NFC East

The National Football Conference – Eastern Division or NFC East is one of the four divisions of the National Football Conference (NFC) in the National Football League (NFL). It currently has four members: the Dallas Cowboys (based in Arlington, Texas), New York Giants (based in East Rutherford, New Jersey), Philadelphia Eagles (based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania), and the Washington Commanders (based in Landover, Maryland).

NFC East
ConferenceNational Football Conference
LeagueNational Football League
SportAmerican football
Founded1967 (as the NFL Eastern Conference Capitol Division)
No. of teams4
CountryUnited States
Most recent
champion(s)
Philadelphia Eagles
(12th title)
Most titlesDallas Cowboys
(24 titles)

The division was formed in 1967 as the National Football League Capitol Division and acquired its current name in 1970 when the NFL merged with the American Football League. The NFC East is currently the only division in the league in which all four current teams have won at least one Super Bowl. With 13 Super Bowl titles, the NFC East is currently the most successful division in the NFL during the Super Bowl era, with the AFC East second with nine titles.

History

The division's original name derived from it being centered on the capital of the United States, Washington, D.C., and the country's birthplace, Philadelphia. In 1967 and 1969 the teams in the NFL Capitol Division were Dallas, Philadelphia, Washington and the expansion team New Orleans Saints, with the New York Giants swapping divisions with the Saints for the 1968 season. This arrangement had been agreed in advance as a means to ensure all of the NFL's teams would be able to visit New York once in those three years. With the merger in 1970, following contentious negotiations culminating in a random draw, it was agreed that New York (along with the St. Louis Cardinals) would permanently return to the re-branded NFC East.

The NFC East has a long history of being geographically inaccurate. While the New York Giants, Philadelphia, and Washington are based on the East Coast, Dallas and St. Louis (later Phoenix, then Arizona) remained a part of the East from the 1970 merger until 2002 (and after the move to Phoenix in 1987) despite being geographically west of most teams in the conference and closer to the Pacific Ocean.

To begin with, the Cowboys were only located east of two NFC teams that were outside of the East division (Los Angeles Rams and San Francisco 49ers from the West division) while the Cardinals were east of one additional such team (Minnesota Vikings from the Central division). The Tampa Bay Buccaneers joined the Central as an expansion team in 1976; they're located east of Dallas and St. Louis. The Cardinals relocated to Phoenix to start the 1988 season and stayed in the East through 2001; that made them located west of every team in the NFC except for the Rams and 49ers. The Rams relocated from Los Angeles to St. Louis to start the 1995 season and stayed in the West, while the Carolina Panthers joined the West as an expansion team that same season; this made the Cardinals and Cowboys west of every team in the conference except for the 49ers from 1995 to 2001.

While the divisions in general have been much more geographically accurate since 2002, even following the Rams' return to Los Angeles the Cowboys are further west than every team in the league except for seven of the eight West teams in both conferences, in addition to the Kansas City Chiefs of the AFC West.

General information

The NFC East teams have combined to be the most successful division in the Super Bowl era with 21 NFC championships and 13 Super Bowl victories, the highest marks of any division in the NFL. The division features a number of prominent rivalries such as the Cowboys–Eagles rivalry, Cowboys–Washington rivalry and Eagles–Giants rivalry, among others. Because the division's teams are in some of the United States' largest media markets (New York No. 1, Philadelphia No. 4, Dallas-Fort Worth No. 5, and Washington No. 9), the NFC East receives a high amount of coverage from national sports media outlets.[1] In the early 1990s the division claimed four consecutive Super Bowl champions, all against the Buffalo Bills, with the Giants and Washington respectively winning back-to-back in Super Bowls XXV and XXVI; and the Cowboys winning twice after in Super Bowls XXVII and XXVIII. Those same three teams won seven out of ten Super Bowls, from 1986–87 to 1995–96 (the 49ers won the other three during that span). Meanwhile, the Eagles are the most recent team in the division to win a Super Bowl, beating the Patriots 41–33 in Super Bowl LII.

