NFC West
The National Football Conference – Western Division or NFC West is one of the four divisions of the National Football Conference in the National Football League. It currently has four members: the Arizona Cardinals, the Los Angeles Rams, the San Francisco 49ers, and the Seattle Seahawks.
The division was formed in 1967 as the National Football League Coastal Division, keeping with the theme of having all of the league's divisions starting with the letter "C." The division was so named because its teams were fairly close to the coasts of the United States, although they were on opposite coasts, making for long travel between division rivals. The NFL Coastal Division had four members: Atlanta Falcons, Baltimore Colts, Los Angeles Rams, and San Francisco 49ers. Los Angeles and San Francisco occupied the West Coast, while Baltimore maintained its dominance over the lesser teams that remained in the division. Atlanta was placed in the division instead of the expansion New Orleans Saints despite being farther east than three Eastern Conference teams.
After the AFL–NFL merger in 1970, the division was renamed the NFC West. The Baltimore Colts moved to the AFC East and were replaced by the Saints, who came from the Eastern Conference. In 1976, the newly formed Seattle Seahawks spent one season in this division before moving to the AFC West. Except for that one year, the division remained the same until 1995 with the addition of the new Carolina Panthers team. The Rams moved to St. Louis before that same season, making the division geographically inaccurate. Ten of the fifteen NFC teams were based west of Atlanta, and twelve of them were based west of Charlotte.
The 2002 re-alignment changed the entire look of the NFC West. The Falcons, Panthers, and Saints moved into the NFC South; while the Cardinals moved in from the NFC East and the Seahawks returned from the AFC West. The Rams remained in the West, preserving the historical rivalry with the 49ers that has existed since 1950, and thus had been the only team in the division that was located east of the Rocky Mountains until 2015; despite this, the re-alignment made the NFC West have all of its teams based west of the Mississippi River. With the Rams' return to Los Angeles in 2016, the entire NFC West is now located west of the Rockies for the first time in its history; all teams except for the Cardinals are based in the Pacific Time Zone. The 2016 season marked the first time the 49ers nor Seahawks played a division game east of the Rocky Mountains.
The NFC West became the second division since the 2002 realignment to have each of its teams make a conference championship game appearance as well as a Super Bowl appearance: Los Angeles, Arizona, San Francisco, and Seattle. Also since 2002, each team has won at least three division titles, one of only two divisions in the league to do so.
In 2010, the NFC West became the first division in NFL history to have a champion with a losing record, after the 2010 Seattle Seahawks won the division title with a record of 7–9. They were joined in this distinction in 2014 by the Carolina Panthers, who won the NFC South with a record of 7–8–1.
The division is one of only two in which all of its teams have appeared in a Super Bowl at least once since the 2002 realignment : Arizona, Los Angeles Rams, San Francisco, and Seattle.
Since the end of the 2016 NFL regular season, the 49ers lead the division with a record of 560–464–16 with five Super Bowl titles and an overall playoff record of 31–21. The Rams hold a record of 577–569–21 with four Super Bowl appearances and one win to go with a 21–26 overall playoff record. The Cardinals hold a 111–128-1 record since joining the NFC West and a loss in Super Bowl XLIII, currently with a 7–9 playoff record, 5-4 as a member of the NFC West. The Seahawks hold a record of 137–102-1 since joining the NFC West, with three Super Bowl appearances, winning Super Bowl XLVIII to go with a playoff record of 16–14; they are currently 13–9 in the playoffs as a member of the NFC West, having gone 3–5 while in the AFC West. Since re-alignment, the Seahawks have led the division in wins, division titles, and playoff appearances.
Division lineups
Place cursor over year for division champ or Super Bowl team.Division champions
Following 2001, the Atlanta Falcons, Carolina Panthers, and New Orleans Saints left the NFC West to join the newly formed NFC South. The Arizona Cardinals joined the NFC West from the NFC East, and the Seattle Seahawks joined from the AFC West to combine with the San Francisco 49ers and the St. Louis Rams to create the new NFC West.Wild Card qualifiers
Season results
;Notes and Tiebreakers- Los Angeles won the Coastal Division based on better point differential in head-to-head games vs. Baltimore. The Rams and Colts played to a 24–24 tie in Baltimore in October before the Rams won 34–10 on the season's final Sunday at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. The result would be the same under the modern tiebreaker, which relies first on head-to-head record.
- The Baltimore Colts won the NFL Championship, but lost to the AFL's New York Jets in Super Bowl III.
- Due to player strikes, the league shortened the 1982 season's games and realigned all the teams into conferences. The records for the division teams are based on what it would have looked like if they were still in the division.
Total playoff berths
Team | Division Championships | Playoff Berths | Super Bowl Appearances | Super Bowl Wins |
San Francisco 49ers1 | 20 | 24 | 7 | 5 |
St. Louis/Los Angeles Rams1 | 15 | 23 | 4 | 1 |
Seattle Seahawks2 | 8 | 12 | 3 | 1 |
St. Louis/Phoenix/Arizona Cardinals2 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 0 |