1943 NFL season explained

Year:1943
Nflchampion:Chicago Bears
Eastchampion:Washington Redskins
Westchampion:Chicago Bears
Regular Season:September 19 –
December 26, 1943

The 1943 NFL season marked the 24th year of the National Football League. A total of 38 regular season games were scheduled, starting on Sunday, September 19 and culminating on Sunday, December 12.

Due to the exodus of players who had left to serve in World War II, the Cleveland Rams were granted permission to suspend operations for this season, while the Philadelphia Eagles and the Pittsburgh Steelers merged for this one season, with the combined team (known as Phil-Pitt and called the "Steagles" by fans) playing four home games in Philadelphia and two in Pittsburgh. With only 8 teams playing, the 1943 season ties the 1932 season for the fewest teams in league history.

The season ended when the Chicago Bears defeated the Washington Redskins, 41–21, in the NFL Championship Game played the day after Christmas, the first time in NFL history that a playoff game was played so late in the year.

Draft

The 1943 NFL draft was held on April 8, 1943, at Chicago's Palmer House Hotel. With the first pick, the Detroit Lions selected runningback Frank Sinkwich from the University of Georgia.

Despite the eventual hiatus of the Cleveland Rams franchise for 1943 and merger of operations of the Philadelphia Eagles and Pittsburgh Steelers, all ten teams participated in the 1943 draft, selecting a total of 300 players.

Major rule changes

Military service and team rosters

The impact of World War II on team rosters was massive during the 1943 season, with hundreds of players from the league's ten teams removed from the possibility of game play by military service. These were proudly listed as part of an official "Service Roster" by the NFL.[4] With the United States beginning to draft fathers into the military, league officials were concerned about the potential impact of expanded conscription upon their rosters and the player limit was increased from 25 to 28 in an effort to avoid crippling disruption.[5]

The Cleveland Rams were granted permission to suspend operations for the 1943 season. Operations of the NFL's two teams from Pennsylvania, the Philadelphia Eagles and the Pittsburgh Steelers, were also merged for 1943 — reducing the number of participating teams to just eight.

Division races

The NFL played a shortened schedule of ten games. Despite the war, the league's popularity continued to grow. The league drew a cumulative 1,072,462 fans, which was fewer than 7,000 short of the record set the previous year despite the fact that 15 fewer games were played. The increased attendance was attributed to the higher competitiveness of the weaker squads.[6] [7]

In the Eastern Division, the Phil-Pitt team won its first two games and led at Week Four, with 1–0–0 Washington close behind, while in the Western Division, the Bears and Packers tied 21–21 in their first game and were 2–0–1 after four weeks.

In Week Five, the division leaders played each other on October 17, with the Bears beating the Steagles 48–21 and the Redskins defeating the Packers 33–7, leaving the two winners in first place.

On November 7, the Lions and Giants played what is as of 2023 the last scoreless tie in NFL history. Although this was the 73rd scoreless tie in NFL history, scoreless ties had gradually become less and less common in the 1930s and early 1940s, and there has not been a scoreless tie in the NFL for 80 years and counting.[8]

The Redskins (5–0–1) and Bears (7–0–1) were still unbeaten going into Week Eleven, and met in Washington on November 21, with the Redskins winning 21–7. The Redskins had their first loss in Week Twelve when they lost to Phil-Pitt, 14–27, on November 28. The Bears clinched the Western Division the same day with a 35–24 win over the Cardinals for an 8–1–1 finish.

In Week Thirteen, Phil-Pitt lost its last game, falling to Green Bay 38–28, and was out of contention at 5–4–1.

Chicago finished its regular season on November 28 and won the Western Division with an 8–1–1 record, but the Bears had to wait for three weeks while the Eastern Division champion was determined.

Washington and the New York Giants ended the regular season by playing against each other on two consecutive Sundays, December 5 and 12 (the second game, originally scheduled on October 3 had been postponed due to heavy rain). The Giants won both games to force a first-place tie at 6–3–1 each. For the third straight weekend, New York and Washington faced each other, with the Redskins winning the final game 28–0 and earning the right to play the Bears for the league championship.

Playoffs

See: 1943 NFL playoffs

Home team in capitalsEastern Division Playoff Game (December 19, 1943)

NFL Championship Game (December 26, 1943)

League leaders

StatisticNameTeamYards
PassingSid LuckmanChicago Bears2194
RushingBill PaschalNew York572
ReceivingDon HutsonGreen Bay776

Awards

Joe F. Carr Trophy (Most Valuable Player)   Sid Luckman, quarterback, Chicago Bears

Coaching changes

Mike Getto was replaced by Pete Cawthon.

Jimmy Conzelman was replaced by Phil Handler.

Gus Dorais was hired as new head coach. Bill Edwards was released after three games in 1942, and John Karcis then served for the final eight games.

Philadelphia Eagles head coach Greasy Neale and Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Walt Kiesling served as co-head coaches of the Steagles.

Ray Flaherty was replaced by Dutch Bergman.

Stadium changes

The merged Steagles split their games between Philadelphia's Shibe Park and Pittsburgh's Forbes Field.

Other sources

Notes and References

  1. Hugh L. Ray (ed.) "Official ?Football Rules of the National Football League, 1943" in George Strickler (ed.), 1943 Official National Football League Record and Roster Manual. Chicago: National Football League, 1943; part 2, inside cover.
  2. "Official Football Rules of the National Collegiate Athletic Association, 1941" in Walter R. Okeson (ed.), The Official National Collegiate Athletic Association Football Guide, 1941: With the Official Rules. New York: A.S. Barnes and Co., 1941; p. 226.
  3. Hugh L. Ray (ed.), "Official Football Rules of the National Football League, 1942," in George Strickler (ed.), 1942 Official National Football League Record and Roster Manual. Chicago: National Football League, 1943; part 2, p. 22.
  4. See, for example: "Service Roster" in Strickler (ed.), 1943 Official National Football League Record and Roster Manual, pp. 7–14.
  5. Tom Bennett, et al. (eds.), The NFL's Official Encyclopedic History of Professional Football. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1977; p. 36.
  6. News: '43 Pro Grid Cracks Attendance Records . May 26, 2011 . . . 28 . December 7, 1943.
  7. Web site: MSN . .
  8. Web site: All Games in Pro Football History with a 0 to 0 score . 2024-01-04 . Pro-Football-Reference.com . en.