NFL on Christmas Day

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Games held by the National Football League (NFL) on Christmas Day, December 25, was historically an occasional part of the league's schedule, but has been an annual occurrence since Template:Nfly. The NFL had avoided annual Christmas Day games because the holiday could fall on a day in which the league does not normally schedule games, in contrast to Thanksgiving Day games since Thanksgiving is always on a Thursday. The NFL held two Divisional Playoff games on Christmas Day in Template:Nfly when the regular season only spanned a 14-week period. This proved unpopular, and the league avoided Christmas Day games until Template:Nfly to Template:Nfly, when the NFL typically scheduled games on Christmas Day if it fell on a Saturday, Sunday, or Monday. Beginning in Template:Nfly, the league has scheduled at least one Christmas game every season, even when the holiday falls on a day in which the NFL does not usually schedule games.

As of the end of the 2024 season, there have been 32 Christmas Day games in the NFL's history, all broadcast nationally. Two games were scheduled each Christmas Day from Template:Nfly to Template:Nfly, Template:Nfly to Template:Nfly, Template:Nfly, and Template:Nfly. Three games were scheduled each year beginning in Template:Nfly, with the exception of 2024.[1]

Generally when Christmas Day falls on a Thursday, the day's games will include the standard Thursday Night Football broadcast. When Christmas Day falls on a Sunday, it will likewise include the standard Sunday Night Football telecast, but the normal slate of Sunday afternoon games is instead moved to Saturday, Christmas Eve. If Christmas Day falls on a Monday, the normal slate of Sunday afternoon games is still played on Christmas Eve, and the normal Monday Night Football broadcast is still on Christmas night, but the Sunday Night Football telecast has been moved to either Monday afternoon or to Saturday, December 23 (with up to two games on both of those days).

History

Early years

In the earliest days of professional football, the season typically ended near the end of November (marquee games were often played on Thanksgiving) or in the first week of December, depending on the team; exhibition games would then be held in the winter. Once league schedules were standardized in the 1930s, the NFL Championship Game was typically held in mid-December. The 1943 NFL Championship Game, played on December 26 of that year because of scheduling complications brought on by World War II, was the first regulation NFL game to be played on or after Christmas.

From 1943 until the 1970 AFL-NFL Merger, the NFL regular season usually ended in mid-December, with the NFL Championship Game being held on the Sunday two weeks later. If that Sunday fell on Christmas Day December 25, the league preferred to move it to the following day, Monday, December 26; this rescheduling occurred for both the 1955 and the 1960 championship games.

The American Football League (AFL) compensated differently: the 1960 championship game was moved back by a full week, being played on New Year's Day 1961, with Christmas Sunday being an off-week. (The NFL's 1966 championship game was also held on Sunday, January 1, 1967, two weeks after the end of the regular season.) New Year's Day was an available day since the college bowl games are moved back to Monday, January 2 in years in which January 1 falls on a Sunday. The AFL had scheduled the 1966 championship game for Monday afternoon December 26, but when the two leagues agreed to merge in 1970 and play a "World Championship game" starting with the 1966 season, the AFL game was moved back to Sunday, January 1.

1971 Divisional Playoffs

The first NFL games actually played on December 25 came after the merger, during the 1971–72 NFL playoffs. The first two games of the Divisional Playoff Round were held on Christmas Day; the first of these was between the Dallas Cowboys and the Minnesota Vikings, while the second of the two contests played that afternoon, the Miami Dolphins versus the Kansas City Chiefs, wound up being the longest game in NFL history.[2] Because of the length of the latter game, the NFL received numerous complaints, reportedly due to the fact that it caused havoc with Christmas dinners around the nation. The NFL also came under fire from some quarters for intruding on a traditional religious and family holiday, and a Kansas state legislator proposed a bill to ban the scheduling of future games on December 25.[3][4] As a result, the NFL decided to not schedule any Christmas Day games for the next 17 seasons.

1972–1988: Avoiding Christmas Day

This required considerable effort during those years in which Christmas Day fell on a Saturday or a Sunday, given that ordinarily those days would be days in which NFL playoff games were to be held.