The NFC East was the first division since the 2002 realignment to send 3 teams to the playoffs when the 2006-07 NFL playoffs had Philadelphia winning the division and Dallas and New York taking both Wild Card spots. On the other hand, the NFC East became one of three divisions to be won by a team with a losing record (the previous two being the NFC South and NFC West) when the then-Washington Football Team won the 2020 division crown with a 7-9 record.

The Philadelphia Eagles are the only NFC East team to actually play in the city of the team's naming.[2] The other three teams play in suburbs of the major cities they are named after. The Dallas Cowboys play in Arlington, Texas, and are the only team in this division not based in the Eastern Time Zone (the Cowboys are based in the Central Time Zone).[3] The Washington Commanders play in Landover, Maryland,[4] and the New York Giants play in East Rutherford, New Jersey,[5] where they share a stadium with the New York Jets. Analogously, three of the four AFC East teams do not actually play within the city of their naming. (The Patriots geographical identifier is New England, being named for the region the team plays in.)

As of 2023, the NFC East could be called the most valuable NFL division. All four teams in the division were in the top ten of most valuable NFL franchises (Cowboys #1; Giants #2; Commanders #7; Eagles #9).[6]

Division lineups

Place cursor over year for division champion.

NFL Eastern Conference
Capitol Division
NFC East Division[B]
1900s2000s
67[A] 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75[C] 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01
Dallas Cowboys
Philadelphia Eagles
Washington Redskins
N.O. Saints NY Giants N.O. Saints New York Giants
  St. Louis Cardinals[C] Phoenix Cardinals Arizona Cardinals[D]
NFC East Division [E]
2000s
02 03 04 05 06 07[F] 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
Dallas Cowboys
Philadelphia Eagles
Washington Redskins Washington Football Team Washington Commanders
New York Giants
  Team not in division   Division Won Super Bowl   Division Won NFC Championship
A The Eastern Conference was divided into the Capitol and Century Divisions. Dallas, Philadelphia, and Washington moved in. Also, the New Orleans Saints joined the league.
B The Capitol Division adopts its current name. New Orleans realigned to the NFC West. The Giants and Cardinals are added from the Century Division.
C Although the Cardinals were division champions, the Cowboys won the NFC Championship as a wild card qualifier.
D St. Louis moved to Phoenix in 1988. The team changed its name from Phoenix Cardinals to the Arizona Cardinals in 1994.
E Arizona moved to the NFC West when the league realigned into eight four-team divisions before the 2002 season.
F Although the Cowboys were division champions, the Giants won the Super Bowl as a wild card qualifier.

Division champions

As NFL Capitol Division

SeasonTeamRecordPlayoff Results
NFL Capitol
1967Dallas Cowboys (1)9–5Won Conference playoffs (Browns) 52–14
Lost NFL Championship Game (at Packers) 17–21
1968Dallas Cowboys (2)12–2Lost Conference playoffs (at Browns) 20–31
1969Dallas Cowboys (3)11–2–1Lost Conference playoffs (Browns) 14–38

There was one division sweep of the Capitol Division: the 1969 Cowboys went 6–0 in division matchups.[7]

The NFC East

There has not been a repeat division champion since 2005. This is the longest active streak among divisions in the NFL as well as the longest in league history.

