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=== NFC West ===
=== NFC West ===

==== San Francisco 49ers vs. Los Angeles Rams ====
{{Main|49ers–Rams rivalry}}
The rivalry between the 49ers and Rams began in 1950. The rivalry became one of the most intense in the NFL in the 1970s as the two [[California]]-based teams (the Rams then played their home games in Los Angeles whereas the 49ers played their home games in San Francisco) regularly competed for the NFL's [[NFC West]] Division title. The two teams have contested 146 games, in which San Francisco leads 75–68–3. After the Rams relocated to [[St. Louis]] (in 1995), the rivalry had lost its geographical lore, although games were still intense. The cultural differences between the [[West Coast of the United States|West Coast]] (where the 49ers are based) and the Midwest (where the Rams were based) also added to the intensity of the rivalry. In 2016, the Rams moved back to Los Angeles making the rivalry once again West Coast based. Both teams had been inactive within the rivalry as the Rams failed to qualify for the postseason from 2005-16 while the 49ers had struggled to remain consistent despite two Super Bowl appearances in 2013 and 2019. Both teams returned to relevance under head coaches [[Sean McVay]] and [[Kyle Shanahan]] respectively. The two sides also rekindled the rivalry with the addition of receiver [[Deebo Samuel]] gaining a notoriety of taunting against the Rams and his publicized feuding with Rams’ defensive tackle [[Aaron Donald]], as they were unable to beat the 49ers in 6 straight regular season matchups until 2022.<ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.nbcsports.com/bayarea/49ers/deebo-samuel-doesnt-seek-aaron-donald-conversation-after-past-beef?amp|title=Deebo Samuel doesn’t seek to squash beef with Aaron Donald|work=[[NBC Sports]]}}</ref> The two teams met in the NFC Championship that year in a hard fought battle with the 49ers taking the lead heading into the 3rd quarter. However; inconsistent play on defense, multiple penalties on both sides slowly chipped away the lead as the Rams inched ahead with 4 minutes left in the game. San Francisco Quarterback [[Jimmy Garoppolo]] would throw a game sealing interception while evading a sack from Aaron Donald, thus giving the Rams the victory as they would go onto win [[Super Bowl LVI]]. ''[[Sports Illustrated]]'' considers it the 8th best of all time in the NFL.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/multimedia/photo_gallery/2005/12/15/gallery.oldrivals/content.3.html |title= Top 10 NFL Rivalries Of All Time|access-date=2008-01-30 |work= [[Sports Illustrated]]}}</ref>

==== San Francisco 49ers vs. Seattle Seahawks ====
==== San Francisco 49ers vs. Seattle Seahawks ====
{{Main|49ers–Seahawks rivalry}}
{{Main|49ers–Seahawks rivalry}}
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Seattle leads the series 30–17 through the end of the 2021 season.{{citation needed|date=February 2022}}
Seattle leads the series 30–17 through the end of the 2021 season.{{citation needed|date=February 2022}}

==== San Francisco 49ers vs. Los Angeles Rams ====
{{Main|49ers–Rams rivalry}}
The rivalry between the 49ers and Rams began in 1950. The rivalry became one of the most intense in the NFL in the 1970s as the two [[California]]-based teams (the Rams then played their home games in Los Angeles whereas the 49ers played their home games in San Francisco) regularly competed for the NFL's [[NFC West]] Division title. The two teams have contested 146 games, in which San Francisco leads 75–68–3. After the Rams relocated to [[St. Louis]] (in 1995), the rivalry had lost its geographical lore, although games were still intense. The cultural differences between the [[West Coast of the United States|West Coast]] (where the 49ers are based) and the Midwest (where the Rams were based) also added to the intensity of the rivalry. In 2016, the Rams moved back to Los Angeles making the rivalry once again West Coast based. Both teams had been inactive within the rivalry as the Rams failed to qualify for the postseason from 2005-16 while the 49ers had struggled to remain consistent despite two Super Bowl appearances in 2013 and 2019. Both teams returned to relevance under head coaches [[Sean McVay]] and [[Kyle Shanahan]] respectively. The two sides also rekindled the rivalry with the addition of receiver [[Deebo Samuel]] gaining a notoriety of taunting against the Rams and his publicized feuding with Rams’ defensive tackle [[Aaron Donald]], as they were unable to beat the 49ers in 6 straight regular season matchups until 2022.<ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.nbcsports.com/bayarea/49ers/deebo-samuel-doesnt-seek-aaron-donald-conversation-after-past-beef?amp|title=Deebo Samuel doesn’t seek to squash beef with Aaron Donald|work=[[NBC Sports]]}}</ref> The two teams met in the NFC Championship that year in a hard fought battle with the 49ers taking the lead heading into the 3rd quarter. However; inconsistent play on defense, multiple penalties on both sides slowly chipped away the lead as the Rams inched ahead with 4 minutes left in the game. San Francisco Quarterback [[Jimmy Garoppolo]] would throw a game sealing interception while evading a sack from Aaron Donald, thus giving the Rams the victory as they would go onto win [[Super Bowl LVI]]. ''[[Sports Illustrated]]'' considers it the 8th best of all time in the NFL.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/multimedia/photo_gallery/2005/12/15/gallery.oldrivals/content.3.html |title= Top 10 NFL Rivalries Of All Time|access-date=2008-01-30 |work= [[Sports Illustrated]]}}</ref>


==== Los Angeles Rams vs. Seattle Seahawks ====
==== Los Angeles Rams vs. Seattle Seahawks ====

Revision as of 23:49, 10 August 2022

As with all sports leagues, there are a number of significant rivalries between teams and notable players in the National Football League (NFL). Rivalries are occasionally created due to a particular event that causes bad blood between teams, players, coaches, or owners, but for the most part, they arise simply due to the frequency with which some teams play each other, and sometimes exist for geographic reasons.

Rivalries in the NFL are commonly recognized as such by fans and players alike. While many rivalries are well established, others are of more recent vintage, accepted as existing by the nature of the competition and history between the two teams. Other rivalries have fallen by the wayside due to league realignment and reduction in frequencies of meetings. Many modern rivalries are formed simply due to the two teams being within the same division.

Foundation

Purely geographic rivalries are rare in the NFL, since crosstown rivals do not play each other nearly as often as in other leagues that have more games and place teams closest to each other into the same divisions (and therefore more opportunities to play other teams).

For example, Major League Baseball teams face each league opponent at least six times in the regular season, and within a division as many as 19 times, while the National Hockey League scheduling policies in the 21st century ensured at least eight games (out of 82) with division rivals and ensured the two areas with multiple teams (New York and Los Angeles) had all of the teams in one area in the same division. In recent years, the NFL changed its scheduling formula to ensure every possible matchup happens within a four-year span, excluding pre-season games or the Super Bowl.[1]

A main factor in the fact that crosstown rivals are almost always in opposing conferences is because of history: in the two current markets (New York/New Jersey and Los Angeles) that have two NFL teams, both have one team that was a member of the American Football League (the Jets in New York/New Jersey and Chargers in Los Angeles).

As part of the AFL–NFL merger, all AFL teams had to be retained, even if it meant multiple teams in one metropolitan area: this was not a major issue, as the Raiders and San Francisco 49ers served separate parts of their metropolitan areas separated by San Francisco Bay, and the New York market, the most populous in the United States, supported two or more NFL teams through the 1930s and 1940s. Only in Los Angeles, which did not have two NFL teams until the Raiders moved there in 1982, has there been difficulty in supporting two NFL teams at the same time, a factor in both the Rams and Raiders leaving in 1995.

