NFL Playoffs -Schedule and History

NFL Playoff Guide to the Galaxy

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Playoffs-Field

The NFL playoffs begin on Saturday and Sunday, January 9-10, with Wild Card Weekend. On Saturday, the Kansas City Chiefs play at the Houston Texans (ESPN/ABC, 4:35 PM ET) and the Pittsburgh Steelers visit the Cincinnati Bengals (CBS, 8:15 PM ET). Wild Card Weekend continues Sunday with the Seattle Seahawks at the Minnesota Vikings (NBC, 1:05 PM ET) and the Green Bay Packers traveling to face the Washington Redskins (FOX, 4:40 PM ET).

The following week (January 16-17), the New England Patriots (Saturday, CBS, 4:35 PM ET) and Denver Broncos (Sunday, CBS, 4:40 PM ET) in the AFC and the Arizona Cardinals (Saturday, NBC, 8:15 PM ET) and Carolina Panthers (Sunday, FOX, 1:05 PM ET) in the NFC host the Divisional Playoffs. The Broncos and Panthers own home-field advantage for the Conference Championship Games (January 24) if they win their Divisional contests.

The 2016 Pro Bowl will be played on Sunday, January 31 at Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaii (ESPN, 7:00 PM ET) and Super Bowl 50 on Sunday, February 7 at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California (CBS, 6:30 PM ET).

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FRESH FACES & CONSISTENT WINNERS HIGHLIGHT PLAYOFF FIELD

There are four new playoff teams in 2015: Houston, Kansas City, Minnesota and Washington.Since the 12-team playoff format was adopted in 1990, at least four teams have qualified for the playoffs in every season that were not in the postseason the year before.

The teams since 1990 to make the playoffs a season after failing to qualify:

SEASON

PLAYOFF TEAMS NOT IN PREVIOUS SEASON’S PLAYOFFS

1990

7 (Cincinnati, Chicago, Kansas City, Los Angeles Raiders, Miami, New Orleans, Washington)

1991

5 (Atlanta, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, New York Jets)

1992

6 (Miami, Minnesota, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, San Diego, San Francisco)

1993

5 (Denver, Detroit, Green Bay, Los Angeles Raiders, New York Giants)

1994

5 (Chicago, Cleveland, Miami, New England, San Diego)

1995

4 (Atlanta, Buffalo, Indianapolis, Philadelphia)

1996

5  (Carolina, Denver, Jacksonville, Minnesota, New England)

1997

5  (Detroit, Kansas City, Miami, New York Giants, Tampa Bay)

1998

5  (Arizona, Atlanta, Buffalo, Dallas, New York Jets)

1999

7  (Detroit, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Seattle, Tampa Bay, Tennessee, Washington)

2000

6  (Baltimore, Denver, New Orleans, New York Giants, Oakland, Philadelphia)

2001

6  (Chicago, Green Bay, New England, New York Jets, Pittsburgh, San Francisco)

2002

5  (Atlanta, Cleveland, Indianapolis, New York Giants, Tennessee)

2003

8  (Baltimore, Carolina, Dallas, Denver, Kansas City, New England, St. Louis, Seattle)

2004

5  (Atlanta, Minnesota, New York Jets, Pittsburgh, San Diego)

2005

7  (Carolina, Chicago, Cincinnati, Jacksonville, New York Giants, Tampa Bay, Washington)

2006

7  (Baltimore, Dallas, Kansas City, New Orleans, New York Jets, Philadelphia, San Diego)

2007

6  (Green Bay, Jacksonville, Pittsburgh, Tampa Bay, Tennessee, Washington)

2008

7  (Arizona, Atlanta, Baltimore, Carolina, Miami, Minnesota, Philadelphia)

2009

6 (Cincinnati, Dallas, Green Bay, New England, New Orleans, New York Jets)

2010

5 (Atlanta, Chicago, Kansas City, Pittsburgh, Seattle)

2011

6 (Cincinnati, Denver, Detroit, Houston, New York Giants, San Francisco)

2012

4 (Indianapolis, Minnesota, Seattle, Washington)

2013

5 (Carolina, Kansas City, New Orleans, Philadelphia, San Diego)

2014

5 (Arizona, Baltimore, Dallas, Detroit, Pittsburgh)

2015

4 (Houston, Kansas City, Minnesota, Washington)

 

In the 14 seasons since realignment in 2002, 28 of the 32 NFL teams have won a division title at least once.

 

How the 2015 playoff teams have fared in the 14 seasons since realignment in 2002 (2015 division winners in bold/italics):

TEAM

DIVISION TITLES

PLAYOFF BERTHS

New England

12

12

Green Bay

8

11

Seattle

7

10

Pittsburgh

6

9

Denver

6

8

Cincinnati

4

7

Carolina

5

6

Kansas City

2

5

Minnesota

3

5

Arizona

3

4

Washington

2

4

Houston

3

3

NFL: St. Louis Rams at Washington Redskins

The Washington Redskins (NFC East) rebounded to win their division after finishing in last place in 2014. This marked the 12th time in the past 13 seasons in which at least one team went from “worst-to-first” in its division.

