The AAFC was one of two American professional sports leagues (along with AFL III) to have its teams play in a double round robin format in the regular season: each team had a home game and an away game with each of its AAFC "brethren."
Ward brought together a number of wealthy pro football enthusiasts, some of whom had previously attempted to purchase NFL franchises. Ward had previously encouraged the NFL to expand, but now he hoped to bring about a permanent second league and a championship game with the NFL, similar to baseball’s World Series.
On November 21, 1944 the AAFC chose Jim Crowley, one of the "Four Horsemen of Notre Dame", as its commissioner. Not coincidentally, the NFL commissioner at this time was Elmer Layden, another of Knute Rockne's legendary 1924 backfield.
During the next months, the AAFC’s plans solidified. The league initially issued franchises for Buffalo, Chicago, Cleveland, Los Angeles, New York, and San Francisco. Brooklyn and Miami were later added. A group representing Baltimore was considered for admission, but could not secure a stadium. The league planned to begin play in 1945, but postponed its opening for a year as World War II still raged.
As the eight franchises built their teams, no move was more far-reaching than Cleveland's choice of Paul Brown as its head coach. Brown had won six Ohio state championships in nine years at Massillon High School and the 1942 national championship at Ohio State, and had also coached successfully at the military’s Great Lakes Naval Station. In Cleveland, Brown would emerge as one of the game's greatest innovators.
As might be expected, the NFL did not welcome its new rival. In 1945, Layden remarked that the AAFC, still a year from its first game, should “first get a ball, then make a schedule, and then play a game.” This insult, often paraphrased as "Tell them to get a ball first," would be long remembered.
Washington Redskins owner George Preston Marshall was perhaps the NFL's hardest-liner regarding the AAFC. In 1945, he commented “I did not realize there was another league, although I did receive some literature telling about a WPA project”. Later he declared, “The worst team in our league could beat the best team in theirs.” After the AAFC put a team in Baltimore, Marshall’s opposition to it would be a major obstacle to interleague peace. Not coincidentally, his team was badly hurt by the AAFC. A top team from 1936 to 1945, the Redskins began a decades-long title drought after coach Ray Flaherty and many key players defected in 1946.
Layden’s successor, Bert Bell, pursued a policy of official non-recognition, generally answering “no comment” to queries about the other league. In 1947, Pro Football Illustrated previewed both leagues in its annual publication and was banned from NFL stadiums.
The AAFC posed a formidable challenge. In most interleague sports wars, the established league has major advantages over the challenger in prestige, finance, size, and public awareness. The NFL-AAFC war differed in several respects.
The NFL was just emerging from its wartime retrenchment. The Cleveland Rams had suspended operations for 1943, and on three occasions teams merged for a season. The Boston Yanks had played only one season as an independent entity.
Meanwhile, the AAFC had advantages not enjoyed by many challengers:
Yet it remained to be seen if there was a market for this much pro football. Since achieving stability in the early 1930s, the NFL had never fielded more than 10 teams. No competitor had endured for more than two years. In 1946, there would be 18 teams, including three in Chicago, three in New York, and two in Los Angeles.
Baseball and college football were substantially more popular. Longtime NFL president Joe Carr had said, "No owner has made money from pro football, but a lot have gone broke thinking they could." At a time when the World Series had long been a national institution, and the Rose Bowl drew crowds of 90,000, the NFL's title game typically drew about 35,000 fans. Most pro teams shared stadiums (and sometimes names) with the local baseball team, and both leagues saw fit to choose college football legends as their commissioners.
There was even a sense that collegians could defeat pros. 1946 saw the famous Army-Notre Dame scoreless tie in Yankee Stadium. At season's end, Arch Ward (the AAFC founder!) opined that both teams were superior to either pro champion.
It was in this landscape that the AAFC prepared to compete with the NFL.
Dan Topping, owner of the NFL’s Brooklyn Tigers, wished to move his team from Ebbets Field to the much larger Yankee Stadium. New York Giants owner Tim Mara used his territorial rights to block the move. He had good reason: the Yankees had displaced the Giants as New York’s premier baseball team after moving into The House That Ruth Built, three rival football leagues had planted teams there hoping to duplicate that feat, and Topping (of Anaconda Copper) was significantly wealthier than Mara.
Topping responded by buying into the baseball Yankees and transferring his club to the AAFC. Most of his players followed. His renamed New York Yankees were rewarded with $100,000 from each of the other seven AAFC teams while the AAFC's initial New York investor withdrew. (Note that the AAFC Brooklyn Dodgers were a separate entity never associated with Topping's team.)