The newly merged league opted not to go through an extensive geographical realignment: instead, the AFL formed most of the AFC, with a few existing NFL teams joining the new AFC and the rest of the old NFL forming the basis of the NFC. As a result, each team ended up in an opposite conference from their crosstown rival. This allowed the combined league to retain both existing television partnerships of each league (NBC for the AFL/AFC, and CBS for the NFL/NFC) instead of choosing one or the other (ABC joined the mix in 1970 with Monday Night Football, thus giving all of the Big Three television networks NFL rights and effectively shutting out any further potential competitors).

NFL policy currently requires any teams who play in the same metropolitan area to play in opposite conferences: in the event of any relocation causing two teams from the same conference to share a metropolitan area, one of the two teams must move to the other conference.[2]

Categories

Division rivals

Games between opponents in the same NFL division. Since 2002, there are 32 teams in eight divisions of four teams each.[3] Each team plays each division opponent twice in the regular season (once at home, once away) for a total of six regular season games out of 17 total. Occasionally, two teams will play three times in a year if they meet again in the playoffs. The Chiefs, Cowboys, Packers, Dolphins and Steelers are the only teams with winning records against all of their current division rivals for rivalries going back at least 20 years.

Conference rivals

Teams do not play a given conference opponent from outside their division more than once during the regular season.[1] However, they may meet again for a second time in the playoffs. The NFL schedules divisions to play against each other on a rotating basis, so that every team from one division will play every team from another division, for a total of four games per team. Each team will also play one team from each of the remaining two divisions within the conference that finished in the same divisional standing position in the prior year, for a grand total of 96 intra-conference games. Conference games are often important, as a team's record in common games, as well as its overall record against its conference, is sometimes used as a tiebreaker for playoff seeding at the end of the regular season. Also, many regular season opponents have met again in the playoffs, and the result of a regular season game can affect where the playoff game will be played. Conference rivals will play each other at least once every three years in the regular season, and as frequently as once every year depending on record, and can play each other in the preseason.

Inter-conference

Teams do not play a given inter-conference opponent more than once during the season unless they are to meet up in the Super Bowl. The NFL schedules inter-conference divisions to play each other exactly once on a rotating basis within a four-year cycle. For instance, given the 2012 NFL season as a reference, the NFC East played the AFC North during the 2012 season, then the AFC West during the 2013 season, AFC South during the 2014 season, and finally the AFC East in the 2015 season before repeating the cycle. The league also schedules inter-conference games on an eight-year cycle so any particular team will both host and visit any given team in the league within eight years.[4] Inter-conference rivals may play each other more frequently in the preseason, where no structured scheduling formula is used.

American Football Conference

AFC East

Buffalo Bills vs. Miami Dolphins

In the AFC East rivalry between the Buffalo Bills and Miami Dolphins, the two teams have played 106 regular season and playoff games, with the Dolphins having a 61-54–1 advantage as of the end of the 2021 season.[5][6] The intensity of the rivalry stems from the Dolphins winning 20 straight meetings in the 1970s, as well as the emergence of Hall-of-Fame quarterbacks Jim Kelly for Buffalo and Dan Marino for Miami in the 1980s and 1990s. The teams have also met four times in the NFL playoffs, with the Bills holding a 3–1 advantage, including a victory in the 1992 AFC Championship Game.[6][7]

Buffalo Bills vs. New England Patriots

During the Brady–Belichick era, this rivalry became one of the most lopsided in the league, with the Patriots controlling the series under quarterback Tom Brady.[8] The Bills have since turned the corner after Brady's departure to Tampa Bay, winning 4 of 5 games afterwards with quarterback Josh Allen, including a 47–17 win in the 2021–22 NFL playoffs.[9] Prior to the Brady era, Bills Hall of Fame quarterback Jim Kelly compiled a 12–8 career record against the Patriots. The Patriots lead 77–47–1 as of the end of the 2021 season. The teams have split their two playoff meetings, with the first one being a Patriots win following the 1963 AFL season.

Buffalo Bills vs. New York Jets

This rivalry is not as fierce as other AFC East rivalries, as the two teams have rarely been competitive simultaneously. The rivalry briefly heated up when former Jets coach Rex Ryan was coaching for Buffalo from 2015 to 2016. The Bills lead series 65–56 as of the end of the 2020 season.[10] The Bills won the rivals' lone post-season meeting in the 1981 AFC Wild Card round.

Miami Dolphins vs. New England Patriots

The Dolphins lead 58–54 as of the end of week 1 of the 2021 season, but the Patriots lead the playoff series 2–1. The rivalry briefly heated up in 2005, when Patriots head coach Bill Belichick's former Browns assistant Nick Saban was hired as Dolphins head coach and when he nearly signed quarterback Drew Brees with the Dolphins, as well as in 2008 when the teams were battling for the top spot in the AFC East. These Dolphins won the division, making 2008 the only in a 16-year stretch in which New England did not win the AFC East. Both teams are also the only teams in the post-Merger era to post undefeated regular season records, with the Dolphins doing so in 1972 and the Patriots in 2007, but only the Dolphins were able to win the Super Bowl. Recently, the Patriots have had the upper hand, posting a 26–13 record in the Tom Brady era.

Miami Dolphins vs. New York Jets

The Dolphins and Jets have often competed for divisional supremacy, and have played a number of classic games. This includes the game, known in NFL Lore as the Monday Night miracle where the Jets erased a 30–7 lead after three quarters and won the game in overtime; as well as the famous Dan Marino fake spike game. The Dolphins lead the series at 57-55–1 as of the end of the 2021 season, while the Dolphins have won the only playoff meeting, the 1982 AFC Championship Game.[11]

New England Patriots vs. New York Jets

Games between the New England Patriots and New York Jets have often played out the fierce Yankees–Red Sox rivalry in Major League Baseball, as New York City and Boston are approximately 3½ hours apart by car.[12][13] More recently, the Jets have tried to overcome the Patriots’ domination in the division and the conference, facing them in the playoffs twice in a five-season span. The Patriots defeated the Jets 37–16 in the 2006 playoffs, while the Jets won 28–21 in the 2010 playoffs. The series is in New England's favor, 69–54–1 as of the end of the 2020 season, including a playoff record of 2–1 against the Jets.[14]

AFC North

Baltimore Ravens vs. Cincinnati Bengals

The Bengals–Ravens rivalry in the AFC north began when the Ravens relocated to Baltimore. Since then, the rivalry heated up when longtime Ravens defensive coordinator Marvin Lewis was hired as the head coach of the Bengals. The Ravens lead the all-time series 27–23 as of the end of the 2020 season.

Baltimore Ravens vs. Cleveland Browns

The Browns–Ravens rivalry in the AFC North began when the Browns resumed operations 1999, after suspending operations for three seasons after the original Browns moved to Baltimore and became the Ravens. The rivalry between the Browns and Ravens was more directed at former Browns owner Art Modell, who orchestrated the move, than the team itself, and has, by most Ravens fans, been simply considered a divisional game. The rivalry has been largely one-sided, as the Ravens hold a 33–11 series lead as of the end of the 2020 season. The two teams have not met in the playoffs.

