
An early American football team, from
the turn of the twentieth century
The
History of American football, a spectator
sport in the United States, can be traced to early versions of
rugby football. Both games have their
origin in
varieties of football played in
the United Kingdom in the mid-19th century, in which a
ball is kicked at a
goal and/or run over a line.
American football resulted from
several major divergences from rugby, most notably the rule changes
instituted by
Walter Camp, considered
the "Father of American Football". Among these important changes
were the introduction of the
line of
scrimmage and of
down-and-distance rules. In the
late 19th and early 20th centuries, gameplay developments by
college coaches such as
Eddie Cochems,
Amos Alonzo Stagg,
Knute Rockne, and
Glenn "Pop" Warner helped take advantage
of the newly introduced
forward pass.
The popularity of
collegiate
football grew as it became the dominant version of the sport in
the United States for the first half of the twentieth century.
Bowl games, a college football tradition,
attracted a national audience for collegiate teams. Bolstered by
fierce
rivalries,
college football still holds widespread appeal in the US.
The origin of
professional
football can be traced back to 1892, with
William "Pudge" Heffelfinger's $500
contract to play in a game for the
Allegheny Athletic
Association against the Pittsburgh Athletic Club. In 1920 the
American Professional Football Association was formed. This league
changed its name to the
National Football League (NFL) two
years later, and eventually became the
major
league of American football. Primarily a sport of Midwestern
industrial towns in the United States, professional football
eventually became a national phenomenon. Football's increasing
popularity is usually traced to the
1958 NFL Championship Game, a
contest that has been dubbed the "Greatest Game Ever Played". A
rival league to the NFL, the
American Football League (AFL),
began play in 1960; the pressure it put on the senior league led to
a
merger between the two leagues and
the creation of the
Super Bowl, which has
become the most watched television event in the United States on an
annual basis.
Early years

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First games
Although there are mentions of
Native Americans
playing ball games, modern American football has its origins in
traditional ball games played at villages and schools in Europe for
many centuries before America was settled by Europeans. There are
reports of early
settlers at
Jamestown, Virginia playing games with
inflated balls in the early 17th century.
Early games appear to have had much in common with the traditional
"
mob football" played in England,
especially on
Shrove Tuesday. The
games remained largely unorganized until the 19th century, when
intramural games of football began
to be played on college campuses. Each school played its own
variety of football.
Princeton
students played a game called "ballown" as early as
1820. A Harvard
tradition known as "Bloody Monday" began in 1827,
which consisted of a mass ballgame between the freshman and
sophomore classes. Dartmouth
played its own version called "Old division football", the rules of
which were first published in 1871, though the game dates to at
least the 1830s. All of these games, and others, shared
certain commonalities. They remained largely "mob" style games,
with huge numbers of players attempting to advance the ball into a
goal area, often by any means necessary. Rules were simple and
violence and injury were common. The violence of these mob-style
games led to widespread protests and a decision to abandon them.
Yale
, under pressure from the city of New
Haven
, banned the play of all forms of football in 1860,
while Harvard followed suit in 1861.
"Boston game"
While the game was being banned in colleges, it was growing in
popularity in various
east coast prep schools. In 1855,
manufactured inflatable balls were introduced. These were much more
regular in shape than the handmade balls of earlier times, making
kicking and carrying easier. Two general types of football had
evolved by this time: "kicking" games and "running" (or "carrying")
games. A hybrid of the two, known as the "
Boston game", was played by a group known as the
Oneida Football Club.
The club,
considered by some historians as the first formal football club in the United States, was formed
in 1862 by schoolboys who played the "Boston game" on Boston Common
. They played mostly between themselves,
though they organized a team of non-members to play a game in
November 1863, which the Oneidas won easily. The game caught the
attention of the press, and the "Boston game" continued to spread
throughout the 1860s.
The game began to return to college campuses by the late 1860s.
Yale,
Princeton, Rutgers
, and Brown
all began
playing "kicking" games during this time. In 1867, Princeton
used rules based on those of the English
Football Association. A "running
game", resembling rugby, was taken up by the
Montreal Football Club in Canada in
1868.
Intercollegiate football
Rutgers v. Princeton (1869)
On
November 6, 1869, Rutgers University
faced Princeton University
in a game that is often regarded as the first game
of intercollegiate football.
The game was played at a Rutgers field under Rutgers rules. Two
teams of 25 players attempted to score by kicking the ball into the
opposing team's goal. Throwing or carrying the ball was not
allowed. The first team to reach six goals was declared the winner.
Rutgers won by a score of six to four. A rematch was played at
Princeton a week later under Princeton rules (one notable
difference was the awarding of a "free kick" to any player that
caught the ball on the fly). Princeton won that game by a score of
eight to zero.
Columbia
joined the series in 1870, and by 1872 several schools were
fielding intercollegiate teams, including Yale
and Stevens
Institute of Technology
.
Rules standardization (1873–1880)
On October
19, 1873, representatives from Yale, Columbia, Princeton, and
Rutgers met at the Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City
to codify the first set of intercollegiate football
rules. Before this meeting, each school had its own set of
rules and games were usually played using the home team's own
particular code. At this meeting, a list of rules, based more on
soccer than on rugby, was drawn up for intercollegiate football
games.
Harvard, which played the "Boston game", a version of football that
allowed carrying, refused to attend this rules conference and
continued to play under its own code.
While Harvard's
voluntary absence from the meeting made it hard for them to
schedule games against other American universities, it agreed to a
challenge to play McGill University
, from Montreal
, in a two-game series. The McGill team
traveled to Cambridge
to meet Harvard. On May 14, 1874, the first
game, played under "Boston" rules, was won by Harvard with a score
of 3–0. The next day, the two teams played rugby to a scoreless
tie. This series of games represents an important milestone in the
development of the modern game of American football.