The teams to go from “worst-to-first” in their divisions since 2003:

SEASON

TEAM

RECORD

PRIOR SEASON RECORD

ADVANCED TO

2003

Carolina

11-5

7-9

Super Bowl XXXVIII

2003

Kansas City

13-3

8-8*

Divisional Playoffs

2004

Atlanta

11-5

5-11

NFC Championship

2004

San Diego

12-4

4-12*

Wild Card Playoffs

2005

Chicago

11-5

5-11

Divisional Playoffs

2005

Tampa Bay

11-5

5-11

Wild Card Playoffs

2006

Baltimore

13-3

6-10*

Divisional Playoffs

2006

New Orleans

10-6

3-13

NFC Championship

2006

Philadelphia

10-6

6-10

Divisional Playoffs

2007

Tampa Bay

9-7

4-12

Wild Card Playoffs

2008

Miami

11-5

1-15

Wild Card Playoffs

2009

New Orleans

13-3

8-8

Won Super Bowl XLIV

2010

Kansas City

10-6

4-12

Wild Card Playoffs

2011

Denver

8-8

4-12

Divisional Playoffs

2011

Houston

10-6

6-10*

Divisional Playoffs

2012

Washington

10-6

5-11

Wild Card Playoffs

2013

Carolina

12-4

7-9*

Divisional Playoffs

2013

Philadelphia

10-6

4-12

Wild Card Playoffs

2015

Washington

9-7

4-12

???

* Tied for last place

The 2015 field also showcases teams that have enjoyed recent postseason success. Since realignment in 2002, the New England Patriots have been to the playoffs 12 times, which is tied for the most in the NFL. The Green Bay Packers are third with 11 postseason berths and the Seattle Seahawks rank fourth with 10 playoff appearances.

Rob Gronkowski, Tom Brady

The teams with the most playoff appearances since 2002 (includes 2015):

TEAM

POSTSEASON APPEARANCES

New England Patriots*

12

Indianapolis Colts

12

Green Bay Packers*

11

Seattle Seahawks*

10

Pittsburgh Steelers*

9

Baltimore Ravens

8

Denver Broncos*

8

Philadelphia Eagles

8

          *In 2015 postseason

 

Lombardi Trophy 940

Four of this season’s 12 playoff teams have won at least one Super Bowl since 2001, capturing eight of the past 14 Vince Lombardi Trophies. Those teams are Green Bay (XLV), New England (XXXVI, XXXVIII, XXXIX and XLIX), Pittsburgh (XL, XLIII) and Seattle (XLVIII).

SUPER BOWL

SEASON

WINNER

XXXVI

2001

New England*

XXXVII

2002

Tampa Bay

XXXVIII

2003

New England*

XXXIX

2004

New England*

XL

2005

Pittsburgh*

XLI

2006

Indianapolis

XLII

2007

New York Giants

XLIII

2008

Pittsburgh*

XLIV

2009

New Orleans

XLV

2010

Green Bay*

XLVI

2011

New York Giants

XLVII

2012

Baltimore

XLVIII

2013

Seattle*

XLIX

2014

New England*

                                                         *In 2015 postseason

 

ALL-TIME PLAYOFFS

Packers

The Green Bay Packers will participate in the playoffs for the 31st time, tying the Dallas Cowboys and New York Giants for the most postseason appearances in NFL history. The Pittsburgh Steelers are making their 29th postseason appearance, the fourth-most in league history.

The teams with the most seasons participating in the playoffs (includes 2015):

TEAM

PLAYOFF BERTHS

Green Bay Packers

31*

Dallas Cowboys

31

New York Giants

31

Pittsburgh Steelers

29*

                                                           *In 2015 playoffs

The 12 playoff teams and their postseason records:

 

TEAM

WINS    LOSSES

PCT.

New England Patriots

28

18

.609

Green Bay Packers

31

20

.608

Pittsburgh Steelers

33

22

.600

Washington Redskins

23

18

.561

Carolina Panthers

7

6

.538

Seattle Seahawks

14

13

.519

Denver Broncos

20

19

.513

Houston Texans

2

2

.500

Arizona Cardinals

6

8

.429

Minnesota Vikings

19

27

.413

Kansas City Chiefs

8

15

.348

Cincinnati Bengals

5

13

.278

 

WILD CARD RECORDS

TEAM

WINS

LOSSES

PCT.

Houston Texans

2

0

1.000

Washington Redskins

6

2

.750

Green Bay Packers

8

5

.615

Seattle Seahawks

6

4

.600

Minnesota Vikings

6

6

.500

Pittsburgh Steelers

4

5

.444

Kansas City Chiefs

2

7

.222

Cincinnati Bengals

1

7

.125

DIVISIONAL RECORDS

TEAM

WINS

LOSSES

PCT.

New England Patriots

11

6

.647

Denver Broncos

9

6

.600

Carolina Panthers

3

3

.500

Arizona Cardinals

1

4

.200

 

 

THE TEAMS

Aaron Rodgers against the Buffalo Bills

WINNING FEELINGThe Green Bay Packers have won 13 NFL championships, the most in league history. Of the 12 playoff teams this season, eight have won at least one championship.

