The following is a detailed list of results and scores from National Football League games aired on NBC under the game package NBC Sunday Night Football. The list includes both regular season and post-season game results, both produced by NBC Sports, from the 2006 NFL season to the present.

The NFL instated a new "flex-scheduling" policy in which the NFL could choose a game to be aired in primetime on NBC based on the team's current performance and record. Previously, Sunday night NFL games were televised by ESPN, from 1987–2005, and TNT, from 1990–1997.

Starting with the 2006 NFL season, NBC was awarded the rights to air Sunday night primetime American football games, as well as the rights to air two games of the NFL playoffs. In February 2009, NBC concluded their third season of the game package by broadcasting Super Bowl XLIII and the 2009 Pro Bowl from Honolulu, Hawai'i. The game package also includes broadcast rights to the NFL Kickoff Game, the late-night Thanksgiving game, and Pro Football Hall of Fame Game.

Results by season [ edit ]

Listed below are games and their respective results played from 2006—present.

2000s [ edit ]

2006 [ edit ]

NBC Sunday Night Football wrapped up its inaugural season [in 2006] averaging 17.5 million viewers, 1.2 million viewers better than ABC Monday Night Football in 2005 and the best viewership number for the network primetime NFL package in six years (18.5 million on ABC in 2000).[1] The season featured pop singer Pink singing the anthem for SNF called "I've Been Waiting All Day For Sunday Night." This would be the only season the tentatively scheduled games during the flex period were not publicly announced.

The September 10 game marked the first time two brothers started against each other as quarterbacks: Peyton Manning of the Indianapolis Colts, and Eli Manning of the New York Giants.

In the 2006 season, there was no game played on the first Sunday night which overlapped with the World Series (October 22 in the 2006 season), along with Christmas Eve night; NBC broadcast that week's game (Eagles at Cowboys) on Christmas afternoon instead. However, the broadcast of Football Night in America continued at its regular time on both occasions each Sunday, with a half-hour version of the program airing before the Christmas game and the two "Wild Card Saturday" games.

2007 [ edit ]

In 2007, there was no game broadcast on NBC for Sunday, October 28 due to Game 4 of the 2007 World Series, although Football Night in America aired at its usual time that week. Also, a tentative full-season schedule was unveiled, including games in the last seven weeks of the season. Those games could be replaced under flexible scheduling if the need arose. Three of the games in the last seven weeks were eventually replaced with more compelling matches. This resulted in the situation—twice—of having a team playing consecutive Sunday nights. New England had consecutive Sunday nighters: the November 18 New England at Buffalo game was moved to prime time and was followed on November 25 by the already-scheduled Philadelphia at New England game. Likewise, the Washington Redskins played a scheduled game at the New York Giants on December 16, and their December 23 game in Minnesota was moved to prime time. The same rules under which CBS and FOX protect games for their own packages still apply.

Day Date Visiting Team Final Score Host Team Stadium KOF Thursday September 6 New Orleans Saints 10–41 Indianapolis Colts RCA Dome Sunday September 9 New York Giants 35–45 Dallas Cowboys Texas Stadium Sunday September 16 San Diego Chargers 14–38 New England Patriots Gillette Stadium Sunday September 23 Dallas Cowboys 34–10 Chicago Bears Soldier Field Sunday September 30 Philadelphia Eagles 3–16 New York Giants Giants Stadium Sunday October 7 Chicago Bears 27–20 Green Bay Packers Lambeau Field Sunday October 14 New Orleans Saints 28–17 Seattle Seahawks CenturyLink Field(Qwest Field) Sunday October 21 Pittsburgh Steelers 28–31 Denver Broncos Sports Authority Field at Mile High(Invesco Field) Sunday November 4 Dallas Cowboys 38–17 Philadelphia Eagles Lincoln Financial Field Sunday November 11 Indianapolis Colts 21–23 San Diego Chargers SDCCU Stadium(Qualcomm Stadium) Sunday November 18* New England Patriots 56–10 Buffalo Bills New Era Field(Ralph Wilson Stadium) Sunday November 25 Philadelphia Eagles 28–31 New England Patriots Gillette Stadium Sunday December 2 Cincinnati Bengals 10–24 Pittsburgh Steelers Heinz Field Sunday December 9 Indianapolis Colts 44–20 Baltimore Ravens M&T Bank Stadium Sunday December 16 Washington Redskins 22–10 New York Giants Giants Stadium Sunday December 23** Washington Redskins 32–21 Minnesota Vikings Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome Saturday December 29 New England Patriots 38–35 New York Giants Giants Stadium Sunday December 30*** Tennessee Titans 16–10 Indianapolis Colts RCA Dome Saturday January 5 Washington Redskins 14–35 Seattle Seahawks CenturyLink Field Saturday January 5 Jacksonville Jaguars 31–29 Pittsburgh Steelers Heinz Field

*Bears-Seahawks game was flexed out for the Patriots-Bills game.

