards | Fired | Edwards was released on January 23 by new team general manager Scott Pioli, who was hired a week earlier. Edwards has been the coach in Kansas City the past three seasons, and during his tenure, the Chiefs focused on becoming younger. This lack of experience was reflected in a record of 6–26 (.188) under Edwards the last two seasons, after a 9–7 record his first season. Before joining the Chiefs, Edwards was head coach of the New York Jets for five seasons. Haley, whose high-powered passing offense was the predominant factor in the Cardinals' run to their first ever Super Bowl appearance, was named head coach February 6. Edwards would become an analyst for ESPN, and would eventually return to head coaching in 2018 at Arizona State. |
Indianapolis Colts | Jim Caldwell, associate head coach and quarterback coach | Tony Dungy | Retired | Dungy retired on January 12, after a 13-year head coaching career that saw him go 148–79 (.652) with Tampa Bay (1996–2001) and Indianapolis (2002–08), including a win in Super Bowl XLI in 2007, beating his friend, Lovie Smith (Chicago Bears coach) and becoming the first African-American coach to win a Super Bowl. This followed a 16-year career (1980–95) as a defensive assistant coach in both college football and the NFL. Dungy appeared on NBC's coverage of Super Bowl XLIII and is now an analyst on NBC's Football Night in America. |
New York Jets | Rex Ryan, former Baltimore Ravens defensive coordinator | Eric Mangini | Fired | Despite an 8–3 start in 2008, the Jets finished the season 1–4, with the only win coming against an equally skidding Buffalo Bills team, leading to Mangini's firing. Mangini coached three seasons with the Jets and compiled a 23–25 (.479) record; he was hired as the head coach of the Cleveland Browns nine days after being released by the Jets. Ryan, one of the two identical twin sons of former Jets defensive coach and Eagles and Cardinals head coach Buddy Ryan, agreed to a four-year contract hours following the Ravens' loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers in the AFC Championship Game. |
Oakland Raiders | Tom Cable, offensive line coach | Lane Kiffin | Fired | Kiffin was fired September 30, 2008, after 5–15 mark (.250) in 11⁄4 seasons as coach and a feud with owner Al Davis. Kiffin would be named the new coach at the University of Tennessee on December 1, replacing Phillip Fulmer. Cable, who previously served as the offensive line coach under Kiffin and previously coached at the University of Idaho, went 4–8 as interim coach of the Raiders and was retained as coach February 4, 2009. |
St. Louis Rams | Steve Spagnuolo, former New York Giants defensive coordinator | Scott Linehan; Defensive coordinator Jim Haslett (interim for 12 games) | Fired | Linehan was fired September 29, 2008, after going 11–25 (.306) over 21⁄4 seasons as coach; After turning down an offer from the San Francisco 49ers to be their offensive coordinator, he took the position of offensive coordinator with the Detroit Lions. Haslett went 2–10 as interim coach, but was told he would not be retained on January 15; Haslett has jumped to the United Football League, where he is now the coach of the Florida Tuskers. Spagnuolo rose to fame after his defense led the Giants to a win in Super Bowl XLII (ruining the New England Patriots' perfect season), and got a four-year contract on January 17 to take over as Rams coach. |
San Francisco 49ers | Mike Singletary, assistant head coach and linebackers coach | Mike Nolan | Fired | Nolan was fired October 20 after an 18–37 mark (.327) over nearly 31⁄2 seasons as coach. Singletary, who went 5–4 as interim coach in 2008, was rewarded with a four-year contract on December 28 following their 27–24 win over the Washington Redskins. Nolan would become defensive coordinator for the Denver Broncos. |
Seattle Seahawks | Jim L. Mora, assistant head coach and defensive backs coach and former head coach of the Atlanta Falcons. | Mike Holmgren | Retired | After 10 years of head coaching with the Seahawks, it was announced that Holmgren would step down as head coach after the 2008 season, with Mora as his automatic successor. In his time with the Seahawks, Holmgren compiled a record of 86–74 (.541), with five division titles, six playoff appearances, including the Seahawks' first appearance in the Super Bowl and its first conference title (2005). |
