List of NFL tied games

      The National Football League (NFL), known from 1920–21 as the American Professional Football Association (APFA), is an American football league based in the United States. In the NFL, a tied game occurs when a regular season game ends with both teams having an equal score.[1] If a game is tied after regulation (60 minutes, divided into four quarters of 15 minutes), a 15-minute sudden-death overtime period is held. Under current overtime rules adopted in 2012, "teams... have the opportunity to possess the ball at least once in the extra period unless the team that receives the [first] overtime kickoff scores a touchdown on its first possession". If that team instead scores a field goal, the other team has an opportunity to tie or surpass that score.[2] Prior to the rule change, any score by either team in overtime would end the game.[3] Ties have counted as a half-win and half-loss in league standings since 1972; before that, ties were not counted in the standings at all.[4]

      Tie games were once frequent in the NFL, but have become increasingly uncommon due to a rule change in 1974 that extended the existing sudden-death overtime for post-season games into the regular season.[5] Only six ties have occurred since the 1989 season, a statistic that has been attributed to the increasing accuracy of kickers.[6] Unlike in association football (soccer), where teams routinely play for ties due to the benefit of a point in the standings, NFL teams never play for ties; the sudden-death overtime system does not provide for an easy way to finish in a tie. Instead, ties are almost always the result of mishaps or mistakes from the teams involved. Tied games are considered to be the least desired outcome a football game can produce, in part due to an American cultural aversion to ties.[7] Due to the rarity of tied games, some players (such as former Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb) that have participated in one have recounted that they did not think a tie was a possible result for an NFL game.[1][8]

      From 1920 to 1973, the NFL had a total of 256 tied games. Only three seasons (1934, 1950, 1952) went without a tied game, while five seasons (1920, 1923, 1926, 1929, 1932) had at least ten ties. The most ties, 17, occurred in the 1920 season.[9] Since 1974, there have only been 18 tied games, the most recent occurring in the 2012 season when the San Francisco 49ers and St. Louis Rams played to a 24–24 draw. The highest-scoring tie game since the rule change was the first one, a 1974 game where the Pittsburgh Steelers and Denver Broncos tied 35–35. The Green Bay Packers and Philadelphia Eagles share the lead for the most tied games since the rule change, with each team having played in four tied games.

      Tied games (1920 to 1973)

      List of tied games per season from 1920 to 1973
      Season No. of ties
      1920[A][9] 17
      1921 7
      1922 9
      1923 13
      1924 7
      1925 9
      1926 14
      1927 6
      1928 6
      1929 10
      1930 7
      1931 3
      1932 10
      1933 5
      1934 0
      1935 4
      1936 2
      1937 3
      1938 3
      1939 3
      1940 4
      1941 2
      1942 1
      1943 3
      1944 3
      1945 1
      1946 3
      1947 2
      1948 1
      1949 3
      1950 0
      1951 3
      1952 0
      1953 3
      1954 2
      1955 3
      1956 2
      1957 1
      1958 3
      1959 1
      1960 5
      1961 3
      1962 4
      1963 5
      1964 6
      1965 2
      1966 5
      1967 9
      1968 4
      1969 5
      1970 9
      1971 8
      1972 5
      1973 7
      ↑Jump back a section

      Tied games (1974 to present)

