The
2007 season of the
National Football League
(NFL) was the 88th season played by the major professional
American football league in the
United States. Regular-season play was held from September 6 to
December 30.
The
New England Patriots became
the first team to complete the regular season undefeated since the
league expanded to a 16-game regular season in
1978.
However, four weeks after the playoffs began on January 5, 2008, the
Patriots lost to the New York Giants
in Super Bowl XLII, the league
championship game at University of Phoenix Stadium
in Glendale, Arizona
on February 3, by a score of 17–14.
Schedule
Preseason
The
Hall of Fame Game was
played in Canton,
Ohio
on Sunday August 5, 2007, with the Pittsburgh Steelers defeating the
Saints by a score of 20-7; the
game was televised by the NFL Network, replacing NBC, who had been
previously scheduled to broadcast the China
Bowl exhibition game from Beijing,
China on August 8, 2007 between the New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks at Workers Stadium
. However, with all efforts being put into
the London regular season game, plans have been postponed until
2009 as Beijing hosted the
2008
Summer Olympics.
Regular Season
Opening Weekend
On March 26, 2007, the league announced the aforementioned opening
Saints-Colts Kickoff Game on September 6 that would be telecast on
NBC. Pre-game activities featured Indiana native
John Mellencamp,
Faith Hill, and
Kelly
Clarkson. The entertainment portion of events started 30
minutes earlier than the scheduled start time of the game, leading
up to the unveiling of the Colts'
Super
Bowl XLI championship banner. The opening events were simulcast
on
NFL Network.
The
Dallas Cowboys hosted the
New York Giants in the first Sunday
night game September 9 at 8:15 p.m. US EDT.
Monday Night Football on
ESPN kicked off with a doubleheader on September 10
with the
Cincinnati Bengals
hosting the
Baltimore Ravens at
7:00 p.m. US EDT, and the
San
Francisco 49ers hosting the
Arizona Cardinals at 10:15 p.m. US EDT.
The 49ers paid tribute to three-time
Super
Bowl winning head coach
Bill Walsh, who died
July 30, in that game.
Going global
In October 2006, NFL club owners approved a plan to stage up to two
international regular season games per season beginning in 2007 and
continuing through at least 2011.
On February 2, 2007, the league announced
that the Week Eight contest between the New York Giants and the Miami Dolphins would be played at Wembley Stadium
in London on October 28 at 5 p.m. UTC, which is 1 p.m.
EDT) As the Giants were the
away-team designate from the
NFC, Fox broadcast the game in
the USA according to league broadcast contract rules.
Thanksgiving
For the second year in a row, three games were also held on the
United States'
Thanksgiving
Day (November 22). In addition to the
traditional games hosted by the
Detroit Lions and Cowboys (with those
teams respectively playing the
Green
Bay Packers and the
New York Jets,
with the Packers–Lions game starting at 12:30 p.m. US EST and the
Jets–Cowboys game kicking off at 4:15 p.m.
US EST respectively),
the Colts faced the Atlanta Falcons
in the Georgia
Dome
, with kickoff at 8:15 p.m. US EST.