NFL championships won by the 2015 playoff teams:

TEAM

NFL CHAMPIONSHIP(S)

SEASON(S)

Green Bay Packers

13

1929-31, 1936, 1939, 1944, 1961-62, 1965-67, 1996, 2010

Pittsburgh Steelers

6

1974-75, 1978-79, 2005, 2008

Washington Redskins

5

1937, 1942, 1982, 1987, 1991

New England Patriots

4

2001, 2003-04, 2014

Arizona Cardinals

2

1925, 1947

Denver Broncos

2

1997-98

Kansas City Chiefs

1

1969

Seattle Seahawks

1

2013

Carolina Panthers

0

Cincinnati Bengals

0

Houston Texans

0

Minnesota Vikings

0

– NFL –

 

Ben Roethlisberger, Pernell McPhee

PLAYOFF SUCCESS: The Pittsburgh Steelers have won 33 postseason games and need one more win to tie Dallas (34) for the most in NFL history. The Green Bay Packers (31) and New England Patriots (28) rank third and fifth, respectively, on the all-time postseason wins list.

The teams with the most playoff victories in NFL history:

TEAM

PLAYOFF WINS

Dallas Cowboys

34

Pittsburgh Steelers*

33

Green Bay Packers*

31

San Francisco 49ers

30

New England Patriots*

28

                                                         *In 2015 playoffs

 

Postseason victories for the 2015 playoff teams:

TEAM

PLAYOFF WINS

Pittsburgh Steelers

33

Green Bay Packers

31

New England Patriots

28

Washington Redskins

23

Denver Broncos

20

Minnesota Vikings

19

Seattle Seahawks

14

Kansas City Chiefs

8

Carolina Panthers

7

Arizona Cardinals

6

Cincinnati Bengals

5

Houston Texans

2

 

 

– NFL –

 nfl-logo-grass

HOME SWEET HOME…MAYBE: While home-field advantage throughout the playoffs is a coveted prize, it has been no guarantee of a trip to the Super Bowl. And like so much about the NFL, an unpredictable result is seemingly the only predictable outcome.

Since the NFL adopted the 12-team playoff format in 1990, only 25 of the 50 (50 percent) No. 1 seeds have advanced to the Super Bowl, with 11 No. 1 seeds being crowned champions (22 percent). How the No. 1 seeds have fared since 1990:

SEASON

AFC NO. 1 SEED

SEASON RESULT

 

NFC NO. 1 SEED

SEASON RESULT

1990

Buffalo

Lost Super Bowl XXV

San Francisco

Lost NFC Championship

1991

Buffalo

Lost Super Bowl XXVI

Washington

Won Super Bowl XXVI

1992

Pittsburgh

Lost Divisional

San Francisco

Lost NFC Championship

1993

Buffalo

Lost Super Bowl XXVIII

Dallas

Won Super Bowl XXVIII

1994

Pittsburgh

Lost AFC Championship

San Francisco

Won Super Bowl XXIX

1995

Kansas City

Lost Divisional

Dallas

Won Super Bowl XXX

1996

Denver

Lost Divisional

Green Bay

Won Super Bowl XXXI

1997

Kansas City

Lost Divisional

San Francisco

Lost NFC Championship

1998

Denver

Won Super Bowl XXXIII

Minnesota

Lost NFC Championship

1999

Jacksonville

Lost AFC Championship

St. Louis

Won Super Bowl XXXIV

2000

Tennessee

Lost Divisional

New York Giants

Lost Super Bowl XXXV

2001

Pittsburgh

Lost AFC Championship

St. Louis

Lost Super Bowl XXXVI

2002

Oakland

Lost Super Bowl XXXVII

Philadelphia

Lost NFC Championship

2003

New England

Won Super Bowl XXXVIII

Philadelphia

Lost NFC Championship

2004

Pittsburgh

Lost AFC Championship

Philadelphia

Lost Super Bowl XXXIX

2005

Indianapolis

Lost Divisional

Seattle

Lost Super Bowl XL

2006

San Diego

Lost Divisional

Chicago

Lost Super Bowl XLI

2007

New England

Lost Super Bowl XLII

Dallas

Lost Divisional

2008

Tennessee

Lost Divisional

New York Giants

Lost Divisional

2009

Indianapolis

Lost Super Bowl XLIV

New Orleans

Won Super Bowl XLIV

2010

New England

Lost Divisional

Atlanta

Lost Divisional

2011

New England

Lost Super Bowl XLVI

Green Bay

Lost Divisional

2012

Denver

Lost Divisional

 

Atlanta

Lost NFC Championship

2013

Denver

Lost Super Bowl XLVIII

Seattle

Won Super Bowl XLVIII

2014

New England

Won Super Bowl XLIX

Seattle

Lost Super Bowl XLIX

2015

Denver

??

 

Carolina

??

 

– NFL –

 NFL: New York Jets at New England Patriots

DIVISION DOMINANCE: Since realignment in 2002, the New England Patriots have won 12 division titles, the most in the NFL during that span. The Green Bay Packers lead the NFC with eight division titles since 2002.

The teams with the most division titles since 2002:

TEAM

DIVISION TITLES

New England*

12

Indianapolis

9

Green Bay

8

Seattle

7

Denver*

6

Philadelphia

6

Pittsburgh

6

           *2015 division champion

 

 

– NFL –

 rsz_tom-brady-super-bowl-xlix-new-england-patriots-qbmx_z4yvmmx

PATRIOT PLACEThe New England Patriots won the AFC East for the seventh consecutive season in 2015, tying the Los Angeles Rams (1973-79) for the most consecutive division titles in NFL history.