Shortly after Topping defected, the NFL owners fired Commissioner Layden, replacing him with Pittsburgh Steelers co-owner Bert Bell. Bell had already made a major contribution to the league: the NFL draft, begun in 1935, was his idea.
Meanwhile, Dan Reeves' Cleveland Rams had consistently lost money, despite winning the 1945 NFL title. Compounding his problems, the local AAFC competition already looked strong: Arthur McBride was aggressively marketing the Browns, and coach Paul Brown was an Ohio icon. Accordingly, Reeves proposed to move the Rams to Los Angeles.
With two teams planned for California, the AAFC had national aspirations. The NFL's thinking was more modest: it rejected Reeves' move because of travel expenses. After the NFL refused to consider his second choice (Dallas), Reeves threatened to withdraw from the league. Having already lost Topping, the NFL reconsidered and approved the Los Angeles move.
It was unprestigious for the NFL champion to move at all, let alone partly to avoid an unproven rival. On the other hand, the NFL would now face the AAFC as a national rather than regional league, and the AAFC would not have a West Coast monopoly.
Again acting ambitiously, the AAFC chose stadiums larger than the NFL's in Chicago, New York, and Cleveland.
The two leagues’ franchises and home fields for 1946 were:
NFL
| Eastern Division | Western Division |
|---|---|
| Boston Yanks (Fenway Park) | Detroit Lions (Briggs Stadium*) |
| New York Giants (Polo Grounds) | Chicago Bears (Wrigley Field) |
| Philadelphia Eagles (Shibe Park) | Chicago Cardinals (Comiskey Park) |
| Pittsburgh Steelers (Forbes Field) | Green Bay Packers (City Stadium) |
| Washington Redskins (Griffith Stadium) | Los Angeles Rams (Los Angeles Coliseum) |
AAFC
| Eastern Division | Western Division |
|---|---|
| New York Yankees (Yankee Stadium) | Cleveland Browns (Municipal Stadium) |
| Brooklyn Dodgers (Ebbets Field) | Chicago Rockets (Soldier Field) |
| Buffalo Bisons (Civic Stadium**) | Los Angeles Dons (Los Angeles Coliseum) |
| Miami Seahawks (Burdine Stadium***) | San Francisco 49ers (Kezar Stadium) |
(*) Now known as Tiger Stadium.
(**) Better remembered as War Memorial Stadium, the original home of the modern Buffalo Bills.
''(***) Later known as the Miami Orange Bowl.
Other than New York, all of the quality teams were in the Western Division. In the West, Cleveland led with a 12-2 record, three games ahead of San Francisco, followed by Los Angeles and Chicago. In the East, New York was the only team to win more than three games, finishing 10-3-1. Brooklyn and Buffalo were seven games behind, followed by Miami. Despite Brooklyn's record, its tailback Glenn Dobbs led the league in passing and was named the MVP.
The title game was a tight affair, with the Browns coming from behind late in the fourth quarter to defeat the Yankees 14-9.
Despite the fiasco in Miami, the AAFC had enjoyed a successful debut, establishing a high level of play and doing well at the gate. The NFL likewise set new attendance highs for both its season and title game. However, salaries shot up with two leagues competing for players, so the only teams to make a profit were the two champions, the Browns and the NFL Bears.
To replace the Seahawks, the Baltimore group turned down in 1945 was issued a franchise. The new Baltimore Colts would play in Municipal Stadium. Meanwhile, the Bisons were renamed the Bills and the NFL added a 12th game to its schedule.
The AAFC enjoyed its most successful season in 1947. Some notable guests watched the Browns' opening game: the entire coaching staff of the 1946 NFL champion Chicago Bears. The 49ers obtained the rights to Army’s legendary Heisman-winners Felix Blanchard ("Mr. Inside") and Glenn Davis ("Mr. Outside"), and amid great publicity unsuccessfully attempted to get the military to permit them to play during their post-graduation furloughs. In other highlights, a Yankees-Dons game in the Los Angeles Coliseum drew a new pro record of more than 82,000, and division leaders New York and Cleveland locked horns on November 23 in the most famous game in AAFC history. Before more than 70,000 fans at Yankee Stadium, the Browns rallied from a 28-0 deficit to tie 28-28.
