The 1938 NFL season was the 19th regular season of the National Football League. The season ended when the New York Giants defeated the Green Bay Packers in the NFL Championship Game.
The 1938 NFL draft was held on December 12, 1937, at Chicago's Hotel Sherman. With the first pick, the Cleveland Rams selected fullback Corbett Davis from Indiana University Bloomington.
In Week Seven, the Bears lost at home to the Rams, 23âÂÂ21, while the Packers beat the Pirates (the future Steelers) 20âÂÂ0, giving Green Bay the lead for the first time. The Packers won their next three games to clinch the Western Division.
In the Eastern Division, the Redskins led until Week Ten, when they fell to the Bears, 31âÂÂ7; the Giants' 28âÂÂ0 win over the Rams gave New York the division lead on November 13. The division title still came down to the last day of the regular season, December 4, when 57,461 turned out at the Polo Grounds in New York to watch the 7âÂÂ2âÂÂ1 Giants host the 6âÂÂ2âÂÂ2 Redskins. A Washington win would have made them 7âÂÂ2âÂÂ2 and New York 7âÂÂ3âÂÂ1, with the Skins as division champs. New York needed only to win or tie, and did the former, five touchdowns en route to a 36âÂÂ0 victory.
Four neutral-site games were held: two at Civic Stadium in Buffalo, New York, one in Erie, Pennsylvania, and one in Charleston, West Virginia. The Buffalo games marked the league's first return to Buffalo since the folding of the Bisons in 1929.
The New York Giants defeated the Green Bay Packers, 23âÂÂ17, at the Polo Grounds in New York City on December 11, 1938, to win the Championship.
After being crowned champion the Giants faced a team of "Pro All-Stars", an all-star team consisting mostly of NFL players but also including three players from the Los Angeles Bulldogs, in an exhibition game at Wrigley Field in Los Angeles on January 15, 1939. The game, which the Giants won 13âÂÂ10, was the first of five annual NFL all-star games held under the format (but the only one to include non-NFL players) prior to the creation of the Pro Bowl in 1951.