Schedule formula
Based on the
NFL's
scheduling formula, the intraconference and interconference
matchups for 2007 were:
Flex scheduling
The NFL entered its second year of flexible scheduling in the final
weeks of the season. In each of the Sunday night contests from
Weeks 11 through 17, NBC had the option of switching its Sunday
night game for a more favorable contest, up to 12 days before the
game's start. In addition to an extra week of flexible scheduling
(because of the conflict with scheduling Christmas Eve the previous
season, which NBC did not do (instead opting to air a game on
Christmas Day)), the NFL slightly changed its flex-schedule
procedure. In 2006, the league did not reveal its predetermined
Sunday night game; the reason given by the league was to avoid
embarrassing the teams switched out for a more compelling game.In
2007, the league announced all predetermined matchups, with a
footnote on the games subject to flex scheduling. Also, the network
that carries the "doubleheader" week game (either CBS or Fox) will
be able to switch one game per week into the 4:15 PM (USET) time
slot, except in the final week, when NBC will select one game for
the 8:15 PM slot, and both CBS and Fox will have doubleheader games
on December 30. The first flex game was the New England Patriots
visiting the
Buffalo Bills on November
18. The next flexing came when it was announced that the December
23 Washington Redskins–
Minnesota
Vikings game was moved to 8:15 PM on NBC, replacing the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers–San
Francisco 49ers contest, which was moved to 4:05 PM to be aired on
Fox. It was announced on December 23 the
Tennessee Titans–Indianapolis Colts game,
originally scheduled for a 1 PM kickoff on CBS, would be the
December 30 "flex game" and airing at 8:15 PM on NBC, replacing the
Kansas City Chiefs–
New York Jets game, which was moved to 4:15 PM
on CBS, along with the
Pittsburgh
Steelers–
Baltimore Ravens
contest. Additionally, the Dallas Cowboys–Washington Redskins game
was switched on Fox from 1 PM kickoff to 4:15 PM.
Final regular season standings
W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, PCT = Winning Percentage, PF=
Points For, PA = Points Against
Clinched playoff seeds are marked in parentheses and shaded in
green
- Tiebreakers
- Pittsburgh finished in first place in the AFC North over
Cleveland based on a head-to-head sweep.
- Detroit finished in third place in the NFC North over Chicago
based on a head-to-head sweep over Chicago.
- Carolina finished in second place in the NFC South over New
Orleans based on a better conference record (7–5 to New Orleans'
6–6).
- Kansas City finished in third place in the AFC West over
Oakland based on a better record against common opponents. (3–11 to
Oakland's 2–12).
- Tennessee clinched the AFC #6 seed over Cleveland based on a
better record against common opponents. (4–1 to Cleveland's
3–2).
- Dallas clinched the NFC #1 seed over Green Bay based on a
head-to-head victory.
Playoffs
Bracket
2008 AFC-NFC Pro Bowl All-Star Game
February
10, Aloha
Stadium
NFC 42x30 AFC
Rule changes
The
following rule changes were passed at the league's annual owners
meeting in Phoenix,
Arizona
during the week of March 25-28:
- The instant replay system, used
since the 1999 season, was finally
made a permanent officiating tool. Previously, it was renewed on a
biennial basis.
- The system has also been upgraded to use high-definition technology.
However,
the systems at Texas
Stadium
(Dallas Cowboys), RCA Dome (Indianapolis Colts),
and Giants
Stadium
(New York Giants and Jets) will not receive the
HDTV updates since those stadiums will be replaced over the next
few years. One reason that the technology was improved was
that fans with high-definition televisions at home were having
better views on replays than the officials and according to Dean
Blandino, the NFL's instant replay director "that could have bit us
in the rear if we continued [with the old system]." In addition,
the amount of time allotted for the referee to review a play was
reduced from 90 seconds to one minute.
- After a play is over, players who spike the ball in the field
of play, other than in the end zone, will
receive a 5-yard delay of game
penalty.
- Forward passes that unintentionally hit an offensive lineman
before an eligible receiver will no longer be an illegal touching
penalty, but deliberate actions are still penalized.
- Roughing-the-passer penalties will not be called on a defender
engaged with a quarterback who simply extends his arms and shoves
the passer to the ground.
- During situations where crowd noise becomes a problem (when it
becomes too loud that it prevents the offensive team from hearing
its signals), the offense can no longer ask the referee to reset
the play clock.
- It is necessary to have the ball touch the pylon or break the
plane above the pylon to count as a touchdown. Previously, a player
just had to have some portion of his body over the goal line or
pylon to count a touchdown
- A completed catch is now when a receiver gets two feet down and
has control of the ball. Previously, a receiver had to make "a
football move" in addition to having control of the ball for a
reception.
- Players will be subject to a fine from the league for playing
with an unbuckled chin strap. Officials will not penalize for chin
strap violations during a game.