The Denver Broncos secured their fifth consecutive AFC West title this season, which is tied for the seventh-longest streak in NFL annals.

The teams to finish first in their division in the most consecutive seasons:

 

TEAM

YEARS

CONSECUTIVE FIRST-PLACE FINISHES

Los Angeles Rams

1973-79

7

New England Patriots

2009-15*

7

Cleveland Browns

1950-55

6

Dallas Cowboys

1966-71

6

Minnesota Vikings

1973-78

6

Pittsburgh Steelers

1974-79

6

Seven teams tied

5

*Active streak

 

– NFL –

 Greg Olsen, Carolina Panthers, Photo credit: Associated Press

UNDEFEATED AT HOME: The Carolina Panthers finished the 2015 regular season undefeated at home.

Since 2000, 26 teams – including the Panthers this year – have posted a perfect regular-season record at home. Of the previous 25 teams before the 2015 season, five have gone to the Super Bowl (20 percent).

The teams (since 2000) to finish with 8-0 records at home and their final season result:

SEASON

TEAM

OVERALL

RESULT

2002

Green Bay Packers

12-4

Advanced to Wild Card

2003

Kansas City Chiefs

13-3

Advanced to Divisional

2003

New England Patriots

14-2

Won Super Bowl XXXVIII

2003

St. Louis Rams

12-4

Advanced to Divisional

2003

Seattle Seahawks

10-6

Advanced to Wild Card

2004

New England Patriots

14-2

Won Super Bowl XXXIX

2004

Pittsburgh Steelers

15-1

Advanced to AFC Championship

2005

Denver Broncos

13-3

Advanced to AFC Championship

2005

Seattle Seahawks

13-3

Advanced to Super Bowl XL

2006

Indianapolis Colts

12-4

Won Super Bowl XLI

2006

San Diego Chargers

14-2

Advanced to Divisional

2007

New England Patriots

16-0

Advanced to Super Bowl XLII

2008

Carolina Panthers

12-4

Advanced to Divisional

2009

New England Patriots

10-6

Advanced to Wild Card

2009

Minnesota Vikings

12-4

Advanced to NFC Championship

2010

New England Patriots

14-2

Advanced to Divisional

2011

Baltimore Ravens

12-4

Advanced to AFC Championship

2011

Green Bay Packers

15-1

Advanced to Divisional

2011

New Orleans Saints

13-3

Advanced to Divisional

2012

Seattle Seahawks

11-5

Advanced to Divisional

2013

Cincinnati Bengals

11-5

Advanced to Wild Card

2013

New England Patriots

12-4

Advanced to AFC Championship

2013

New Orleans Saints

11-5

Advanced to Divisional

2014

Denver Broncos

12-4

Advanced to Divisional

2014

Green Bay Packers

12-4

Advanced to NFC Championship

2015

Carolina Panthers

15-1

???

 

 

– NFL –

 Richard Sherman Seahawks

SUPER ENCORE: The Seattle Seahawks posted a 10-6 record this season and became the 16th Super Bowl runner-up since 1990 to qualify for the playoffs the following season.

Since 1990, the Super Bowl runner-ups to advance to the postseason:

YEAR

TEAM

RECORD

RESULT

1991

Buffalo

13-3

Won division; Advanced to Super Bowl XXVI

1992

Buffalo

11-5

Wild Card; Advanced to Super Bowl XXVII

1993

Buffalo

12-4

Won division; Advanced to Super Bowl XXVIII

1995

San Diego

9-7

Wild Card; Advanced to Wild Card

1996

Pittsburgh

10-6

Won division; Advanced to Divisional

1997

New England

10-6

Won division; Advanced to Divisional

1998

Green Bay

11-5

Wild Card; Advanced to Wild Card

2000

Tennessee

13-3

Won division; Advanced to Divisional

2006

Seattle

9-7

Won division; Advanced to Divisional

2009

Arizona

10-6

Won division; Advanced to Divisional

2010

Indianapolis

10-6

Won division; Advanced to Wild Card

2011

Pittsburgh

12-4

Wild Card; Advanced to Wild Card

2012

New England

12-4

Won division; Advanced to AFC Championship

2013

San Francisco

12-4

Wild Card; Advanced to NFC Championship

2014

Denver

12-4

Won division; Advanced to Divisional

2015

Seattle

10-6

Wild Card; ???

– NFL –

 

 

OT & PLAYOFFS – WINNING COMBINATION: The playoffs have featured at least one overtime game in 12 of the past 15 postseasons.

In 2010, the NFL adopted a modified sudden-death system for the playoffs, which was expanded to cover all NFL games in 2012. The system guarantees each team a possession or the opportunity to possess, unless the team that receives the opening kickoff scores a touchdown on its initial possession. Play continues in sudden death until a winner is determined, and the game automatically ends upon any score.

A look at NFL overtime playoff games since 2000:

SEASON

ROUND

TEAMS

GAME-WINNING SCORE

2000

WC

Miami 23, Indianapolis 17

RB Lamar Smith scores on 17-yard TD run.

2001

Div.

New England 16, Oakland 13

K Adam Vinatieri connects on 23-yard FG.

2002

Div.