New York won the East with an 11-2-1 record, 2 1/2 games ahead of Buffalo, with Brooklyn and Baltimore far back. Cleveland, led by MVP quarterback Otto Graham, won the West with a 12-1-1 record, 3 1/2 games ahead of San Francisco. Los Angeles followed, and Chicago was last at 1-13. Former Commissioner Crowley would not return either as coach or owner.
The title game was a defensive struggle, with the Browns again defeating the Yankees, 14-3.
By this time a pattern had emerged among the franchises. The Browns, Yankees, 49ers, Dons, and Bills all had stable ownership and at least one winning season. The Browns led both leagues in attendance by a wide margin, the Yankees and Dons outpaced their crosstown NFL rivals on the field and at the gate, and the 49ers and Bills (despite a small stadium and city) also enjoyed good attendance.
However, the Dodgers, Rockets, and to a lesser extent the Colts were having serious problems. Playing near the Yankees and the NFL Giants, the Dodgers drew less than 12,000 fans per game, least in both leagues. The Rockets faced the NFL's flagship Bears and a Cardinals team enjoying rare success. After a decent start in 1946, the Rockets collapsed on the field and now played before tens of thousands of empty seats in huge Soldier Field. The first-year Colts did reasonably well at the gate but finished last. All of these teams were at the bottom of the standings and all were sold after the 1947 season, the Rockets for the second time.
One factor affecting AAFC attendance was the gap between the league’s best and worst teams. To counter this, Commissioner Ingram attempted to get the strongest teams to distribute some players to the weakest. He was modestly successful: the Browns sent rookie quarterback Y. A. Tittle to the Colts, who enjoyed their first good season, and the Yankees were generous enough to fall into mediocrity. However, 1948 featured extremes despite Ingram’s efforts.
For the first time, the division races were close. One featured excellence, the other mediocrity.
In the West, San Francisco and Cleveland both remained undefeated far into the season. On November 14, nearly 83,000 (a new record) in Cleveland Municipal Stadium watched the 9-0 Browns win a 14-7 defensive struggle over the 10-0 49ers. They met again two weeks later in San Francisco, with the Browns now 12-0 and the 49ers 11-1. The Browns again won narrowly, this time 31-28, clinching first place.
The rematch concluded an AAFC Thanksgiving week promotion: the Browns played three games in eight days. New Dodgers' part-owner Branch Rickey (of baseball fame) suggested this experiment, and the Browns were chosen as the guinea pigs. They survived unscathed, and went on to complete an unprecedented 14-0 regular season.
The 49ers finished a heartbreaking second (and out of the postseason) at 12-2. Los Angeles followed at 7-7, and Chicago again finished 1-13 and last. The quarterbacks of the two outstanding teams, Cleveland’s Otto Graham and San Francisco’s Frankie Albert, shared the MVP.
In the East, Buffalo and Baltimore tied at a mediocre 7-7, just ahead of 6-8 New York. Brooklyn was last at 2-12. Buffalo won a playoff and the dubious privilege of meeting Cleveland for the title.
Cleveland won the title in a predictable rout, 49-7. With pro football's second perfect season (after the 1937 Los Angeles Bulldogs of the second American Football League) and an 18-game winning streak and a 29-game unbeaten streak in progress, the Browns were making history. Since then, only the 1972 Miami Dolphins team managed to win its league championship with an unblemished record. The Pro Football Hall of Fame recognizes the Browns' latter streak as the longest in the history of professional football.
The NFL had also had a problem with imbalance. Nearly every title game from 1933 to 1946 featured either the Giants or Redskins from the East against either the Bears or Packers from the West.
But in the late 1940s new powers rose in the NFL, as the Cardinals, Eagles, and Rams all won titles, and the Steelers reached a playoff. All these teams had long histories of futility and had merged or suspended operations during the war. (In fact, the Cardinals were winless from mid-1942 to mid-1945, including an 0-10 merged season with the Steelers.)
Adding to the drama, the division races were often tight. Decades before Pete Rozelle, Bert Bell promoted parity by purposely matching strong teams early in the season, keeping them from getting far ahead in the standings. All this presented a sharp contrast to the AAFC.
The war was getting increasingly costly thanks to rising salaries and dropping attendance. Nearly every team in both leagues lost money - enough that in December, the NFL officially acknowledged the AAFC as peace talks almost succeeded in ending the war. However, the AAFC wanted the NFL to admit four of its teams, while the NFL was willing to admit only the Browns and 49ers. Although the survival of its Brooklyn and Chicago teams was now in doubt, the AAFC decided to continue the fight.