Television
The 2007 season marked the second year of the current television
contracts with NBC, CBS, Fox, ESPN, and the NFL Network. The
pre-game shows made some changes, with former Steelers coach
Bill Cowher joining host
James Brown,
Boomer Esaison,
Shannon Sharpe and
Dan
Marino on CBS's
The NFL
Today. On Fox, after one season on the road,
Fox NFL Sunday returned to Los Angeles
as
Curt Menefee took over as full-time
host.
Chris Rose, who had been doing in
in-game updates of other NFL games, was reverted to a part-time
play-by-play role.
The biggest changes were at NBC and ESPN.
Michael Irvin's contract with ESPN was not
renewed, and former coach
Bill
Parcells returned to the network after four years as Cowboys
head coach. Parcells left before the season ended to become the
Miami Dolphins VP of Player
Personnel. Another pair of former Cowboys,
Emmitt Smith and
Keyshawn Johnson also provided roles in the
studio for
Sunday NFL
Countdown and
Monday
Night Countdown. At
Monday Night Football,
Joe Theismann was dropped (and would
later resign from the network) after seventeen years in the booth
between the Sunday and Monday Night packages, and former
Philadelphia Eagles quarterback and
current
Philadelphia Soul
(
AFL) president
Ron Jaworski took his place alongside
Mike Tirico and
Tony
Kornheiser. Part of the reason that Jaworski replaced Theismann
was because of his chemistry with Kornheiser on
Pardon The Interruption, where
Jaworski was a frequent guest during the football season.
NBC's
Football Night in
America also made two changes.
MSNBC
Countdown
anchor
Keith Olbermann joined
Bob Costas and
Cris Collinsworth as another co-host,
while
Sterling Sharpe exited as a
studio analyst, and former
New York
Giants running back
Tiki Barber
replaced him. In another change,
Faith
Hill took over singing "Waiting All Day For Sunday Night" for
Pink.
In the second year of the NFL Network's "
Run to the Playoffs",
Marshall Faulk and
Deion Sanders replaced
Dick Vermeil for two games when Collinsworth
was unavailable. An unforced change saw
Bryant Gumbel miss the Broncos–Texans game
December 13 due to a sore throat and NBC announcer
Tom Hammond step into Gumbel's play-by-play role
in what turned out to be more or less a preview of one of NBC's
Wild Card Game announcing teams.
Controversy surrounding NFL Network coverage
and 2007 New England Patriots-New York Giants game
The dispute between the NFL Network and various cable companies
involving the distribution of the cable channel continued
throughout the season, getting the attention of government
officials when the NFL Network was scheduled to televise two
high-profile regular season games: the Packers-Cowboys game on
November 29 and the Patriots-Giants game on December 29. In the
case of the Packers-Cowboys game, the carriage was so limited that
even
Governor of Wisconsin
Jim Doyle went to his brother's house to
watch the game on satellite (which is where the majority of the
viewers watch the network). The contest drew a network record 10.1
million viewers, a high-water mark at that time.
Some politicians urged the league to seek a resolution to conflict.
In
December, Massachusetts
Senator
John Kerry wrote a letter to NFL
Commissioner Roger Goodell asking for
the league to settle their differences in time for the
Patriots-Giants game. Because the game, as it turned out,
would be the Patriots' attempt to seal the record that would make
them the first undefeated team in 35 years, Kerry urged for a
solution to be decided upon in time so that Americans can witness
"an historic event."
Also, Pennsylvania
Senator Arlen Specter
threatened to introduce legislation to eliminate the league's
freedom from antitrust
laws.
On December 26, the NFL announced that, despite initial plans to
broadcast the game only on the NFL Network, the game would be
presented in a three-network simulcast with both CBS and NBC, the
first time an NFL game would be broadcast on three networks, and
the first simulcast of any pro football game since
Super Bowl I. Nielsen ratings saw CBS with 15.7
million viewers, NBC with 13.2 million viewers and NFL Network with
4.5 million viewers for the game.
