1981
Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2025 2:02 pm
To me this season like few before or after it felt like a massive NFL sea change
The Raiders, Steelers, Rams, and Vikings all missed the playoffs after essentially ruling the previous decade
You also had the rise of previous doormats in the 49ers and Giants
In 1980, there were inklings of football change: the Rams/Cowboys didn’t even win their divisions and Minnesota would have joined them if not for that Cleveland Hail Mary and the Bears Thanksgiving day improbable win
Oakland was able to steal a SB thanks to Plunkett and his aging 70s holdovers holding onto the Raider mystique like it was 1974
They and PIT having won 6 of 7 SB’s after the Dolphins got WFL’d
But by the time they met on MNF in December 1981, it felt less like their atomic collisions of the mid 70s and more like the last sunset of their rivalry
Conversely, 49ers/Giants in late November which in previous years had been basically for draft positioning suddenly was meaningful
If you had told NFL fans before the season that one of those two post-Thanksgiving games would be a playoff preview, NOBODY would have picked the NFC one
And while those AFC behemoths were no longer invincible, you also had the Jets and Bengals rising from nowhere
Now it wasn’t all upstarts as you still had Miami and Dallas holding things down for traditionalists (they even played each other in a memorable game opposite World Series game 5)
You had the wild sweepstakes known as the NFC Central where everybody was in it but Chicago (who won only 6 games but went 4-0 against the rugged AFC West)
Denver became the only team since the 1970 merger to go undefeated at home and miss the playoffs
You had good wild card races with the likes of Kansas City, Green Bay, and St. Louis playing meaningful games late in the season
The incredibly luckless Falcons who scored more points than their 12-4 1980 season…… yet went 7-9 thanks to a ghastly EIGHT losses by single digits
The shocking collapse of the Eagles: from 9-2 and headed for SB redemption to 1 and done then basically fading away until Buddy Ryan
Joe Gibbs starting 0-5….. and yet they would have made the playoffs if the Giants lost on that final Saturday to Dallas
With so many 70s stalwarts absent for postseason play, you had a lot of new hungry faces vying for a title without the usual suspects involved.
Oh and you had the debut of Summerall and Madden as the gold standard of football broadcasting
Basically it truly felt like a crossroads year: teams coming, teams going
The Raiders, Steelers, Rams, and Vikings all missed the playoffs after essentially ruling the previous decade
You also had the rise of previous doormats in the 49ers and Giants
In 1980, there were inklings of football change: the Rams/Cowboys didn’t even win their divisions and Minnesota would have joined them if not for that Cleveland Hail Mary and the Bears Thanksgiving day improbable win
Oakland was able to steal a SB thanks to Plunkett and his aging 70s holdovers holding onto the Raider mystique like it was 1974
They and PIT having won 6 of 7 SB’s after the Dolphins got WFL’d
But by the time they met on MNF in December 1981, it felt less like their atomic collisions of the mid 70s and more like the last sunset of their rivalry
Conversely, 49ers/Giants in late November which in previous years had been basically for draft positioning suddenly was meaningful
If you had told NFL fans before the season that one of those two post-Thanksgiving games would be a playoff preview, NOBODY would have picked the NFC one
And while those AFC behemoths were no longer invincible, you also had the Jets and Bengals rising from nowhere
Now it wasn’t all upstarts as you still had Miami and Dallas holding things down for traditionalists (they even played each other in a memorable game opposite World Series game 5)
You had the wild sweepstakes known as the NFC Central where everybody was in it but Chicago (who won only 6 games but went 4-0 against the rugged AFC West)
Denver became the only team since the 1970 merger to go undefeated at home and miss the playoffs
You had good wild card races with the likes of Kansas City, Green Bay, and St. Louis playing meaningful games late in the season
The incredibly luckless Falcons who scored more points than their 12-4 1980 season…… yet went 7-9 thanks to a ghastly EIGHT losses by single digits
The shocking collapse of the Eagles: from 9-2 and headed for SB redemption to 1 and done then basically fading away until Buddy Ryan
Joe Gibbs starting 0-5….. and yet they would have made the playoffs if the Giants lost on that final Saturday to Dallas
With so many 70s stalwarts absent for postseason play, you had a lot of new hungry faces vying for a title without the usual suspects involved.
Oh and you had the debut of Summerall and Madden as the gold standard of football broadcasting
Basically it truly felt like a crossroads year: teams coming, teams going