Tennessee 34, Pittsburgh 31

K Joe Nedney wins it with 26-yard FG.

2003

WC

Green Bay 33, Seattle 27

CB Al Harris returns INT 52 yards for TD.

2003

Div.

Carolina 29, St. Louis 23 (2 OT)

QB Jake Delhomme connects with WR Steve Smith on 69-yd TD.

2003

Div.

Philadelphia 20, Green Bay 17

K David Akers wins game with 31-yard FG.

2004

WC

NY Jets 20, San Diego 17

K Doug Brien converts 28-yard FG.

2004

Div.

Pittsburgh 20, NY Jets 17

K Jeff Reed connects on 33-yard game-winner.

2006

Div.

Chicago 27, Seattle 24

K Robbie Gould converts game-winning 49-yard FG.

2007

Champ.

NY Giants 23, Green Bay 20

K Lawrence Tynes wins it with 47-yard FG.

2008

WC

San Diego 23, Indianapolis 17

RB Darren Sproles scores on 22-yard TD run.

2009

WC

Arizona 51, Green Bay 45

LB Karlos Dansby scores on 17-yard FR-TD.

2009

Champ.

New Orleans 31, Minnesota 28

K Garrett Hartley converts 40-yard game-winning FG.

2011

WC

Denver 29, Pittsburgh 23

WR Demaryius Thomas catches 80-yard TD from QB Tim Tebow.

2011

Champ.

NY Giants 20, San Francisco 17

K Lawrence Tynes connects on 31-yard FG.

2012

Div.

Baltimore 38, Denver 35 (2 OT)

K Justin Tucker converts 47-yard game-winning FG.

2014

Champ.

Seattle 28, Green Bay 22

QB Russell Wilson throws 35-yard TD to WR Jermaine Kearse.

– NFL –

 

resizepeytonfeature

THE PLAYERS

POSTSEASON QUARTERBACKS: Quarterbacks TOM BRADY of New England, PEYTON MANNING of Denver, AARON RODGERS of Green Bay and RUSSELL WILSON of Seattle have enjoyed postseason success. They all rank among the leaders in many postseason passing categories.

Rodgers (101.0) ranks third all-time in career postseason passer rating, trailing only Pro Football Hall of Famer BART STARR (104.8) and KURT WARNER (102.8). Wilson (97.8) ranks fifth all-time.

The quarterbacks with the highest postseason passer rating (min. 150 attempts):

 

QUARTERBACK

COMP.

ATT.

YARDS

TD

INT

RATING

Bart Starr

130

213

1,753

15

3

104.8

Kurt Warner

307

462

3,952

31

14

102.8

Aaron Rodgers*

253

387

2,983

23

7

101.0

Drew Brees*

306

464

3,539

24

6

100.7

Russell Wilson*

123

202

1,820

12

6

97.8

                                   *Active

Brady is the all-time postseason passing leader in career attempts (1,085), completions (683), yards (7,345) and touchdowns (53). Manning ranks second in attempts (935), completions (598) and yards (6,800) and ranks fourth all-time in touchdown passes (38).

The top five all-time playoff leaders in completions, attempts, passing yards and touchdowns:

PLAYER

COMPLETIONS

PLAYER

ATTEMPTS

Tom Brady*

683

Tom Brady*

1,085

Peyton Manning*

598

Peyton Manning*

935

Brett Favre

481

Brett Favre

791

Joe Montana

460

Joe Montana

734

Dan Marino

385

Dan Marino

687

*Active in 2015 playoffs

*Active in 2015 playoffs

PLAYER

PASSING YARDS

PLAYER

TD PASSES

Tom Brady*

7,345

Tom Brady*

53

Peyton Manning*

6,800

Joe Montana

45

Brett Favre

5,855

Brett Favre

44

Joe Montana

5,772

Peyton Manning*

38

John Elway

4,964

Dan Marino

32

*Active in 2015 playoffs

*Active in 2015 playoffs

Manning has nine career 300-yard passing games in the postseason, the most all-time, while Brady (eight) ranks second.

QUARTERBACK

PLAYOFF GAMES

300-YARD GAMES

Peyton Manning*

24

9

Tom Brady*

29

8

Joe Montana

23

6

Kurt Warner

13

6

Drew Brees

11

6

                                              *Active in 2015 playoffs

Aaron Rodgers 350

Rodgers has completed 253 of 387 passes for a 65.4 completion percentage, the fifth-best mark in league playoff history.

The quarterbacks with the highest postseason completion percentage (min. 150 attempts):

QUARTERBACK

ATT.

COMP.

PCT.

Kurt Warner

462

307

66.5

Matt Ryan

187

124

66.3

Ken Anderson

166

110

66.3

Drew Brees

464

306

65.9

Aaron Rodgers*

387

253

65.4

                                                      *Active in 2015 playoffs

 

Arizona Cardinals v Seattle Seahawks 

AIR ATTACK: Seattle quarterback RUSSELL WILSON is averaging 9.01 yards per pass attempt (1,820 yards, 202 attempts), the highest in NFL postseason history (minimum 200 attempts).

The quarterbacks with the highest postseason yards per attempt average (min. 200 attempts):

QUARTERBACK

PASS YARDS

ATTEMPTS

YARDS/ATT.