Harvard quickly took a liking to the rugby game, and its use of the
try which, until that time, was not used
in American football. The try would later evolve into the score
known as the
touchdown. In late 1874, the
Harvard team traveled to Montréal to play McGill in rugby, and won
by three tries.
A year later, on June 4, 1875, Harvard faced
Tufts
University
in the first game between two American colleges
played under rules similar to the McGill/Harvard contest, which was
won by Tufts 1–0. The first edition of
The Game—the annual contest between
Harvard and Yale—was played on November 13, 1875, under a modified
set of rugby rules known as "The Concessionary Rules". Yale lost
4–0, but found that it too preferred the rugby style game.
Spectators from Princeton carried the game back home, where it also
became popular.
On
November 23, 1876, representatives from Harvard, Yale, Princeton,
and Columbia met at the Massasoit House in Springfield,
Massachusetts
to standardize a new code of rules based on the
rugby game first introduced to Harvard by McGill University in
1874. The rules were based largely on the
Rugby Football Union's code from
England, though one important difference was the replacement of a
kicked goal with a touchdown as the primary means of scoring (a
change that would later occur in rugby itself, favoring the
try as the main scoring event). Three of the
schools—Harvard, Columbia, and Princeton—formed the
Intercollegiate Football
Association, as a result of the meeting. Yale did not join the
group until 1879, because of an early disagreement about the number
of players per team.
Walter Camp: Father of American football
Walter Camp is widely considered to be
the most important figure in the development of American football.
As a youth, he excelled in sports like
track,
baseball, and soccer, and after enrolling at Yale
in 1876, he earned varsity honors in every sport the school
offered.
Camp became a fixture at the Massasoit House conventions where
rules were debated and changed. He proposed his first rule change
at the first meeting he attended in 1878: a reduction from fifteen
players to eleven. The motion was rejected at that time but passed
in 1880. The effect was to open up the game and emphasize speed
over strength. Camp's most famous change, the establishment of the
line of scrimmage and the
snap from
center to
quarterback, was also passed in 1880.
Originally, the snap was executed with the foot of the center.
Later changes made it possible to snap the ball with the hands,
either through the air or by a direct hand-to-hand pass.
Camp's new scrimmage rules revolutionized the game, though not
always as intended. Princeton, in particular, used scrimmage play
to slow the game, making incremental progress towards the end zone
during each
down. Rather
than increase scoring, which had been Camp's original intent, the
rule was exploited to maintain control of the ball for the entire
game, resulting in slow, unexciting contests. At the 1882 rules
meeting, Camp proposed that a team be required to advance the ball
a minimum of five yards within three downs. These down-and-distance
rules, combined with the establishment of the line of scrimmage,
transformed the game from a variation of rugby or soccer into the
distinct sport of American football.
Camp was central to several more significant rule changes that came
to define American football. In 1881, the field was reduced in size
to its modern dimensions of 120 by 53 1/3 yards (109.7 by 48.8
meters). Several times in 1883, Camp tinkered with the scoring
rules, finally arriving at four points for a touchdown, two points
for
kicks after touchdowns, two points
for safeties, and five for
field
goals. In 1887, gametime was set at two halves of 45 minutes
each. Also in 1887, two paid officials—a
referee and an
umpire—were mandated for
each game. A year later, the rules were changed to allow tackling
below the waist, and in 1889, the officials were given whistles and
stopwatches.
After leaving Yale in 1882, Camp was employed by the New Haven
Clock Company until his death in 1925. Though no longer a player,
he remained a fixture at annual rules meetings for most of his
life, and he personally selected an annual
All-American team every year from 1898 through
1924. The
Walter Camp
Football Foundation continues to select All-American teams in
his honor.
Expansion (1880–1904)
College football expanded greatly during the last two decades of
the nineteenth century. In 1880, only eight universities fielded
intercollegiate teams, but by 1900, the number had expanded to 43.
Several major
rivalries date
from this time period.
In 1879, the
University of
Michigan became the first school west of Pennsylvania to
establish a college football team.
Other Midwestern schools soon followed
suit, including the University of Chicago
, Northwestern University
, and the University of
Minnesota. The first western team to travel east was the
1881 Michigan
team, which played at Harvard, Yale and Princeton. The nation's
first college football league, the Intercollegiate Conference of
Faculty Representatives (also known as the Western Conference), a
precursor to the
Big Ten
Conference, was founded in 1895.
Led by legendary coach
Fielding Yost,
Michigan became the first "western" national power.
From 1901 to 1905,
Michigan had a 56-game undefeated streak that included a 1902 trip
to play in the first college football
post-season game, the Rose Bowl
. During this streak, Michigan scored 2,831
points while allowing only 40.
Another legendary coach,
Amos Alonzo
Stagg of the University of Chicago, spent most of his career in
the Western Conference.
He coached first at the Springfield International YMCA Training
School, then Chicago, and later at the University of the Pacific
for a record total of 57 years. As of 2007,
he still ranked seventh on the list of most often winning football
coaches, with 314 wins.
Historical college football scoringA compilation of six
sources:
• " History." 2009 Baylor Football Media
Almanac. Baylor Athletics (Baylor University). Retrieved
2009-10-11.
• The National Collegiate Athletic Association. " Section 11—Extra Points." 2008 Football
Statisticians' Manual. August 2008. Retrieved
2009-10-11.
• Professional Football Researchers Association. " Yale's Walter
Camp and 1870s Rugby." The Journey to Camp: The Origins of
American Football to 1889. Ivy League Rugby Conference
(2009-01-31). Retrieved 2009-10-11.
• Johnson, Greg (2008-08-28). " Two-point conversion turns 50." The NCAA
News. Retrieved 2009-10-11.
• " NFL History by Decade: 1869-1910." National
Football League. Retrieved 2009-10-11.