**Buccaneers-49ers game was flexed out for the Redskins-Vikings game.

***Chiefs-Jets game was flexed out for the Titans-Colts game.

2008 [ edit ]

NBC Sunday Night Football's 2008 schedule began on Thursday, September 4 with the defending-Super Bowl champion New York Giants defeating the Washington Redskins in the NFL Kickoff game. On Sunday, September 7, the Indianapolis Colts hosted the Chicago Bears in the first game at Lucas Oil Stadium. 2008 marked the third consecutive year that both the Colts and Giants would be featured in the NBC Sunday Night Football opening week games. As a result, the Manning brothers were used in commercial advertisements.

The 2008 schedule, released April 15, continued the current practice of a scheduled game possibly being moved in favor of a more compelling one during Weeks 11 through 16 (November 16 through December 21), but left the slot open on the final Sunday, December 28. The NFL Kickoff Game between the Washington Redskins and defending Super Bowl champion New York Giants that was played on September 4 started at 7:00 p.m. instead of the normal 8:30 p.m. time in order to avoid conflict with the nomination speech that John McCain gave at the Republican National Convention that night; the game ended at 10:01pm EDT, averting any conflict. As in previous years, one Sunday night (October 26) featured no game broadcast due to Game 4 of the World Series, although Football Night in America aired as usual that week.

The October 19 Seahawks-Buccaneers game featured Cris Collinsworth substituting for John Madden as the color commentator, the first time Madden had missed calling a game in 28 years. He had taken the week off because he would have had to make three straight cross country trips after calling games in Jacksonville and San Diego. (He travels by bus because of a fear of flying.)[2] The Patriots-Seahawks game on December 7 was dropped in favor of a Redskins-Ravens flex schedule game. The Chargers-Buccaneers game on December 21 was dropped in favor of a Panthers-Giants game to determine home-field advantage in the NFC playoffs. The Week 17 game was purposely not chosen when the schedule was initially released, and the Broncos-Chargers game was picked up for it to determine the winner of the AFC West division.

On wildcard weekend, the Atlanta Falcons and Arizona Cardinals both made their debuts on SNF in the 4:30 EDT game on January 3. The Chargers hosted the Colts in the primetime game later that evening.

The first Super Bowl aired as part of this package took place on February 1 in Raymond James Stadium, with the Steelers winning over the Cardinals (who became the third consecutive team to lose in its first Super Bowl appearance; coincidentally, the last team to win in its first appearance were the Buccaneers, who call Raymond James Stadium home, and that Super Bowl was also called by Al Michaels, who was with ABC at the time; the streak was snapped by the Bucs' division rivals the New Orleans Saints the next year).

*Patriots-Seahawks game was flexed out for the Redskins-Ravens game.

**Chargers-Buccaneers game was flexed out for the Panthers-Giants game.

2009 [ edit ]

Day Date Visiting Team Final Score Host Team Stadium KOF Thursday September 10 Tennessee Titans 10–13 (OT) Pittsburgh Steelers Heinz Field Sunday September 13 Chicago Bears 15–21 Green Bay Packers Lambeau Field Sunday September 20 New York Giants 33–31 Dallas Cowboys AT&T Stadium(Cowboys Stadium) Sunday September 27 Indianapolis Colts 31–10 Arizona Cardinals University of Phoenix Stadium Sunday October 4 San Diego Chargers 28–38 Pittsburgh Steelers Heinz Field Sunday October 11 Indianapolis Colts 31–9 Tennessee Titans Nissan Stadium(LP Field) Sunday October 18 Chicago Bears 14–21 Atlanta Falcons Georgia Dome Sunday October 25 Arizona Cardinals 24–17 New York Giants Giants Stadium Sunday November 8 Dallas Cowboys 20–16 Philadelphia Eagles Lincoln Financial Field Sunday November 15 New England Patriots 34–35 Indianapolis Colts Lucas Oil Stadium Sunday November 22 Philadelphia Eagles 24–20 Chicago Bears Soldier Field Sunday November 29 Pittsburgh Steelers 17–20 (OT) Baltimore Ravens M&T Bank Stadium Sunday December 6* Minnesota Vikings 17–30 Arizona Cardinals University of Phoenix Stadium Sunday December 13 Philadelphia Eagles 45–38 New York Giants Giants Stadium Sunday December 20 Minnesota Vikings 7–26 Carolina Panthers Bank of America Stadium Sunday December 27 Dallas Cowboys 17–0 Washington Redskins FedExField Sunday January 3 Cincinnati Bengals 0–37 New York Jets Giants Stadium Saturday January 9 New York Jets 24–14 Cincinnati Bengals Paul Brown Stadium Saturday January 9 Philadelphia Eagles 14–34 Dallas Cowboys AT&T Stadium

*Patriots-Dolphins game was flexed out for the Vikings-Cardinals game.