As the war entered its fourth season, financial problems forced reorganization in both leagues.
In the NFL, the champion Philadelphia Eagles lost money and were sold. Plagued by league-low attendance, the Boston Yanks moved to New York in a curious move. Yanks owner Ted Collins had long desired a franchise in Yankee Stadium (thus his team’s name), and expected the AAFC and its Yankees to be gone in 1949. Instead, with Yankee Stadium and the Yanks name unavailable, Collins' renamed Bulldogs had to share the Polo Grounds with the Giants on unfavorable terms and compete with two superior rivals.
Meanwhile, the Dodgers, the AAFC's least-drawing team, merged with the Yankees. The Rockets (renamed the Hornets) and Colts continued their streaks of annual ownership changes.
With the AAFC now down to 7 teams, it realigned into one division, reduced its schedule to 12 games (still a double round-robin), and changed its postseason. In 1948, the 12-2 49ers had stayed home while the 7-7 Bills played for the title. This would not recur, as now the top four teams would qualify for the playoffs. Also, for the first time in pro football, playoff home-field advantage would be based on win-loss record rather than rotating between divisions.
The lineup of the rival leagues was now:
NFL
AAFC
Ward, of course, was also the founder of the AAFC. After the game's contract with the NFL expired with the 1948 game, Ward refused to renew it, and attempted to help the AAFC by putting its champion into the prestigious game. However, the NFL was able to convince the Tribune’s board to override Ward and force him to re-sign with the NFL, handing the AAFC an embarrassing defeat.
Red ink on both sides continued to flow. Los Angeles Dons owner Ben Lindheimer was subsidizing the Colts and Hornets. The Green Bay Packers, then as now owned by a local civic group, had to issue new stock to remain solvent. Now facing two cross-town rivals, the Bulldogs predictably had even lower attendance in New York than in Boston. The Pittsburgh Steelers and Detroit Lions were also having serious financial problems.
On the field, Cleveland finally showed some vulnerability. An opening day tie with the Bills ended their winning streak, and on October 9 the 49ers ended their unbeaten streak in a 56-28 upset to move into first place.
Things soon reverted to the AAFC norm, however. The Browns won the rematch with the 49ers, 30-28, and Cleveland (9-1-2) and San Francisco (9-3) finished one-two for the fourth consecutive year. Brooklyn-New York and Buffalo were the other playoff qualifiers, followed by Chicago and Los Angeles. Baltimore finished far behind at 1-11.
In playoff action, Cleveland defeated Buffalo 31-21 and San Francisco defeated Brooklyn-New York 17-7. The two best teams in AAFC history met at last with the title at stake, with the Browns winning the final title, 21-7. No MVP was named for this season.
The Browns now owned a 52-4-3 record and all four AAFC titles.
The Browns and 49ers, as the AAFC's two strongest teams, were obvious choices. The third choice was the subject of some debate.
There was some sentiment to admit the Bills rather than the Colts, as the Bills had better attendance and the better team. However, Buffalo's size (only Green Bay was smaller) and climate were seen as problems. George Preston Marshall had long objected to the Colts' proximity to his Redskins. However, the choice was Baltimore after Marshall, deciding that Redskins-Colts could be an excellent rivalry, agreed to accept a $150,000 fee to waive his territorial rights.
Although Buffalo fans petitioned the NFL to admit the Bills as well, Buffalo owner Jim Breuil was content to accept a minority share of the Browns and the NFL was not inclined to add a fourth team. The popularity of the original franchise prompted Ralph Wilson (former minority owner of the Detroit Lions) to adopt the name "Buffalo Bills" for his American Football League franchise ten years later.
The Yankees' players were divided between the Giants (who chose six players) and Bulldogs (who received the rest). Three Bills players were awarded to the Browns. The remaining Bills, Dons, and Hornets entered a dispersal draft.
With the AAFC Yankees gone, Bulldogs owner Ted Collins was free to rename his team the Yanks and move into Yankee Stadium. He continued to lose money, however, and sold the team to Dallas interests after two seasons.
The word "American" did not remain in the enlarged league's name for long. "National Football League" was restored in March 1950. Although "National" and "American" became the names of the league's new conferences, within three years the conferences were renamed Eastern and Western. It was not until the AFL-NFL merger twenty years later that the "American" and "National" conference names were restored.