• " NFL History by Decade: 1911-1920." National
Football League. Retrieved 2009-10-11.
| Era |
Touchdown |
Field goal |
Conversion |
Two-point conversion |
Safety |
Conversion
safety |
Defensive
conversion |
| 1883 |
2 |
5 |
4 |
– |
1 |
– |
– |
| 1883–1897 |
4 |
5 |
2 |
– |
2 |
– |
– |
| 1898–1903 |
5 |
5 |
1 |
– |
2 |
– |
– |
| 1904–1908 |
5 |
4 |
1 |
– |
2 |
– |
– |
| 1909–1911 |
5 |
3 |
1 |
– |
2 |
– |
– |
| 1912–1957 |
6 |
3 |
1 |
– |
2 |
– |
– |
| 1958–1988 |
6 |
3 |
1 |
2 |
2 |
1 |
– |
| 1988–present |
6 |
3 |
1 |
2 |
2 |
1 |
2 |
| Note: For brief periods in the late 1800s, some
penalties awarded one or more points for the opposing teams, and
some teams in the late 1800s and early 1900s chose to negotiate
their own scoring system for individual games. |
Violence and controversy (1905)
From its earliest days as a mob game, football was a violent sport.
The 1894 Harvard-Yale game, known as the "Hampden Park Blood Bath",
resulted in crippling injuries for four players; the contest was
suspended until 1897. The annual Army-Navy game was suspended from
1894–1898 for similar reasons. One of the major problems was the
popularity of mass-formations like the
flying wedge, in which a large number of
offensive players charged as a unit against a similarly arranged
defense. The resultant collisions often led to serious injuries and
sometimes even death.
The situation came to an end in 1905 when there were 19 fatalities
nationwide.
President
Theodore Roosevelt threatened to
shut the game down if drastic changes were not made. One rule
change introduced in 1906, devised to open up the game and reduce
injury, was the introduction of the legal
forward pass. Though it was underutilized for
years, this proved to be the last—and one of the most
important—rule changes in the establishment of the modern game. On
December 28, 1905, 62 schools met in New York City to discuss rule
changes to make the game safer. As a result of this meeting, the
Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United States, later
named the
National Collegiate
Athletic Association (NCAA), was formed.
Modernization and innovation (1906–1930)
As a result of the 1905–1906 reforms, mass formation plays became
illegal and
forward passes legal.
Bradbury Robinson, playing for visionary
coach Eddie Cochems at St. Louis
University
, threw the first legal pass in a September 5, 1906
game against Carroll College
at Waukesha
. Other important changes, formally adopted
in 1910, were the requirements that at least seven offensive
players be on the line of scrimmage at the time of the snap, that
there be no pushing or pulling, and that interlocking interference
(arms linked or hands on belts and uniforms) was not allowed. These
changes greatly reduced the potential for collision injuries.
Several coaches emerged who took advantage of these sweeping
changes. Amos Alonzo Stagg introduced such innovations as the
huddle, the tackling dummy, and the pre-snap
shift. Other coaches, such as
Pop
Warner and
Knute Rockne, introduced
new strategies that still remain part of the game.
Besides these coaching innovations, several rules changes during
the first third of the twentieth century had a profound impact on
the game, mostly in opening up the passing game. In 1914, the first
roughing-the-passer penalty was implemented. In 1918, the rules on
eligible receivers were loosened to allow eligible players to catch
the ball anywhere on the field—previously strict rules were in
place only allowing passes to certain areas of the field. Scoring
rules also changed during this time: field goals were lowered to
three points in 1909 and touchdowns raised to six points in
1912.
Star players that emerged in the early twentieth century include
Jim Thorpe,
Red
Grange, and
Bronko Nagurski;
these three made the transition to the fledgling NFL and helped
turn it into a successful league.
Sportswriter Grantland Rice helped popularize the sport
with his poetic descriptions of games and colorful nicknames for
the game's biggest players, including Grange, whom he dubbed "The
Galloping Ghost," Notre Dame's "Four Horsemen" backfield, and
Fordham
University's
linemen, known as the "Seven Blocks of
Granite".
Glenn Pop Warner
Glenn
"Pop" Warner coached at several schools throughout his career,
including the University of
Georgia, Cornell
University
, University
of Pittsburgh, Stanford
University, and the Temple
University. One of his most famous stints was at the
Carlisle Indian
Industrial School, where he coached
Jim
Thorpe, who went on to become the first president of the
National Football League,
an
Olympic Gold Medalist, and
is widely considered one of the best overall athletes in history.
Warner wrote one of the first important books of football strategy,
Football for Coaches and Players, published in 1927.
Though the shift was invented by Stagg, Warner's
single wing and double wing
formations greatly improved
upon it; for almost 40 years, these were among the most important
formations in football. As part of his single and double wing
formations, Warner was one of the first coaches to effectively
utilize the forward pass. Among his other innovations are modern
blocking schemes, the
three-point
stance, and the
reverse play. The youth football
league,
Pop Warner Little
Scholars, was named in his honor.
Knute Rockne
Knute Rockne rose to prominence in 1913 as an
end for the University
of Notre Dame
, then a largely unknown midwestern Catholic school. When Army scheduled
Notre Dame as a warm-up game, they thought little of the small
school. Rockne and quarterback
Gus Dorais
made innovative use of the forward pass, still at that point a
relatively unused weapon, to defeat Army 35–13 and helped establish
the school as a national power. Rockne returned to coach the team
in 1918, and devised the powerful
Notre
Dame Box offense, based on Warner's single wing. He is credited
with being the first major coach to emphasize offense over defense.
Rockne is also credited with popularizing and perfecting the
forward pass, a seldom used play at the time. In 1927, his complex
shifts led directly to a rule change whereby all offensive players
had to stop for a full second before the ball could be snapped.