Baltimore Ravens vs. Pittsburgh Steelers

The Ravens-Steelers rivalry in the AFC North is one of the most intense in the NFL.[15] The Ravens and Steelers often compete for divisional supremacy.[16] They are also known for fielding tough, hard-hitting defensive squads, giving their games an extra element of physical intensity. The Steelers lead the series 30–24 as of the end of the 2020 season, including a 3–1 record in the playoffs. The two teams have combined for eight Super Bowl championships. CBS ranked this rivalry as No. 2 of their best NFL rivalry of the 2000s.[17]

Cincinnati Bengals vs. Cleveland Browns

This rivalry, often referred to as the "Battle of Ohio" started as the result of former Browns head coach and team founder Paul Brown starting the Bengals franchise after leaving the Browns. The colors of each team are similar, since Paul Brown chose the exact shade of orange used by the Browns for the Bengals, and the Bengals original uniforms were identical to the Browns uniforms, excluding the word "Bengals" on the helmet. The rivalry reached its peak during the 1980s when both teams were vying viciously for a spot in the playoffs. During the 1990s the rivalry also butted heads when Brown's sons were in charge of the day-to-day operations of the Bengals.[18] The Bengals lead the series 51–44 as of the end of the 2020 season. The two teams have not met in the playoffs.

Cincinnati Bengals vs. Pittsburgh Steelers

The two teams have played each other twice a year since becoming division rivals in 1970. This rivalry has gained intensity since the 2000s, as the teams have met twice in the playoffs, with both games being marked by hard hits and injuries with the most infamous example occurring in the 2005 playoffs.[19][20][21] The Steelers lead the overall series 67–36 and the postseason series 2–0. However, the Steelers have been more dominant recently, posting a record of 28–7 since 2004, when they drafted Roethlisberger. There were two times that the rivalry has met during the playoffs: the Wild Card rounds of 2005 and 2015, with the Steelers winning both meetings at Cincinnati. The 2005 game is marked as a special time in the rivalry because this is when Steelers defensive tackle Kimo Von Oelhoffen injured Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer,[22] while the 2015 game is also special due to the fact that Bengals running back Jeremy Hill fumbled the ball in the waning minutes when the Bengals had a 16–15 lead over the Steelers to give the latter one last chance. They used that chance wisely as they drove down the field (with the help of two costly personal fouls by the Bengals) and kicked a game-winning field goal.[23]

Cleveland Browns vs. Pittsburgh Steelers

The Browns–Steelers rivalry is one of the most storied in the American Football Conference and NFL. With 138 meetings and counting, it is the oldest rivalry in the AFC. The two divisional foes have a natural rivalry due to the commonalities between the cities. It is sometimes called the Turnpike Rivalry[24] because the majority of driving route between the two cities are connected via the Pennsylvania and Ohio Turnpikes. The Steelers lead the series 77–61–1 as of the end of the 2020 season, including a 2–1 playoff record against Cleveland. The Steelers have dominated the series in recent years, posting a 37–9–1 record against the Browns since their 1999 return to the NFL.

AFC South

Indianapolis Colts vs. Houston Texans

In one of the newer rivalries in the NFL, the Colts and Texans have intensified their animosity in recent years. Despite Indianapolis dominating the AFC South and this particular series under quarterback Peyton Manning in the 2000s, Houston has recently provided more competition, winning the division five times since 2011. Indianapolis currently leads the series 30–9, including a win in the postseason in 2018.[25]

Houston Texans vs. Tennessee Titans

This rivalry matches the old team representing Houston (the Titans, as the Houston Oilers) against the new team (the Texans). Though the Titans dominated the series early on, the Texans have made it more competitive as of late. A notable moment involved Texans receiver Andre Johnson and Titans cornerback Cortland Finnegan getting into a brawl during a 2010 matchup.[26] The Titans lead the series 21–17, as of the end of the 2020 season.[27] The two teams have never met in the playoffs.

Jacksonville Jaguars vs. Tennessee Titans

This is a relatively new rivalry as the Jaguars did not begin play until 1995, A notable moment was the 1999 season, in which the Jaguars went 14–2, with both of their losses coming to the Titans. The Titans would beat the Jaguars for a third time in the AFC Championship Game, their only playoff meeting to date. The 1999 season was the match that ignited this rivalry with both teams topping the AFC that year, fueled further by allegations that Titans Defensive Coordinator Gregg Williams had stolen the Jaguars playbook that season; and an interview where Titans Head Coach Jeff Fisher referred to the Jaguars stadium as a "Second Home Field". The Titans lead the all time series 32–21 as of the end of the 2020 season, including a 1–0 postseason record, which was the aforementioned 1999 AFC Championship Game.

AFC West

Denver Broncos vs. Las Vegas Raiders

During the AFL days in the 1960s and up to 1976, the rivalry was very one-sided, with the Raiders going 26–6–2, including 14 straight wins from 1965–71. The Broncos defeated the Raiders in the 1977 AFC championship, en route to the first Super Bowl appearance. The Raiders won 13 out of 15 meetings from 1988–94, and held a 49–20–2 series lead by 1994. However, the Broncos reversed their fortunes against the Raiders when Mike Shanahan became the Broncos' head coach in 1995. Shanahan coached the Raiders in 1988 before being fired four games into the 1989 season, and later became involved in a lengthy contract dispute with Raiders' owner Al Davis. The Broncos went 21–7 against Oakland during the 14 seasons that Shanahan coached the Broncos (1995–2008). the Raiders lead the series 69–54–2 as of the end of the 2021 season. The teams have met twice in the playoffs, with each team winning one game. Since 1970 the NFL they are most frequently matchups On Monday Night Football which is 19 Matchups (except In 1978 which is play on Sunday from December 3)

Kansas City Chiefs vs. Las Vegas Raiders

The Chiefs–Raiders rivalry is considered as one of the NFL's most bitter.[28][29] Since the AFL was established in 1960, the Chiefs and Raiders have shared the same division, first being the AFL Western Conference, and since the AFL–NFL merger, the AFC West.

The Chiefs lead the regular season series 70–54–2 as of the end of the 2021 season, including a 2–1 playoff record against Las Vegas.

Los Angeles Chargers vs. Las Vegas Raiders

The Chargers-Raiders rivalry dates to the 1963 season, when the Raiders defeated the heavily favored Chargers twice, both come-from-behind fourth quarter victories. One of the most memorable games between these teams was the "Holy Roller" game in 1978, in which the Raiders intentionally fumbled in order to score a touchdown. This somewhat controversial play resulted in a rule change the following season. On November 22, 1982, the Raiders hosted their first Monday Night football game in Los Angeles against the Chargers. The Chargers led the game in the 1st half 24–0 until the Raiders scored 28 unanswered points in the second half to win 28–24. On January 10, 2022, the Raiders defeated the Charges in overtime, 35-32. The winning field goal was unnecessary for the Raiders' playoff chances, and if the game had ended in a tie, both teams would have made the playoffs. With the field goal, the Chargers were eliminated. The Raiders lead the series 66–55–2 as of the end of the 2020 season, including having won the only playoff game between the two teams, the 1980 AFC Championship game.[30]

Denver Broncos vs. Kansas City Chiefs

Chiefs lead 67–55 as of the end of the 2017 season, but the Broncos won the only playoff game between the two teams, a 1997 AFC Divisional game.[citation needed]

Denver Broncos vs. Los Angeles Chargers

Broncos lead 69–53–1 as of the end of the 2020 season, including having won the only playoff meeting between the two teams, a 2013 AFC Divisional game.[citation needed]

Kansas City Chiefs vs. Los Angeles Chargers

Chiefs lead 64–57–1 as of the end of the 2020 season,[citation needed] but the Chargers won the only playoff meeting between the two teams, a 1992 AFC wild card game.