In addition, local stations in New York
City (WWOR-TV
in nearby Secaucus, New Jersey
), Boston
(WCVB-TV
), and Manchester, New Hampshire
(WMUR-TV
), all previously signed on to carry the game in the
teams' home markets, added 1.2 million viewers, making it the most
watched TV show since the 2007
Oscars and the most watched regular season NFL telecast in
twelve years.
Coaching changes
The following teams hired new head coaches prior to the start of
the 2007 season:
| Team |
2007 Coach |
Former Coach |
Reason for leaving |
Story/Accomplishments of Former Coach |
| Atlanta Falcons |
Bobby Petrino, former head coach,
University of
Louisville |
Jim Mora |
Fired |
Hired in 2004 and subsequently
led the Falcons to the NFC
Championship Game. However, Atlanta went 8-8 in 2005 before going 7-9 in 2006, losing the last final three
games. |
| Arizona Cardinals |
Ken Whisenhunt, former offensive
coordinator, Pittsburgh
Steelers |
Dennis Green |
Fired |
Hired in 2004. However, the
Cardinals suffered three consecutive losing seasons under him,
including a loss to the Chicago Bears
after blowing a 20-point lead that prompted Green to throw an
infamous tirade during the post-game media conference saying, "They
are who we thought they were, and we let em' off the hook!" |
| Dallas Cowboys |
Wade Phillips, former defensive
coordinator, San Diego
Chargers |
Bill Parcells |
Retired |
Hired in 2003. Led the Cowboys
to the playoffs in two of his four seasons as Dallas head coach,
but never won a postseason game. |
| Miami Dolphins |
Cam Cameron, former offensive
coordinator, San Diego
Chargers |
Nick Saban |
Resigned to coach the University of Alabama |
Hired in 2005 and finished the
year 9-7, narrowly missing the playoffs. Went 6-10 in 2006, first
losing record as a head coach. |
| Oakland Raiders |
Lane Kiffin, former offensive
coordinator, Southern
California |
Art Shell |
Fired |
Re-hired in 2006 after having previously served as Raiders head
coach, 1989–94. However in his first and only season back, the team
finished with its worst record, 2-14, since 1963. |
| Pittsburgh Steelers |
Mike Tomlin, former defensive
coordinator, Minnesota
Vikings |
Bill Cowher |
Retired |
Hired in 1992 and led the
Steelers to an appearance in Super Bowl
XXX and a victory in Super Bowl
XL. |
| San Diego Chargers |
Norv Turner, former offensive
coordinator, San Francisco
49ers |
Marty Schottenheimer |
Fired |
Hired in 2002. Led the Chargers
to two playoff appearances, but a strained relationship with
general manager A.J. Smith led to his ousting. |
The following head coaches were fired or resigned during the 2007
season:
Milestones
The following teams and players set all-time NFL records during the
regular season:
| Record |
Player/Team |
Date Broken/Opponent |
Previous Record Holder |
| Longest Kickoff Return |
Ellis Hobbs, New England (108
yards) |
September 9, at N.Y.
