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1957 NFL season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1957 NFL season
Regular season
DurationSeptember 29 –
December 22, 1957
East ChampionsCleveland Browns
West ChampionsDetroit Lions (playoff)
Championship Game
ChampionsDetroit Lions
1957 NFL season is located in the United States
Eagles
Eagles
Browns
Browns
Giants
Giants
Bears
Bears
Cardinals ....
Cardinals ....
Steelers ....
Steelers ....
.... Redskins
.... Redskins
Packers
Packers
Lions
Lions
49ers
49ers
Colts
Colts
Rams
Rams
NFL teams: West, East

The 1957 NFL season was the 38th regular season of the National Football League. After a 6-game preseason slate, the league's 12 teams played a 12-game league schedule — 72 regular season contests in all.

The season ended on Sunday, December 28, with a "World's Championship Playoff" held in the home city of the Western Conference champions,[1] won 59–14 by the Detroit Lions over the Cleveland Browns.

This was followed by the "All Star Pro-Bowl Game" held January 11, 1959, in Los Angeles,[1] a game won by the East, 28–21.

Draft

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The 1957 NFL draft was held on November 26, 1956, and January 31, 1957, at Philadelphia's Warwick Hotel and The Bellevue-Stratford Hotel. With the first pick, the Green Bay Packers selected halfback Paul Hornung from the University of Notre Dame.

Major rule changes

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  • During sudden-death overtime, rules for time outs are the same as in a regular game, including the last two minutes of the second and fourth quarters.
  • Home teams wore dark jerseys and road team wore white. Previously, NFL teams were allowed to wear whatever uniform color they liked, even if it clashed with the other team, and were not required to have a white jersey.

Division races

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Cleveland won its opener, 6–3 over the Giants and led the Eastern Division from wire to wire. A 17–7 loss to the Eagles in Week Four forced the Browns to share the lead with New York, but the Giants lost the following week and spent the rest of the season trying to catch Cleveland.

The Western Division race was more protracted. Baltimore, Detroit, and San Francisco were tied for the lead several times and had identical 7–4 records at the end of the penultimate week.[2] When two teams tied for first place, they would meet in a one-game playoff. The NFL did have a provision for this situation: "If all three teams win, tie, or lose, then a two-week playoff series begins next Sunday with Baltimore drawing a bye, San Francisco playing Detroit, and the winner meeting the Colts at Baltimore December 29."[3] Detroit and San Francisco both won while starting their backup quarterbacks (Tobin Rote and rookie John Brodie, respectively), but the Colts lost, meaning the additional playoff was not required.

Week Western Record Eastern Record
1 3 teams (Bal, GB, LA) 1–0–0 3 teams (Cards, Cle, Pit) 1–0–0
2 Baltimore Colts 2–0–0 Cleveland Browns 2–0–0
3 Baltimore Colts 3–0–0 Cleveland Browns 3–0–0
4 3 teams (Bal, Det, SF) 3–1–0 Tie (Cle, NYG) 3–1–0
5 San Francisco 49ers 4–1–0 Cleveland Browns 4–1–0
6 San Francisco 49ers 5–1–0 Cleveland Browns 5–1–0
7 San Francisco 49ers 5–2–0 Cleveland Browns 6–1–0
8 3 teams (Bal, Det, SF) 5–3–0 Cleveland Browns 6–1–1
9 Baltimore Colts 6–3–0 Cleveland Browns 7–1–1
10 Baltimore Colts 7–3–0 Cleveland Browns 8–1–1
11 3 teams (Bal, Det, SF) 7–4–0 Cleveland Browns 8–2–1
12 (tie) Detroit Lions 8–4–0 Cleveland Browns 9–2–1
12 San Francisco 49ers 8–4–0

Final standings

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Playoffs

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Home team in capitals

Western Conference Playoff Game

  • Detroit 31, SAN FRANCISCO 27

NFL Championship Game

  • DETROIT 59, Cleveland 14

Awards

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AP NFL Most Valuable Player Jim Brown, Fullback, Cleveland
AP NFL Coach of the Year George Wilson, Lions

Coaching changes

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Stadium changes

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The Green Bay Packers moved from City Stadium to New City Stadium

References

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  1. ^ a b Joseph T. Labrum (ed.), The National Football League Record and Rules Manual: 1958, 39th Season. Bala-Cynwyd, PA: National Football League, 1958; back cover.
  2. ^ Olan, Ben (December 15, 1957). "Frisco, Lions, Colts seek title; Browns at New York". Youngstown Vindicator. Ohio. Associated Press. p. D1.
  3. ^ "Western NFL Championship At Stake Today," The Post-Standard (Syracuse), December 15, 1957, p34