In Template:Nfly, the NFL opened its regular season a week earlier than would have ordinarily been the case (September 12, the second Sunday of the month, rather than the customary third Sunday) so that the Divisional Playoffs could be held on December 18 and 19 instead of December 25 and 26, and thus no games would be needed on Saturday, December 25 (Super Bowl XI was subsequently played on January 9, the earliest date in Super Bowl history).

In Template:Nfly, with Christmas Day falling on a Sunday, the Divisional Playoff Games were held around the holiday, with an AFC doubleheader on Saturday, December 24, and an NFC doubleheader on Monday, December 26. This was done so that one team did not have a two-day rest advantage over the other for the Conference Championship games (the NFL only allowed one-day rest advantages). This scheduling resulted in most of the country missing the majority of the first quarter of the Pittsburgh SteelersDenver Broncos game telecast (beginning at 4:00 p.m. EST), since the early AFC game that Saturday (Oakland RaidersBaltimore Colts, beginning at 12:30 p.m. EST) went into double overtime; with an ordinary schedule of one game from each conference, viewers would have had the option of switching channels (or using a VCR) but in this case NBC simply stayed with the Raiders–Colts game (except in the Pittsburgh and Denver markets) and had to overlap its telecasts.

The NFL continued to avoid Christmas Day even after it started to extend the length of the regular season and the playoffs. The league expanded to a 16-game regular season and a 10-team playoff tournament in Template:Nfly, but it was not until Template:Nfly that the regular season ended after Christmas Day. It was originally scheduled to end on Sunday, December 26 of that year, but the regular season was extended to Sunday, January 2, 1983, after the 57-day NFL players' strike reduced the season from 16 games to 9; the NFL compensated by extending the regular season one week and eliminating the off week between the conference championships and the Super Bowl.

In Template:Nfly and again in Template:Nfly, the NFL split the first round Wild Card Playoffs between Saturday, December 24 and Monday, December 26 to avoid a Christmas Day game.

Had the United States Football League (USFL) survived to play its autumn 1986 season, it would have featured the first major professional football games to be played in the regular season on Christmas Day; the USFL planned a complete set of four games for Christmas Day.[5] The USFL suspended operations prior to the 1986 season and the games were never played.

1989–2019: Occasional regular season games on Christmas Day

Finally, in Template:Nfly, the NFL tried another Christmas Day game, Cincinnati at Minnesota, but it was a 9:00 p.m. EST Monday Night Football contest on ABC, thereby avoiding interfering with family dinners. The NFL pushed the regular season back one week in 1989 as a one-off experiment, meaning Christmas Day would fall during the last week of the regular season instead of the first round of the playoffs. The league added a bye week to its schedule in Template:Nfly, making Christmas Day permanently fall during the regular season. In the years since, the NFL has played an occasional late-afternoon or night game on the holiday, but the league did not schedule a Christmas Day game starting earlier than 3:30 p.m. local time (for either participating team) from 1971 through 2021.

When Christmas Day landed on a Thursday during this period, no games were scheduled even though the league began regularly scheduling late-season Thursday Night Football games in Template:Nfly. This was because it landed in Week 17, which was the final week of the season. Any playoff team playing their final regular season game on Thursday would have had a significant competitive advantage with the extra rest heading into the postseason.

The league did however hold rare Friday games on Christmas Day in 2009 and 2020, both of which were considered special editions of Thursday Night Football.[6][7]

2020–present: Annual Christmas Day games

The NFL has staged at least one Christmas Day game each season since Template:Nfly, even in years in which Christmas Day falls on a day the league typically does not play. This became largely a result after the NFL expanded from a 16-game schedule to 17 games in Template:Nfly, putting the holiday on either the third- or second-to-last week of the regular season.