SeasonTeamRecordPlayoff Results
1970Dallas Cowboys (4)10–4Won Divisional playoffs (Lions) 5–0
Won NFC Championship (at 49ers) 17–10
Lost Super Bowl V (vs. Colts) 13–16
1971Dallas Cowboys (5)11–3Won Divisional playoffs (at Vikings) 20–12
Won NFC Championship (49ers) 14–3
Won Super Bowl VI (vs. Dolphins) 24–3
1972Washington Redskins (1)11–3Won Divisional playoffs (Packers) 16–3
Won NFC Championship (Cowboys) 26–3
Lost Super Bowl VII (vs. Dolphins) 7–14
1973Dallas Cowboys (6)10–4Won Divisional playoffs (Rams) 27–16
Lost NFC Championship (Vikings) 10–27
1974St. Louis Cardinals (1)10–4Lost Divisional playoffs (at Vikings) 14–30
1975St. Louis Cardinals (2)11–3Lost Divisional playoffs (at Rams) 23–35
1976Dallas Cowboys (7)11–3Lost Divisional playoffs (Rams) 12–14
1977Dallas Cowboys (8)12–2Won Divisional playoffs (Bears) 37–7
Won NFC Championship (Vikings) 23–6
Won Super Bowl XII (vs. Broncos) 27–10
1978Dallas Cowboys (9)12–4Won Divisional playoffs (Falcons) 27–20
Won NFC Championship (at Rams) 28–0
Lost Super Bowl XIII (vs. Steelers) 31–35
1979Dallas Cowboys (10)11–5Lost Divisional playoffs (Rams) 19–21
1980Philadelphia Eagles (1)12–4Won Divisional playoffs (Vikings) 31–16
Won NFC Championship (Cowboys) 20–7
Lost Super Bowl XV (vs. Raiders) 10–27
1981Dallas Cowboys (11)12–4Won Divisional playoffs (Buccaneers) 38–0
Lost NFC Championship (at 49ers) 27–28
1982*Washington Redskins*8–1Won First Round playoffs (Lions) 31–7
Won Second Round playoffs (Vikings) 21–7
Won NFC Championship (Cowboys) 31–17
Won Super Bowl XVII (vs. Dolphins) 27–17
1983Washington Redskins (2)14–2Won Divisional playoffs (Rams) 51–7
Won NFC Championship (49ers) 24–21
Lost Super Bowl XVIII (vs. Raiders) 9–38
1984Washington Redskins (3)11–5Lost Divisional playoffs (Bears) 19–23
1985Dallas Cowboys (12)10–6Lost Divisional playoffs (at Rams) 0–20
1986New York Giants (1)14–2Won Divisional playoffs (49ers) 49–3
Won NFC Championship (Redskins) 17–0
Won Super Bowl XXI (vs. Broncos) 39–20
1987Washington Redskins (4)11–4Won Divisional playoffs (at Bears) 21–17
Won NFC Championship (Vikings) 17–10
Won Super Bowl XXII (vs. Broncos) 42–10
1988Philadelphia Eagles (2)10–6Lost Divisional playoffs (at Bears) 12–20
1989New York Giants (2)12–4Lost Divisional playoffs (Rams) 13–19 (OT)
1990New York Giants (3)13–3Won Divisional playoffs (Bears) 31–3
Won NFC Championship (at 49ers) 15–13
Won Super Bowl XXV (vs. Bills) 20–19
1991Washington Redskins (5)14–2Won Divisional playoffs (Falcons) 24–7
Won NFC Championship (Lions) 41–10
Won Super Bowl XXVI (vs. Bills) 37–24
1992Dallas Cowboys (13)13–3Won Divisional playoffs (Eagles) 34–10
Won NFC Championship (at 49ers) 30–20
Won Super Bowl XXVII (vs. Bills) 52–17
1993Dallas Cowboys (14)12–4Won Divisional playoffs (Packers) 27–17
Won NFC Championship (49ers) 38–21
Won Super Bowl XXVIII (vs. Bills) 30–13
1994Dallas Cowboys (15)12–4Won Divisional playoffs (Packers) 35–9
Lost NFC Championship (at 49ers) 28–38
1995Dallas Cowboys (16)12–4Won Divisional playoffs (Eagles) 30–11
Won NFC Championship (Packers) 38–27
Won Super Bowl XXX (5) (vs. Steelers) 27–17
1996Dallas Cowboys (17)10–6Won Wild Card playoffs (Vikings) 40–15