Conference rivalries

Buffalo Bills vs. Tennessee Titans

Formerly divisional rivals in the AFL East, the Bills and Titans (formerly the Houston Oilers) faced off in several high-profile games in the 1980s and 1990s, including two of the most famous postseason games in NFL history, namely The Comeback and the Music City Miracle.[31] Both of these games were franchise-altering, as The Comeback became one of the greatest moments in Bills history but was later cited as one of the reasons the Oilers moved to Tennessee,[32] while the Music City Miracle cemented the Titans' home in Nashville but became the start of a 17-year playoff drought for the Bills.[33] The series remains somewhat heated to this day, as several games since 1999 have been decided by a touchdown or less.[31]

Denver Broncos vs. New England Patriots

The Broncos lead 31–23 as of the end of the 2020 season, including a 4–1 playoff record against New England. In recent history, the Broncos and Patriots met in the postseason twice in three years, in both the 2013 and 2015 AFC Championship Games. The Broncos won both games, earning the right to represent the AFC in Super Bowls 48 and 50.

Denver Broncos vs. Pittsburgh Steelers

As of the 2021 season, the Broncos lead the Steelers 20–13–1, and have a 5–3 playoff record. Of their eight playoff matchups, six of them eventually saw the winner play in the Super Bowl. Two of the games featured playoff upsets by the Steelers winning in 1984 and 2005.[34][35]

Indianapolis Colts vs. New England Patriots

The Colts–Patriots rivalry is one of the NFL's most famous.[36] The two teams combined for eight Super Bowl victories (six by the Patriots and two for the Colts) and thirteen AFC Championships since 1970, while both are noted for their organizational excellence.[36] Despite starting in the 1970s, it would gain much more attention during the 2000s since that was the peak of the Brady-Manning rivalry.[37][38][39][40][41][42][43] The Patriots lead 52–30 as of the end of the 2021 season, including a 4–1 playoff record.

Las Vegas Raiders vs. Miami Dolphins

One of the NFL's most prominent rivalries in the 1970s, the Dolphins and Raiders met three times in the playoffs in a five-year span. The Raiders won two of the three meetings, the last of which became known as The Sea of Hands game which ended Miami's two-year reign as Super Bowl champions. The Raiders were also the Dolphins' first-ever opponent in their 1966 expansion season, and also ended the team's 18-game winning streak following the Dolphins' unbeaten 1972 season.[44]

The Raiders currently lead the all-time series 21–19–1, and are 3–1 in the playoffs.

Las Vegas Raiders vs. Pittsburgh Steelers

New England Patriots vs. Pittsburgh Steelers

Both teams are currently tied with six Super Bowl championships, and have enjoyed a competitive rivalry during the 1990s and into the 2000s and 2010s.[45][46] The two teams met thrice in the AFC championship in 2001, 2004 and 2016, all of which was won by the Patriots en route to winning the Super Bowl each year. Meanwhile, the Steelers won two Super Bowls in 2005 and 2008, but did not face the Patriots in either postseason run.[34] CBS ranked this rivalry in the 8th spot of the NFL rivalries of the 2000s.[17]

Pittsburgh Steelers vs. Tennessee Titans

The Steelers own the all-time series 47–32 as of the end of the 2020 season.[citation needed]

Baltimore Ravens vs. New England Patriots

This rivalry stems from 4 playoff matches played between the two in the early to mid 2010s. They met in back to back AFC Championships (2011 & 2012) along with two other playoff match ups in 2009 and 2014, the teams have split the playoff match ups 2–2, but the Patriots lead the regular season series 9–2 as of the end of the 2020 season.

Baltimore Ravens vs. Tennessee Titans

Despite starting in the late 1990s, the rivalry wouldn't gain intensity until the 2000s.[47][48] The all-time series is tied 13–13 with the Ravens leading the playoff series 3–2; the road team has won all five playoff matchups entering the 2021 season.[49]

Jacksonville Jaguars vs Miami Dolphins

This rivalry has been underdeveloped for multiple years, however these two instate rivals have met 11 times overall, 1 of which was in the playoffs. In the regular season these teams have a 5-5 record, however the Jaguars have a 1-0 playoff record beating the Dolphins by a score of 62-7 in the 2000 playoffs. Overall the Jaguars have 6-5 record against the Dolphins.

Las Vegas Raiders vs. Miami Dolphins

One of the NFL's most prominent rivalries in the 1970s, the Dolphins and Raiders met three times in the playoffs in a five-year span. The Raiders won two of the three meetings, the last of which became known as The Sea of Hands game which ended Miami's two-year reign as Super Bowl champions. The Raiders were also the Dolphins' first-ever opponent in their 1966 expansion season, and also ended the team's 18-game winning streak following the Dolphins' unbeaten 1972 season.[50]

The Raiders currently lead the all-time series 21–19–1, and are 3–1 in the playoffs.

Las Vegas Raiders vs. Pittsburgh Steelers

New England Patriots vs. Pittsburgh Steelers

Both teams are currently tied with six Super Bowl championships, and have enjoyed a competitive rivalry during the 1990s and into the early 21st century. The two teams met thrice in the AFC championship in 2001, 2004 and 2016, all of which was won by the Patriots en route to winning the Super Bowl each year. Meanwhile, the Steelers won two Super Bowls in 2005 and 2008, but did not face the Patriots in either postseason run.[51]

Pittsburgh Steelers vs. Tennessee Titans

The Steelers own the all-time series 47–32 as of the end of the 2020 season.[citation needed]

Baltimore Ravens vs. New England Patriots

This rivalry stems from 4 playoff matches played between the two in the early to mid 2010s. They met in back to back AFC Championships (2011 & 2012) along with two other playoff match ups in 2009 and 2014, the teams have split the playoff match ups 2–2, but the Patriots lead the regular season series 9–2 as of the end of the 2020 season.

Baltimore Ravens vs. Tennessee Titans

The all-time series is tied 13–13 with the Ravens leading the playoff series 3–2; the road team has won all five playoff matchups entering the 2021 season.

National Football Conference

NFC East

Dallas Cowboys vs. Washington Commanders

The rivalry between the Dallas Cowboys and Washington Commanders, formerly known as the Redskins, is called one of the top NFL rivalries of all time and "one of the greatest in sports" by Sports Illustrated.[52] The two franchises have won 37 combined division titles and ten NFL Championships, including eight combined Super Bowls.

The rivalry started in 1960 when the Cowboys joined the league as an expansion team.[53] During that year they were in separate conferences, but played once during the season. Since 1961, Dallas has been in the same division as Washington. Dallas leads the all-time series 75-47–2 as of the end of the 2021 season.[citation needed] Despite their storied history they've only met twice in the playoffs (1972 & 1982), both times in the NFC Championship Game. Washington won both of those meetings.

In 2009, they were the two wealthiest franchises in the NFL.[54]

Dallas Cowboys vs. Philadelphia Eagles

The rivalry between the Dallas Cowboys and Philadelphia Eagles has been one of the higher profile rivalries in the NFL over the past three decades, characterized by bitterly contested games that are typical of the NFC East, with both teams often contesting for the division crown. The Cowboys have a 70-54 edge in the all-time series as of the end of the 2020 season.[citation needed] Since 2006 the NFL was a frequent matchup on NBC Sunday Night Football over 15 Matchups when the Cowboys leads the series over the Eagles 8-7 Going head to head Including In the playoffs. the clubs have gone four times, with the home team winning all four games and Dallas holding a 3–1 edge. The Eagles won in 1980, while the Cowboys won in 1992, 1995, & 2009.[when?][citation needed]

Dallas Cowboys vs. New York Giants

The modern rivalry dates back to the 2003 season when Bill Parcells took over as Cowboys head coach. After he left, Wade Phillips coached the Cowboys to a division winning season in 2007 only to see the team fall to the eventual Super Bowl XLII champion Giants in the 2007 Divisional playoff game, in what proved to be the final playoff game in Texas Stadium history. Both teams combine for a total of nine Super Bowl Championships with the Giants winning the two most recent trophies. Dallas is ahead in the all-time series 69–47–2 as of the end of the 2020 season.[citation needed] The aforementioned 2007 playoff meeting was their only postseason encounter.

