2003 NFL season

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The 2003 NFL season was the 84th regular season of the National Football League (NFL).

Regular-season play was held from September 4, 2003, to December 28, 2003. Due to damage caused by the Cedar Fire, Qualcomm Stadium was used as an emergency shelter, and thus the Miami DolphinsSan Diego Chargers regular-season game on October 27 was instead played at Sun Devil Stadium, the home field of the Arizona Cardinals. This was the first season in NFL history where every team won at least 4 games.

The playoffs began on January 3, 2004. The NFL title was won by the New England Patriots when they defeated the Carolina Panthers 32–29 in Super Bowl XXXVIII at Reliant Stadium in Houston, Texas, on February 1.

Draft

The 2003 NFL draft was held from April 26 to 27, 2003, at New York City's Theater at Madison Square Garden. With the first pick, the Cincinnati Bengals selected quarterback Carson Palmer from the University of Southern California.

Referee changes

Dick Hantak and Bob McElwee retired in the 2003 off-season. Hantak joined the league as a back judge (the position title was changed to field judge in 1998) in 1978, and was assigned Super Bowl XVII in that position. He was promoted to referee in 1986, working Super Bowl XXVII. McElwee joined the NFL in 1976 as a line judge, and became a referee in 1980. He was the referee for three Super Bowls: XXII, XXVIII, and XXXIV. Walt Anderson and Pete Morelli were promoted to referee to replace Hantak and McElwee.

Major rule changes

File:Joe Theismann Joe Namath.jpg
"NFL Kickoff" event on September 4, 2003: Joe Theismann (L) and Joe Namath (R) at a military tribute
  • If an onside kick inside the final five minutes of the game does not go 10 yards, goes out of bounds, or is touched illegally, the receiving team will have the option of accepting the penalty and getting the ball immediately. Previously, the kicking team was penalized, but had another chance to kick again from five yards back.
  • League officials encouraged networks to immediately cut to a commercial break if an instant replay challenge review was initiated. Previously networks were generally not permitted to utilize those game stoppages for their prescribed commercial periods.[1]

2003 deaths

Pro Football Hall of Fame

Final regular season standings

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Conference standings

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Playoffs

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Bracket

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Milestones

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

Record Player or team Date/opponent Previous record holder[5]
Most touchdowns, season Priest Holmes, Kansas City (27) December 28, vs. Chicago Marshall Faulk, St. Louis, 2000 (26)
Most rushing yards gained, game Jamal Lewis, Baltimore (295) September 14, vs. Cleveland Corey Dillon, Cincinnati vs. Denver, October 22, 2000 (278)
Most consecutive field goals Mike Vanderjagt, Indianapolis December 28, at Houston Gary Anderson, 1997–98 (40)
Most consecutive road games lost Detroit Lions December 21, vs. Carolina Houston Oilers, 1981–84 (23)
Most consecutive games with a sack Tampa Bay Buccaneers (69) November 9, 2003 Dallas Cowboys (68)

Statistical leaders

Team

Points scored Kansas City Chiefs (484)
Total yards gained Minnesota Vikings (6,294)
Yards rushing Baltimore Ravens (2,674)
Yards passing Indianapolis Colts (4,179)
Fewest points allowed New England Patriots (238)
Fewest total yards allowed Dallas Cowboys (4,056)
Fewest rushing yards allowed Tennessee Titans (1,295)
Fewest passing yards allowed Dallas Cowboys (2,631)