When December 25 again fell on a Sunday in Template:Nfly, the NFL scheduled three Christmas Day games for the first time. The 2022 Christmas Day games consisted of single contests for each Sunday network -- Fox at the 1:00 p.m. ET early slot, CBS in the late game slot at 4:30 p.m. ET, and Sunday Night Football.[8][9] The CBS game included an alternate, youth-oriented broadcast on sister network Nickelodeon, after having previously aired Wild Card games in such a manner.[10]

Under the NFL's next round of television deals, which began in 2023 and will run through 2033, Fox acquired the rights to air special Christmas Day games as the schedule permits. These special Christmas Day games are in addition to standard primetime games on Christmas Day (such as Thursday Night Football, Sunday Night Football and Monday Night Football in years in which Christmas Day lands on those days).[11] With December 25 landing on a Monday in Template:Nfly, the NFL scheduled another tripleheader, once again consisting of national CBS and Fox games, along with Monday Night Football.[12] For the second consecutive season, Nickelodeon aired an alternate, youth-oriented broadcast of CBS's game.[13]

With December 25 landing on a Wednesday in Template:Nfly, the league originally told The Wall Street Journal in December 2023 that it would not play games when Christmas Day falls on Tuesdays or Wednesdays.[14][15] However, on March 26, 2024, the NFL reversed course and announced a three-year agreement with Netflix to nationally stream two Christmas Day games in 2024, and at least one holiday game in both 2025 and 2026.[16][17] The Baltimore Ravens, Houston Texans, Pittsburgh Steelers, and two-time defending Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs were selected for the 2024 games. The Netflix games aired on local television affiliates in each respective team's television markets per NFL regulations.[18] All four teams played the previous Saturday to make the turnaround between games similar to that of a Sunday to Thursday night contest. The first ever halftime show for Christmas Gameday was headlined by Beyoncé on Christmas Day.[19]

According to The Washington Post in February 2025, the Kansas City Chiefs proposed to the league to play on Christmas every year, though it was unclear whether the league's other franchises would agree to the proposal.[20] In April, the NFL's vice president of broadcast planning and scheduling, Mike North, stated that the league would likely not to commit to a permanent host for Christmas.[21]

With December 25 landing on a Thursday for the first time since the expansion of the season, the league will return to a tripleheader of games with Netflix airing two games in the afternoon and Prime Video airing a primetime game as part of its usual Thursday Night Football package.[22] NFL commissioner Roger Goodell also stated that a Christmas tripleheader would remain an annual tradition moving forward.[1]

All-time results

1971 Divisional Round

Season Visiting team Score Home team Significance Location TV
1971 Dallas Cowboys 20–12 Minnesota Vikings Cowboys–Vikings rivalry Metropolitan Stadium CBS[23]
Miami Dolphins 27–24 (<templatestyles src="Template:Tooltip/styles.css" />2OTScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Kansas City Chiefs Longest NFL game Municipal Stadium NBC[24]

Regular season

Season Visiting team Score Home team Significance Location TV/Streaming
Template:Nfly Cincinnati Bengals 21–29 Minnesota Vikings Metrodome ABC[25]
Template:Nfly Houston Oilers 10–7 San Francisco 49ers Candlestick Park NBC[26]
Template:Nfly Detroit Lions 20–27 Miami Dolphins Joe Robbie Stadium ESPN[27]
Template:Nfly Dallas Cowboys 37–13 Arizona Cardinals Sun Devil Stadium ABC[28]
Template:Nfly Denver Broncos 17–7 Detroit Lions Pontiac Silverdome CBS[29]
Template:Nfly Dallas Cowboys 0–31 Tennessee Titans Adelphia Coliseum ABC[30]
Template:Nfly Oakland Raiders 30–31 Kansas City Chiefs Chiefs–Raiders rivalry Arrowhead Stadium CBS[31]
Denver Broncos 37–16 Tennessee Titans The Coliseum ESPN[32]
Template:Nfly Chicago Bears 24–17 Green Bay Packers Bears–Packers rivalry Lambeau Field Fox[33]
Minnesota Vikings 23–30 Baltimore Ravens M&T Bank Stadium ESPN[34]
Template:Nfly Philadelphia Eagles 23–7 Dallas Cowboys Cowboys–Eagles rivalry Texas Stadium NBC[35]
New York Jets 13–10 Miami Dolphins Dolphins–Jets rivalry Dolphin Stadium ESPN[36]
Template:Nfly San Diego Chargers 42–17 Tennessee Titans LP Field NFLN[37]
Template:Nfly Dallas Cowboys 26–27 Arizona Cardinals University of Phoenix Stadium NFLN[38]
Template:Nfly Chicago Bears 21–35 Green Bay Packers Bears–Packers rivalry
2010 NFC Championship Game rematch
Lambeau Field NBC[39]
Template:Nfly Baltimore Ravens 27–31 Pittsburgh Steelers Ravens–Steelers rivalry Heinz Field NFLN[40]
Denver Broncos 10–33 Kansas City Chiefs Broncos–Chiefs rivalry Arrowhead Stadium NBC[41]
Template:Nfly Pittsburgh Steelers 34–6 Houston Texans NRG Stadium NBC/NFLN/Prime Video