Tampa Bay Buccaneers | Raheem Morris, defensive backs coach | Jon Gruden | Fired | After his arrival from Oakland for two first-round picks, two second-round picks, and $8 million, Gruden – who was fired along with general manager Bruce Allen – became the Buccaneers' most successful coach, winning Super Bowl XXXVII over the Raiders in 2003. The team's late season collapse after starting with a 9–3 record and the lead position in the NFC South may have been the main reason for Gruden's firing. In seven seasons with the Buccaneers, Gruden compiled a 57–55 (.509) regular season record and was 3–2 in the playoffs. Morris, who was previously the defensive backs coach, was promoted to defensive coordinator after Monte Kiffin announced he would leave to join his son Lane at the University of Tennessee. Gruden worked for NFL Network at the 2009 Draft and was an analyst for Monday Night Football on ESPN. In 2018, he returned as the head coach of the Raiders. |
The following coaches were fired during the 2009 season:
Team | Interim coach | Ex-coach | Reason for leaving | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Buffalo Bills | Perry Fewell, defensive coordinator | Dick Jauron | Fired Nov 17 after 9 games | In 31⁄2 years with the Bills, all of them losing seasons, Jauron compiled a 24–33 (.421) record, including a 3–6 record at the time of his firing. He had particularly poor records against the AFC East (8–13, 0–7 against the New England Patriots), in night games (winless) and against teams with winning records (2–21). Perry Fewell, Jauron's replacement, had never been a head coach at any level. |
Team | Position | 2008 office holder | Reason for leaving | 2009 replacement | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cleveland Browns | GM | Phil Savage | Fired | George Kokinis | Savage compiled a 24–40 (.375) record in four seasons as the Browns' general manager. Browns HC Romeo Crennel was fired at the same time.
As director of pro personnel for the Ravens, Kokinis was responsible for analyzing NFL rosters and assessing the free agent market. He also assisted in contract negotiation for some of the team's draft picks. |
Denver Broncos | GM | Jim Goodman (interim) | Brian Xanders | Xanders had been hired the previous offseason as the assistant general manager. Owner Pat Bowlen fired Jim Goodman and appointed Xanders as the team's sole general manager on February 12, 2009. Xanders and new head coach Josh McDaniels engineered a personnel transformation where 85 percent of the team's roster was overhauled before the 2009 season began. | |
Indianapolis Colts | GM | Bill Polian | Resigned | Chris Polian | Bill Polian stepped down as general manager in 2009, but remains with the team as president and vice-chairman. He is succeeded by his son Chris, who was promoted from vice president of football operations. |
Jacksonville Jaguars | GM | James "Shack" Harris | Gene Smith | Smith became the first general manager in Jaguars history on January 12, 2009, after the resignation of James "Shack" Harris, who had been the team's vice-president of player personnel. | |
Kansas City Chiefs | GM | Carl Peterson | Scott Pioli | On December 15, 2008, Chiefs Chairman and acting owner Clark Hunt announced Peterson's resignation effective January 15, 2009.
Pioli had previously worked in the Patriots organization as vice president of player personnel. | |
St. Louis Rams | GM | Jay Zygmunt | Billy Devaney | Zygmunt resigned on December 22nd, 2008, the day after a week 16 loss to the San Francisco 49ers that dropped the Ram's record to 2–13.
In February 2008 the Rams hired Devaney as vice president of pro personnel to help conduct their 2008 draft. He was promoted to general manager of the Rams after Zygmunt's resignation. | |
Tampa Bay Buccaneers | GM | Bruce Allen | Fired | Mark Dominik | Bruce Allen was hired in 2004. Allen had previously worked with then-head coach Jon Gruden in Oakland. Like Gruden, the team's late season collapse from a 9–3 record to 9–7 and no playoffs was likely also the main reason Allen was fired.
Dominik previously was the director of pro personnel. |
Team | Position | Departing office holder | Reason for leaving | Interim replacement | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cleveland Browns | GM | George Kokinis | Fired | vacant | After a 1–7 start, Kokinis was reportedly escorted from the Cleveland Browns team facility by security on November 2, 2009. The team later released a statement saying he was "no longer actively involved with the organization." |
Washington Redskins | GM | Vinny Cerrato | Resigned | Bruce Allen | Cerrato was (re)hired as vice president of football operations in 2002. Cerrato resigned from the team on December 17, 2009, and Allen was hired as general manager the same day. In an interview, owner Daniel Snyder admitted that the 2008 hiring of Jim Zorn as head coach was the reason that Cerrato was forced out.[51] |
Seattle Seahawks | GM | Tim Ruskell | Resigned | vacant | Ruskell was forced to resign from his position as the Seahawks' president of football operations on December 2, 2009. The Seahawks were 4–7 at the time and had finished with a 4–12 record the year before. |
The 2009 season was the first season for the new Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, replacing Texas Stadium in Irving.