Jets |
Tied by 3 players (106) |
| Most Regular-Season Wins by a Quarterback,
Career |
Brett Favre, Green Bay (160) |
September 16, at N.Y. Giants |
John Elway, 1983-1998 (148) |
| Most Touchdown Passes, Career |
Brett Favre, Green Bay (442) |
September 30, at Minnesota |
Dan Marino, 1983-1999 (420) |
| Most Pass Attempts, Career |
Brett Favre, Green Bay (8,758) |
September 30, at Minnesota |
Dan Marino, 1983-1999
(8,358) |
| Most Points Scored by a Team, Fourth
Quarter |
Detroit Lions
(34) |
September 30, vs. Chicago |
Tied by 3 teams (31) |
| Most consecutive games with a 20-point margin of
victory, to start season |
New England
Patriots (4) |
October 1, vs. Cincinnati |
1920 Buffalo
All-Americans (4, including semi-pro teams) |
| Most Touchdown Catches by a Tight End,
Career |
Tony Gonzalez,
Kansas City (66) |
October 14, vs. Cincinnati |
Shannon Sharpe, 1990-2003
(62) |
| Most Passes Had Intercepted, Career |
Brett Favre, Green Bay (288) |
October 14, vs. Washington |
George Blanda, 1949-1975
(277) |
| Most Field Goals, Game |
Rob Bironas, Tennessee (8) |
October 21, at Houston |
Tied by 4 players (7) |
| Most Consecutive Seasons in One Stadium |
Lambeau Field ,
Green Bay Packers |
2007 marks 51st season. |
Wrigley Field , Chicago Bears (50 years, 1921-1970) |
Longest Return of a Missed Field Goal/
Longest Play in NFL History |
Antonio Cromartie, San Diego (109 yards) |
November 4, at Minnesota |
Tied by 2 players (108 yards) /
Tied by 3 players (108 yards) |
| Most Rushing Yards, Game |
Adrian Peterson, Minnesota
(296) |
November 4, vs. San Diego |
Jamal Lewis, 2003 (295) |
| Most Consecutive Games with Three Touchdown
Passes |
Tom Brady, New England (10 games) |
November 4, at Indianapolis |
Peyton Manning (8 games) |
| Most Games with Three Touchdown Passes,
Career |
Brett Favre, Green Bay (63) |
November 22, at Detroit |
Dan Marino, 1983-1999 (62) |
| Most Yards Passing, Career |
Brett Favre, Green Bay (61,655) |
December 16, at St.
Louis |
Dan Marino, 1983-1999 (61,361) |
| Consecutive 12+ win seasons |
2003-present Indianapolis (5) |
December 16, at Oakland |
1992-1995 Dallas (4) |
| Most Touchdowns Scored, Season |
New England Patriots (75) |
December 23, vs. Miami |
Miami Dolphins, 1984 (69) |
Most Points After Touchdown Kicked,
Season/
Most Point After Touchdown Attempts,
Season
|
Stephen Gostkowski, New
England (74/74) |
December 16, vs. N.Y. Jets/
December 23, vs. Miami |
Uwe von Schamann, 1984 (66
PATs) /
Uwe von Schamann, 1984 (70 attempts) |
| Most Points, Season |
New England Patriots (589) |
December 29, at N.Y. Giants |
Minnesota, 1998 (556) |
| Most Touchdown Passes, Season |
Tom Brady, New England (50) |
December 29, at N.Y. Giants |
Peyton Manning, Indianapolis,
2004 (49) |
| Most Receiving Touchdowns, Season |
Randy Moss, New England (23) |
December 29, at N.Y. Giants |
Jerry Rice, San Francisco, 1987 (22) |
| Most Points After Touchdown, No Misses,
Season |
Stephen Gostkowski, New England (74/74) |
December 29, at N.Y. Giants |
Jeff Wilkins, St. Louis, 1999 (64/64) |
| Most Games Won, Season |
New England (16) |
December 29, at N.Y. Giants |
Tied by 4 teams (15) |
Most Consecutive Games Won, Start of Season/
Most Consecutive Games Without Defeat, Start of
Season |
New England (16) |
December 29, at N.Y. Giants |
Miami, 1972 (14) |
Most Consecutive Games Won, End of Season/
Most Consecutive Games Without Defeat, End of Season |
New England (16) |
December 29, at N.Y. Giants |
Tied by 2 teams (14) |
| Most Consecutive Regular Season Games Won |
New England, 2006-07 (19) |
December 29, at N.Y. Giants |
New England, 2003-04 (18) |
| Most Kick Returns for a Touchdown, Season |
Devin Hester, Chicago (6: 4 punts
and 2 kickoffs) |
December 30, vs. New
Orleans |
Devin Hester, 2006 (5: 3 punts and 2 kickoffs) |
| Most Passes Completed, Season |
Drew Brees, New Orleans (443) |
December 30, at Chicago |
Rich Gannon, Oakland, 2002
(418) |
| Most Receptions by a Tight End, Career |
Tony Gonzalez, Kansas City (816) |
December 30, at N.Y. Jets |
Shannon Sharpe, 1990-2003 (815) |
- Hobbs' kickoff return was also, at the time, tied for the
longest play in NFL history until Antonio Cromartie broke the
record.