Lost Divisional playoffs (at Panthers) 17–26
1997New York Giants (4)10–5–1Lost Wild Card playoffs (Vikings) 22–23
1998Dallas Cowboys (18)10–6Lost Wild Card playoffs (Cardinals) 7–20
1999Washington Redskins (6)10–6Won Wild Card playoffs (Lions) 27–13
Lost Divisional playoffs (at Buccaneers) 13–14
2000New York Giants (5)12–4Won Divisional playoffs (Eagles) 20–10
Won NFC Championship (Vikings) 41–0
Lost Super Bowl XXXV (vs. Ravens) 7–34
2001Philadelphia Eagles (3)11–5Won Wild Card playoffs (Buccaneers) 31–9
Won Divisional playoffs (at Bears) 33–19
Lost NFC Championship (at Rams) 24–29
NFC East
2002Philadelphia Eagles (4)12–4Won Divisional playoffs (Falcons) 20–6
Lost NFC Championship (Buccaneers) 10–27
2003Philadelphia Eagles (5)12–4Won Divisional playoffs (Packers) 20–17 (OT)
Lost NFC Championship (Panthers) 3–14
2004Philadelphia Eagles (6)13–3Won Divisional playoffs (Vikings) 27–14
Won NFC Championship (Falcons) 27–10
Lost Super Bowl XXXIX (vs. Patriots) 21–24
2005New York Giants (6)11–5Lost Wild Card playoffs (Panthers) 0–23
2006Philadelphia Eagles (7)10–6Won Wild Card playoffs (Giants) 23–20
Lost Divisional playoffs (at Saints) 24–27
2007Dallas Cowboys (19)13–3Lost Divisional playoffs (Giants) 17–21
2008New York Giants (7)12–4Lost Divisional playoffs (Eagles) 11–23
2009Dallas Cowboys (20)11–5Won Wild Card playoffs (Eagles) 34–14
Lost Divisional playoffs (at Vikings) 3–34
2010Philadelphia Eagles (8)10–6Lost Wild Card playoffs (Packers) 16–21
2011New York Giants (8)9–7Won Wild Card playoffs (Falcons) 24–2
Won Divisional playoffs (at Packers) 37–20
Won NFC Championship (at 49ers) 20–17 (OT)
Won Super Bowl XLVI (vs. Patriots) 21–17
2012Washington Redskins (7)10–6Lost Wild Card playoffs (Seahawks) 14–24
2013Philadelphia Eagles (9)10–6Lost Wild Card playoffs (Saints) 24–26
2014Dallas Cowboys (21)12–4Won Wild Card playoffs (Lions) 24–20
Lost Divisional playoffs (at Packers) 21–26
2015Washington Redskins (8)9–7Lost Wild Card playoffs (Packers) 18–35
2016Dallas Cowboys (22)13–3Lost Divisional playoffs (Packers) 31–34
2017Philadelphia Eagles (10)13–3Won Divisional playoffs (Falcons) 15–10
Won NFC Championship (Vikings) 38–7
Won Super Bowl LII (vs. Patriots) 41–33
2018Dallas Cowboys (23)10–6Won Wild Card playoffs (Seahawks) 24–22
Lost Divisional playoffs (at Rams) 22–30
2019Philadelphia Eagles (11)9–7Lost Wild Card playoffs (Seahawks) 9–17
2020Washington Football Team (9)7–9Lost Wild Card playoffs (Buccaneers) 23–31
2021Dallas Cowboys (24)12–5Lost Wild Card playoffs (49ers) 17–23
2022Philadelphia Eagles (12)14–3Won Divisional playoffs (Giants) 38–7
Won NFC Championship (49ers) 31–7
Lost Super Bowl LVII (vs. Chiefs) 35–38
  • * 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.
  • ++ The 1987 Redskins are the only NFC 3rd Seed to win the Super Bowl.[8]
  • ^ The 2007 Dallas Cowboys were defeated by division rival and NFC 5th Seed New York Giants, who ultimately won Super Bowl XLII.
  • # The 2011 New York Giants are the only sub-10-win team to win the Super Bowl (other than the 1982 Redskins listed above), as well as the first team to win the Super Bowl as the NFC's 4th Seed.[8]