New York Giants vs. Philadelphia Eagles

The rivalry between the Philadelphia Eagles and New York Giants dates back to 1933. However, the competition began to heat up when both teams came to relative prominence in the 1940s and 1950s. The rivalry is mainly based on the two teams being in the same division in the NFL since 1933 and the geographic New York City–Philadelphia rivalry.[55] It is ranked by Sports Illustrated as amongst the top ten NFL rivalries of all-time at #4.[56] However, the geographic rivalry between the Eagles and Giants is well known in football circles, meriting mention on ESPN.com.[36]

The rivalry is the second-oldest of the NFC East. It has been called the greatest rivalry in NFL history.[57][58] The Giants and Eagles have met four times in the playoffs, with each team winning twice. The Giants won in 1981 & 2000, and the Eagles won in 2006 & 2008. The Eagles currently lead the all-time series 89–87–2 as of the 2019 season.[citation needed]

New York Giants vs. Washington Commanders

The Giants and Washington Commanders, formerly known as the Redskins, have a storied rivalry, as well as the oldest in the NFC East, dating back to 1932 with the founding of the Redskins' predecessors, the Boston Braves. While New York leads the rivalry, there have been great periods of competition between the two teams. On November 27, 1966, the Redskins defeated the Giants in what was then the highest scoring game in NFL history, 72-41. The teams' most notable meetings were during the 1980s where they clashed for division and conference titles to reach the Super Bowl. Between 1982–91 they combined for 8 division titles and 5 Super Bowl titles, two by the Giants (1986, 1990) and three by the Redskins (1982, 1987, 1991).[59] New York has a 105–69–4 all-time record over Washington as of the end of the 2020 season. The Giants are the second team to mark 100 wins against another NFL franchise in 2017. (The Green Bay Packers were the first team to do so against the Lions in 2016.) The teams have met in the playoffs twice, with the Redskins shutting out the Giants 28–0 in 1943 and New York returning the favor 43 years later in the 1986 NFC Conference Championship, winning 17–0.

Washington Commanders vs. Philadelphia Eagles

Washington leads the all-time series 88–79–6 as of the end of the 2020 season and won their only playoff matchup in the 1990 Wild Card round 20–6.[citation needed]

NFC North

Chicago Bears vs. Green Bay Packers

The Bears–Packers rivalry began in 1921 and is the league's longest; Cardinals-Staleys (Bears) commenced in 1920.[60] The Packers lead the series 101–95–6 as of January 10, 2021, the fourth time in NFL history that a team has recorded 100 wins against an opponent, following the Lions–Packers, Giants–Washington, and Bears–Lions rivalries.[60]

The two clubs have won a combined 22 NFL championships (including 5 Super Bowls) and have 48 members in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

The strike-shortened 1982 NFL season wiped out both Bears-Packers meetings scheduled for that season. Because of this, it is not the longest continuous rivalry. That goes to the Lions-Packers, who have played at least twice each season since 1932.

The rivalry has led to the Chicago–Milwaukee/Wisconsin rivalry being seen in other sports, like the Brewers–Cubs rivalry in Major League Baseball and the rivalry between the Bulls and Bucks in the National Basketball Association.

The teams met four times in the 2011 calendar year, and the Packers won all four. They met on January 2 in the 2010 regular season finale, then three weeks later in the NFC Conference Championship Game en route to winning Super Bowl XLV, and then they had both meetings in the 2011 regular season. The 2013 regular season finale served as a playoff game for the NFC North Division Championship, which Green Bay won 33–28, scoring a 48-yard touchdown on fourth-and-8 with 38 seconds left.

Chicago Bears vs. Detroit Lions

The Bears–Lions rivalry is an NFL rivalry between the Chicago Bears and Detroit Lions. Chicago and Detroit share or have shared a sports rivalry in all four major sports (see; Bulls–Pistons rivalry, Tigers–White Sox rivalry, and Blackhawks–Red Wings rivalry). The franchises first met in 1930 when the Lions were known as the Portsmouth Spartans and based in Portsmouth, Ohio. They moved to Detroit for the 1934 season. The Bears and Lions have been division rivals since 1933 and have usually met twice a season since the Lions franchise began. The Bears lead the series 102–75–5 as of the end of the 2020 season.

This rivalry is also the longest-running annual series in the NFL as both teams have met at least once a season since 1930. (As mentioned above, due to the 1982 strike, both games scheduled for the Bears–Packers rivalry were not played that season.) However, one of the two meetings between both teams was canceled during Week 3 of the 1987 season, which does not make this rivalry the longest-running continuous series in the NFL (that feat belongs to the Lions–Packers rivalry, who have met at least twice a season since 1932 without any canceled meetings).

Chicago Bears vs. Minnesota Vikings

It began when the Vikings entered the league as an expansion team in 1961. The first time these two teams met, the Vikings stunned the Bears 37–13 in Minnesota. Both teams are members of the NFC North, and play at least twice a year. The rivalry is known for having had many offensive-oriented contests, and also several surprising results.[citation needed] The Vikings lead the overall series 61–57–2. The teams have met once in the postseason, a 35–18 Bears win in the 1994 Wild Card Round.

Detroit Lions vs. Green Bay Packers

The Lions–Packers rivalry is an NFL rivalry between the Detroit Lions and Green Bay Packers. They first met in 1930 when the Lions were known as the Portsmouth Spartans and based in Portsmouth, Ohio. The team eventually moved to Detroit for the 1934 season. The Lions and Packers have been division rivals since 1933 and have always met at least twice a season since 1932, without any canceled games between both rivals. The Packers lead the series 104–72–7 as of the end of the 2020 season, the first time in NFL history that a team has recorded 100 wins over an opponent.

Detroit Lions vs. Minnesota Vikings

The Lions and Vikings have played twice annually since the Vikings entered the league's Western Conference in 1961. The two teams moved to the NFC Central after the AFL-NFL merger in 1970, which became the NFC North after the NFL's 2002 realignment. This is the only NFC North rivalry without any head-to-head postseason meetings. The Vikings lead the all-time series 78–39–2.

Green Bay Packers vs. Minnesota Vikings

The Packers–Vikings rivalry began in 1961, when the Vikings entered the league as an expansion team. The rivalry is known for being very close, both in the all-time series and in each game.[citation needed] It is also considered to be one of the most intense rivalries in the NFL, due these close games, the fact that both teams have often fought for the NFC North title, and the fact that the two states in which these teams reside (Minnesota and Wisconsin) have a rivalry in many sports, seen between the Big Ten rivals, the University of Wisconsin and University of Minnesota. Events such as Randy Moss mooning the Green Bay crowd in the first playoff game between these two teams (won by the Vikings), and former Packer great Brett Favre's move to the Vikings have created more resentment between these teams. The Packers lead the all-time series 63–55–3

NFC South

Atlanta Falcons vs. New Orleans Saints

At 100 games played, the series between the Falcons and Saints in the NFC South is the oldest and most established rivalry in the division.[when?][citation needed] Born one year apart, the Saints and Falcons were the first two NFL franchises in the Deep South (Dallas being arguably southern but not in the traditional Deep South). They have shared many of the same players, such as Morten Andersen (the leading scorer in Saints History, as Falcons Kicker Matt Bryant is now the leading scorer in Falcons history ), Bobby Hebert (who quarterbacked for both teams in the 1990s), and Joe Horn (the Pro Bowl Saints receiver who left for the Falcons in 2007). They have also drawn coaches from the same families, and even shared a head coach: recent Falcons coach Jim L. Mora is the son of longtime Saints coach Jim E. Mora, and former Falcons and Saints coach Wade Phillips is the son of former Saints coach Bum Phillips. Although rarely noted by the national media—no doubt due to both teams' long stretches of futility until the opening decade of the 21st century—games between the Falcons and Saints have riveted their respective regions for more than 40 years. Fans of both teams consider the other their most important and hated opponent.