Regular season statistical leaders
| Team |
| Points scored |
New England Patriots
(589) |
| Total yards gained |
New England Patriots
(6,580) |
| Yards rushing |
Minnesota Vikings (2,634) |
| Yards passing |
New England Patriots
(4,731) |
| Fewest points allowed |
Indianapolis Colts (262) |
| Fewest total yards allowed |
Pittsburgh Steelers
(4,262) |
| Fewest rushing yards allowed |
Minnesota Vikings (1,185) |
| Fewest passing yards allowed |
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
(2,728) |
| Individual |
| Scoring |
Mason Crosby, Green Bay (141
points) |
| Touchdowns |
Randy Moss, New England (23 TDs) |
| Most field goals made |
Rob Bironas, Tennessee (35 FGs) |
| Rushing |
LaDainian Tomlinson, San
Diego (1,474 yards) |
| Passer rating |
Tom Brady, New England (117.2
rating) |
| Passing touchdowns |
Tom Brady, New England (50 TDs) |
| Passing yards |
Tom Brady, New England (4,806
yards) |
| Pass receptions |
T. J. Houshmandzadeh, Cincinnati and Wes Welker, New England (112 catches) |
| Pass receiving yards |
Reggie Wayne, Indianapolis (1,510
yards) |
| Punt returns |
Devin Hester, Chicago (42 for 651
yards, 15.5 average yards) |
| Kickoff returns |
Josh Cribbs, Cleveland (59 for 1,809
yards, 30.7 average yards) |
| Interceptions |
Antonio Cromartie, San Diego
(10) |
| Punting |
Shane Lechler, Oakland (73 for
3,585 yards, 49.1 average yards) |
| Sacks |
Jared Allen, Kansas City (15.5) |
Awards
| Most
Valuable Player |
Tom Brady, New England Patriots |
| Coach of the
Year |
Bill Belichick, New England
Patriots |
| Offensive Player of the
Year |
Tom Brady, New England Patriots |
| Defensive Player of the
Year |
Bob Sanders, Safety, Indianapolis
Colts |
| Offensive
Rookie of the Year |
Adrian Peterson, Running
back, Minnesota Vikings |
| Defensive
Rookie of the Year |
Patrick Willis, Linebacker, San
Francisco 49ers |
| NFL
Comeback Player of the Year |
Greg Ellis, Dallas Cowboys |
| Super
Bowl Most Valuable Player Award |
Eli Manning, New York Giants |
- All-Pro
Team
[[Brett Favre]],Green Bay>
| Offense |
|
| Running back |
LaDainian Tomlinson, San
Diego
Brian Westbrook,
Philadelphia
|
| Fullback |
Lorenzo Neal, San Diego |
| Wide receiver |
Randy Moss, New England
Terrell Owens, Dallas
|
| Tight end |
Jason Witten, Dallas |
| Offensive tackle |
Matt Light, New England
Walter Jones,
Seattle
|
| Offensive guard |
Steve
Hutchinson, Minnesota
Alan Faneca, Pittsburgh
|
| Center |
Jeff Saturday, Indianapolis |
| Defense |
| Defensive end |
Patrick Kerney, Seattle
Jared Allen, Kansas City
|
| Defensive tackle |
Albert Haynesworth,
Tennessee
Kevin Williams,
Minnesota
|
| Outside linebacker |
Mike Vrabel, New England
DeMarcus Ware, Dallas
|
| Inside linebacker |
Lofa Tatupu, Seattle
Patrick Willis, San
Francisco
|
| Cornerback |
Asante Samuel, New England
Antonio Cromartie, San
Diego
|
| Safety |
Bob Sanders, Indianapolis
Ed Reed, Baltimore
|
Events
Player conduct off the field
The
NFLPA, led by their
president
Gene Upshaw and NFL
commissioner Roger Goodell are going to be working with player
conduct in the form of suspensions for off the field conduct in
light of the more than fifty arrests by local law enforcement since
the start of the
2006 season. The
hardest hit so far came on April 10 when
Adam "Pacman" Jones of the
Tennessee Titans was suspended for the
entire season for his five arrests, the most blatant while in
Las Vegas for the
NBA All-Star Weekend in
February where he was accused of causing a riot/shooting in a strip
club. That same day,
Chris
Henry of the
Cincinnati
Bengals was suspended for the first eight games of the season
for his run-ins with the legal system. The other big name that has
been caught in the web of controversy was Falcons' quarterback
Michael Vick.