All four teams in the NFC East have won the Super Bowl. The Cowboys lead with five, followed by the Giants with four, Washington with three, and the Eagles with one. In overall NFL history, however, the Giants lead with eight league championships, followed by the Cowboys and Washington with five each, then the Eagles with four.

There have been three division sweeps of the NFC East Division, the 1998 Dallas Cowboys (8–0), the 2004 Philadelphia Eagles (6–0), and the 2021 Dallas Cowboys (6–0).[7]

Wild Card qualifiers

SeasonTeamRecordPlayoff Results
NFC East
1971Washington Redskins9–4–1Lost Divisional playoffs (at 49ers) 20–24
1972Dallas Cowboys10–4Won Divisional playoffs (at 49ers) 30–28
Lost NFC Championship (at Redskins) 3–26
1973Washington Redskins10–4Lost Divisional playoffs (at Vikings) 20–27
1974Washington Redskins10–4Lost Divisional playoffs (at Rams) 10–19
1975Dallas Cowboys10–4Won Divisional playoffs (at Vikings) 17–14
Won NFC Championship (at Rams) 37–7
Lost Super Bowl X (vs. Steelers) 17–21
1976Washington Redskins10–4Lost Divisional playoffs (at Vikings) 20–35
1978Philadelphia Eagles9–7Lost Wild Card playoffs (at Falcons) 13–14
1979Philadelphia Eagles11–5Won Wild Card playoffs (Bears) 27–17
Lost Divisional playoffs (at Buccaneers) 17–24
1980Dallas Cowboys12–4Won Wild Card playoffs (Rams) 34–13
Won Divisional playoffs (at Falcons) 30–27
Lost NFC Championship (at Eagles) 7–20
1981Philadelphia Eagles10–6Lost Wild Card playoffs (Giants) 21–27
New York Giants9–7Won Wild Card playoffs (at Eagles) 27–21
Lost Divisional playoffs (at 49ers) 24–38
1982+Dallas Cowboys6–3Won First Round playoffs (Buccaneers) 30–17
Won Second Round playoffs (Packers) 37–26
Lost NFC Championship (at Redskins) 17–31
St. Louis Cardinals5–4Lost First Round playoffs (at Packers) 16–41
1983Dallas Cowboys12–4Lost Wild Card playoffs (Rams) 17–24
1984New York Giants9–7Won Wild Card playoffs (at Rams) 16–13
Lost Divisional playoffs (at 49ers) 10–21
1985New York Giants10–6Won Wild Card playoffs (49ers) 17–3
Lost Divisional playoffs (at Bears) 0–21
1986Washington Redskins12–4Won Wild Card playoffs (Rams) 19–7
Won Divisional playoffs (at Bears) 27–13
Lost NFC Championship (at Giants) 0–17
1989Philadelphia Eagles11–5Lost Wild Card playoffs (Rams) 7–21
1990Philadelphia Eagles10–6Lost Wild Card playoffs (Redskins) 6–20
Washington Redskins10–6Won Wild Card playoffs (at Eagles) 20–6
Lost Divisional playoffs (at 49ers) 10–28
1991Dallas Cowboys11–5Won Wild Card playoffs (at Bears) 17–13