The enlarged NFL was aligned as follows:
| American (Eastern) Conference | National (Western) Conference |
|---|---|
| Chicago Cardinals (Comiskey Park) | Baltimore Colts (Municipal Stadium) |
| Cleveland Browns (Municipal Stadium) | Chicago Bears (Wrigley Field) |
| New York Giants (Polo Grounds) | Detroit Lions (Briggs Stadium) |
| Philadelphia Eagles (Shibe Park) | Green Bay Packers (City Stadium) |
| Pittsburgh Steelers (Forbes Field) | New York Yanks (Yankee Stadium) |
| Washington Redskins (Griffith Stadium) | Los Angeles Rams (Los Angeles Coliseum) |
| San Francisco 49ers (Kezar Stadium) |
With two exceptions, this was the NFL's alignment for the rest of the 1950s.
Remarkably, although the NFL absorbed the AAFC, the AAFC actually had better average attendance.
In December 1949, with both leagues financially exhausted but now at peace, a profitable interleague playoff was now both possible and desirable. Although Pittsburgh's Art Rooney, whose Steelers were among the shakiest NFL franchises, publicly advocated such a game, most of the NFL was unwilling to risk defeat at the hands of their vanquished, supposedly inferior rival. Officially, however, commissioner Bert Bell maintained that the NFL constitution barred such a game. The football world would have to wait to see how the Browns matched up against the NFL's best.
All would not be lost for fans, however. Bell appreciated that the Browns were now an important asset to the NFL, and scheduled a special Saturday night game between them and the NFL’s two-time champion Philadelphia Eagles to open the 1950 season. While not quite an unofficial interleague playoff, what took place on September 16, 1950 was no ordinary regular season game.
The defending champions of two leagues that had never met on the field were about to play, foreshadowing tensions present in the early Super Bowls of the 1960s. At last the Browns would have the chance to prove themselves, and by extension the AAFC, against the NFL. There was tremendous anticipation from fans and the press, which called the game “The World Series of Pro Football”. Although the game was played in the Eagles’ city, it was not played on their field: because of the huge crowd expected, the game was moved from Shibe Park to Philadelphia Municipal Stadium, site of the Army-Navy game. Attendance was more than 71,000: more than any previous NFL or AAFC championship game and one of the largest pro football crowds to that date. (This figure also surpasses Super Bowl I and nearly matches Super Bowls II and III.) There was even a most valuable player award, unheard of for a regular-season game.
As it turned out, “The World Series of Pro Football” resembled Super Bowl III nearly two decades later. As with the 1968 Baltimore Colts and New York Jets, the Eagles were widely considered one of the NFL’s strongest-ever champions, while many discounted the Browns’ success in their “inferior” league. The result was just as shocking: the Eagles underestimated the highly motivated Browns (coach Greasy Neale did not even scout the Browns’ preseason games), while Paul Brown found some previously unknown weaknesses in the widely imitated “Eagle Defense”. The Browns led 14-3 at halftime and dominated the rest of the game to win decisively, 35-10. Quarterback Otto Graham was named the game’s MVP.
The Browns’ 1950 season confirmed the quality of their AAFC achievements as nothing else could. After the title game, Commissioner Bell called the Browns "the greatest team to ever play football.”
Cleveland remained near the top of the NFL for years, although in 1951 they were finally denied a league title (by the Rams). The Browns played in every NFL title game from 1950 to 1955, winning three of them, for a grand total of seven league titles in ten years.
The other ex-AAFC teams did not fare nearly as well.
The 49ers, the AAFC's second-best team, struggled in 1950 and finished 3-9. However, starting the next year they emerged as one of the better teams in the NFL’s Western Conference, reaching the postseason in 1957 after some near-misses.
The Colts' prospects were not promising: they had finished 1-11 and last in the AAFC in 1949 and also faced the handicap of playing near the Washington Redskins. In 1950, the Colts went 1-11 again and disbanded. Their legacy lived on, however: three years later, a new Baltimore Colts franchise was established and became one of the NFL’s storied teams.
See Cleveland Browns, San Francisco 49ers, Baltimore Colts (1947-50), and Indianapolis Colts for further details of these teams' subsequent histories.
According to the NFL, this is because official scoresheets of AAFC games were not made available to the NFL after the merger. Without these, the NFL could not verify the authenticity of any AAFC statistics or records and so chose to ignore them. However, in the case of the NFL-AFL merger completed in 1970, the AFL gave all of its official scoresheets to the NFL making it possible for the NFL to accept the AFL's statistics and records.
