NATIONAL FOOTBALL CONFERENCE EAST DIVISION

(Redirected from NFC East)

The 'NFC East' is a division of the National Football League's National Football Conference. It currently has four members: Dallas Cowboys, New York Giants, Philadelphia Eagles, and Washington Redskins.
When the division was created after the AFL-NFL Merger in 1970, it also included the St. Louis Cardinals. Despite relocating to Arizona in 1988, the Cardinals continued to play in the NFC East until the 2002 re-alignment when they were moved to the NFC West. However, at the request of the Cardinals, the Cowboys and Cardinals continue to face each other on an annual basis in the preseason.
Although the St. Louis Rams are geographically farther east than Dallas, the Cowboys remained in the NFC East and the Rams stayed in the NFC West due to long-standing rivalries: the Cowboys with the three other teams in the East, and the Rams with the San Francisco 49ers in the West.
NFC East teams have a combined 18 Super Bowl appearances and ten wins, the highest marks of any division in the NFL. Given the division member's histories and intense rivalries, many sports analysts and fans regard the NFC East as the toughest division in the NFL.

Contents
Division champions
Wild Card qualifiers
Total playoff berths

Division champions


{| class="wikitable"
|- bgcolor="#efefef"
! Season !! Team !! Record !! Playoff Results
|-
| 1970 || Dallas Cowboys || 10-4-0 || Lost Super Bowl V
|-
| 1971 || Dallas Cowboys || 11-3-0 || 'Won Super Bowl VI'
|-
| 1972 || Washington Redskins || 11-3-0 || Lost Super Bowl VII
|-
| 1973 || Dallas Cowboys || 10-4-0 || Lost NFC Championship Game
|-
| 1974 || St. Louis Cardinals || 10-4-0 || Lost NFC Divisional Playoffs
|-
| 1975 || St. Louis Cardinals || 11-3-0 || Lost NFC Divisional Playoffs
|-
| 1976 || Dallas Cowboys || 11-3-0 || Lost NFC Divisional Playoffs
|-
| 1977 || Dallas Cowboys || 12-2-0 || 'Won Super Bowl XII'
|-
| 1978 || Dallas Cowboys || 12-4-0 || Lost Super Bowl XIII
|-
| 1979 || Dallas Cowboys || 11-5-0 || Lost NFC Divisional Playoffs
|-
| 1980 || Philadelphia Eagles || 12-4-0 || Lost Super Bowl XV
|-
| 1981 || Dallas Cowboys || 12-4-0 || Lost NFC Championship Game
|-
| 1982+ || Washington Redskins || 8-1-0 || 'Won Super Bowl XVII'
|-
| 1983 || Washington Redskins || 14-2-0 || Lost Super Bowl XVIII
|-
| 1984 || Washington Redskins || 11-5-0 || Lost NFC Divisional Playoffs
|-
| 1985 || Dallas Cowboys || 10-6-0 || Lost NFC Divisional Playoffs
|-
| 1986 || New York Giants || 14-2-0 || 'Won Super Bowl XXI'
|-
| 1987 || Washington Redskins || 11-4-0 || 'Won Super Bowl XXII'
|-
| 1988 || Philadelphia Eagles || 10-6-0 || Lost NFC Divisional Playoffs
|-
| 1989 || New York Giants || 12-4-0 || Lost NFC Divisional Playoffs
|-
| 1990 || New York Giants || 13-3-0 || 'Won Super Bowl XXV'
|-
| 1991 || Washington Redskins || 14-2-0 || 'Won Super Bowl XXVI'
|-
| 1992 || Dallas Cowboys || 13-3-0 || 'Won Super Bowl XXVII'
|-
| 1993 || Dallas Cowboys || 12-4-0 || 'Won Super Bowl XXVIII'
|-
| 1994 || Dallas Cowboys || 12-4-0 || Lost NFC Championship Game
|-
| 1995 || Dallas Cowboys || 12-4-0 || 'Won Super Bowl XXX'
|-
| 1996 || Dallas Cowboys || 10-6-0 || Lost NFC Divisional Playoffs
|-
| 1997 || New York Giants || 10-5-1 || Lost NFC Wild Card Playoffs
|-
| 1998 || Dallas Cowboys || 10-6-0 || Lost NFC Wild Card Playoffs
|-
| 1999 || Washington Redskins || 10-6-0 || Lost NFC Divisional Playoffs
|-
| 2000 || New York Giants || 12-4-0 || Lost Super Bowl XXXV
|-
| 2001 || Philadelphia Eagles || 11-5-0 || Lost NFC Championship Game
|-
| 2002 || Philadelphia Eagles || 12-4-0 || Lost NFC Championship Game
|-
| 2003 || Philadelphia Eagles || 12-4-0 || Lost NFC Championship Game
|-
| 2004 || Philadelphia Eagles || 13-3-0 || Lost Super Bowl XXXIX
|-
| 2005 || New York Giants || 11-5-0 || Lost NFC Wild Card Playoffs
|-
| 2006 || Philadelphia Eagles || 10-6-0 || Lost NFC Divisional Playoffs
+ A players' strike in 1982 reduced the regular season to nine games. Thus, the league used a special 16-team playoff tournament just for this year. Division standings were ignored, Washington had the best record of the division teams and won the Super Bowl
Philadelphia Eagles are the only team in the NFC East to not win a Super Bowl. The Cowboys lead with five, followed by the Redskins with three, and the Giants with two. However, the Giants hold the better percentage (2-1, .667), followed by the Cowboys (5-3, .625), then the Redskins (3-2, .600). The Eagles are 0-2.

Wild Card qualifiers


:''Since 1970''

1970 - ''None''

1971 - Washington Redskins

1972 - Dallas Cowboys

1973 - Washington Redskins

1974 - Washington Redskins

1975 - Dallas Cowboys

1976 - Washington Redskins

1977 - ''None''

1978 - Philadelphia Eagles

1979 - Philadelphia Eagles

1980 - Dallas Cowboys

1981 - New York Giants, Philadelphia Eagles

1982 -


1983 - Dallas Cowboys

1984 - New York Giants

1985 - New York Giants

1986 - Washington Redskins

1987 - ''None''

1988 - ''None''

1989 - Philadelphia Eagles

1990 - Philadelphia Eagles, Washington Redskins

1991 - Dallas Cowboys

1992 - Philadelphia Eagles, Washington Redskins

1993 - New York Giants

1994 - ''None''

1995 - Philadelphia Eagles

1996 - Philadelphia Eagles

1997 - ''None''

1998 - Arizona Cardinals

1999 - Dallas Cowboys

2000 - Philadelphia Eagles

2001 - ''None''

2002 - New York Giants

2003 - Dallas Cowboys

2004 - ''None''

2005 - Washington Redskins

2006 - Dallas Cowboys, New York Giants

- A players' strike in 1982 reduced the regular season to nine games. Thus, the league used a special 16-team playoff tournament just for this year. Division standings were ignored.

Total playoff berths


{| class="wikitable"
|- bgcolor="#efefef"
! Team !! Division Titles !! Playoff Berths
|-
| Dallas Cowboys || 15 || 24
|-
| Philadelphia Eagles || 7 || 16
|-
| Washington Redskins || 7 || 15
|-
| New York Giants || 6 || 12
|-
| St. Louis/Arizona Cardinals1 || 2 || 4
1 Known as the St. Louis Cardinals before 1988. Realigned to the NFC West during the 2002 NFL season.

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