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2002 NFL season

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The 2002 NFL season was the 83rd regular season of the National Football League. The league expanded to 32 teams with the addition of the Houston Texans.

With the Texans joining the NFL, the league's teams were realigned into eight divisions, four in each conference. In creating the new divisions, the league tried to maintain the historical rivalries from the old alignment, while at the same time attempting to organize the teams geographically. The significant changes were:

Additionally, the arrival of the Texans meant that the league could return to its pre-1999 scheduling format in which no team got a bye during the first two weeks or last seven weeks of the season. From 1999 to 2001, at least one team had to sit out each week because of an odd number of teams in the league.

Due to the reconstruction of Soldier Field, the Chicago Bears played the 2002 season in Champaign, Illinois at Memorial Stadium.

The playoff format was also modified: four division winners and two wild cards from each conference now advance to the playoffs.

The season ended with Super Bowl XXXVII when the Tampa Bay Buccaneers defeated the Oakland Raiders.

Contents

[edit] Major rule changes

  • A player who touches a pylon remains in-bounds until any part of his body touches the ground out-of-bounds.
  • Continuing-action fouls now become dead-ball fouls and will result in the loss of down and distance.
  • Any dead-ball penalties by the offense after they have made the line to gain will result in a loss of 15 yards and a new first down. Previously, the 15 yard penalty was enforced but the down was replayed.
  • The act of batting and stripping the ball from a player is officially legal.
  • Chop-blocks are illegal on kicking plays.
  • Hitting a quarterback helmet-to-helmet anytime after a change of possession is illegal.
  • After a kickoff, the game clock will start when the ball is touched legally in the field of play. Previously, the clock started immediately when the ball was kicked.
  • Inside the final two minutes of a half, the game clock will not stop when the player who originally takes the snap is tackled behind the line of scrimmage (i.e. a sack).

[edit] Final standings

W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, PCT= Winning Percentage, PF= Points For, PA = Points Against

Qualified for playoffs
AFC East
TeamWLTPCTPFPA
New York Jets 970.562359336
New England Patriots 970.562381346
Miami Dolphins 970.562378301
Buffalo Bills 880.500379397
AFC North
TeamWLTPCTPFPA
Pittsburgh Steelers 1051.656390345
Cleveland Browns 970.562344320
Baltimore Ravens 790.438316354
Cincinnati Bengals 2140.125279456
AFC South
TeamWLTPCTPFPA
Tennessee Titans 1150.688367324
Indianapolis Colts 1060.625349313
Jacksonville Jaguars 6100.375328315
Houston Texans 4120.250213356
AFC West
TeamWLTPCTPFPA
Oakland Raiders 1150.688450304
Denver Broncos 970.562392344
San Diego Chargers 880.500333367
Kansas City Chiefs 880.500467399
NFC East
TeamWLTPCTPFPA
Philadelphia Eagles 1240.750415241
New York Giants 1060.625320279
Washington Redskins 790.438307365
Dallas Cowboys 5110.312217329
NFC North
TeamWLTPCTPFPA
Green Bay Packers 1240.750398328
Minnesota Vikings 6100.375390442
Chicago Bears 4120.250281379
Detroit Lions 3130.188306451
NFC South
TeamWLTPCTPFPA
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 1240.750346196
Atlanta Falcons 961.594402314
New Orleans Saints 970.562432388
Carolina Panthers 790.438258302
NFC West
TeamWLTPCTPFPA
San Francisco 49ers 1060.625367351
St. Louis Rams 790.438316369
Seattle Seahawks 790.438355369
Arizona Cardinals 5110.312262417

[edit] Tiebreakers

  • N.Y. Jets finished ahead of New England in the AFC East based on better record in common games (8-4 to 7-5) and Miami based on better division record (4-2 to 2-4).
  • New England finished ahead of Miami in the AFC East based on better division record (4-2 to 2-4).
  • Cleveland clinched the AFC 6 seed instead of Denver or New England based on better conference record (7-5 to Denver's 5-7 and New England's 6-6).
  • Oakland clinched the AFC 1 seed instead of Tennessee based on better head-to-head record (1-0).
  • San Diego finished ahead of Kansas City in the AFC West based on better division record (3-3 to 2-4).
  • Philadelphia clinched the NFC 1 seed instead of Green Bay or Tampa Bay based on better conference record (11-1 to Green Bay's 9-3 and Tampa Bay's 9-3).
  • Tampa Bay clinched the NFC 2 seed instead of Green Bay based on better head-to-head record (1-0).
  • St. Louis finished ahead of Seattle in the NFC West based on better division record (4-2 to 2-4).

