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1942 NFL season

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1942 NFL season
1942 edition of NFL's annual guide
Regular season
DurationSeptember 13 to
December 13, 1942
East ChampionsWashington Redskins
West ChampionsChicago Bears
Championship Game
ChampionsWashington Redskins
1942 NFL season is located in USA Midwest and Northeast
Giants
Giants
Eagles
Eagles
Dodgers
Dodgers
Steelers
Steelers
Redskins
Redskins
Bears
Bears
Cardinals
Cardinals
Packers
Packers
Rams
Rams
Lions
Lions
NFL teams: West, East

The 1942 NFL season was the 23rd regular season of the National Football League. Before the season, many players left for service in World War II, thus depleting the rosters of all the teams.

The ten teams of the NFL each played a 11 game schedule during the 1942 regular season, for a league total of 55 contests.

Continuing their Chicago Bears finished the regular season at 11–0, and faced the 10–1 Washington Redskins in the championship game. Washington, which had been embarrassed by a massive 73–0 shutout loss in the 1940 Championship Play-off, got a measure of revenge by spoiling the Bears' hope for a perfect season, winning the rematch 14–6.

Draft

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The 1942 NFL draft was held on December 22, 1941, at Chicago's Palmer House Hotel. With the first pick, the Pittsburgh Steelers selected runningback Bill Dudley from the University of Virginia.

Major changes for 1942

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Rules changes

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  • The use of flags on flexible shafts to mark the intersections of goal lines and side lines (the predecessor to the pylon) becomes mandatory.
  • A clarification to the offsides rule is added: The center or snapper is not offsides unless a portion of his body is ahead of the defensive team's line.
  • A half cannot end on a double foul. Instead, the period will be extended by one untimed down.
  • Detachable kicking toes are prohibited.
  • When an encroachment or false start causes the other team to be offsides, only the initial foul is penalized.
  • A forward pass that first touches an ineligible receiver may be intercepted.
  • If the offensive team commits pass interference in their opponent's end zone, it is an automatic touchback.

Coaching changes

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Stadium changes

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Final standings

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NFL Eastern Division
W L T PCT DIV PF PA STK
Washington Redskins 10 1 0 .909 7–1 227 102 W9
Pittsburgh Steelers 7 4 0 .636 5–3 167 119 L1
New York Giants 5 5 1 .500 4–4 155 139 W2
Brooklyn Dodgers 3 8 0 .273 2–6 100 168 L6
Philadelphia Eagles 2 9 0 .182 2–6 134 239 L1
Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.
NFL Western Division
W L T PCT DIV PF PA STK
Chicago Bears 11 0 0 1.000 8–0 376 84 W11
Green Bay Packers 8 2 1 .800 6–2 300 215 W2
Cleveland Rams 5 6 0 .455 3–5 150 207 L1
Chicago Cardinals 3 8 0 .273 3–5 98 209 L6
Detroit Lions 0 11 0 .000 0–8 38 263 L11
Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.

NFL Championship Game

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Washington 14, Chi. Bears 6, at Griffith Stadium, Washington, D.C., December 13, 1942

Team statistics

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These statistics include the 11 regularly scheduled games played by each team and exclude the Championship game. A new league record for passing was set by the Green Bay Packers, with 2,407 yards gained through the air.[1] The Packers also set new records for most passes completed in a season (172) and most touchdowns passing (28).[1] The Washington Redskins, featuring the passing of Sammy Baugh, set a new NFL record for passing accuracy, completing 53.4% of their 257 pass attempts as a team.[1] Also worthy of note is the point differential of the undefeated Chicago Bears, who amassed 376 points (34.1 points per game) while giving up just 84 (7.6 points per game) — both league bests.

Rank Team Total yards (Rushing)[2] (Passing) Penalized Yards allowed Takeaways Turnovers
1 Chicago Bears 3,900 1,926 1,974 905 1,703 43 43
2 Green Bay Packers 3,790 1,383 2,407 312 3,076 48 26
3 Washington Redskins 3,121 1,521 1,600 610 1,950 26 30
4 Pittsburgh Steelers 2,606 1,920 686 383 2,383 31 18
5 Philadelphia Eagles 2,535 1,119 1,416 392 3,016 28 28
6 Chicago Cardinals 2,453 1,021 1,432 400 2,972 33 40
7 Cleveland Rams 2,413 876 1,537 315 3,544 33 35
8 Brooklyn Dodgers 2,219 1,505 714 288 2,794 26 34
9 Detroit Lions 2,206 1,321 885 364 3,083 28 56
10 New York Giants 2,160 1,203 957 437 2,877 34 21
Source: Strickler (ed.), 1943 NFL Record & Roster Manual, pp. 74-75. Takeaways = (Interceptions + Fumble recoveries)

Awards

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Joe F. Carr Trophy

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The Joe F. Carr Trophy was presented annually by the National League as its Most Valuable Player award. For the second year in a row, the award was won by Packer end Don Hutson.

All-National League Team

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Given the dominant performance of the 1942 Chicago Bears team, it is unsurprising that five of the players named to the First Team eleven were members of George Halas' club, with a sixth Bear player tabbed for the second team. In addition, four Washington Redskins were accorded All-League honors, with the Green Bay Packers and the Cleveland Rams adding three players each. There were also 34 players included as part of an "Honorable Mention" list.[3]

First Team ————————————————— Second Team
Name Team Position Name Team
Don Hutson Green Bay Packers LE Perry Schwartz Brooklyn Dodgers
Willie Wilkin Washington Redskins LT Chet Adams Cleveland Rams
Dan Fortmann Chicago Bears LG Riley Matheson Cleveland Rams
"Bulldog" Turner Chicago Bears C Chuck Cherundolo Pittsburgh Steelers
"Monk" Edwards New York Giants RG Charles Goldenberg Green Bay Packers
Lee Artoe Chicago Bears RT "Bruiser" Kinard Brooklyn Dodgers
Bob Masterson Washington Redskins RE George Wilson Chicago Bears
Sid Luckman Chicago Bears QB Sammy Baugh Washington Redskins
Cecil Isbell Green Bay Packers LHB Merl Condit Brooklyn Dodgers
Bill Dudley Pittsburgh Steelers RHB Dante Magnani Cleveland Rams
Gary Famiglietti Chicago Bears FB Andy Farkas Washington Redskins

References

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  1. ^ a b c Strickler (ed.), 1943 NFL Roster and Record Manual, p. 74.
  2. ^ Official NFL stats included yardage agained "by rushing" and "on laterals", which are combined here.
  3. ^ Strickler (ed.), 1943 NFL Roster and Record Manual, p. 98.

Further reading

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  • Tom Bennett, et al. (eds.), The NFL's Official Encyclopedic History of Professional Football. Revised and expanded edition. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1977.
  • Bob Carroll, et al. (eds.), Total Football II: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Football League. New York: HarperCollins, 1999.
  • NFL Communications Department and Santo Labombarda (eds.), Official National Football League 2024 Record and Fact Book. New York: National Football League, 2024.
  • Joseph S. Page, Pro Football Championships Before the Super Bowl: A Year-by-Year History, 1926–1965. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co., 2011.