ESPN.com writer Len Pasquarelli has cited the rivalry as one of the best in all of sports: "Every year, bus caravans loaded with rowdy (and usually very inebriated) fans make the seven-hour trip between the two cities. Unless you've attended a Falcons-Saints debauchery-filled afternoon, you'll just have to take my word for how much fun it really can be."

Atlanta leads the series 53–51 (52–51 regular season, 1–0 playoffs).[when?][citation needed] From 2006 onward, the teams have become consistent playoff threats, New Orleans appropriated five division titles in 2006, 2009, 2011, 2017, and 2018 while the Falcons made the playoffs in 2008 and captured the division in 2010, 2012 and 2016. Both teams have reached the Super Bowl, only once New Orleans and twice Atlanta (the Saints won Super Bowl XLIV over the Colts 31–17, while Atlanta lost Super Bowl XXXIII to the Broncos 34–19 and Super Bowl LI to the Patriots 34–28).

New Orleans Saints vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Although the Saints and the Buccaneers have played since 1977, this matchup began a full-fledged rivalry in 2002 when the Saints and the Buccaneers moved into the same division, the NFC South. The first matchup was in 1977 at the Louisiana Superdome (now the Caesars Superdome) when the Bucs won 33–14, their first win in franchise history. The most recent match was in 2021 at Raymond James Stadium. The Saints pulled off a shutout win in the regular season winning 9-0. Together, they have had 60 meetings. The Saints are leading this rivalry 39–21, while the Buccaneers last won in their playoff meeting winning 30-20.[when?][citation needed]

Carolina Panthers vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Although the Buccaneers and the Panthers have played since 1995, this match-up became a full-fledged rivalry in 2002 when they moved into the same division, the NFC South. This first meeting came in 1995 at Memorial Stadium in Clemson when the Bucs won 20–13. The rivalry only got more intense in the early to mid-2000s as both teams fought for dominance.[61][62] The latest meeting came in 2021 at Bank of America Stadium when the Buccaneers won 32–6. The Panthers lead the series 24–18.[when?][citation needed]

Atlanta Falcons vs. Carolina Panthers

The Falcons–Panthers rivalry is a rivalry between the Atlanta Falcons and Carolina Panthers of the National Football League. Both franchises have a combined twelve divisional titles (eleven as members of the same division) and four Super Bowl appearances, with the Falcons appearing in Super Bowl XXXIII and Super Bowl LI and the Panthers appearing in Super Bowls XXXVIII and 50.

The Panthers and Falcons have played each other twice a year since 1995, as members of both the NFC West (1995–2001) and NFC South (2002–present) divisions. Their games have been marked by intensity, close scores, and remarkable performances. One of the famous events occurred in 2015 when the Falcons spoiled the Panthers quest for a perfect season.[63][64]

It is also known as the "I-85 Rivalry" due to Atlanta and Charlotte being only four hours apart on Interstate 85. Indeed, games between the two often feature large contingents of the away team's fans visiting the stadium.[65]

Atlanta leads the rivalry 33–20.[when?][citation needed]

Atlanta Falcons vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Tampa Bay leads the series 29-28.

Carolina Panthers vs. New Orleans Saints

NFC West

San Francisco 49ers vs. Los Angeles Rams

The rivalry between the 49ers and Rams began in 1950. The rivalry became one of the most intense in the NFL in the 1970s as the two California-based teams (the Rams then played their home games in Los Angeles whereas the 49ers played their home games in San Francisco) regularly competed for the NFL's NFC West Division title. The two teams have contested 146 games, in which San Francisco leads 75–68–3. After the Rams relocated to St. Louis (in 1995), the rivalry had lost its geographical lore, although games were still intense. The cultural differences between the West Coast (where the 49ers are based) and the Midwest (where the Rams were based) also added to the intensity of the rivalry. In 2016, the Rams moved back to Los Angeles making the rivalry once again West Coast based. Both teams had been inactive within the rivalry as the Rams failed to qualify for the postseason from 2005-16 while the 49ers had struggled to remain consistent despite two Super Bowl appearances in 2013 and 2019. Both teams returned to relevance under head coaches Sean McVay and Kyle Shanahan respectively. The two sides also rekindled the rivalry with the addition of receiver Deebo Samuel gaining a notoriety of taunting against the Rams and his publicized feuding with Rams’ defensive tackle Aaron Donald, as they were unable to beat the 49ers in 6 straight regular season matchups until 2022.[66] The two teams met in the NFC Championship that year in a hard fought battle with the 49ers taking the lead heading into the 3rd quarter. However; inconsistent play on defense, multiple penalties on both sides slowly chipped away the lead as the Rams inched ahead with 4 minutes left in the game. San Francisco Quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo would throw a game sealing interception while evading a sack from Aaron Donald, thus giving the Rams the victory as they would go onto win Super Bowl LVI. Sports Illustrated considers it the 8th best of all time in the NFL.[67]

San Francisco 49ers vs. Seattle Seahawks

The Seattle Seahawks and San Francisco 49ers became divisional rivals in 2002, when Seattle moved to the NFC West. However, it was not until 2011 that the match-up became a true rivalry. The 49ers won the division in 2002, but did not have another winning season until 2011. Meanwhile, the Seahawks made the playoffs five straight times from 2003–2007 and appeared in Super Bowl XL.

In 2010, the Seahawks hired former USC head coach Pete Carroll, who took the Seahawks to the playoffs in his first year, and the rivalry started growing in 2011 when the 49ers hired former Stanford head coach Jim Harbaugh, who also took his team to the playoffs in his first year. Carroll and Harbaugh had been intense rivals as college head coaches, and the rivalry followed them into the NFL.

The rivalry took off in 2012, when the two teams posted winning records and made the NFC playoffs during the same year for the first time. The teams split their games, with the Seahawks defeating the 49ers 42–13 on national TV in a week 16 game that kept the division race alive until the final week. San Francisco ultimately won the division by a half-game and advanced to Super Bowl XLVII (losing 34–31 to the Baltimore Ravens), while the Seahawks lost in the NFC divisional round.