Russell Wilson*

1,820

202

9.01

Kurt Warner

3,952

462

8.55

Joe Theismann

1,782

211

8.45

Jim Plunkett

2,293

272

8.43

Terry Bradshaw

3,833

456

8.41

                                          *Active in 2015 postseason

 

– NFL –

PASSING BY: Quarterbacks PEYTON MANNING of Denver and AARON RODGERS of Green Bay have each had a 400-yard passing game in the postseason.

Manning (three) is one of two quarterbacks in NFL postseason history with three 400-yard passing games (DREW BREES).

The 19 400-yard passing performances in NFL postseason history:

QUARTERBACK

TEAM

OPPONENT

DATE

PASSING YARDS

Bernie Kosar

Cleveland

New York Jets

1/3/87

489

Drew Brees

New Orleans

Detroit

1/7/12

466

Drew Brees

New Orleans

San Francisco

1/14/12

462

Peyton Manning*

Indianapolis

Denver

1/9/05

458

Andrew Luck

Indianapolis

Kansas City

1/4/14

443

Dan Fouts

San Diego

Miami

1/2/82

433

Kelly Holcomb

Cleveland

Pittsburgh

1/5/03

429

Jeff George

Minnesota

St. Louis

1/16/00

423

Aaron Rodgers*

Green Bay

Arizona

1/10/10

423

Dan Marino

Miami

Buffalo

12/30/95

422

Dan Marino

Miami

Pittsburgh

1/6/85

421

Kurt Warner

St. Louis

Tennessee

1/30/00

414

Randall Cunningham

Philadelphia

Chicago

12/31/88

407

Jim Kelly

Buffalo

Cleveland

1/6/90

405

Drew Brees

New Orleans

Seattle

1/8/11

404

Don Strock

Miami

San Diego

1/2/82

403

Peyton Manning*

Indianapolis

San Diego

1/13/08

402

Daryle Lamonica

Oakland

New York Jets

12/29/68

401

Peyton Manning*

Denver

New England

1/19/14

400

*Active in 2015 postseason

– NFL –

Tom Brady

SUPER BOWL MVPs: There are three players – all quarterbacks – in the 2015 postseason who have been named Super Bowl MVPTOM BRADY of New England (XXXVI, XXXVIII, XLIX),PEYTON MANNING of Denver (XLI with Indianapolis) and AARON RODGERS of Green Bay (XLV).

Brady, who was named the MVP of last year’s Super Bowl, and Pro Football Hall of Famer JOE MONTANA are the only players to win the award three times.

The five players in NFL history to be named Super Bowl MVP multiple times:

PLAYER

TEAM

SUPER BOWL MVPs

Tom Brady*

New England

3 (XXXVI, XXXVIII, XLIX)

Joe Montana

San Francisco

3 (XVI, XIX, XXIV)

Terry Bradshaw

Pittsburgh

2 (XIII, XIV)

Eli Manning

New York Giants

2 (XLII, XLVI)

Bart Starr

Green Bay

2 (I, II)

       *Active in 2015 playoffs

 

– NFL –

 

WHEN IT COUNTS: New England quarterback TOM BRADY has a 21-8 (.724) career postseason record, the most playoff wins all-time by a starting quarterback.

The starting quarterbacks with the most playoff wins in NFL history:

QUARTERBACK

TEAM(S)

PLAYOFF WINS

Tom Brady*

New England Patriots 

21

Joe Montana

San Francisco 49ers, Kansas City Chiefs

16

Terry Bradshaw

Pittsburgh Steelers

14

John Elway

Denver Broncos

14

Brett Favre

Green Bay Packers, Minnesota Vikings

13

                               *Active in 2015 playoffs

 

Brady has an 21-8 (.724) postseason record, trailing only Pro Football Hall of FamersTERRY BRADSHAW and TROY AIKMAN for the best winning percentage as a starting quarterback in NFL playoff history (minimum 15 starts).

Pittsburgh’s BEN ROETHLISBERGER (10-5, .667) is tied for fifth all-time.

 

The quarterbacks with the best winning percentage in postseason starts (minimum 15 starts):

QUARTERBACK

WIN PCT.

RECORD

Terry Bradshaw

.737

14-5

Troy Aikman

.733

11-4

Tom Brady*

.724

21-8

Joe Montana

.696

16-7

John Elway

.667

14-7

Joe Flacco

.667

10-5

Ben Roethlisberger*

.667

10-5

                                    *Active in 2015 playoffs

– NFL –

resbenfeature

A PROVEN WINNERNew England’s TOM BRADY is one of three quarterbacks in NFL history to win four Super Bowls.

Only 11 QBs in NFL history have won multiple Super Bowls. Of the 11, three are active, including Pittsburgh’s BEN ROETHLISBERGER (two), and seven have been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

The starting quarterbacks to win multiple Super Bowls:

QUARTERBACK

SUPER BOWL WINS

Tom Brady**

4

Terry Bradshaw*

4

Joe Montana*

4

Troy Aikman*

3

John Elway*

2

Bob Griese*

2

Eli Manning

2

Jim Plunkett

2

Ben Roethlisberger**

2

Bart Starr*

2

Roger Staubach*

2

                                                         *Member of Pro Football Hall of Fame

                                                         **Active in 2015 playoffs

 

 

– NFL –

 

Andy Dalton Bengals

PLAYOFF STARTERS: Cincinnati quarterback ANDY DALTON helped lead the Bengals to the postseason for the fifth consecutive season and can join JOE FLACCO as the only quarterbacks during the Super Bowl era to start a playoff game in each of their first five seasons beginning with their rookie year.

