The 1946 NFL season was the 27th regular season of the National Football League. Before the season, Elmer Layden resigned as NFL Commissioner and Bert Bell, co-founder of the Philadelphia Eagles, replaced him. Meanwhile, the All-America Football Conference was formed to rival the NFL, and the Rams became the first NFL team based on the West Coast after they relocated from Cleveland, Ohio, to Los Angeles, California. A regular season game was played on Tuesday, the last until the 2010 season, on October 1, between New York and Boston.

1946 NFL season
Regular season
DurationSeptember 20 – December 8, 1946
East ChampionsNew York Giants
West ChampionsChicago Bears
Championship Game
ChampionsChicago Bears
1946 NFL season is located in the United States
Giants
Giants
Cardinals ....
Cardinals ....
Eagles
Eagles
Steelers ....
Steelers ....
Redskins
Redskins
Yanks
Yanks
Bears
Bears
Packers
Packers
Rams
Rams
Lions
Lions
NFL teams: West, East

The season ended when the Chicago Bears defeated the New York Giants in the NFL Championship Game.

Draft edit

The 1946 NFL Draft was held on January 14, 1946, at New York City's Commodore Hotel. With the first pick, the Boston Yanks selected quarterback Frank Dancewicz from the University of Notre Dame.

Major rule changes edit

  • A forward pass that strikes the goal posts is automatically ruled incomplete.
  • The free substitution rule was repealed, and substitutions were limited to no more than three players at a time.
  • The receiving team is permitted to return punts and missed field goal attempts from behind their own goal line.
  • The penalty for an invalid fair catch signal is 5 yards from the spot of the signal.
  • A fair catch signal is valid when it is made while the ball is in flight.

Division races edit

In the Eastern Division, the Giants, Eagles, and Steelers all had 4-2 records in Week Seven of an 11-week season, while in the Western Division, the Bears' 10–7 win over the Packers on November 3 put them a game ahead of the Rams.

In Week Eight, the Giants beat the Eagles 45–17, the Steelers lost to Detroit 17–7, and the Bears beat the Rams 27–21 to widen their lead.

Week Nine saw Giants tie with Boston, 28–28, putting them at 5–2–1, while the Steelers beat the Eagles 10–7 to be a half-game behind at 5–3–1.

The teams met in New York in Week Ten, and the Giants' 7–0 win put them in front again.

The final week of the season had the 6–3–1 Giants hosting the 5–4–1 Redskins: a Washington win would have given them both 6–4–1 records and forced a playoff.

That became a moot point with New York's 31–0 win in front of 60,337 at the Polo Grounds: more than the 58,346 that went there for the Championship Game a week later.

Final standings edit

NFL Championship Game edit

Chicago Bears 24, New York Giants 14, at the Polo Grounds in New York City on December 15, 1946

League leaders edit

Statistic Name Team Yards
Passing Sid Luckman Chicago Bears 1826
Rushing Bill Dudley Pittsburgh 604
Receiving Jim Benton Los Angeles 981

Awards edit

Joe F. Carr Trophy (Most Valuable Player)   Bill Dudley, Halfback, Pittsburgh

Coaching changes edit

Stadium changes edit

The relocated Los Angeles Rams moved from Cleveland's League Park to Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum

Deaths edit

January edit

February edit

April edit

May edit

June edit

July edit

September edit

August edit

  • August 25 – Don Jackson, age 32, Running Back and Defensive Back for the Philadelphia Eagles in 1936.

October edit

  • October 1 – Johnnie Hudson, Age 47, Running Back, for the Washington Senators in 1922.
  • October 22 – Doc Ledbetter, age 36, Running Back, Chicago Cardinals and Staten Island Stapletons from 1932 to 1933.

November edit

References edit

  • NFL Record and Fact Book (ISBN 1-932994-36-X)
  • NFL History 1941–1950 Archived May 16, 2008, at the Wayback Machine (Last accessed December 4, 2005)
  • Total Football: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Football League (ISBN 0-06-270174-6)
  1. ^ The goal posts were on the goal line from 1933 until 1973.