2010s [ edit ]

2010 [ edit ]

*Chargers-Bengals game was flexed out for the Vikings-Eagles game. The game was played on Tuesday night due to the December 2010 North American blizzard.

2011 [ edit ]

*Colts–Patriots game was flexed out for the Lions-Saints game.

2012 [ edit ]

The December 16 game between the San Francisco 49ers and New England Patriots was interrupted for 25 minutes for NBC to cover President Barack Obama's speech in reaction to the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting the previous Friday. Coverage aired on NBC Sports Network and CNBC until the speech ended, after which NBC resumed airing the game.

*Chargers-Jets game was flexed out for the 49ers-Seahawks game.

2013 [ edit ]

*Packers-Giants game was flexed out for the Chiefs-Broncos game.

**Falcons-Packers game was flexed out for the Panthers-Saints game.

***Patriots-Ravens game was flexed out for the Bears-Eagles game.

2014 [ edit ]

Starting in the 2014 season, NBC was allowed to flex games beginning in week 5. All the previous flexible scheduling rules apply, but on a limited basis. Only two games between weeks 5-10 can be flexed per season; weeks 11-17 (excluding Thanksgiving Night) flex rules are still the same as in previous years. However, despite these changes, NBC did not flex a single one of their originally scheduled games, which marked the first season that none of the originally scheduled Sunday night games for the entire season (other than week 17) were flexed out. (Note: the kickoff for the Ravens-Patriots Divisional Playoff game was at 4:35 ET)

2015 [ edit ]

2015 marked the 10th season of SNF on NBC. (Note: the kickoff for the Seahawks-Vikings Wildcard Playoff game was at 1:05 ET)

*Chiefs-Chargers game was flexed out for the Bengals-Cardinals game.

**Seahawks-Ravens game was flexed out for the Patriots-Texans game.

***Bengals-49ers game was flexed out for the Cardinals-Eagles game.

****Steelers-Ravens game was flexed out for the Giants-Vikings game.

2016 [ edit ]

2016 marked the first ever tie on NBC Sunday Night Football, which occurred in week 7, when the Seahawks and Cardinals tied at 6-6. Seahawks-Cardinals also became the lowest scoring SNF on NBC game to date, with 12 total points, and the first primetime NFL game tie since November 23, 1997, when the Redskins and Giants tied at 7-7 on ESPN Sunday Night Football. Due to NBC having the rights to the second half of the Thursday Night Football package, NBC Sports gave Al Michaels a "Bye week", giving him 3 games off: Packers-Redskins, Steelers-Colts (Thanksgiving), and Chiefs-Broncos. Mike Tirico replaced him for these games, with Cris Collinsworth still doing the color commentary.[4]

The AFC Divisional Playoff game between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Kansas City Chiefs was originally scheduled to kickoff at 1:05 ET, but due to stormy weather in the Kansas City area, the NFL moved the kickoff time to 8:20 ET.[1]

*Patriots–Jets game was flexed out for the Chiefs–Broncos game.

**Steelers–Bengals game was flexed out for the Buccaneers–Cowboys game.

2017 [ edit ]

2017 marked the 12th season of NBC Sunday Night Football. Due to Christmas Eve falling on a Sunday in 2017, the Week 16 Sunday night telecast was instead scheduled for Saturday, December 23, with the Vikings visiting the Packers. NBC also broadcast Super Bowl LII, played at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, making it the 4th time NBC had broadcast a Super Bowl since taking over the Sunday night package in 2006. NBC did not flex a single one of their originally scheduled games, which marked the second time since 2014 that none of the originally scheduled Sunday night games for the entire season were flexed out. For the first time since acquiring the Sunday night package, NBC aired no game in Week 17 to ensure that teams whose games would affect each other's playoff standings would be played at the same time. [5] The Falcons-Rams NFC Wildcard game kicked off at 8:15 pm ET, while the NFC Divisional Playoff in Philadelphia kicked off at 4:35 pm ET.

2018 [ edit ]

Starting in 2018, the NFL moved the start time of Sunday Night Football back, from 8:30 p.m. ET to 8:20 p.m. ET. The Bengals-Chiefs game flexed into Sunday Night on October 21 became the earliest the NFL has ever flexed a Sunday Night Football contest. The Falcons-Saints game on Thanksgiving night will be called by the Football Night in America studio crew, with Mike Tirico doing the play-by-play and Tony Dungy and Rodney Harrison as color analysts[6]. The Eagles-Bears Wildcard game kicked off at 4:35 p.m. ET, as did the Colts-Chiefs Divisional game..