Individual

Scoring Jeff Wilkins, St. Louis (163 points)
Touchdowns Priest Holmes, Kansas City (27 TDs)
Most field goals made Jeff Wilkins, St. Louis (39 FGs)
Rushing Jamal Lewis, Baltimore (2,066 yards)
Passing Peyton Manning, Indianapolis (4,267 yards)
Passing touchdowns Brett Favre, Green Bay (32 TDs)
Pass receiving Torry Holt, St. Louis (117 catches)
Pass receiving yards Torry Holt, St. Louis (1,696)
Pass receiving touchdowns Randy Moss, Minnesota (17 touchdowns)
Punt returns Dante Hall, Kansas City (16.3 average yards)
Kickoff returns Jerry Azumah, Chicago (29.0 average yards)
Interceptions Brian Russell, Minnesota and Tony Parrish, San Francisco (9)
Punting Shane Lechler, Oakland (46.9 average yards)
Sacks Michael Strahan, New York Giants (18.5)

Awards

Most Valuable Player Peyton Manning, quarterback, Indianapolis and Steve McNair, quarterback, Tennessee Titans (as of 2025, this is the most recent season without a consensus MVP)
Coach of the Year Bill Belichick, New England
Offensive Player of the Year Jamal Lewis, running back, Baltimore
Defensive Player of the Year Ray Lewis, linebacker, Baltimore
Offensive Rookie of the Year Anquan Boldin, wide receiver, Arizona
Defensive Rookie of the Year Terrell Suggs, linebacker, Baltimore
NFL Comeback Player of the Year Jon Kitna, quarterback, Cincinnati
Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Will Shields, guard, Kansas City
Super Bowl Most Valuable Player Tom Brady, quarterback, New England

Head coach/front office changes

Head coach
Front office

Stadium changes

File:Lambeau Field Warm-Ups 2003 Tennessee Titans.jpg
Tennessee at Green Bay in the preseason; both teams made the playoffs

In addition, new turf was installed for the following teams:

New uniforms

  • The Atlanta Falcons unveiled a new uniform design featuring red trim down the sides of both the jerseys and pants. The pants were switched from gray to white, and black pants were also introduced for selected games. Black remained the primary jersey color while a red alternate jersey was also introduced. The falcons helmet logo was redesigned to be more aggressive and closely resemble a capital "F".
  • The Cincinnati Bengals added new alternate black pants with their black jerseys for select home games.
  • The Cleveland Browns added new alternate orange pants last worn during the 1970s-early 1980s Kardiac Kids era of coach Sam Rutigliano.
  • The Denver Broncos introduced blue pants with orange streaks to match with their blue jerseys.
  • The Detroit Lions introduced a new design that added black trim to their logo and jerseys, and changed their face masks from blue to black.
  • The Houston Texans added red third alternate uniforms.
  • The Miami Dolphins added orange third alternate uniforms.
  • The New England Patriots added silver third alternate uniforms.
  • The New Orleans Saints wore gold pants full time, discontinuing using black pants with their white jerseys.
  • The Philadelphia Eagles added silver trim to the jersey numbers on uniforms, and black third alternate uniforms.
  • The San Diego Chargers wore white pants instead of blue with their white jerseys. They wore blue pants with their blue jerseys for the game vs. the Dolphins which had to be moved from San Diego to Arizona due to wildfires in southern California.
  • The Tennessee Titans added powder blue third alternate uniforms.

Television

This was the sixth year under the league's eight-year broadcast contracts with ABC, CBS, Fox, and ESPN to televise Monday Night Football, the AFC package, the NFC package, and Sunday Night Football, respectively.

At Fox, Tony Siragusa joined Dick Stockton and Daryl Johnston on the network's #2 broadcast team in a sideline analyst role instead of the traditional sideline reporter.

At CBS it was Greg Gumbel’s final season as lead play by play commentator with Phil Simms, and Armen Keteyian. It would be Beasley Reece’s last season as color commentator for the first time since 1999, after serving as a sideline reporter from 2000-2002. This would also be The SEC football on CBS’s Tim Brando and Spencer Tillman’s last season with the NFL on CBS after week 2 as they were no longer needed being replaced by Bill Macatee. Also on The NFL today studio it was Jim Nantz’s final season as studio host as he and Greg Gumbel would trade places the following year.

Notes

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References

External links

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