Rather than simply a regional team, Rockne's "Fighting Irish"
became famous for
barnstorming
and played any team at any location. It was during Rockne's tenure
that the annual
Notre Dame-University
of Southern California rivalry began.
He led his team to an
impressive 105–12–5 record before his premature death in a plane
crash
in 1931. So famous was he at that point that
his funeral was broadcast nationally on radio.
From a regional to a national sport (1930–1958)
In the early 1930s, the college game continued to grow,
particularly in the
South,
bolstered by fierce rivalries such as the "
South's Oldest Rivalry", between
Virginia and North Carolina and the "
Deep South's Oldest Rivalry",
between
Georgia and
Auburn. Although before the
mid-1920s most national powers came from the
Northeast or the
Midwest, the trend changed when
several teams from the South and the West Coast achieved national
success.
Wallace William Wade's
1925 Alabama team won the
1926 Rose
Bowl after receiving its first national title and
William Alexander's 1928
Georgia Tech team
defeated
California
in the
1929 Rose Bowl. College
football quickly became the most popular spectator sport in the
South.
Several major modern college football conferences rose to
prominence during this time period. The
Southwest Athletic Conference
had been founded in 1915. Consisting mostly of schools from Texas,
the conference saw back-to-back national champions with
Texas Christian University (TCU)
in 1938 and
Texas
A&M in 1939. The
Pacific Coast Conference (PCC), a
precursor to the
Pacific-10
Conference (Pac-10), had its own back-to-back champion in the
University of Southern
California which was awarded the title in 1931 and 1932. The
Southeastern Conference
(SEC) formed in 1932 and consisted mostly of schools in the
Deep South. As in previous decades, the
Big Ten continued to dominate in the 1930s and 1940s, with
Minnesota winning 5 titles between 1934 and 1941, and Michigan
(1933 and 1948) and
Ohio
State (1942) also winning titles.
As it grew beyond its regional affiliations in the 1930s, college
football garnered increased national attention. Four new
bowl games were created: the
Orange Bowl,
Sugar
Bowl, the
Sun Bowl in 1935, and the
Cotton Bowl in 1937. In lieu of
an actual national championship, these bowl games, along with the
earlier Rose Bowl, provided a way to match up teams from distant
regions of the country that did not otherwise play. In 1936, the
Associated Press began its
weekly poll of prominent sports writers, ranking all
of the nation's college football teams. Since there was no national
championship game, the final version of the AP poll was used to
determined whowas crowned the
National Champion of college
football.
The 1930s saw growth in the passing game. Though some coaches, such
as General
Robert Neyland at
Tennessee, continued to eschew its use, several rules changes to
the game had a profound effect on teams' ability to throw the ball.
In 1934, the rules committee removed two major penalties—a loss of
five yards for a second incomplete pass in any series of downs and
a loss of possession for an incomplete pass in the end zone—and
shrunk the circumference of the ball, making it easier to grip and
throw. Players who became famous for taking advantage of the easier
passing game included Alabama receiver
Don
Hutson and TCU passer
"Slingin" Sammy
Baugh.
In 1935,
New York City's Downtown Athletic
Club awarded the first Heisman
Trophy to University of Chicago
halfback Jay
Berwanger, who was also the first ever NFL
Draft pick in 1936. The trophy was designed by sculptor Frank Eliscu and modeled after NYU
player Ed
Smith. The trophy recognizes the nation's "most
outstanding" college football player and has become one of the most
coveted awards in all of American sports.
During
World War II, college football
players enlisted in the
armed forces.
As most of these
players had eligibility left on their college careers, some of them
returned to college at West Point
, bringing Army back-to-back national titles in 1944
and 1945 under coach Red Blaik.
Doc Blanchard (known as "Mr. Inside")
and
Glenn Davis
(known as "Mr. Outside") both won the
Heisman Trophy, in 1945 and 1946
respectively.
On the coaching staff of those 1944–1946
Army teams was future Pro Football Hall of Fame
coach Vince
Lombardi.
The 1950s saw the rise of yet more
dynasties and power programs.
Oklahoma, under coach
Bud Wilkinson, won three national titles
(1950, 1955, 1956) and all ten
Big
Eight Conference championships in the decade while building a
record 47 game winning streak.
Woody
Hayes led Ohio State to two national titles, in 1954 and 1957,
and dominated the Big Ten conference, winning three
Big Ten titles—more
than any other school. Wilkinson and Hayes, along with Robert
Neyland of Tennessee, oversaw a revival of the running game in the
1950s. Passing numbers dropped from an average of 18.9 attempts in
1951 to 13.6 attempts in 1955, while teams averaged just shy of 50
running plays per game. Nine out of ten Heisman trophy winners in
the 1950s were runners. Notre Dame, one of the biggest passing
teams of the decade, saw a substantial decline in success; the
1950s were the only decade between 1920 and 1990 when the team did
not win at least a share of the national title.
Paul Hornung, Notre Dame quarterback, did
however win the Heisman in 1956, becoming the only player from a
losing team ever to do so.
Modern college football (1958–present)
Following the enormous television success of the
National Football League's 1958 championship game, college
football no longer enjoyed the same popularity as the NFL, at least
on a national level. While both games benefited from the advent of
television, since the late 1950s, the NFL has become a nationally
popular sport while college football has maintained strong regional
ties.

A college football game between
Colorado State University and the Air Force Academy
As professional football became a national television phenomenon,
college football did as well. In the 1950s, Notre Dame, which had a
large national following, formed its own network to broadcast its
games, but by and large the sport still retained a mostly regional
following. In 1952, the NCAA claimed all television broadcasting
rights for the games of its member institutions, and it alone
negotiated television rights.
