The 1960 NFL season was the 41st regular season of the National Football League.
Before the season, on January 26, 33-year-old Pete Rozelle, the general manager of the Los Angeles Rams, was elected NFL commissioner as a compromise choice on the twenty-third ballot. Meanwhile, the league expanded to 13 teams on January 28 with the addition of the Dallas Cowboys, with a fourteenth team, the Minnesota Vikings, to start in . Also, on March 13th, the Cardinals relocated from Chicago to St. Louis and became the St. Louis Cardinals, the same moniker as the National League baseball club.
In the championship game, the host Philadelphia Eagles defeated the Green Bay Packers by four points at earlier in , both teams had finished in last place in their respective conferences, combining for only three wins. This loss was Vince Lombardi's only post-season defeat (excluding a loss in the third place Playoff Bowl game four years later) as an NFL head coach. Following this loss in 1960, Lombardi's Packers won five NFL championship games in seven years, and easily won the first two Super Bowls.
The NFL introduced the Playoff Bowl, a game for third place between the runners-up from each division. Played at the Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida, after the NFL Championship game, it benefitted the players' pension fund. The Detroit Lions played the Cleveland Browns in the inaugural game and the Lions won by a point, the first of three straight wins by Detroit in the series.
The two-time defending league champion Baltimore Colts led the Western Division after their bye in week 9 but lost the last four games to finish at .500 and fourth in the West. The New York Giants, winners of the Eastern Division the previous two seasons, won only one of their final five games and finished third in the East.
During this season, the American Football League (AFL) was launched as a competitor to the NFL. The two leagues co-existed for the entire 1960s, agreed to a merger in , and became one combined league in .
The 1960 NFL draft was held on November 30, 1959, at Philadelphia's Warwick Hotel. With the first pick, the Los Angeles Rams selected running back Billy Cannon from Louisiana State University.
Because the league awarded the Dallas Cowboys franchise about two months later on January 28, 1960, this marked the only time that an NFL expansion team did not have the benefit of a college draft in its first year.
The 1960 NFL expansion draft was held on March 13, 1960, with the Dallas Cowboys selecting 36 players from the other 12 teams.
All teams but Dallas played a home-and-away game against the other five members of their own division, one inter-division game, and one game against the new team (Dallas): Dallas, although assigned to the Western Division, was a "swing team" and played each team once.
This was the final season for the 12-game schedule in the NFL.
A bye was required because of there being thirteen teams, with one team having a bye in each of the 13 weeks.
The Cowboys' first game saw them take a 14âÂÂ0 lead over the Pittsburgh Steelers on a Saturday night at the Cotton Bowl, with Jim Doran catching a pass from Eddie LeBaron for the first score, but lost 35âÂÂ28.
Philadelphia lost its opener at home to Cleveland, 41âÂÂ24, then went on a nine-game winning streak. The breakthrough came in Week Six on October 30, when unbeaten New York (3âÂÂ0âÂÂ1), two-time defending division champions, came off their bye and lost at home to St. Louis, 20âÂÂ13, while the Browns and idle Eagles were both at 4âÂÂ1. In Week Seven, New York beat Cleveland, 17âÂÂ13, and the Eagles beat Pittsburgh 34âÂÂ7. The Eagles clinched the Eastern Division after ten games at 9âÂÂ1; they dropped a game the next week in the snow at Pittsburgh, and finished the regular season at 10âÂÂ2, 1ý games ahead of Cleveland. Two of the wins in the streak were in consecutive games (November 20 and 27) against New York.
In the latter game, the Eagles trailed 17âÂÂ0, then 23âÂÂ17, before Norm Van Brocklin threw two touchdown passes in the final quarter for a 31âÂÂ23 victory. In the former, the Giants' Frank Gifford was severely injured in a tackle by linebacker Chuck Bednarik late in the game that almost ended his career. New York entered that November 20 game at 5âÂÂ1âÂÂ1, but won only once in the last five games, including a tie against Dallas - the Cowboys lost their remaining eleven games that year - and finished third in the Eastern at 6âÂÂ4âÂÂ2. The Giants won the next three division championships for five in six seasons, but not the league title.
The Western Division race was one in which Baltimore, Chicago, Detroit, Green Bay, and San Francisco all had a lead at one time.
The Bears fell back after a Week Six loss to the 49ers, 25âÂÂ7. In Week Seven, the 4âÂÂ2 Colts and the 4âÂÂ1 Packers met on November 6 in Green Bay. Two-time defending NFL champion Baltimore, which had lost an earlier match, won 38âÂÂ24, to take the lead in the Western. In Week Ten, the Colts (6âÂÂ2) came off their bye and lost at home to San Francisco, 30âÂÂ22, to begin a streak of four defeats. Baltimore's 20âÂÂ15 loss to the Lions, and Green Bay's 41âÂÂ13 win at Chicago, tied the Colts and Packers at 6âÂÂ4 in Week Eleven. After the Packers' 13âÂÂ0 win at San Francisco, their record was 7âÂÂ4, while the Colts, Lions and 49ers were all at 6âÂÂ5. While San Francisco and Detroit both won the next week, the former beating Baltimore 34âÂÂ10, the Packers had won the day before, beating Los Angeles 35âÂÂ21 for the Western title, their first in 16 years.
The new Dallas Cowboys lost their first ten games but managed a 31âÂÂ31 tie against the Giants at Yankee Stadium in New York on December 4. They finished at 0âÂÂ11âÂÂ1: as ties were excluded in calculating winning percentage prior to , the Cowboys had a winning percentage of , rather than .
Conference leaders
The Playoff Bowl was between the division runners-up, for third place in the league. This was its first year (of ten) and it was played three weeks after the regular season.