Vick was charged on
July 24 with dogfighting and animal abuse
, and has been suspended indefinitely following a
guilty plea in the case, on which he was sentenced to 23 months in
prison (retroactive to November) and three years probation on
December 10.
Death of Marquise Hill
On the
evening of May 27, 2007, Marquise
Hill, a defensive end for the New England Patriots and a friend fell
off a jet ski in Lake
Pontchartrain
, north of New Orleans
. The two were wearing neither
personal flotation nor
tracking devices.
The friend was
rescued and sent to Tulane
Medical Center, but Hill did not survive; his body
was found the next day. The Patriots honored Hill, the first
Patriots player to die while still a member of the team, by wearing
black circular decals on their helmets with Hill's number,
91.
Death of Sean Taylor
Fourth-year player Sean Taylor, a defensive back for the Redskins, was shot in
his home near Miami,
Florida
on November 26. Armed with a machete, Taylor
confronted robbers — Eric Rivera, the 17-year-old gunman,
18-year-old Charles Wadlow, and 20-year-olds Jason Mitchell and
Venjah Hunte — who were breaking into his home. Rivera fired two
shots from his 9 mm gun, one missing and the other hitting
Taylor's leg, going from his right groin to his left according to
an autopsy obtained by
Associated
Press. He died from his injuries the next day. For the
remainder of the season, the Redskins honored him with a black
patch on their right shoulder of the player uniform jerseys, while
all 32 teams honored Taylor by applying a decal with his playing
number (21) on the left back side of their helmets. Taylor's memory
was honored in all games during Week 13 and all three Redskins
representatives in the
Pro Bowl wore
number 21 in his honor. All four men involved are being held
without bail pending a trial.
Spygate
During the Patriots season opening game at The Meadowlands against
the Jets, a Patriots camera staffer was ejected from the Patriots
sideline and was accused of videotaping the Jets' defensive coaches
relaying signals. The end result was that the team was fined
$250,000, head coach
Bill Belicheck
was docked $500,000 (the maximum fine that could be imposed) and
also stripped of their first round selection of the
2008 NFL Draft. If the Pats had failed to
make the playoffs, the penalty would have been their second and
third round picks. The team was allowed to keep their other
first-round pick acquired from the
San Francisco 49ers during the previous
year's selection meeting.
Other events
- This was the final season the classic NFL Shield logo, which
had not changed since 1980, was used. An updated version first seen
on August 31 in USA Today was put into use
starting with the 2008 NFL Draft in
April.. The new logo design features eight stars (one for each
division) instead of the current 25 stars, the football now
resembles that on the top of the Vince Lombardi Trophy, given to the
Super Bowl champion and the lettering and
point has been updated and modified to that of the league's current
typeface for other logos.
- The 2007 season was the last in the RCA Dome for the
Indianapolis Colts, who had played there since 1984. The franchise will move to the new Lucas Oil
Stadium
in time for the 2008 season, located literally
across the street. The dome will be demolished, and an
extension to the Indiana Convention Center
will replace the stadium.
- The Redskins celebrated their 75th anniversary (actually their
76th season) season as the franchise was founded in 1932 as the Boston Braves, and wore Vince Lombardi-styled uniforms against the
New York Giants on September 23. The Philadelphia Eagles and their
cross-state rival Pittsburgh Steelers also celebrated their
respective 75th seasons, having been founded in 1933. The Eagles wore replicas of their
inaugural season uniforms against the Detroit Lions on September 23, while the
Steelers wore 1960 uniforms against the Buffalo Bills on September 16 and did so again
when the Baltimore Ravens visited
on November 5.