In 2013, the teams again split their games, and the Seahawks won the division by a game and went on to win Super Bowl XLVIII, defeating the 49ers in the NFC Championship game. All three 49ers-Seahawks games were highly anticipated that season, and most sports analysts called it the best rivalry in the NFL. Ever since then the San Francisco 49ers and the Seattle Seahawks fans are always eagerly awaiting this divisional round matchup.[68]

After several years of mediocre or poor teams, the 49ers regained relevance in the 2019 season. They were the last undefeated team in the league at 8–0. On Monday Night Football, they played a pitched battle where San Francisco missed what would have been a game-winning field goal in overtime.[69] They proceeded to lose their first game of the season when Seattle kicked a field goal on the last play of the game. The rematch between the division foes was the final game of the NFL season, with the division championship (and playoff seeding) on the line. The Niners won this time, earning the top seed in the NFC.[70]

Seattle leads the series 30–17 through the end of the 2021 season.[citation needed]

Los Angeles Rams vs. Seattle Seahawks

The rivalry between the Los Angeles Rams and Seattle Seahawks came into existence in 2002 following the Seahawks’ relocation to the NFC West. The first notable matchup between the two clubs occurred in the 2004 NFC Wild card round when the Rams managed to defeat the Seahawks in Seattle 27–20. Much of the intensity waned as the Rams declined in competition throughout the 2000s and early 2010s, but several notable matchups between the two clubs would still occur. Only recently has the rivalry grown in animosity with notable moments of taunting or fighting occurring in addition to 2 postseason matchups.[71]

Arizona Cardinals vs. Los Angeles Rams

A resurgent rivalry in the NFL, one that dates back to the two teams first meeting during the 1937 NFL Season whilst the Rams were located in Cleveland, and the Cardinals in Chicago. The Rivalry has resurged with the Cardinals' ambitions to become a contender once again. The two would frequently clash in notable matchups during the season as the Rams experienced their own rebuild following their relocation back to Los Angeles in 2017.[72] Los Angeles has proven to be significantly more dominant by winning 9 out of 10 games since the hiring of head coach Sean McVay. During the 2021 season, the Cardinals not only managed to end their 8 game losing streak against the Rams, but also stole the lead of the NFC following a shocking week 5 victory. The two teams would meet again in a Monday Night matchup culminating in a Rams' victory, the Cardinals would later go onto stumble in securing a Wild Card berth while the Rams managed to win the division. The two teams would eventually meet again in the NFC Wild Card at Sofi Stadium the Rams' first home playoff game in their new stadium. During the third quarter, Rams' running back Cam Akers would collide violently with Cardinals' safety Budda Baker, sending Baker to the hospital. Initially following the collision, Akers taunted Baker as he laid on the ground unconscious; unaware he had suffered a severe concussion. Akers would later realize the severity of Baker's injuries and issued a public apology and his support for Baker's recovery. Despite Kyler Murray's best efforts, he would be intercepted twice and one would be returned for a pick 6 as he attempted to evade a sack from Rams' Linebacker Troy Reeder. Eventually, the Cardinals would go on to suffer a brutal 34–11 loss at the hands of the Rams, the second postseason matchup between the two teams since the Rams would beat the St. Louis Cardinals in the 1975 NFC Divisional Game.

The Rams own the all time series 47–39–2, also winning both postseason matchups in 1975 and 2021.

Arizona Cardinals vs. Seattle Seahawks

One of the newer rivalries in the NFL, the Cardinals and Seahawks became divisional rivals after both were relocated to the NFC West as a result of the league's realignment in 2002. This rivalry has become one of the NFL's more bitter in recent years, as the mid-to-late 2010s often saw the Seahawks and Cardinals squaring off for NFC West supremacy. Many Cardinals fans see the Seahawks as their top rival due to their 2010s dominance under quarterback Russell Wilson and head coach Pete Carroll, although Seattle shares more intense rivalries with the San Francisco 49ers, Los Angeles Rams, and even the Green Bay Packers. Seattle leads the series 23–22–1, and the two teams have not yet to meet in the playoffs.

Conference rivalries

Atlanta Falcons vs. Philadelphia Eagles

The Eagles lead the Falcons 21–15–1, with a 3–1 lead in playoff games. The rivalry first emerged after the Falcons upset the Eagles in the 1978 Wild Card Round, and only intensified further in the 2000s thanks to the rivalry between prominent dual-threat quarterbacks Donovan McNabb and Michael Vick.[73] Recently, the Eagles' path to winning Super Bowl LII included a 2017 divisional round victory over the Falcons.[74][75]

Chicago Bears vs. Arizona Cardinals

Chicago Bears vs. New York Giants

The Bears and Giants have engaged in a long-standing rivalry that involved six NFL championship games. In the pre-Super Bowl era, the Bears won four of six championship games against the Giants, with one of the Giants' two victories involving the iconic "Sneakers Game" in the 1934 NFL Championship Game.[76] The two teams also met in the playoffs twice in the Super Bowl era, splitting both meetings, with the winner eventually claiming the Super Bowl.[77]

As of 2021, the Bears lead the all-time regular season series 30–21–2, and have a 5–3 postseason record.

Dallas Cowboys vs. Green Bay Packers

The Packers lead the all-time series 20–17.[when?][citation needed]

Dallas Cowboys vs. Minnesota Vikings

The Cowboys lead the all-time series 18–15. The Cowboys are 4–3 against the Vikings in the playoffs.

Dallas Cowboys vs. San Francisco 49ers

The bitter rivalry between the Dallas Cowboys and San Francisco 49ers began in the 1970s and became prominent during the 1990s.[78][79] For three straight seasons from 1992 through 1994 the two teams met in the conference championship game. Each was a hotly contested battle whose winner went on to win the Super Bowl in every one of those seasons. The NFL Top 10 ranked this rivalry to be the tenth best in the history of the NFL. San Francisco has played Dallas in eight postseason games with the Cowboys leading the postseason series 5–3. The Cowboys lead all-time series 19–18–1.[80]

Dallas Cowboys vs. Los Angeles Rams

The rivalry between the Dallas Cowboys and the Los Angeles Rams became prominent during the 1970s and 1980s. The Cowboys met the Rams eight times during that span and split those meetings. Two of those matchups decided the NFC's representative in the Super Bowl, with the Cowboys prevailing on both occasions.[81] The two teams met again in the postseason during the 2018 NFC Divisional Round culminating in a Rams victory. As of 2021, the series is currently tied 18–18, with the Rams leading 5–4 in the playoffs.

Green Bay Packers vs. New York Giants

The Packers lead 34–26–2 overall, and 5–3 in the playoffs.

Green Bay Packers vs. San Francisco 49ers

The rivalry between the Packers and the 49ers heated up during the 1990s, with the two teams facing each other in four consecutive playoff games. The Packers won four of five playoff games against the 49ers with Brett Favre as its quarterback, with four of those games pitting Favre against 49ers' Hall of Fame quarterback Steve Young. Since 2012, the 49ers have defeated the Aaron Rodgers-led Packers four times in the playoffs.[82]

The Packers currently lead the series 38–33–1, but the 49ers have won the last four postseason meetings to take a 5–4 lead.[83]

Green Bay Packers vs. Seattle Seahawks

As of January 2021, the Packers lead the series 14–9 overall and 3–1 in the playoffs.

New York Giants vs. San Francisco 49ers

The series is tied at 21 overall, tied at 4 in the playoffs.

New Orleans Saints vs. Minnesota Vikings

The Vikings lead the series 23–13 with a 4–1 record in the playoffs.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers vs. Los Angeles Rams

The rivalry between the Buccaneers and the Rams initially was very undeveloped until several recent notable matchups.[84] The two teams prominently met in the 1979 NFC Championship game and the 2000 NFC Championship, Despite the few matchups over the years; both teams have also recently met in the 2021 NFC Divisional round.[85] The two teams have recently grown to prominence again following Tampa’s acquisition of veteran quarterback Tom Brady, and Los Angeles’ trade for Matthew Stafford.[86][87] Notably both teams are the only two in league history to win the Super Bowl in their home stadium, in back to back seasons.

The Rams lead the series 19-9, on top of all 3 playoff meetings.