This situation continued until 1984, when
several schools brought a suit under the Sherman Antitrust Act; the Supreme
Court
ruled against the NCAA and schools are now free to
negotiate their own television deals. ABC Sports began broadcasting a national Game of
the Week in 1966, bringing key matchups and rivalries to a national
audience for the first time.
New formations and play sets continued to be developed.
Emory Bellard, an assistant coach under
Darrell Royal at the
University of Texas, developed a
three-back
option style offense known
as the
wishbone. The wishbone is
a run-heavy offense that depends on the quarterback making last
second decisions on when and to whom to hand or pitch the ball to.
Royal went on to teach the offense to other coaches, including
Bear Bryant at Alabama,
Chuck Fairbanks at Oklahoma and
Pepper Rodgers at
UCLA; who all adapted and developed it
to their own tastes. The strategic opposite of the wishbone is the
spread offense, developed by
professional and college coaches throughout the 1960s and 1970s.
Though some schools play a run-based version of the spread, its
most common use is as a passing offense designed to "spread" the
field both horizontally and vertically. Some teams have managed to
adapt with the times to keep winning consistently. In the rankings
of the
most
victorious programs,
Michigan,
Texas, and
Notre Dame are ranked 1,
2, and 3 as judged by both total wins and winning percentage.
Growth of bowl games
Growth of bowl
games 1930–2008 |
| Year |
# of games |
| 1930 |
1 |
| 1940 |
5 |
| 1950 |
8 |
| 1960 |
8 |
| 1970 |
8 |
| 1980 |
15 |
| 1990 |
19 |
| 2000 |
25 |
| 2008 |
34 |
In 1940, there were only five bowl games (Rose, Orange, Sugar, Sun,
and Cotton). By 1950, three more had joined that number and in
1970, there were still only eight. The number grew to eleven in
1976. At the birth of
cable
television and cable sports networks like
ESPN, there were fifteen bowls in 1980. With more
national venues and increased available revenue, the bowls saw an
explosive growth throughout the 1980s and 1990s. In the thirty
years from 1950 to 1980, seven bowl games were added to the
schedule. From 1980 to 2008, an additional 19 bowl games were added
to the schedule. Some have criticized this growth, claiming that
the increased number of games has diluted the significance of
playing in a bowl game. Yet others have countered that the
increased number of games has increased exposure and revenue for a
greater number of schools, and see it as a positive
development.
With the growth of bowl games, it became difficult to determine a
national champion in a fair and equitable manner. As conferences
became contractually bound to certain bowl games (a situation known
as a
tie-in),
match-ups that guaranteed a consensus national champion became
increasingly rare. In 1992, seven conferences and independent Notre
Dame formed the
Bowl Coalition, which
attempted to arrange an annual #1 versus #2 matchup based on the
final AP poll standings. The Coalition lasted for three years,
however several scheduling issues prevented much success; tie-ins
still took precedence in several cases. For example the Big Eight
and SEC champions could never meet, since they were contractually
bound to different bowl games. The coalition also excluded the Rose
Bowl, arguably the most prestigious game in the nation, and two
major conferences—the Pac-10 and Big Ten—meaning that it had
limited success. In 1995, the Coalition was replaced by the
Bowl Alliance, which reduced the
number of bowl games to host a national championship game to
three—the
Fiesta, Sugar, and Orange
Bowls—and the participating conferences to five—the
ACC,
SEC,
Southwest,
Big Eight, and
Big East. It was agreed that the #1 and
#2 ranked teams gave up their prior bowl tie-ins and were
guaranteed to meet in the national championship game, which rotated
between the three participating bowls.
The system still did
not include the Big Ten, Pac-10, or the Rose
Bowl
, and thus still lacked the legitimacy of a true
national championship.
Bowl Championship Series
In 1998, a new system was put into place, the Bowl Championship
Series. For the first time, it included all major conferences (ACC,
Big East, Big 12, Big Ten, Pac-10, and SEC) and all four major bowl
games (Rose, Orange, Sugar and Fiesta). The champions of these six
conferences, along with two "at-large" selections, were invited to
play in the four bowl games. Each year, one of the four bowl games
served as a national championship game. Also, a complex system of
human polls, computer rankings, and strength of schedule
calculations was instituted to rank schools. Based on this ranking
system, the #1 and #2 teams met each year in the national
championship game. Traditional tie-ins were maintained for schools
and bowls not part of the national championship. For example, in
years when not a part of the national championship, the Rose Bowl
still hosted the Big Ten and Pac-10 champions.
The system continued to change, as the formula for ranking teams
was tweaked from year to year. At-large teams could be chosen from
any of the
Division I conferences, though
only one selection—
Utah in 2005—came from
a non-BCS affiliated conference. Starting with the 2006 season, a
fifth game—simply called the
BCS National Championship
Game—was added to the schedule, to be played at the site of one
of the four BCS bowl games on a rotating basis, one week after the
regular bowl game. This opened up the BCS to two additional
at-large teams. Also, rules were changed to add the champions of
five additional conferences (
Conference
USA, the
Mid-American
Conference, the
Mountain
West Conference, the
Sun Belt
Conference and the
Western Athletic Conference),
provided that said champion ranked in the top twelve in the final
BCS rankings. Every season since this rule change was implemented,
schools from non-BCS conferences played in BCS bowl games, namely
Boise State
in
2006,
Hawai i in
2007, and
Utah in
2008.
Professional Football
Early players, teams, and leagues (1892–1919)
In the early twentieth century, football began to catch on in the
general population of the United States and was the subject of
intense competition and rivalry, albeit of a localized nature.
Although
payments to players were considered unsporting and dishonorable at
the time, a Pittsburgh
area club, the Allegheny Athletic
Association, surreptitiously hired former Yale All-American
guard William "Pudge"
Heffelfinger. On November 12, 1892, Heffelfinger became
the first known professional football player. He was paid $500 to
play in a game against the
Pittsburgh Athletic
Club. Heffelfinger picked up a Pittsburgh fumble and ran 35
yards for a touchdown, winning the game 4–0 for Allegheny. Although
observers held suspicions, the payment remained a secret for
years.