Another explanation is that the NFL-AAFC agreement was not a merger between equals. Three AAFC teams were admitted to the NFL, while four disbanded. There was no interleague playoff in December 1949. "American" swiftly disappeared from the enlarged league's name. The general attitude of superiority expressed throughout the war by NFL figures such as Marshall and commissioners Layden and Bell is also suggestive. The AFL, on the other hand, was able to force the NFL to admit every one of its teams and to play a Super Bowl on a neutral field. From this perspective, it is not surprising that the AFL's statistics were recognized and the AAFC's were not.
Despite this, however, the Pro Football Hall of Fame does recognize AAFC statistics.
The Cleveland Browns, San Francisco 49ers, and original Baltimore Colts began in the AAFC.
Fifteen AAFC alumni are enshrined in pro football’s Hall of Fame.
The AAFC played a 14-game schedule more than a decade before the NFL, and played a major role in popularizing zone defenses in pro football.
The AAFC put the first pro football teams in Baltimore, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Miami. Indeed, the AAFC was a coast-to-coast league more than a decade before major league baseball. This brought about another innovation: AAFC teams traveled by air while NFL teams still traveled by train.
Black players were excluded from the NFL from 1934 to 1945. The AAFC helped reintegrate the pro game in 1946 when Cleveland signed Marion Motley and Bill Willis while the NFL Rams signed Kenny Washington and Woody Strode.
The AAFC’s Paul Brown produced numerous innovations to the game on and off the field. Among them were year-round coaching staffs, precision pass patterns, the face mask, and the practice of coaches’ calling plays via “messenger guards”. He also was the first coach to have his staff film the opposition and have his team breakdown those game films in a classroom setting. In fact, the classroom setting and chalkboard analysis can also be attributed to him. His success with the Browns forced the rest of both leagues to adopt his methods. Many of his players and assistants eventually coached champions. Brown declined efforts to draft him to succeed Bert Bell as NFL commissioner, later founded the Cincinnati Bengals, and served on the NFL’s key Competition Committee until his death in 1991.
These and other AAFC innovations and personalities helped lay the groundwork for the NFL’s great success.
(*): Team now in NFL. (**): Team in NFL with that name, but unrelated to the AAFC team.
| Eastern Division | ||||||
| Team | W | L | T | Pct. | PF | PA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| New York Yankees | 10 | 3 | 1 | .769 | 270 | 192 |
| Brooklyn Dodgers | 3 | 10 | 1 | .231 | 226 | 339 |
| Buffalo Bisons | 3 | 10 | 1 | .231 | 249 | 370 |
| Miami Seahawks | 3 | 11 | 0 | .214 | 167 | 378 |
| Western Division | ||||||
| Team | W | L | T | Pct. | PF | PA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cleveland Browns | 12 | 2 | 0 | .857 | 423 | 137 |
| San Francisco 49ers | 9 | 5 | 0 | .643 | 307 | 189 |
| Los Angeles Dons | 7 | 5 | 2 | .583 | 305 | 290 |
| Chicago Rockets | 5 | 6 | 3 | .455 | 263 | 315 |
| Eastern Division | |||
| Team | W | L | T |
|---|---|---|---|
| New York Yankees | 11 | 2 | 1 |
| Buffalo Bills | 8 | 4 | 2 |
| Brooklyn Dodgers | 3 | 10 | 1 |
| Baltimore Colts | 2 | 11 | 1 |
| Western Division | |||
| Team | W | L | T |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cleveland Browns | 12 | 1 | 1 |
| San Francisco 49ers | 8 | 4 | 2 |
| Los Angeles Dons | 7 | 7 | 0 |
| Chicago Rockets | 1 | 13 | 0 |
| Eastern Division | |||
| Team | W | L | T |
|---|---|---|---|
| Buffalo Bills | 7 | 7 | 0 |
| Baltimore Colts | 7 | 7 | 0 |
| New York Yankees | 6 | 8 | 0 |
| Brooklyn Dodgers | 2 | 12 | 0 |
| Western Division | |||
| Team | W | L | T |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cleveland Browns | 14 | 0 | 0 |
| San Francisco 49ers | 12 | 2 | 0 |
| Los Angeles Dons | 7 | 7 | 0 |
| Chicago Rockets | 1 | 13 | 0 |
AAFC Championship: Cleveland 49, Buffalo 7 (December 19 @ Cleveland)
| Team | W | L | T |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cleveland Browns | 9 | 1 | 2 |
| San Francisco 49ers | 9 | 3 | 0 |
| Brooklyn/New York Yankees | 8 | 4 | 0 |
| Buffalo Bills | 5 | 5 | 2 |
| Chicago Hornets | 4 | 8 | 0 |
| Los Angeles Dons | 4 | 8 | 0 |
| Baltimore Colts | 1 | 11 | 0 |
Semifinal #2: San Francisco 17, Brooklyn/New York 7 (December 4 @ San Francisco)
AAFC Championship: Cleveland 21, San Francisco 7 (December 11 @ Cleveland)
Franchises are ranked by win percentage. As was the custom for professional football leagues in the 1940s, ties were not considered for the purpose of standings.