Seattle’s RUSSELL WILSON led the Seahawks to the postseason and can join Dalton and Flacco as the only Super Bowl-era quarterbacks to start a playoff game in each of his first four career seasons.

 

The quarterbacks to start a playoff game in each of their first four seasons in the Super Bowl era (since 1966):

QUARTERBACK

SEASONS

TEAM

Joe Flacco

2008-12

Baltimore Ravens

Andy Dalton*

2011-15

Cincinnati Bengals

 

 

 

Russell Wilson*

2012-15

Seattle Seahawks

*Active in 2015 postseason

– NFL –

DANGER-RUSS: Seattle quarterback RUSSELL WILSON has guided the Seahawks to the Super Bowl in each of the past two seasons. He is aiming to join Pro Football Hall of FamersBOB GRIESE and JIM KELLY as the only quarterbacks to start three consecutive Super Bowls.

QUARTERBACK

TEAM

CONSECUTIVE SUPER BOWL STARTS

SUPER BOWLS

Jim Kelly

Buffalo Bills

4

XXV, XXVI, XXVII, XXVIII

Bob Griese

Miami Dolphins

3

VI, VII, VIII

Russell Wilson

Seattle Seahawks

  2*

XLVIII, XLIX

Wilson led the Seahawks to a win in Super Bowl XLVIII and can become the 12th quarterback in NFL history to win multiple Super Bowls.

Wilson has six postseason victories and needs one win to pass TOM BRADY (six) for the most postseason wins in a quarterback’s first four seasons.

– NFL –

alex smith 940

STREAKING SMITHKansas City quarterback ALEX SMITH has made three career postseason starts, completing 66 of 114 passes (57.9 percent) for 873 yards with nine touchdowns and no interceptions for a 108.6 passer rating.

Smith’s streak of 114 attempts without an INT is the second-longest in NFL postseason history to begin a career, trailing only JEFF HOSTETLER (115).

The most consecutive pass attempts without an interception to start a career in postseason history:

POSTSEASON TO START A CAREER

PLAYER

YEAR(S)

CONSECUTIVE PASS ATTEMPTS WITHOUT INT

Jeff Hostetler

1991-94

115

Alex Smith

2012-present

114*

Roger Staubach

1969-73

103

Peyton Manning

2000-03

101

*Active streak

 

Smith’s nine postseason touchdowns without an interception are already the most consecutive TD passes without an INT in history to begin a postseason career:

POSTSEASON TO START A CAREER

PLAYER

YEAR(S)

CONSECUTIVE TD PASSES WITHOUT INT

Alex Smith

2012-present

9*

Roger Staubach

1969-73

7

Tony Eason

1985-87

7

Jeff Hostetler

1991-94

7

*Active streak

 – NFL –

rsz_teddy-bridgewater-washington-redskins-v-minnesota-4siwtm4lil_l

FIRST-TIMERS: Minnesota’s TEDDY BRIDGEWATER, Washington’s KIRK COUSINS and Houston’s BRIAN HOYER will make their playoff debuts this postseason. Cincinnati’s AJ MC CARRON and Denver’s BROCK OSWEILER also played prominent roles for their respective clubs at the close of the regular season.

The players with the most passing yards in their first career postseason start:

PLAYER

TEAM

PASSING YARDS

Kelly Holcomb

Cleveland Browns

429

Aaron Rodgers

Green Bay Packers

423

Randall Cunningham

Philadelphia Eagles

407

Kurt Warner

St. Louis Rams

391

Neil Lomax

St. Louis Cardinals

385

– NFL –

Carson Palmer_Arizona Cardinals1

TAKING A PASS: Seattle quarterback RUSSELL WILSON led the NFL with a 110.1 passer rating and the top five in the category – Wilson, Cincinnati’s ANDY DALTON (106.3), Arizona’sCARSON PALMER (104.6), New England’s TOM BRADY (102.2) and Washington’s KIRK COUSINS (101.6) – all lead playoff teams.

The quarterbacks with the highest passer rating in a single postseason (min. 50 attempts):

 

QUARTERBACK

TEAM

SEASON

ATT.

COMP.

YARDS

TD

INT

RATING

Joe Montana

San Francisco

1989

83

65

800

11

0

146.4

Bart Starr

Green Bay

1966

51

35

554

6

1

135.6

Phil Simms

New York Giants

1986

58

38

494

8

0

131.8

Kurt Warner

Arizona

2009

59

46

584

5

1

129.1

Troy Aikman

Dallas

1992

89

61

795

8

0

126.4

– NFL –

Tampa Bay Buccaneers v Minnesota Vikings

RUSHING INTO THE RECORD BOOKS: Minnesota running back ADRIAN PETERSON led the NFL with 1,485 rushing yards, the third time in his career he was the league’s rushing champion.

Seattle running back MARSHAWN LYNCH has led the NFL in postseason rushing yards in each of the past two seasons.