Historical rivalries

Denver Broncos vs. Seattle Seahawks

The rivalry between the Denver Broncos and the Seattle Seahawks dates back to 1977, when the two clubs were AFC West division rivals until the early 2000s when the Seahawks joined the NFC.[88] The clubs have played each other in the NFL playoffs twice, most recently in Super Bowl XLVIII, in which the Seahawks defeated the Broncos 43–8.[89][90]

Las Vegas Raiders vs. Pittsburgh Steelers

The Immaculate Reception spawned a heated rivalry between the Raiders and Steelers, a rivalry that was at its peak during the 1970s, when both teams were among the best in the league and both were known for their hard-hitting, physical play. The teams met in the playoffs in each of the next four seasons, starting with the Raiders' 33–14 victory in the 1973 divisional playoffs. Pittsburgh used the AFC championship game victories over Oakland (24–13 at Oakland in 1974 and 16–10 at Pittsburgh in 1975) as a springboard to victories in Super Bowl IX and Super Bowl X, before the Raiders notched a 24–7 victory at home in 1976 on their way to winning Super Bowl XI. To date, the two last met in the playoffs in 1983 when the eventual Super Bowl champion Raiders, playing in Los Angeles at the time, crushed the Steelers 38–10. The rivalry has somewhat died off in the years since, mainly due to the Raiders on-field struggles since appearing in Super Bowl XXXVII. The Raiders lead the all time series 17-13 and 13–10 in the regular season. The series is tied 3-3 in the playoffs.

Dallas Cowboys vs. San Francisco 49ers

The bitter rivalry between the Dallas Cowboys and San Francisco 49ers began in the 1970s and became prominent during the 1990s.[78][79] For three straight seasons from 1992 through 1994 the two teams met in the conference championship game. Each was a hotly contested battle whose winner went on to win the Super Bowl in every one of those seasons. The NFL Top 10 ranked this rivalry to be the tenth best in the history of the NFL. San Francisco has played Dallas in seven postseason games with the Cowboys leading the postseason series 5–3. The Cowboys lead all-time series 19–18–1.[80]

New York Giants vs. San Francisco 49ers

The Giants-49ers rivalry is rooted in the 1980s when both teams were on the rise and would combine to win six Super Bowls from 1981–90. During that stretch there were five postseason meetings between the two teams. The series is tied 21–21.

The 49ers defeated the Giants in the first two meetings (the 1981 NFC divisional round 38–24 and again in the divisional round, this time in 1984, winning 21–10) en route to victories in Super Bowl XVI and Super Bowl XIX. The Giants would defeat the 49ers in the next three playoff meetings; in the 1985 Wild Card round the Giants defeated the defending Super Bowl XIX champions 17–3, then crushed the 49ers 49–3 in the divisional round of the 1986 playoffs en route to winning Super Bowl XXI, the first in the history of the Giants franchise. This game is memorable for nose tackle Jim Burt's hit on Joe Montana that knocked him out of the game in the second quarter; Montana's pass on this play was intercepted by Lawrence Taylor and Taylor ran in a 34-yard touchdown.

The two teams met again in the 1990 NFC Championship Game. In one of the most physical football games ever played, the Giants upset the 49ers 15–13, ending their hopes of winning three Super Bowls in a row while the Giants went on to win their second Super Bowl in franchise history in Super Bowl XXV. The 49ers got their revenge in the 1993 playoffs when they defeated the Giants in the divisional round 44–3 in the last game of Lawrence Taylor's and Phil Simms' careers. The rivalry intensified again in the 2002 playoffs when the two clubs met in the NFC Wild Card playoff round and the 49ers behind Jeff Garcia erased a 38–14 gap for a 39–38 49ers win, a game decided on a chaotic and controversial botched field goal attempt by the Giants.

Recently,[when?] the rivalry has cooled down from its peak in the 1980s. However, during the 2011 NFC Championship Game the two met at Candlestick Park. The Giants defeated the 49ers 20–17 in overtime to go to and eventually win Super Bowl XLVI.

Pittsburgh Steelers vs. Dallas Cowboys

The Cowboys lead the all-time series 17–16, but the Steelers are 2–1 against the Cowboys in the Super Bowl.[91]

Dallas Cowboys vs Green Bay Packers

The Packers lead the all-time series 20–17.[when?][citation needed]

Green Bay Packers vs. New York Giants

The Packers lead 34–26–2 overall, and 5–3 in the playoffs.

New England Patriots vs. New York Giants

Best known for their two classic meetings in Super Bowl XLII and Super Bowl XLVI, the Giants and Patriots have met 13 times, with New England currently holding a 7–6 lead. However, the Giants own a 2–0 playoff record by virtue of winning both Super Bowl matchups.[92]

Kansas City Chiefs vs. St. Louis Cardinals/Rams

When St. Louis, Missouri had NFL teams, namely the Cardinals and later the Rams, a cross-state rivalry existed with the Kansas City Chiefs, with a trophy being awarded to the winner of each game.

San Francisco 49ers vs. Las Vegas Raiders

When the Raiders were located in Oakland, California, just across San Francisco Bay from the 49ers, this series was known as the "Battle of the Bay" until the Raiders moved to Las Vegas. Preseason games were often held annually until fan violence broke out in 2011.[93][94][95][96][97]

Instate rivalries

New York Giants vs. New York Jets

The Giants lead the all-time series 8–6 as of November 10, 2019.[98]

Buffalo Bills vs. New York Jets

See § Buffalo Bills vs. New York Jets above

Technically in-state, though the Jets play in the New Jersey suburbs of New York City.

Miami Dolphins vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers

The Buccaneers lead the all-time series 6–5.[when?][citation needed]

Dallas Cowboys vs. Houston Texans/Houston Oilers/Dallas Texans

The Cowboys lead their series with the Texans 7–6 and won their series with the Oilers 18–13.[citation needed]

Cincinnati Bengals vs. Cleveland Browns

See § Cincinnati Bengals vs. Cleveland Browns above

Pittsburgh Steelers vs. Philadelphia Eagles

The Eagles lead the all-time series 48–29–3.[when?][citation needed]

San Francisco 49ers vs. Los Angeles Rams

See § San Francisco 49ers vs. Los Angeles Rams above

Washington Commanders vs. Baltimore Ravens

Sometimes considered the "Beltway Bowl," the Ravens lead the all-time series 4–3.

Los Angeles Raiders/Los Angeles Chargers vs. Los Angeles Rams

Initially, the Los Angeles Raiders and Rams were considered to be competing in the "Battle of Los Angeles" during the Raiders’ tenure in Los Angeles from 1982–94,.[99] However, the rivalry ended as the Rams moved to St. Louis and the Raiders returned to Oakland in the mid-1990s.

The Raiders unsuccessfully attempted relocating back to Los Angeles in 2015 following a failed joint stadium project with the then-San Diego Chargers. The intercity rivalry was revived only with the Los Angeles Chargers being the city’s AFC team following the Rams’ return to Los Angeles in 2016, and their relocation from San Diego in 2017. Hostility erupted between the two clubs during a 2017 joint scrimmage at the Rams’ training camp in Irvine, CA. Rams’ cornerback Nickell Robey-Coleman and Chargers’ receiver Keenan Allen initiated an altercation and multiple players rushed into the skirmish, creating an uproar from the crowd.[100] Following the hiring of coach Sean McVay in 2017, the Rams managed to win back to back division titles, including an appearance in Super Bowl LIII during McVay’s second season as head coach. The Chargers experienced their own playoff success by boasting a 12-4 record in 2018 and making an appearance in the 2018 AFC divisional round but also losing to the New England Patriots. The Rams lead the only regular season matchup in Los Angeles thus far.[101][102]

See also

References

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