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In 2015, the Bengals became the first team in the AFC North (Central) to ever start the year 8–0, finishing the season 12–4 and winning the division for the second time in three years. Cincinnati clinched the division title in week 16 when the Steelers were upset by the 4–10 Ravens in Baltimore, quarterbacked by Ryan Mallett.
The record for the most regular-season wins by an AFL or AFC champion is 16, by the 2007 New England Patriots, with a perfect 16–0 record, followed by the 2024 Kansas City Chiefs, who won 15 games in a 17-game season. The 1972 Miami Dolphins also had a perfect season, winning 14 games in a 14-game season, with a 14–0 record. [1]
Pages in category "AFC North championship seasons" The following 22 pages are in this category, out of 22 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9.
This will be the fifth consecutive season since the NFL expanded to a 14-team playoff field from the prior 12-team format. ... Baltimore Ravens (12-5, AFC North winners, No. 3 seed) Houston Texans ...
AFC North: 1st: 11 5 0 .688 Won Wild Card Playoffs 30–12 Won Divisional Playoffs (at Chiefs) 18–16 Lost AFC Championship (at Patriots) 17–36 2017: 2017: NFL AFC North: 1st: 13 3 0 .813 Lost Divisional Playoffs 42–45 2018: 2018: NFL AFC North 2nd 9 6 1 .594 2019: 2019: NFL AFC North 2nd 8 8 0 .500 2020: 2020: NFL AFC North: 1st: 12 4 0 .750
Record: 4-5 (third in AFC North) Top fantasy performer: QB Joe Burrow, 181.46 points MVP: WR Ja’Marr Chase Key second-half game: Dec. 1 vs. Steelers The season started with an awful home loss to ...
AFC North 2nd 9 7 0 Ed Reed (DPOY Tooltip National Football League Defensive Player of the Year Award) [19] [20] 2005: 2005: NFL AFC North 3rd 6 10 0 [21] 2006: 2006: NFL AFC North† 1st† 13 3 0 Lost Divisional Playoffs 6–15 [22] 2007: 2007: NFL AFC North 4th 5 11 0 [23] 2008: 2008: NFL AFC North 2nd^ 11 5 0 Won Wild Card Playoffs (at ...
Prior to the advent of the Super Bowl for the 1966 season, the AFL went to great lengths to avoid scheduling its playoffs head-to-head with the NFL. In 1960, the NFL's game was held on Monday, December 26; the AFL had that week off, and played its title contest on Sunday, January 1, as the college bowl games were played on Monday.