Dolphin Stadium was renamed Land Shark Stadium after a naming rights deal was signed with the Land Shark beer that was sold at Jimmy Buffett's Margaritaville restaurant chain.
This season also served as the last season for Giants Stadium, as both the New York Giants and Jets moved into a new stadium for 2010. The Giants exited with an auspicious 41–9 loss to Carolina on December 27, while the Jets defeated the Cincinnati Bengals by a 37–0 score in the season finale on Sunday night, January 3, 2010.
After having no major uniform changes for the 2008 NFL season, the trend of at least one major uniform change per season among the 32 teams returned with two major uniform changes, as well as one with some minor modifications.
The San Francisco 49ers, who had been long-rumored to be returning to their 1964–1995 uniforms (and have had the red variation of those uniforms as their third uniform since the 2002 season) did so for this season.[52] The team returned to a brighter, scarlet red and a less metallic "49ers gold" as its team colors, replacing the darker cardinal red and the more metallic "49ers gold" which the team has worn since it last overhauled their uniforms in 1996.[53] The new uniforms were unveiled on April 25, 2009.
The Jacksonville Jaguars got new uniforms for the 2009 season.[54][55] Team owner Wayne Weaver reportedly wanted to "clean up" the look, feeling that the team has too many uniform styles.[55] The changes aren't a complete overhaul, but similar to the Atlanta Falcons and Minnesota Vikings' recent overhauls.[54] The new uniforms were introduced at a press conference on April 22.[56]
The Detroit Lions designated their popular 1950s-era throwbacks as their third uniform and completely dropped their unpopular black jerseys.[57] The team had not worn the throwbacks from 2005 to 2007 to make room for the Matt Millen-designated black jerseys. In addition, the team unveiled a new helmet logo on April 20, updating "Bubbles" with a fiercer look and wordmark, with modified uniforms. Those logos were accidentally leaked by NFL.com in their online shop, then quickly removed on March 23, 2009.[58]
Besides the above-mentioned throwbacks for the 50th anniversary season of the AFL, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers wore their "Creamsicle" throwbacks for the November 8 home game against the Green Bay Packers, in conjunction with the creation of the Buccaneers Ring of Honor.[59] The Buccaneers defeated the Packers 38–28, the only home game the team won in 2009.
The St. Louis Rams wore their 1973–1999 blue uniforms in select home games to honor former owner Georgia Frontiere, who died in early 2008 (too late to inform the NFL about wearing a throwback uniform in her honor during the 2008 season; the team instead opted for a memorial patch) and also celebrate the tenth anniversary of their win in Super Bowl XXXIV.[60] Ironically, the Rams cut ties with its last two remaining offensive players from the "Greatest Show on Turf" era during the offseason by releasing Orlando Pace and Torry Holt for salary cap reasons plus opting for a rebuilding mode after a 2–14 season in 2008 (second only to the Lions' historic 0–16 season) and no trips to the postseason since the 2004 season. Defensive end Leonard Little is the only player remaining who wore the pre-2000 uniforms again in 2009. These uniforms were worn on October 11 against the Vikings and December 20 against the Texans.
The Cleveland Browns, Dallas Cowboys, Minnesota Vikings, and Pittsburgh Steelers retained their throwback alternates worn in previous seasons. The Atlanta Falcons wore replicas of their first season uniforms from 1966, in lieu of their all-black uniforms. The Tennessee Titans wore a Number 9 decal on the back of their helmets to honor former Titans quarterback Steve McNair, who was killed on July 4, while the Philadelphia Eagles wore a decal with the initials of Jim Johnson, their longtime defensive coordinator who died on July 28. The Seattle Seahawks also unveiled a lime green jersey with blue shoulders, to pay tribute to the new Major League Soccer team with whom they share Qwest Field. The jersey No. 71 was retired for former offensive lineman Walter Jones on December 9, 2009.
The Miami Dolphins, after a four-year hiatus, brought back their alternate orange jerseys and wore them against the New York Jets on October 12.
This was the fourth season under the television contracts with the league's television partners: CBS (all AFC Sunday afternoon away games and one Thanksgiving game), Fox (all NFC Sunday afternoon away games and one Thanksgiving game), NBC (16 Sunday night games and the kickoff game), ESPN (17 Monday night games over sixteen weeks), NFL Network (eight late-season games on Thursday and Saturday nights, including one Thanksgiving game and a Christmas night game), and DirecTV's NFL Sunday Ticket package. These agreements with CBS, Fox and DirecTV were extended two years through the 2013 season on May 19, 2009, and NBC's contract was also extended through that same season on August 19 of the same year; these extensions were done so they all coincided with the 2013 expiration date on ESPN's contract.