[edit] Playoffs

Main article: NFL playoffs, 2002-03
Playoff seeds
Seed AFC NFC
1 Oakland Raiders (West winner) Philadelphia Eagles (East winner)
2 Tennessee Titans (South winner) Tampa Bay Buccaneers (South winner)
3 Pittsburgh Steelers (North winner) Green Bay Packers (North winner)
4 New York Jets (East winner) San Francisco 49ers (West winner)
5 Indianapolis Colts New York Giants
6 Cleveland Browns Atlanta Falcons
Home team in capitals

[edit] AFC

  • Wild-Card playoffs: N.Y. JETS 41, Indianapolis 0; PITTSBURGH 36, Cleveland 33
  • Divisional playoffs: TENNESSEE 34, Pittsburgh 31 (OT); OAKLAND 30, N.Y. Jets 10
  • AFC Championship: OAKLAND 41, Tennessee 24

[edit] NFC

  • Wild-Card playoffs: Atlanta 27, GREEN BAY 7; SAN FRANCISCO 39, N.Y. Giants 38
  • Divisional playoffs: PHILADELPHIA 20, Atlanta 6; TAMPA BAY 31, San Francisco 6
  • NFC Championship: Tampa Bay 27, PHILADELPHIA 10

[edit] Super Bowl

[edit] Milestones

The following players set all-time NFL records during the season:

Most Pass Receptions, Season Marvin Harrison, Indianapolis (143)
Longest Return of a Missed Field Goal Chris McAlister, Baltimore, September 30, vs. Denver (107 yards)
Yards From Scrimmage, Career Jerry Rice, Oakland, broken September 29, vs. Tennessee (21,281)
Most Rushing Yards Gained, Career Emmitt Smith, Dallas, broken October 27, vs. Seattle (16,726)

[edit] Statistical leaders

[edit] Team

Points scoredKansas City Chiefs (467)
Total yards gainedOakland Raiders (6,237)
Yards rushingMinnesota Vikings (2,507)
Yards passingOakland Raiders (4,475)
Fewest points allowedTampa Bay Buccaneers (196)
Fewest total yards allowedTampa Bay Buccaneers (4,044)
Fewest rushing yards allowedPittsburgh Steelers (1,375)
Fewest passing yards allowedTampa Bay Buccaneers (2,490)

[edit] Individual

ScoringPriest Holmes, Kansas City (144 points)
TouchdownsPriest Holmes, Kansas City (24 TDs)
Most field goals madeMartin Gramatica, Tampa Bay (32 FGs)
RushingRicky Williams, Miami (1,853 yards)
PassingChad Pennington, New York Jets (104.2 rating)
Passing touchdownsTom Brady, New England (28 TDs)
Pass receivingMarvin Harrison, Indianapolis (143 catches)
Pass receiving yardsMarvin Harrison, Indianapolis (1,722)
Punt returnsJimmy Williams, San Francisco (16.8 average yards)
Kickoff returnsMarTay Jenkins, Arizona (28.0 average yards)
InterceptionsRod Woodson, Oakland and Brian Kelly, Tampa Bay (8)
PuntingTodd Sauerbrun, Carolina (45.5 average yards)
SacksJason Taylor, Miami (18.5)

[edit] Awards

Most Valuable PlayerRich Gannon, Quarterback, Oakland
Coach of the YearAndy Reid, Philadelphia
Offensive Player of the YearPriest Holmes, Running back, Kansas City
Defensive Player of the YearDerrick Brooks, Linebacker, Tampa Bay
Offensive Rookie of the YearClinton Portis, Running Back, Denver
Defensive Rookie of the YearJulius Peppers, Defensive End, Carolina
NFL Comeback Player of the YearTommy Maddox, Quarterback, Pittsburgh

[edit] References

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