Lost Divisional playoffs (at Lions) 6–38
1992Philadelphia Eagles10–6Won Wild Card playoffs (at Saints) 36–20
Lost Divisional playoffs (at Cowboys) 10–34
Washington Redskins9–7Won Wild Card playoffs (at Vikings) 24–7
Lost Divisional playoffs (at 49ers) 13–20
1993New York Giants11–5Won Wild Card playoffs (Vikings) 17–10
Lost Divisional playoffs (at 49ers) 3–44
1995Philadelphia Eagles10–6Won Wild Card playoffs (Lions) 58–37
Lost Divisional playoffs (at Cowboys) 11–30
1996Philadelphia Eagles10–6Lost Wild Card playoffs (at 49ers) 0–14
1998Arizona Cardinals9–7Won Wild Card playoffs (at Cowboys) 20–7
Lost Divisional playoffs (at Vikings) 21–41
1999Dallas Cowboys8–8Lost Wild Card playoffs (at Vikings) 10–27
2000Philadelphia Eagles11–5Won Wild Card playoffs (Buccaneers) 21–3
Lost Divisional playoffs (at Giants) 10–20
NFC East
2002New York Giants10–6Lost Wild Card playoffs (at 49ers) 38–39
2003Dallas Cowboys10–6Lost Wild Card playoffs (at Panthers) 10–29
2005Washington Redskins10–6Won Wild Card playoffs (at Buccaneers) 17–10
Lost Divisional playoffs (at Seahawks) 10–20
2006Dallas Cowboys9–7Lost Wild Card playoffs (at Seahawks) 20–21
New York Giants8–8Lost Wild Card playoffs (at Eagles) 20–23
2007New York Giants10–6Won Wild Card playoffs (at Buccaneers) 24–14
Won Divisional playoffs (at Cowboys) 21–17
Won NFC Championship (at Packers) 23–20 (OT)
Won Super Bowl XLII (vs. Patriots) 17–14
Washington Redskins9–7Lost Wild Card playoffs (at Seahawks) 14–35
2008Philadelphia Eagles9–6–1Won Wild Card playoffs (at Vikings) 26–14
Won Divisional playoffs (at Giants) 23–11
Lost NFC Championship (at Cardinals) 25–32
2009Philadelphia Eagles11–5Lost Wild Card playoffs (at Cowboys) 14–34
2016New York Giants11–5Lost Wild Card playoffs (at Packers) 13–38
2018Philadelphia Eagles9–7Won Wild Card playoffs (at Bears) 16–15
Lost Divisional playoffs (at Saints) 14–20
2021Philadelphia Eagles9–8Lost Wild Card playoffs (at Buccaneers) 15–31
2022Dallas Cowboys12–5Won Wild Card playoffs (at Buccaneers) 31–14
Lost Divisional playoffs (at 49ers) 12–19
New York Giants9–7–1Won Wild Card playoffs (at Vikings) 31–24
Lost Divisional playoffs (at Eagles) 7–38
  • + A players' strike in 1982 reduced the regular season to nine games, so the league used a special 16-team playoff tournament just for this year.
  • ** The 2007 New York Giants are the only NFC East team to win a Super Bowl as a Wild Card team, and the first NFL team in history to win the Super Bowl as a 5th Seed in either Conference.[8]