      Key
      Symbol Meaning
      Team (X) Denotes the number of times the team has tied a game from 1974 on.
      List of tied games from 1974 on
      No. Date Home team Away team Score Note(s)
      1 01974-09-22September 22, 1974 Denver Broncos Pittsburgh Steelers 35–35 Second regular-season overtime game in NFL history as well as the highest-scoring tie game under modern rules.[6]
      2 01976-09-19September 19, 1976 Minnesota Vikings Los Angeles Rams 10–10
      3 01978-11-26November 26, 1978 Green Bay Packers Minnesota Vikings (2) 10–10 Both teams finished the season with an 8–7–1 record. Minnesota won the NFC Central over Green Bay by virtue of a 1–0–1 head-to-head record.[7]
      4 01980-10-12October 12, 1980 Tampa Bay Buccaneers Green Bay Packers (2) 14–14
      5 01981-10-04October 4, 1981 Miami Dolphins New York Jets 28–28
      6 01982-12-19December 19, 1982 Baltimore Colts Green Bay Packers (3) 20–20 Only game of the season that Baltimore (0–8–1)[B] did not lose.
      7 01983-10-24October 24, 1983 St. Louis Cardinals New York Giants 20–20 Only overtime tie in Monday Night Football history.[12]
      8 01984-11-04November 4, 1984 Detroit Lions Philadelphia Eagles 23–23
      9 01986-10-19October 19, 1986 Atlanta Falcons San Francisco 49ers 10–10
      10 01986-12-07December 7, 1986 Philadelphia Eagles (2) St. Louis Cardinals (2) 10–10
      11 01987-09-20September 20, 1987 Green Bay Packers (4) Denver Broncos 17–17
      12 01988-10-02October 2, 1988 New York Jets (2) Kansas City Chiefs 17–17
      13 01989-11-19November 19, 1989 Cleveland Browns Kansas City Chiefs (2) 10–10
      14 01997-11-16November 16, 1997 Baltimore Ravens Philadelphia Eagles (3) 10–10
      15 01997-11-23November 23, 1997 Washington Redskins New York Giants (2) 7–7 Lowest-scoring tie game under modern rules. In a now infamous incident, Redskins quarterback Gus Frerotte injured himself during the game by headbutting a stadium wall while celebrating the lone Redskins touchdown of the game.[13]
      16 02002-11-10November 10, 2002 Pittsburgh Steelers (2) Atlanta Falcons (2) 34–34 Atlanta mounted a 17-point comeback to force overtime. Pittsburgh wide receiver Plaxico Burress was stopped a yard short of the end zone on the final play of overtime.[14]
      17 02008-11-16November 16, 2008 Philadelphia Eagles (4) Cincinnati Bengals 13–13 Bengals kicker Shayne Graham missed a 47-yard field goal with seven seconds left in overtime.[15]
      18 02012-11-11November 11, 2012 San Francisco 49ers (2) St. Louis Rams 24–24 St. Louis had a game-winning field goal taken away because of a penalty. Both teams missed field goal attempts in the overtime period.[16]
      ↑Jump back a section

      Notes

      Notes
      1. ^ No official standings were recorded throughout the 1920 season and teams played games against opponents outside of the league.[10]
      2. ^ The 1982 season was reduced from 16 to 9 games due to a 57-day players' strike.[11]
      Footnotes
      1. ^ a b Campbell, Dave (November 13, 2012). "Rams-49ers tie likely not enough to alter NFL rule". The Huffington Post. Retrieved February 25, 2013. 
      2. ^ "NFL overtime rules". NFL.com. March 28, 2012. Retrieved February 27, 2013. 
      3. ^ Chase, Chris (March 28, 2012). "NFL passes new overtime rules for regular-season games". Shutdown Corner. Yahoo! Sports. Retrieved February 27, 2013. 
      4. ^ Piascik, Andy (2005). "Old and New Style: Winning Percentages". The Coffin Corner (Professional Football Researchers Association) 27 (5). Retrieved January 16, 2013. 
      5. ^ Jonsson, Patrick (November 12, 2012). "First NFL tie since 2008, between Rams and 49ers: What is this, soccer?". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved February 25, 2013. 
      6. ^ a b Chase, Chris (November 12, 2012). "All recent NFL ties have happened in mid-November and other interesting facts". USA Today. Retrieved February 25, 2013. 
      7. ^ a b Graham, Bryan Armen. "An argument in favor of tie games". Fan Nation. SI.com. Retrieved February 25, 2013. 
      8. ^ Farrar, Doug (November 12, 2012). "49ers and Rams players fail the test when asked about overtime rules". Shutdown Corner. Yahoo! Sports. Retrieved February 25, 2013. 
      9. ^ a b "1920 APFA Weekly League Schedule". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved February 27, 2013. 
      10. ^ "NFL Champions". Pro Football Hall of Fame. Retrieved January 15, 2013. 
      11. ^ "NFL History by Decade: 1981-1990". NFL.com Baltimore finished with zero wins, eight losses, and one tie. Retrieved February 27, 2013. 
      12. ^ Weinfuss, Josh (October 23, 2012). "Amped Up For "Monday Night Football"". Arizona Cardinals. Retrieved February 26, 2013. 
      13. ^ Schremmer, Mak (November 13, 2012). "Redskins Pro Bowler remembered for bizarre celebration". The Joplin Globe. Retrieved March 17, 2013. 
      14. ^ Bouchette, Ed (November 11, 2012). "Steelers settle for tie as Vick rallies Atlanta from 17-point deficit in fourth quarter". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved February 25, 2013. 
      15. ^ "Eagles, Bengals play to NFL's first tie in six years at 13-13". ESPN.com. Retrieved February 25, 2013. 
      16. ^ Gregory, Sean (November 12, 2012). "Unusual Ending: How the NFL Got a Tie Game". Time Magazine. Retrieved February 25, 2013. 
      ↑Jump back a section

      General references

      ↑Jump back a section

      External links

      ↑Jump back a section
      Last modified on 25 May 2013, at 17:28