*Rams–49ers game was flexed out for the Bengals-Chiefs.

**Steelers-Jaguars game was flexed out for the Vikings-Bears game.

***49ers-Seahawks game was flexed out for the Chargers-Steelers game.

****Steelers-Raiders game was flexed out for the Rams-Bears game.

2019 [ edit ]

SNF statistics [ edit ]

Most points scored on SNF by a single team: 62 (New Orleans Saints 62 vs Indianapolis Colts 7 [10/23/2011])

62 (New Orleans Saints 62 vs Indianapolis Colts 7 [10/23/2011]) Highest combined score on SNF : 83 points (Philadelphia Eagles 45 @ New York Giants 38 [12/13/2009] & Kansas City Chiefs 40 @ New England Patriots 43 [10/14/2018])

83 points (Philadelphia Eagles 45 @ New York Giants 38 [12/13/2009] & Kansas City Chiefs 40 @ New England Patriots 43 [10/14/2018]) Lowest combined score on SNF : 12 points (Seattle Seahawks 6 @ Arizona Cardinals 6 [10/23/2016])

12 points (Seattle Seahawks 6 @ Arizona Cardinals 6 [10/23/2016]) Most appearances on SNF (counting postseason): 44 (Dallas Cowboys)

44 (Dallas Cowboys) Fewest appearances on SNF (counting postseason): 1 (Buffalo Bills, Cleveland Browns)

1 (Buffalo Bills, Cleveland Browns) Most wins on SNF (counting postseason): 23 (Dallas Cowboys)

23 (Dallas Cowboys) Most losses on SNF (counting postseason): 21 (Dallas Cowboys)

Interconference (AFC vs. NFC) Matchups American Football Conference Wins National Football Conference Wins 17 12 Team Appearances

(counting postseason) Wins Losses Ties Arizona Cardinals 12 7 4 1 Atlanta Falcons 12 5 7 0 Baltimore Ravens 16 9 7 0 Buffalo Bills 1 0 1 0 Carolina Panthers 8 2 6 0 Chicago Bears 24 11 13 0 Cincinnati Bengals 11 0 11 0 Cleveland Browns 1 0 1 0 Dallas Cowboys 44 23 21 0 Denver Broncos 24 14 10 0 Detroit Lions 9 1 8 0 Green Bay Packers 32 15 17 0 Houston Texans 10 5 5 0 Indianapolis Colts 32 17 15 0 Jacksonville Jaguars 2 1 1 0 Kansas City Chiefs 16 6 10 0 Los Angeles Chargers* 13 9 4 0 Los Angeles Rams** 4 0 4 0 Miami Dolphins 3 0 3 0 Minnesota Vikings 18 7 11 0 New England Patriots 35 22 13 0 New Orleans Saints 20 15 5 0 New York Giants 29 12 17 0 New York Jets 8 5 3 0 Oakland Raiders 5 2 3 0 Philadelphia Eagles 35 18 17 0 Pittsburgh Steelers 31 18 13 0 San Francisco 49ers 10 3 7 0 Seattle Seahawks 24 17 6 1 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 2 1 1 0 Tennessee Titans 4 1 3 0 Washington Redskins 16 7 9 0 Appeared as the San Diego Chargers until 2017

Appeared as the St. Louis Rams until 2016 Conference Division Appearances Wins Losses Ties AFC East 47 27 20 0 North 59 27 32 0 South 48 24 24 0 West 60 31 29 0 NFC East 124 60 64 0 North 83 34 49 0 South 42 23 19 0 West 50 27 21 2 NBC Playoff games (WildCard, Divisional, and Super Bowl) Team Appearances Wins Losses Arizona Cardinals 3 2 1 Atlanta Falcons 3 1 2 Baltimore Ravens 2 1 1 Chicago Bears 1 0 1 Cincinnati Bengals 3 0 3 Dallas Cowboys 2 1 1 Detroit Lions 2 0 2 Green Bay Packers 2 1 1 Houston Texans 2 2 0 Indianapolis Colts 5 2 3 Jacksonville Jaguars 1 1 0 Kansas City Chiefs 4 1 3 Los Angeles Chargers* 1 1 0 Los Angeles Rams* 1 0 1 Minnesota Vikings 2 0 2 New England Patriots 4 2 2 New Orleans Saints 3 2 1 New York Giants 1 1 0 New York Jets 2 2 0 Philadelphia Eagles 5 3 2 Pittsburgh Steelers 4 2 2 Seattle Seahawks 6 5 1 Washington Redskins 1 0 1

See also [ edit ]