Friday, August 23, 2019

NFL Empires: 1970

This is a continuation of my "empire" maps (where victors take the territory of the losers) of the NFL. Different than most such imperialism sports maps, instead of gaining all the loser's land from a victory home or away, the victor only gets territory for an away victory, and just two-thirds of it (or one-third for an away tie).

1970 was the first season after the NFL-AFL merger was completed. Pittsburgh, Baltimore, and Cleveland moved to the AFC and the rest is history.

Since the Super Bowl was played at a neutral site, the winner gains one third of the territory of the loser (splitting the difference between a home game and an away game).

My data was from Pro Football Reference and most of the logos from SportsLogos.net.

Here then is the map of the NFL empires after the 1970 season:

Baltimore (royal blue) beat Dallas (gray green) in the Super Bowl, which is how Baltimore gained most of their land on this map. They had a great season (and thus home-field advantage during the playoffs) but they didn't beat any big empires till Dallas. In the NFC, Minnesota (dark violet) had home-field advantage, but they lost to San Francisco (burgundy), who then lost at home to Dallas in the conference championship. Thus no empire dominates the map.

Los Angeles (red), Kansas City (light violet), St. Louis (magenta), and New York (dark blue) all had respectable empires (by this year's standards), but all missed the playoffs by a game or two. Kansas City lost at home to Dallas, plus two home ties, to see their empire crumble. Detroit (gray purple) made the playoffs as a wildcard, but promptly lost in Dallas.

Here is the map before the season started:

So much for purple.

Tuesday, August 20, 2019

NFL Empires: 1969

This is a continuation of my "empire" maps (where victors take the territory of the losers) of the NFL. Different than most such imperialism sports maps, instead of gaining all the loser's land from a victory home or away, the victor only gets territory for an away victory, and just two-thirds of it (or one-third for an away tie).

There were no changes to the teams before the seasons.

Since the Super Bowl was played at a neutral site, the winner gains one third of the territory of the loser (splitting the difference between a home game and an away game).

My data was from Pro Football Reference and most of the logos from SportsLogos.net.

Here then is the map of the NFL empires after the 1969 season:

Purple power! Kansas City (light violet) of the AFL beat Minnesota (dark violet) in the Super Bowl, thus expanding their already-large empire. Kansas City had been second place in the AFL West, behind Oakland (light green yellow), but Kansas City beat the New York Jets (dark turquoise) then Oakland in the playoffs, in each of their home stadiums.

In the NFL, Minnesota took all their land during the regular season, then had home-field advantage in the playoffs. Baltimore (royal blue) still had a large remnant of the empire they began the year with, but they only came in second place in the Coastal Division, behind Los Angeles (red). Cleveland (brown) also lost land this year, despite a road playoff victory over Dallas (gray green). To round out the purple on the map, Detroit (gray purple) came in second in the Central, behind Minnesota, and thus weren't in the playoffs.

Here is the map before the season started:

Quite the difference, eh?

Saturday, August 17, 2019

NFL Empires: 1968

This is a continuation of my "empire" maps (where victors take the territory of the losers) of the NFL. Different than most such imperialism sports maps, instead of gaining all the loser's land from a victory home or away, the victor only gets territory for an away victory, and just two-thirds of it (or one-third for an away tie).

Before the season, Cincinnati was added. I've given them the land within a 100-mile radius to start.

Since the Super Bowl was played at a neutral site, the winner gains one third of the territory of the loser (splitting the difference between a home game and an away game).

My data was from Pro Football Reference and most of the logos from SportsLogos.net.

Here then is the map of the NFL empires after the 1968 season:

The New York Jets (dark turquoise) beat Baltimore (royal blue) in the Super Bowl, the first AFL victory over the NFL. The Jets thus were the first AFL team with a large empire on this map, including four capitals besides their own. Baltimore were undefeated at home, with plenty of road wins to amass a huge empire, even after losing a third of it to the Jets. Oakland (light green yellow) won the AFL West, but still didn't have much land to show for it.