On
September 3, 1895 the first wholly professional game was played, in
Latrobe
, Pennsylvania
, between the Latrobe Athletic Association
and the Jeannette Athletic Club. Latrobe won the contest
12–0. In 1897, the Latrobe Athletic Association paid all of its
players for the whole season, becoming the first fully professional
football team.
Three years later in 1899, the Morgan
Athletic Club, on the South Side of Chicago
, was founded. This team later became the
Chicago Cardinals, and now is
known as the
Arizona Cardinals,
making them the oldest continuously operating professional football
team.
The first known professional football league, known as the
National Football League
(not the same as the modern league) began play in 1902 with teams
from the
Mid Atlantic region.
Several
baseball clubs formed football
teams to play in the league, including the
Philadelphia Athletics and the
Philadelphia Phillies. A five-team
tournament, known as the
World Series of Football was
organized by the league. The league and the World Series only
lasted two seasons.
The game
moved west into Ohio
which
became the center of professional football during the early decades
of the twentieth century. Small towns such as Massillon
, Akron
, Portsmouth
, and Canton
all
supported professional teams in a loose coalition known as the
"Ohio League," the direct predecessor to
today's National Football
League. In 1915, the
Canton
Bulldogs signed former Olympian and
Carlisle Indian School standout
Jim Thorpe to a contract. Thorpe became
the face of professional football for the next several years and
was present at the founding of the National Football League five
years later.
Early years of the NFL (1920–1945)
Formation
In 1920, the first professional league, the
American Professional Football
Association, was founded, in a meeting at a
Hupmobile car dealership in Canton, Ohio.
Jim Thorpe was elected the league's first
president. After several more meetings, the league's membership was
formalized. The original teams were:
In its early years the league was little more than a formal
agreement between teams to play each other and to declare a
champion at season's end. Teams were still permitted to play
non-league members. The 1920 season saw several teams drop out and
fail to play through their schedule. Only four teams: Akron,
Buffalo, Canton, and Decatur, finished the schedule. Akron claimed
the first league champion, with the only undefeated record among
the remaining teams.
Expansion
In 1921, several more teams joined the league, increasing the
membership to 22 teams. Among the new additions were the
Green Bay Packers, which now has the
record for longest use of an unchanged team name. Also in 1921,
A. E.
Staley, the owner of the Decatur
Staleys, sold the team to player-coach
George Halas, who went on to become one of the
most important figures in the first half century of the NFL. In
1921, Halas moved the team to Chicago, but retained the Staleys
nickname. In 1922 the team was renamed the
Chicago Bears.
By the mid-1920s, NFL membership had grown to 25 teams, and a rival
league known as the
American Football
League was formed. The rival AFL folded after a single season,
but it symbolized a growing interest in the professional game.
Several college stars joined the NFL, most notably
Red Grange from the
University of Illinois,
who was taken on a famous barnstorming tour in 1925 by the Chicago
Bears.
1932 NFL playoff game
At the end of the
1932 season, the
Chicago Bears and the
Portsmouth Spartans were tied with the best
regular-season records. To determine the champion, the league voted
to hold its first
playoff
game.
Because of cold weather, the game was held
indoors at Chicago
Stadium
, which forced some temporary rule changes.
Chicago won, 9–0. The playoff proved so popular that the league
reorganized into two divisions for the
1933 season, with the winners advancing to a
scheduled championship game. A number of new rule changes were also
instituted: the goal posts were moved forward to the goal line,
every play started from between the
hash
marks, and forward passes could originate from anywhere behind
the
line of scrimmage (instead of
the previous five yards behind). In 1936, the NFL instituted the
first ever
draft of college players. The
first selection was Heisman Trophy winner Jay Berwanger, but he
declined to play professionally. Also in that year, another AFL
formed, but it also lasted only two seasons.
War years
In 1941, the NFL named its first Commissioner,
Elmer Layden. The new office replaced that of
President. Layden held the job for five years, before being
replaced by
Pittsburgh Steelers
co-owner
Bert Bell in 1946.
During
World War II, a player shortage
led to a shrinking of the league as several teams folded and others
merged. Among the short-lived merged teams were the
Steagles (Pittsburgh and Philadelphia) in 1943, the
Carpets (Chicago Cardinals and Pittsburgh)
in 1944, and a team formed from the merger of the
Brooklyn Dodgers and the
Boston Yanks in 1945.
Stability and growth of the NFL (1946–1957)
1946 was an important year in the history of professional football.
Bert Bell became commissioner of the NFL, providing a stable source
of leadership for the next 13 years. Before he became commissioner,
league membership was fluid; between 1920 and 1945, 53 teams had
gone defunct. In 1946, the NFL had ten teams, nine of which are
still in operation today. The league
integrated in 1946, when the
Los Angeles Rams signed two
African American players,
Kenny Washington and
Woody Strode. Also that year, a
competing league, the
All-America Football
Conference (AAFC), began operation.
During the 1950s, additional teams entered the league. In 1950, the
AAFC folded, and three teams from that league were absorbed into
the NFL: the
Cleveland Browns (who
had won the AAFC Championship every year of the league's
existence), the
San Francisco
49ers, and the Baltimore Colts (not the same as the modern
franchise, this version folded after one year). The remaining
players were chosen by the now 13 NFL teams in a
dispersal draft. Also in 1950, the Los
Angeles Rams became the first team to televise its entire schedule,
marking the beginning of an important relationship between
television and professional football. In 1952, the
Dallas Texans went defunct, becoming the
last NFL franchise to do so. The following year a new
Baltimore Colts franchise formed to take
over the assets of the Texans. The players' union, known as the
NFL Players Association,
formed in 1956.