| Team | W | L | T | Pct. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cleveland Browns | 47 | 4 | 3 | .922 |
| San Francisco 49ers | 38 | 15 | 2 | .717 |
| New York Yankees | 27 | 13 | 2 | .675 |
| Brooklyn/New York Yankees | 8 | 4 | 0 | .667 |
| Los Angeles Dons | 25 | 27 | 2 | .481 |
| Buffalo Bisons/Bills | 24 | 28 | 5 | .462 |
| Miami Seahawks/Baltimore Colts | 13 | 40 | 1 | .245 |
| Chicago Rockets/Hornets | 11 | 40 | 3 | .216 |
| Brooklyn Dodgers | 8 | 32 | 2 | .200 |
| Year | Date | Winning Team | Score | Losing Team | Location | Attendance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1946 | December 22 | Cleveland Browns | 14-9 | New York Yankees | Cleveland Municipal Stadium | 41,181 |
| 1947 | December 14 | Cleveland Browns | 14-3 | New York Yankees | Yankee Stadium | 60,103 |
| 1948 | December 19 | Cleveland Browns | 49-7 | Buffalo Bills | Cleveland Municipal Stadium | 22,981 |
| 1949 | December 11 | Cleveland Browns | 21-7 | San Francisco 49ers | Cleveland Municipal Stadium | 22,550 |
| Year | Date | Winning Team | Score | Losing Team | Location | Attendance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1948 | December 12 | Buffalo Bills | 28-17 | Baltimore Colts | Municipal Stadium | 27,327 |
| 1949 | December 4 | Cleveland Browns | 31-21 | Buffalo Bills | Cleveland Municipal Stadium | 17,240 |
| 1949 | December 4 | San Francisco 49ers | 17-7 | New York Yankees | Kezar Stadium | 41,393 |
See All-America Football Conference playoffs for box scores.
| Year | Date | Winning Team | Score | Losing Team | Location | Attendance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1949 | December 17 | AAFC All-Stars | 12-7 | Cleveland Browns | Rice Stadium, Houston | 10,000 |
(Note: Graham and Motley were also named to the NFL's 75th anniversary all-time team in 1994.)
| Year | Name | Team | Yards | TDs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1946 | Spec Sanders | New York | 709 | 6 |
| 1947 | Spec Sanders | New York | 1432 | 19 |
| 1948 | Marion Motley | Cleveland | 964 | 5 |
| 1949 | Joe Perry | San Francisco | 783 | 8 |
| Year | Name | Team | Yards | TDs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1946 | Glenn Dobbs | Brooklyn | 1886 | 13 |
| 1947 | Otto Graham | Cleveland | 2753 | 25 |
| 1948 | Otto Graham | Cleveland | 2713 | 25 |
| 1949 | Otto Graham | Cleveland | 2785 | 19 |
| Year | Name | Team | Yards | TDs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1946 | Dante Lavelli | Cleveland | 843 | 8 |
| 1947 | Mac Speedie | Cleveland | 1146 | 6 |
| 1948 | Mac Speedie | Cleveland | 816 | 4 |
| 1949 | Mac Speedie | Cleveland | 1028 | 7 |
| Year | Name | Team | Points | TDs | FGs | PATs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1946 | Lou Groza | Cleveland | 84 | 0 | 13 | 45 |
| 1947 | Spec Sanders | New York | 114 | 19 | 0 | 0 |
| 1948 | Chet Mutryn | Buffalo | 96 | 16 | 0 | 0 |
| 1949 | Alyn Beals | San Francisco | 73 | 12 | 0 | 1 |