- Throwback uniforms were not just limited to team anniversary
celebrations. The Cleveland Browns wore their 1957 throwbacks in a
27–17 win against the Houston Texans on November 25, the Minnesota Vikings wore 1970's uniforms
against the Packers on September 30 (in the same game that Brett Favre passed Dan
Marino for most touchdown passes in NFL history), while the
Jets honored their historic predecessors on October 14 against the
Eagles and, in a rare instance, wore them in a road game at Miami
December 2 by wearing the New York Titans' 1960 through 1962
uniforms. The team did not become the Jets until 1963. The Cowboys
wore their 1960 uniforms on November 29 against the Packers, and
the Bills wore their 1960's throwbacks at home against Dallas
October 7 and against Miami December 9.
- San Francisco 49ers coach Mike Nolan
and Jaguars coach Jack Del Rio both
wore a suit on the sidelines for all of the team's home games to
honor Nolan's father, former 49ers and Saints coach Dick Nolan. In 2006, both
coaches were allowed to wear a suit on the sidelines for a maximum
of two home games. Del Rio did not wear a suit in the September
16th game against the Falcons due to the extreme heat in
Jacksonville that day. Nolan wore a suit at the Meadowlands against
the Giants on October 21.
- The 49ers also honored the late Bill Walsh, coach of their wins
in Super Bowls XVI, XIX, and XXIII by wearing throwback uniforms from
the 1980s in their opener on September 10 against the Arizona
Cardinals. Mike Nolan had been considering wearing the 1980s
uniforms for the entire season to honor Walsh's memory. The retro
uniforms were worn again on November 18 against the Seahawks. In
addition, all season long, the team wore a black football-shaped
decal on their helmets with the initials "BW" in white.
- The Kansas City Chiefs honored their late former owner and team
founder Lamar Hunt by wearing special
American Football League
logo patches on their jerseys with the letters "LH" emblazoned
inside the logo's football. Originally meant to be a one-season
tribute, the Chiefs announced that as of the 2008 NFL season, the patch will be a
permanent fixture on the jerseys, joining the Chicago Bears (for George Halas) and Cleveland Browns (for Al Lerner) for such memorial patches.
- Teams that have permanent captains are allowed to wear a "C"
patch (similar to those in ice hockey) on
their right shoulder. The patch is in team colors with four stars
under the "C." A gold star is placed on a bar below the "C"
signaling how many years (with a maximum of four years) that player
has been captain. The Pittsburgh
Steelers--who were using up two patches as it was for the
season with their own logo (which was already part of the standard
uniforms) and the team's 75th anniversary logo—and Oakland Raiders elected not to use the "C"
patch.
- The ESPN Monday Night Football game between the unbeaten New
England Patriots and the Baltimore Ravens on December 3 drew the
highest basic cable rating in history, with over 17.5 million
viewers, beating the premiere of Disney
Channel's High School
Musical 2, which set the previous record on August 17. The
previous high water mark was a MNF telecast between the
New York Giants and the Dallas Cowboys on October 23, 2006, drawing
over 16 million viewers.
References
- The flexible-scheduling policy also allows a shorter time
window for changing Week 17 games prior to the game.
- Reiss, Mike. Kerry presses on NFL Network The Boston
Globe, 6 December 2007.
- Specter Wants to Revisit NFL's Antitrust Status
Washington Post, 8 December 2007.
- Patriots' historic game to be available to all of
America, after all NFL.com, Accessed 26 December 2007.
- ESPN - Hester scores on sixth kick return in 2007
to break own record - NFL
- Brady wins MVP Award ESPN.com
- Perfect season lifts Belichick to second AP Coach
of Year honor
- Brady wins Offensive Player of the Year Award
SI.com
- Colts Sanders wins NFL Defensive Player of the Year
Award NFL.com
- 49ers’ Willis named AP’s top defensive rookie - NFL -
MSNBC.com
- Ellis named Comeback Player
See also