NFL supremacy (1958–present)
The Greatest Game Ever Played
At the
conclusion of the 1958 NFL season,
the Baltimore
Colts and the New York Giants
met at Yankee
Stadium
to determine the league champion. Tied after
60 minutes of play, it became the first NFL game to go into
sudden death overtime. The final score was
Baltimore Colts 23,
New York Giants 17. The game has since
become widely known as "the Greatest Game Ever Played". It was
carried live on the
NBC television network, and
the national exposure it provided the league has been cited as a
watershed moment in professional football history, helping propel
the NFL to become one of the most popular sports leagues in the
United States. Journalist Tex Maule said of the contest, "This, for
the first time, was a truly epic game which inflamed the
imagination of a national audience."
American Football League and merger
In 1959,
longtime NFL commissioner Bert Bell died of a heart attack while
attending an Eagles/Steelers game at Franklin Field
. That same year, Dallas
, Texas
businessman
Lamar Hunt led the formation of the rival
American Football League,
the fourth such league to bear that name, with war hero and former
North Dakota Governor Joe Foss as its
Commissioner. Unlike the earlier rival leagues, and
bolstered by television exposure, the AFL posed a significant
threat to NFL dominance of the Professional Football world. With
the exception of Los Angeles and New York, the AFL avoided placing
teams in markets where they directly competed with established NFL
franchises. In 1960, the AFL began play with eight teams and a
double round-robin schedule of fourteen games. New NFL commissioner
Pete Rozelle took office the same
year.
The AFL became a viable alternative to the NFL as it made a
concerted effort to attract established talent away from the NFL,
signing half of the NFL's first-round draft choices in 1960. The
AFL worked hard to secure top college players, many from sources
virtually untapped by the established league: small colleges and
predominantly black colleges. Two of the eight coaches of the
Original Eight AFL franchises,
Hank Stram (
Texans/Chiefs) and
Sid Gillman (
Chargers) eventually were inducted to the
Hall of Fame. Led by
Oakland Raiders
owner and AFL commissioner
Al Davis, the
AFL established a "war chest" to entice top talent with higher pay
than they got from the NFL. Former Green Bay Packers quarterback
Babe Parilli became a star for the
Boston Patriots during the
early years of the AFL, and University of Alabama passer
Joe Namath rejected the NFL to play for the
New York Jets. Namath became the face
of the league as it reached its height of popularity in the
mid-1960s. Davis's methods worked, and in 1966, the junior league
forced a partial merger with the NFL. The two leagues agreed to
have a common
draft and play in a common
season-ending championship game, known as the AFL-NFL World
Championship. Two years later, the game's name was changed to the
Super Bowl.AFL teams won the next two
Super Bowls, and in 1970, the two leagues
merged to form a new 26-team league. The
resulting newly expanded NFL eventually incorporated some of the
innovations that led to the AFL's success, such as including names
on player's jerseys, official scoreboard clocks, national
television contracts, and sharing of gate and broadcating revenues
between home and visiting teams.
Modern NFL
The NFL continued to grow, eventually adopting the two-point PAT
conversion introduced to Professional Football by the AFL. It has
expanded several times to its current 32-team membership, and the
Super Bowl has become more than simply a football championship. One
of the most popular televised events annually in the United States,
it has become a major source of advertising revenue for the
television networks that have carried it and it serves as a means
for advertisers to debut
elaborate and expensive commercials
for their products. The NFL has grown to become the most popular
spectator sports league in the United States.
One of the things that has marked the modern NFL as different from
other
major
professional sports leagues is the apparent parity between its
32 teams. While from time to time,
dominant teams have arisen, the league has
been cited as one of the few where every team has a realistic
chance of winning the championship from year to year.
The league's complex
labor agreement with its players' union,
which mandates a hard salary cap and
revenue sharing between its clubs, prevents the richest teams from
stockpiling the best players and gives even teams in smaller cities
such as Green
Bay
and New
Orleans
the opportunity to compete for the Super
Bowl. One of the chief architects of this labor agreement
was former NFL commissioner
Paul
Tagliabue, who presided over the league from 1989 to 2006. In
addition to providing parity between the clubs, the current labor
contract, established in 1993 and renewed in 1998 and 2006, has
kept player salaries low—the lowest among the four major league
sports in the United States— and has helped make the NFL the only
major American professional sports league since 1993 not to suffer
any player strike or work stoppage.
Since taking over as commissioner before the
2006 season,
Roger
Goodell has made
player
conduct a priority of his office. Since taking office, several
high-profile players have experienced trouble with the law, from
Adam "Pacman" Jones to
Michael Vick. In these and other cases,
Commissioner Goodell has mandated lengthy suspensions for players
who fall outside of acceptable conduct limits.
Other professional leagues
Several other professional football leagues have been formed since
the AFL-NFL merger, though none have had the success of the AFL. In
1974, the
World Football
League formed and was able to attract such stars as
Larry Csonka away from the NFL with lucrative
contracts. However, most of the WFL franchises were insolvent and
the league folded in 1975; the
Memphis
Southmen, the team that had signed Csonka and the most
financially stable of the teams, unsuccessfully sued to join the
NFL.
In 1982, the
United States
Football League formed as a spring league, and enjoyed moderate
success during its first two seasons behind such stars as
Jim Kelly and
Herschel
Walker. It moved its schedule to the fall in 1985, and tried to
compete with the NFL directly, but it was unable to do so and
folded, despite winning an anti-trust suit against the older
league.
The NFL founded a developmental league known as the
World League of American
Football with teams based in the United States, Canada, and
Europe. The WLAF ran for two years, from 1991 to 1992. The league
went on a two-year hiatus before reorganizing as
NFL Europe in 1995, with teams only in European
cities. The name of the league was changed to NFL Europa in 2006.