[42]

Oakland Raiders 10–19 Philadelphia Eagles Lincoln Financial Field ESPN[43]
Template:Nfly Minnesota Vikings 33–52 New Orleans Saints Saints–Vikings rivalry
2019 NFC Wild Card Round rematch
Mercedes-Benz Superdome Fox/NFLN/Prime Video[44]
Template:Nfly Cleveland Browns 22–24 Green Bay Packers Lambeau Field Fox/NFLN/Prime Video[45]
Indianapolis Colts 22–16 Arizona Cardinals State Farm Stadium NFLN[46][47]
Template:Nfly Green Bay Packers 26Template:Ndash20 Miami Dolphins Hard Rock Stadium Fox[48]
Denver Broncos 14Template:Ndash51 Los Angeles Rams SoFi Stadium CBS/Nick[49]
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 19Template:Ndash16 (OT)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Arizona Cardinals State Farm Stadium NBC[50]
Template:Nfly Las Vegas Raiders 20Template:Ndash14 Kansas City Chiefs Chiefs–Raiders rivalry Arrowhead Stadium CBS/Nick[51]
New York Giants 25Template:Ndash33 Philadelphia Eagles Eagles–Giants rivalry
2022 NFC Divisional Round rematch
Lincoln Financial Field Fox[52]
Baltimore Ravens 33Template:Ndash19 San Francisco 49ers Levi's Stadium ABC[53]
Template:Nfly Kansas City Chiefs 29Template:Ndash10 Pittsburgh Steelers Acrisure Stadium Netflix[54]
Baltimore Ravens 31Template:Ndash2 Houston Texans 2023 AFC Divisional Round rematch NRG Stadium Netflix[55]
Template:Nfly Dallas Cowboys 0Template:Ndash0 Washington Commanders Commanders–Cowboys rivalry Northwest Stadium Netflix
Detroit Lions 0Template:Ndash0 Minnesota Vikings Lions–Vikings rivalry U.S. Bank Stadium Netflix
Denver Broncos 0Template:Ndash0 Kansas City Chiefs Broncos–Chiefs rivalry Arrowhead Stadium Prime Video

Christmas Day standings

By franchise (through the 2024 games)

Team Games played Wins Losses Ties Win %
Philadelphia Eagles 3 3 0 0 1.000
Indianapolis Colts 1 1 0 0 1.000
Los Angeles Chargers 1 1 0 0 1.000
Los Angeles Rams 1 1 0 0 1.000
New Orleans Saints 1 1 0 0 1.000
New York Jets 1 1 0 0 1.000
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 1 1 0 0 1.000
Baltimore Ravens 4 3 1 0 .750
Green Bay Packers 4 3 1 0 .750
Pittsburgh Steelers 3 2 1 0 .667
Kansas City Chiefs 5 3 2 0 .600
Denver Broncos 4 2 2 0 .500
Miami Dolphins 4 2 2 0 .500
Tennessee Titans 4 2 2 0 .500
Chicago Bears 2 1 1 0 .500
Dallas Cowboys 5 2 3 0 .400
Las Vegas Raiders 3 1 2 0 .333
Arizona Cardinals 4 1 3 0 .250
Minnesota Vikings 4 1 3 0 .250
Cincinnati Bengals 1 0 1 0 .000
Cleveland Browns 1 0 1 0 .000
New York Giants 1 0 1 0 .000
Detroit Lions 2 0 2 0 .000
Houston Texans 2 0 2 0 .000
San Francisco 49ers 2 0 2 0 .000

References

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