Table of Contents

Player movement
Transactions
Trades
Draft
Referee changes
Major rule changes
1992 deaths
Members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame
Preseason
American Bowl
Regular season
Scheduling formula
Final standings
Tiebreakers
Playoffs
Awards
Coaching changes
Stadium changes
Uniform changes
Television
External links
References

1992 NFL season

Year1992
NflchampionDallas Cowboys
Regular SeasonSeptember 6 – December 28, 1992
Playoffs StartJanuary 2, 1993
AfcchampionBuffalo Bills
NfcchampionDallas Cowboys
Sb NameXXVII
Sb DateJanuary 31, 1993
Sb SiteRose Bowl, Pasadena, California
Pb DateFebruary 7, 1993

The 1992 NFL season was the 73rd regular season of the National Football League (NFL). Due to the damage caused by Hurricane Andrew, the New England Patriots at Miami Dolphins game that was scheduled for September 6 at Joe Robbie Stadium was rescheduled to October 18. Both teams originally had that weekend off. This marked the first time since the 1966 NFL season and the AFL seasons of 1966 and 1967 that there were byes in week 1.

The season ended with Super Bowl XXVII when the Dallas Cowboys defeated the Buffalo Bills 52–17 at the Rose Bowl. This would be the third of the Bills' four consecutive Super Bowl losses; as of 2023, no other team has ever lost more than two Super Bowls in a row. Buffalo joined the Miami Dolphins of the early 1970s as the second team to reach three straight Super Bowls (the New England Patriots of the late 2010s became the third, and subsequently, the early 2020s Kansas City Chiefs).

Player movement

Transactions


Trades


Draft

The 1992 NFL draft was held from April 26 to 27, 1992, at New York City's Marriott Marquis. With the first pick, the Indianapolis Colts selected defensive tackle Steve Emtman from the University of Washington.

Referee changes

After one season as referee, Stan Kemp stepped down after he was diagnosed with Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Tom Dooley also retired during the off-season. Gary Lane and Ed Hochuli were then promoted to referee.

Kemp's son, Alex, became an NFL official in 2014 and was promoted to referee in 2018.

Major rule changes


1992 deaths


Members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame


Preseason

American Bowl

A series of National Football League pre-season exhibition games that were held at sites outside the United States, a total of three games were contested.

DateWinning teamScoreLosing teamScoreStadiumCity
August 2, 1992Houston Oilers34Dallas Cowboys23Tokyo Dome Tokyo
August 15, 1992Miami Dolphins31Denver Broncos27Olympiastadion Berlin
August 16, 1992San Francisco 49ers17Washington Redskins15Wembley Stadium London

Regular season

Scheduling formula

    Inter-conference
AFC East vs NFC West
AFC Central vs NFC Central
AFC West vs NFC East

Highlights of the 1992 season included:


Final standings

There was an unusual deviation between good teams and bad teams in the NFL in 1992. Only one team, the Denver Broncos; finished with eight wins and eight losses, nine teams had at least 11 wins, and eight teams had at least 11 losses. Only six teams had between seven, eight or nine wins in 1992.

Tiebreakers


Playoffs

1992–93 NFL playoffs

Awards

Most Valuable PlayerSteve Young, quarterback, San Francisco
Coach of the YearBill Cowher, Pittsburgh
Offensive Player of the YearSteve Young, quarterback, San Francisco
Defensive Player of the YearCortez Kennedy, defensive tackle, Seattle
Offensive Rookie of the YearCarl Pickens, wide receiver, Cincinnati
Defensive Rookie of the YearDale Carter, cornerback, Kansas City
NFL Comeback Player of the YearRandall Cunningham, quarterback, Philadelphia
NFL Man of the YearJohn Elway, quarterback, Denver
Super Bowl Most Valuable PlayerTroy Aikman, quarterback, Dallas

Coaching changes


Stadium changes

The Atlanta Falcons played their first season in the new Georgia Dome, replacing Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium. The Falcons would play at the Georgia Dome until 2016.

Uniform changes

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers began wearing orange pants with their white jerseys.

Television

This was the third year under the league's four-year broadcast contracts with ABC, CBS, NBC, TNT, and ESPN. ABC, CBS, and NBC continued to televise Monday Night Football, the NFC package, and the AFC package, respectively. Sunday night games aired on TNT during the first half of the season, and ESPN during the second half of the season. With Bill Walsh leaving NBC to become head coach of the Stanford Cardinal college football team, Bob Trumpy was named to replace him as the network's lead color commentator, alongside Dick Enberg. Gary Bender replaced Skip Caray as TNT's play-by-play announcer.

External links


References



Category:NFL seasons

National Football League