Total playoff berths since 1967

TeamDivision
Championships
Playoff
Berths
Super Bowl
Appearances
Super Bowl
Championships
Dallas Cowboys243385
Philadelphia Eagles122441
Washington Commanders91953
New York Giants81654
Arizona Cardinals12400

To sort table above, click button to right of heading.

NFC EastDivision
Championships
Playoff
Berths
NFC
Championships
Super Bowl
Championships
Totals- 1967-202054932113
1These numbers only reflect the Cardinals' time as a member of the NFC East, as the team realigned to the NFC West after the 2001 season.

Season results

(#) Denotes team that won the Super Bowl
(#) Denotes team that won the NFC Championship
(#) Denotes team that qualified for the NFL Playoffs
SeasonTeam (record)
1st2nd3rd4th5th
NFL Capitol
1967 Dallas (9–5) Philadelphia (6–7–1) Washington (5–6–3) New Orleans (3–11)
1968 Dallas (12–2) N.Y. Giants (7–7) Washington (5–9) Philadelphia (2–12)
1969 Dallas (11–2–1) Washington (7–5–2) New Orleans (5–9) Philadelphia (4–9–1)
NFC East
1970 Dallas (10–4) N.Y. Giants (9–5) St. Louis (8–5–1) Washington (6–8) Philadelphia (3–10–1)
1971 Dallas (11–3) Washington (9–4–1) Philadelphia (6–7–1) St. Louis (4–9–1) N.Y. Giants (4–10)
1972 Washington (11–3) Dallas (10–4) N.Y. Giants (8–6) St. Louis (4–9–1) Philadelphia (2–11–1)
1973 Dallas (10–4) Washington (10–4) Philadelphia (5–8–1) St. Louis (4–9–1) N.Y. Giants (2–11–1)
1974 St. Louis (10–4) Washington (10–4) Dallas (8–6) Philadelphia (7–7) N.Y. Giants (2–12)
1975 (3) St. Louis (11–3) (4) Dallas (10–4) Washington (8–6) N.Y. Giants (5–9) Philadelphia (4–10)
1976 (2) Dallas (11–3) (4) Washington (10–4) St. Louis (10–4) Philadelphia (4–10) N.Y. Giants (3–11)
1977 (1) Dallas (12–2) Washington (9–5) St. Louis (7–7) Philadelphia (5–9) N.Y. Giants (5–9)
1978 (2) Dallas (12–4) (5) Philadelphia (9–7) Washington (8–8) St. Louis (6–10) N.Y. Giants (6–10)
1979 (1) Dallas (11–5) (4) Philadelphia (11–5) Washington (10–6) N.Y. Giants (6–10) St. Louis (5–11)
1980 (2) Philadelphia (12–4) (4) Dallas (12–4) Washington (6–10) St. Louis (5–11) N.Y. Giants (4–12)
1981 (2) Dallas (12–4) (4) Philadelphia (10–6) (5) N.Y. Giants (9–7) Washington (8–8) St. Louis (7–9)
1982^ (1) Washington (8–1) (2) Dallas (6–3) (6) St. Louis (5–4) N.Y. Giants (4–5) Philadelphia (3–6)
1983 (1) Washington (14–2) (4) Dallas (12–4) St. Louis (8–7–1) Philadelphia (5–11) N.Y. Giants (3–12–1)
1984 (2) Washington (11–5) (5) N.Y. Giants (9–7) St. Louis (9–7) Dallas (9–7) Philadelphia (6–9–1)
1985 (3) Dallas (10–6) (4) N.Y. Giants (10–6) Washington (10–6) Philadelphia (7–9) St. Louis (5–11)
1986 (1) N.Y. Giants (14–2) (4) Washington (12–4) Dallas (7–9) Philadelphia (5–10–1) St. Louis (4–11–1)
1987 (3) Washington (11–4) Dallas (7–8) St. Louis (7–8) Philadelphia (7–8) N.Y. Giants (6–9)
1988 (3) Philadelphia (10–6) N.Y. Giants (10–6) Washington (7–9) Phoenix (7–9) Dallas (3–13)
1989 (2) N.Y. Giants (12–4) (4) Philadelphia (11–5) Washington (10–6) Phoenix (5–11) Dallas (1–15)
1990 (2) N.Y. Giants (13–3) (4) Philadelphia (10–6) (5) Washington (10–6) Dallas (7–9) Phoenix (5–11)
1991 (1) Washington (14–2) (5) Dallas (11–5) Philadelphia (10–6) N.Y. Giants (8–8) Phoenix (4–12)
1992 (2) Dallas (13–3) (5) Philadelphia (11–5) (6) Washington (9–7) N.Y. Giants (6–10) Phoenix (4–12)
1993 (1) Dallas (12–4) (4) N.Y. Giants (11–5) Philadelphia (8–8) Phoenix (7–9) Washington (4–12)