The players with the most rushing yards in a single postseason:

PLAYER

TEAM

SEASON

YARDS

TD

John Riggins

Washington Redskins

1982

610

4

Terrell Davis

Denver Broncos

1997

581

8

Terrell Davis

Denver Broncos

1998

468

3

Marcus Allen

L.A. Raiders

1983

466

4

Eddie George

Tennessee Titans

1999

449

3

– NFL –

David Johnson, Adrian Amos

CARDINAL RULE: Arizona running back DAVID JOHNSON led NFL rookies with 13 total touchdowns in 2015 (eight rushing, four receiving and one kickoff return).

The rookies with the most total touchdowns in a single postseason:

PLAYER

TEAM

SEASON

TOTAL TDs

William Floyd

San Francisco 49ers

1994

5

Norm Standlee

Chicago Bears

1941

4

Tony Dorsett

Dallas Cowboys

1977

4

Jamal Lewis

Baltimore Ravens

2000

4

 

Johnson rushed for 581 yards and eight touchdowns, the most among rookies in the 2015 playoff field.

The rookies with the most rushing yards in a single postseason:

PLAYER

TEAM

SEASON

RUSH YARDS

Timmy Smith

Washington Redskins

1987

342

Jamal Lewis

Baltimore Ravens

2000

338

James Starks

Green Bay Packers

2010

315

Duane Thomas

Dallas Cowboys

1970

313

Ickey Woods

Cincinnati Bengals

1988

307

The rookies with the most rushing touchdowns in a single postseason:

PLAYER,

TEAM

SEASON

RUSH TDs

Norm Standlee

Chicago Bears

1941

4

Tony Dorsett

Dallas Cowboys

1977

4

William Floyd

San Francisco 49ers

1994

4

Jamal Lewis

Baltimore Ravens

2000

4

– NFL –

 

Larry+Fitzgerald+Arizona+Cardinals+v+Philadelphia+0Pl3f8zeVJhl

CATCH ME IF YOU CANArizona wide receiver LARRY FITZGERALD holds NFL records for the most catches (30), receiving yards (546) and touchdown receptions (seven) in a single postseason. He set all three marks during the 2008 playoffs when the Cardinals advanced to Super Bowl XLIII.

The players with the most receptions, receiving yards and touchdown catches in a single postseason:

MOST CATCHES, SINGLE POSTSEASON

PLAYER

TEAM

SEASON

CATCHES

Larry Fitzgerald

Arizona Cardinals

2008

30

Hakeem Nicks

New York Giants

2011

28

Demaryius Thomas

Denver Broncos

2013

28

Steve Smith

Carolina Panthers

2005

27

Wes Welker

New England Patriots

2007

27

MOST RECEIVING YARDS, SINGLE POSTSEASON

PLAYER

TEAM

SEASON

YARDS

Larry Fitzgerald

Arizona Cardinals

2008

546

Hakeem Nicks

New York Giants

2011

444

Jerry Rice

San Francisco 49ers

1988

409

Steve Smith

Carolina Panthers

2003

404

Charlie Brown

Washington Redskins

1983

401

 

MOST TD CATCHES, SINGLE POSTSEASON

PLAYER

TEAM

SEASON

TD CATCHES

Larry Fitzgerald

Arizona Cardinals

2008

7

Jerry Rice

San Francisco 49ers

1988

6

Dave Casper

Oakland Raiders

1977

5

Alvin Garrett

Washington Redskins

1982

5

Jerry Rice

San Francisco 49ers

1989

5

CATCHING ON: Arizona wide receiver LARRY FITZGERALD has nine touchdowns receptions in his postseason career. With one touchdown catch, Fitzgerald will become the seventh player in NFL history with at least 10 postseason touchdown receptions and move into a tie for the third-most all-time.

 

The top five all-time playoff leaders in touchdown receptions:

PLAYER

TD RECEPTIONS

Jerry Rice

22

John Stallworth

12

Fred Biletnikoff

10

Antonio Freeman

10

Randy Moss

10

Hines Ward

10

Larry Fitzgerald*

  9

                                                              *Active in 2015 postseason

 

 

– NFL –

gronkowski.iooss8

WELCOME RECEPTION: There are 11 players in the 2015 playoff field who recorded at least 1,000 receiving yards in the regular season: Pittsburgh’s ANTONIO BROWN (1,834), Houston’sDE ANDRE HOPKINS (1,521), Denver’s DEMARYIUS THOMAS (1,304) and EMMANUEL SANDERS (1,135), Cincinnati’s A.J. GREEN (1,297), Arizona’s LARRY FITZGERALD (1,215) and JOHN BROWN (1,003), New England’s ROB GRONKOWSKI (1,176), Carolina’s GREG OLSEN (1,104), Kansas City’s JEREMY MACLIN (1,088) and Seattle’s DOUG BALDWIN(1,069).

The players with the most receiving yards in a single postseason:

PLAYER, TEAM

SEASON

REC.

RECEIVING YARDS

TD

Larry Fitzgerald, Arizona

2008

30

546

7

Hakeem Nicks, New York Giants

2011

28

444

4

Jerry Rice, San Francisco

1988

21

409

6

Steve Smith, Carolina

2003

18

404

3

Charlie Brown, Washington

1983

14

401

1

There have been eight 200-yard receiving games in NFL postseason history.

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