CBS celebrated their 50th season of NFL coverage; CBS has covered NFL games from 1956 to 1993 and again from 1998 to the present. Ironically, CBS which was ordered by the NFL not to give American Football League scores during its NFL broadcasts of the 1960s, now covers the AFC, while Fox covers the NFC. This season was also the fortieth consecutive season that Monday Night Football has been a permanent part of the NFL schedule, though the league had played games on Monday night sporadically before this. Monday Night Football originally aired on ABC before switching to ESPN in 2006, when the two networks' sports operations were merged. The first Monday night of the regular season featured two AFL Original Eight games, a doubleheader with the Bills at the Patriots and the Chargers at the Raiders.
NFL Network continued to have coverage disputes with major cable providers. In particular, Comcast, the largest cable provider in the United States, was considering removing the network from its lineups on April 30, 2009, shortly after the draft but before the start of the preseason. Comcast was carrying the network on a digital sports tier and negotiations continued past the April 30 deadline as NFLN would continue on Comcast, which ended with a resolution on May 19 that could open the door for other major cable providers such as Cablevision and Cox to carry the network on a what would be equal to Comcast's digital classic tier, with around 10 million subscribers.[61] However, the most notable holdout, Time Warner Cable, still is nowhere near a deal.[62] Additionally, the NFL Network created a new "Red Zone Channel" starting with the season openers September 13. Comcast-owned Versus has signed a deal to carry United Football League games on Thursday nights; the tail end of the UFL schedule overlapped with the first few weeks of the Thursday night NFL package. In related news, the NFL has reached a settlement with DISH Network over the satellite provider's decision to move NFL Network to a higher tier. NFL Network has also dropped the use of the names "Run to the Playoffs" and "Saturday Night Football", opting to standardize all of its broadcasts under the "Thursday Night Football" banner. The Saturday night and Friday night games airing on the network was marketed as "Thursday Night Football Special Edition".
This was also the first NFL season after the DTV transition in the United States, which had originally been scheduled to take place on February 17, 2009, but was delayed until June 12, 2009. Hawaiʻi made the digital switchover on January 15, 2009.[63] (Low-power translators will still be allowed to broadcast in analog until at least 2012, and cable providers will continue to distribute analog signals for the foreseeable future.)
After fifty seasons as a player, coach, broadcaster and video game maven, John Madden retired on April 16 from his position on Sunday Night Football. Cris Collinsworth moved from NFL Network to NBC to assume Madden's in-game analyst role with Al Michaels; Matt Millen replaced Collinsworth on NFL Network, while Tony Dungy and Rodney Harrison replaced Collinsworth and Jerome Bettis as studio analysts on NBC's Football Night in America pregame show. In addition, Tony Kornheiser left MNF and former Raiders and Buccaneers coach Jon Gruden replaced him.
In radio, it was reported that the league was exploring ending its contract with Westwood One or sharing games with another network due to Westwood One's financial problems. The Sports USA Radio Network, ESPN Radio and Sporting News Radio were mentioned as possible partners; Fox Sports Radio was notably excluded from consideration. Sports USA currently carries Sunday afternoon games by agreement with individual teams, while ESPN carries the NBA and Major League Baseball, the latter causing a potential schedule conflict between Sunday Night Football and Sunday Night Baseball, plus the MLB Playoffs. Sunday night, Monday night, Thanksgiving and all other Thursday and Saturday games are covered by the contract.[64] Of the offers, Westwood One was the high bidder (and reportedly the only one offering guaranteed money), ESPN requested a longer-term deal, the Sporting News offered a revenue-sharing plan in lieu of rights fees, and Sports USA was described as a "long shot".[65] After a restructuring shored up the company's financial situation, Westwood One in March 2009 earned a two-year extension for all of the night games, paying US$33,000,000 for the two-year deal.[66]
In addition to the official feature game package, three networks will carry nationwide radio broadcasts of Sunday afternoon games. The newest such network is Compass Media Networks, which has signed deals with eight teams. Sports USA and Westwood One will carry games from the other 24 teams. Dial Global, which previously backed Sports USA's coverage in 2008, will instead handle Compass's package for 2009.