1994 (2) Dallas (12–4) N.Y. Giants (9–7) Arizona (8–8) Philadelphia (7–9) Washington (3–13)
1995 (1) Dallas (12–4) (4) Philadelphia (10–6) Washington (6–10) N.Y. Giants (5–11) Arizona (4–12)
1996 (3) Dallas (10–6) (5) Philadelphia (10–6) Washington (9–7) Arizona (7–9) N.Y. Giants (6–10)
1997 (3) N.Y. Giants (10–5–1) Washington (8–7–1) Philadelphia (6–9–1) Dallas (6–10) Arizona (4–12)
1998 (3) Dallas (10–6) (6) Arizona (9–7) N.Y. Giants (8–8) Washington (6–10) Philadelphia (3–13)
1999 (3) Washington (10–6) (5) Dallas (8–8) N.Y. Giants (7–9) Arizona (6–10) Philadelphia (5–11)
2000 (1) N.Y. Giants (12–4) (4) Philadelphia (11–5) Washington (8–8) Dallas (5–11) Arizona (3–13)
2001 (3) Philadelphia (11–5) Washington (8–8) N.Y. Giants (7–9) Arizona (7–9) Dallas (5–11)
2002 (1) Philadelphia (12–4) (5) N.Y. Giants (10–6) Washington (7–9) Dallas (5–11)
2003 (1) Philadelphia (12–4) (6) Dallas (10–6) Washington (5–11) N.Y. Giants (4–12)
2004 (1) Philadelphia (13–3) N.Y. Giants (6–10) Dallas (6–10) Washington (6–10)
2005 (4) N.Y. Giants (11–5) (6) Washington (10–6) Dallas (9–7) Philadelphia (6–10)
2006 (3) Philadelphia (10–6) (5) Dallas (9–7) (6) N.Y. Giants (8–8) Washington (5–11)
2007 (1) Dallas (13–3) (5) N.Y. Giants (10–6) (6) Washington (9–7) Philadelphia (8–8)
2008 (1) N.Y. Giants (12–4) (6) Philadelphia (9–6–1) Dallas (9–7) Washington (8–8)
2009 (3) Dallas (11–5) (6) Philadelphia (11–5) N.Y. Giants (8–8) Washington (4–12)
2010 (3) Philadelphia (10–6) N.Y. Giants (10–6) Dallas (6–10) Washington (6–10)
2011 (4) N.Y. Giants (9–7) Philadelphia (8–8) Dallas (8–8) Washington (5–11)
2012 (4) Washington (10–6) N.Y. Giants (9–7) Dallas (8–8) Philadelphia (4–12)
2013 (3) Philadelphia (10–6) Dallas (8–8) N.Y. Giants (7–9) Washington (3–13)
2014 (3) Dallas (12–4) Philadelphia (10–6) N.Y. Giants (6–10) Washington (4–12)
2015 (4) Washington (9–7) Philadelphia (7–9) N.Y. Giants (6–10) Dallas (4–12)
2016 (1) Dallas (13–3) (5) N.Y. Giants (11–5) Washington (8–7–1) Philadelphia (7–9)
2017 (1) Philadelphia (13–3) Dallas (9–7) Washington (7–9) N.Y. Giants (3–13)
2018 (4) Dallas (10–6) (6) Philadelphia (9–7) Washington (7–9) N.Y. Giants (5–11)
2019 (4) Philadelphia (9–7) Dallas (8–8) N.Y. Giants (4–12) Washington (3–13)
  • 2020: The Washington Redskins temporarily became the Washington Football Team.
2020 (4) Washington (7–9) N.Y. Giants (6–10) Dallas (6–10) Philadelphia (4–11–1)
2021 (3) Dallas (12–5) (7) Philadelphia (9–8) Washington (7–10) N.Y. Giants (4–13)
2022 (1) Philadelphia (14–3) (5) Dallas (12–5) (6) N.Y. Giants (9–7–1) Washington (8–8–1)

See also

References

  1. "Request Rejected" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 7, 2012. Retrieved July 20, 2012.
  2. "Lincoln Financial Field - Google Maps". Google Maps. Retrieved November 30, 2016.
  3. "AT&T Stadium - Google Maps". Google Maps. Retrieved November 30, 2016.
  4. "FedExField". Redskins. Retrieved December 12, 2016.
  5. "Met Life Stadium - Google Maps". Google Maps. Retrieved November 30, 2016.
  6. "NFL team valuations rankings for 2023:Cowboys again tower over every franchise, Giants exceed $7 billion". CBS Sports. Retrieved September 11, 2023.
  7. "NFL.com - Official Site of the National Football League - NFL.com". www.nfl.com.
  8. "Graphic: Which NFL Playoff Seeds Succeed?".
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