After the 2007 season, the NFL announced that it was closing down
the league to focus its international marketing efforts in other
ways, such as playing NFL regular season games in cities outside of
the U.S.
In 2001, the
XFL was formed as a joint venture
between the
World
Wrestling Federation and the NBC television network. It folded
after one season because of a lack of fan interest. However, XFL
stars such as
Tommy Maddox and
Rod "He Hate Me" Smart later saw success in the
NFL.
The
United Football
League is a four-team fully professional league which played
its first season in October-November 2009.
Involved in this
league are Mark Cuban, media mogul and
owner of the National
Basketball Association's Dallas
Mavericks and William
Hambrecht, a prominent Wall Street
investor.
Two additional football leagues are scheduled to begin play in the
near future. The
All
American Football League, a six team league scheduled to begin
play in spring 2010, will be based in communities with large
college football followings. Another league, reviving the name of
the
United States
Football League, is scheduled to begin play in February 2010,
though it has had significantly less media coverage than the AAFL
or UFL.
Youth and high school football
American football is a popular participatory sport among youth. One
of the earliest youth football organizations was founded in
Philadelphia, in 1929, as the Junior Football Conference. Organizer
Joe Tomlin started the league to provide activities and guidance
for teenage boys who were vandalizing the factory he owned. The
original four-team league expanded to sixteen teams in 1933 when
Pop Warner, who had just been hired as the new coach of the Temple
University football team, agreed to give a lecture to the boys in
the league. In his honor, the league was renamed the
Pop Warner Conference.
Today,
Pop Warner Little Scholars—as the program is now known—enrolls over
300,000 young boys and girls ages 5–16 in over 5000 football and
cheerleading squads, and has affiliate
programs in Mexico
and
Japan. Other organizations, such as the
Police Athletic League,
Upward, and the National Football League's NFL Youth
Football Program also manage various youth football leagues.
Football is a popular sport for
high
schools in the United States. The
National
Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) was founded
in 1920 as an umbrella organization for
state-level organizations that manage high school
sports, including
high school
football. The NFHS publishes the rules followed by most local
high school football associations. More than 13,000 high schools
participate in football, and in some places high school teams play
in stadiums that rival college-level facilities.
In Denton, Texas
, for example, a 12,000 seat, $21,000,000 stadium
hosts two local high school football teams. The growth of
high school football and its impact on small town communities has
been documented by landmark non-fiction works such as the 1990 book
Friday Night
Lights and the subsequent fictionalized
film and
television series.
American football outside the United States
American football has been played outside the US since the 1920s
and accelerated in popularity after
World
War II, especially in countries with large numbers of U.S.
military personnel, who often formed a substantial proportion of
the players and spectators.
In 1998, the
International
Federation of American Football, was formed to coordinate
international amateur competition. At present, 45 associations from
the
Americas, Europe, Asia and
Oceania are organized within the IFAF, which claims
to represent 23 million amateur athletes.
The IFAF, which is
based in Paris
, France,
organizes the quadrennial American Football World
Cup.
Until 2007, Japan dominated amateur football outside of the USA.
The
Japanese national team won the first two world cups — hosted by
Italy in 1999 and Germany in
2003 — defeating Mexico
in the
play-off on both occasions. Japan had never lost a game
until it went down at home, 23-20, to the
US Amateur
Team in the final of the
2007
World Cup.
Mexico
American
football has been played in Mexico since the early 1920s, and is a
strong minority sport at Mexican colleges and universities, mainly
in Mexico
City
. Over successive decades, more universities
and colleges joined the championship, and four categories, called
fuerzas, were created. The First
Fuerza became
the
National League in
1970. In 1978, this was reorganized under the name
Organización
Nacional Estudiantil de Fútbol Americano (ONEFA).
Japan
The
Japan American
Football Association was founded in 1934 with three collegiate
teams: Rikkyo
, Meiji and Waseda
. By 1937, an allstar game involving teams
representing eastern and western Japan, attracted over 25,000
spectators.
In Japan, high school teams also began to appear. In the 1970s, the
movement of players between Japan and the U.S. increased
dramatically, along with greater exposure on Japanese
television.
Europe
American
football in Europe first began as a four-team tournament between
NATO
allies on the west coast of Italy.
The game
began to take hold in Italy, with the first game between two
European teams occurring between teams from Piacenza
and Legnano
. The
German Football League was formed in
1979. By 1981, the first international games between European
nations occurred, as a two game series between German and Italian
teams.
The first
European governing body, the American European Football Federation
(AEFF) was formed in 1982 by representatives from Finland
, Italy, Germany, Austria
, and France. The league expanded in 1985 to include
Switzerland
, the Netherlands
, and Great Britain
and changed its name to the European Football
League. Now known as the
European Federation of
American Football, it now is made up of 14 member nations.
Today, there are approximately 800 American football clubs
throughout Europe, with Germany's American Football Verband
Deutschland (AFVD) overseeing more than 230 clubs.
Similar codes of football
Other codes of football share a common history with American
football.
Canadian football is a
form of the game that evolved parallel to American football. While
both games share a common history, there are some
important
differences between the two. A more modern sport that derives
from American football is
Arena
football, designed to be played indoors inside of
hockey or
basketball
arenas. The game was invented in 1981 by
Jim Foster and the
Arena Football League was founded in
1987 as the first major professional league to play the sport.
Several other indoor football leagues have since been founded and
continue to play today.
American football's parent sport of rugby continued to evolve.
Today, two distinct codes of rugby, known as
rugby union and
rugby
league are played. Since the
two codes split
in 1895, the
history of rugby
league and the
history of
rugby union have evolved separately.
See also
Notes
References
Further reading
External links