Cleveland (brown) won the Century Division and amassed a significant chunk of land, despite losing the NFL Championship Game at home to Baltimore. Green Bay (kelly green) came in third place in the four-team Central Division, but are prominent on the map thanks to a last-week victory at Chicago (periwinkle).

Here is the map before the season started:

Hot map; cool map.

Wednesday, August 14, 2019

NFL Empires: 1967

This is a continuation of my "empire" maps (where victors take the territory of the losers) of the NFL. Different than most such imperialism sports maps, instead of gaining all the loser's land from a victory home or away, the victor only gets territory for an away victory, and just two-thirds of it (or one-third for an away tie).

Before the season, New Orleans was added. I've given them the land within a 100-mile radius to start.

Since the AFL-NFL World Championship Game was played at a neutral site, the winner gains one third of the territory of the loser (splitting the difference between a home game and an away game).

My data was from Pro Football Reference and most of the logos from SportsLogos.net.

Here then is the map of the NFL empires after the 1967 season:

Green Bay (kelly green) had a bad season, including a loss to Pittsburgh (yellow) the final week of the season, but they still won the AFL-NFL World Championship Game. Pittsburgh was last place in the Century Division. Los Angeles (red) and Baltimore (royal blue) were first and second in the Coastal Division, both with large empires. Dallas (gray green) and Cleveland (brown) won their divisions, but neither amassed much of an empire.

In the AFL, Oakland (light green yellow) beat Houston (dark green yellow) in the championship game for the right to lose to Green Bay. Despite that final loss, Oakland still managed to have the largest empire of the AFL teams.

Here is the map before the season started:

New Orleans did all right for an expansion team, eh?

Friday, August 02, 2019

NFL Empires: 1966

This is a continuation of my "empire" maps (where victors take the territory of the losers) of the NFL. Different than most such imperialism sports maps, instead of gaining all the loser's land from a victory home or away, the victor only gets territory for an away victory, and just two-thirds of it (or one-third for an away tie).

In 1966, the NFL officially merged with the AFL. The two leagues kept their names and independent schedules, but met at the end of the season in the AFL-NFL World Championship Game, later dubbed the Super Bowl. Thus Oakland, San Diego, Denver, Kansas City, Houston, Miami, Buffalo, the New York Jets, and Boston entered the league. Also joining the league, but on the NFL side, was Atlanta. As new teams in the greater NFL, all the teams were given the land within 100 miles of their capitals, except for land controlled by a nearer capital.

Since the AFL-NFL World Championship Game was played at a neutral site, the winner gains one third of the territory of the loser (splitting the difference between a home game and an away game).

My data was from Pro Football Reference and most of the logos from SportsLogos.net and Sports Ecyclopedia.

Here then is the map of the NFL empires after the 1966 season:

Green Bay (kelly green) beat Kansas City (light violet) in the AFL-NFL World Championship Game. Since the AFL didn't have much land to start with, Green Bay only gained minimal land from the game, around Kansas City and Houston. In the preceding NFL championship game, Green Bay beat Dallas (gray green) in Dallas, but not much land changed hands that game either. Dallas had lost to Eastern fifth-place Washington (gold) in the next-to-last game of the season, and Washington lost to third-place Philadelphia (dark green) in the last week, so the land Dallas had amassed during the season got divvied up by the end. In the AFL championship game, Kansas City beat Buffalo (denim blue) in Buffalo, which is where Green Bay's new Houston lands came from.

Meanwhile, NFL Western second-place Baltimore (royal blue) expanded their empire nicely, although Eastern second-place Cleveland (brown) didn't. Surprisingly, Western last-place Minnesota (dark violet) managed to hold onto a decent empire, thanks to a mid-season victory at Green Bay and a late win at Detroit (gray purple).

Here is the map before the season started:

100 miles doesn't go very far in southern California, does it?