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The Bears played in four straight NFL Championship Games between 1940 and 1943, winning three of them, including an NFL record 73–0 victory over the Washington Redskins in 1940. [ 8 ] [ 9 ] The second period of success was between 1984 and 1991 when the Bears captured six NFC Central Division titles in eight years and won Super Bowl XX .
The first parentheses in the Western champions and Eastern champions columns indicate the teams' playoff seed. The second parentheses indicate the number of times that teams have appeared in an NBA Finals as well as each respective team's NBA Finals record to date.
However, the Patriots were named Division Champions based on a better division record (6–2 to the Dolphins' 5–3). [37] j The Patriots, Dolphins, and New York Jets finished the season with 9–7 records in 2002. For having the best record against common opponents, the Jets were awarded the division championship.
Cleveland Browns record by season Season Team League Conference Division Regular season Postseason results Awards Head coach Refs; Finish W L T; 1946: 1946: AAFC ~ Western ^ 1st ^ 12 2 0 Won AAFC championship (1) 14–9 Paul Brown [5] 1947: 1947: AAFC ~ Western ^ 1st ^ 12 1 1 Won AAFC championship (2) (at Yankees) 14–3 [6] 1948: 1948: AAFC ...
Lost NFC Championship (at 49ers) 31–34 [141] 2024: 2024: NFL NFC North ^ 1st ^ 15 2 0 .882 Divisional Playoffs (TBD) [142] Totals 6 Division titles 4 Conference titles 4 NFL titles 606 709 34 .462 All-time NFL regular season record (1930–2024) [15] 9 14 — .391 All-time NFL postseason record (1930–2024) 615 723 34 .461
Best Record, Named NFL Champions (3) [14] This marked the first time a team has achieved three consecutive NFL championships. [7] 1932: 1932: NFL 2nd 10 3 1 1933: 1933: NFL West 3rd 5 7 1 NFL teams split into two divisions, with the winner of each division playing in a championship game (the champion was previously determined by best record). [15]
The New York Jets have won one National Football League championship in Super Bowl III. In their 60-season history, they have an overall regular season record of 408 wins, 500 losses, and 8 ties. They have made 14 postseason appearances, and have an overall postseason record of 12 wins and 13 losses.
During this period, they went without a single winning season between 1956 to 1968 and posted their worst regular-season record in franchise history, going 1–12–1 in 1961. [2] Since their last Super Bowl win in 1991, Washington has only four playoff wins and only three seasons with 10 or more wins.