The 2000 NFL season was the 81st regular season of the National Football League (NFL). The season ended with Super Bowl XXXV when the Baltimore Ravens defeated the New York Giants, 34–7, at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida.

Week 1 of the season reverted to Labor Day weekend in 2000. It would be the last NFL season to date to start on Labor Day weekend. It would also be the last time until 2015 that CBS televised the late afternoon games in Week 1, because both Week 1 of the NFL season and CBS's coverage of the U.S. Open tennis finals would take place on the same day beginning next season.

Player movement

  • July 24: The Carolina Panthers sign defensive end Reggie White.
  • July 21: The Baltimore Ravens sign tight end Ben Coates.
  • July 31: The Green Bay Packers trade quarterback Aaron Brooks and tight end Lamont Hall to the New Orleans Saints for linebacker K.D. Williams.

Regular season

Scheduling formula

{| border=0 style="margin: 0 0 0 1.5;"

|-valign="top"

|

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Inter-conference<br/>

AFC East vs NFC Central<br/>

AFC Central vs NFC East<br/>

AFC West vs NFC West<br/>

| style="padding-left:40px;" |

|}

Highlights of the 2000 season included:

  • Thanksgiving: Two games were played on Thursday, November 23, featuring New England at Detroit and the Minnesota at Dallas, with Detroit and Minnesota winning.

Final regular season standings

Tiebreakers

  • Green Bay finished ahead of Detroit in the NFC Central based on better division record (5–3 to Lions' 3–5).
  • New Orleans finished ahead of St. Louis in the NFC West based on better division record (7–1 to Rams' 5–3).
  • Tampa Bay was the second NFC Wild Card based on head-to-head victory over St. Louis (1–0).

Playoffs

Milestones

The following teams and players set all-time NFL records during the season:

{| class="wikitable"

!Record

!Player/team

!Date/opponent

!Previous record holder

|-

| Most rushing yards gained, game

| Corey Dillon, Cincinnati (278)

| October 22, vs. Denver

| Walter Payton, Chicago vs. Minnesota, November 20, 1977 (275)

|-

| Most pass receptions, game

| Terrell Owens, San Francisco (20)

| December 17, vs. Chicago

| Tom Fears, L.A. Rams vs. Green Bay, December 3, 1950 (18)

|-

| Most points, career

| Gary Anderson, Minnesota

| October 22, vs. Buffalo

| George Blanda 1949–1975 (2,002)

|-

| Most two-point conversions by a team, game

| St. Louis (4)

| October 15, vs. Atlanta

| Tied by 2 teams (3)

|-

| Most yards gained by a team, season

| St. Louis (7,075)

| N/A

| Miami, 1984 (6,936)

|-

| Most passing yards gained by a team, season

| St. Louis (5,232)

| N/A

| Miami, 1984 (5,018)

|}

Statistical leaders

Team

{| cellpadding="3" cellspacing="1"

|Points scored||St. Louis Rams (540)

|-

|Total yards gained||St. Louis Rams (7,075)

|-

|Yards rushing||Oakland Raiders (2,470)

|-

|Yards passing||St. Louis Rams (5,232)

|-

|Fewest points allowed||Baltimore Ravens (165)

|-

|Fewest total yards allowed||Tennessee Titans (3,813)

|-

|Fewest rushing yards allowed||Baltimore Ravens (970)

|-

|Fewest passing yards allowed||Tennessee Titans (2,423)

|}

Individual

{| cellpadding="3" cellspacing="1"

|Scoring||Marshall Faulk, St. Louis (160 points)

|-

|Touchdowns||Marshall Faulk, St. Louis (26 TDs)

|-

|Most field goals made||Matt Stover, Baltimore (35 FGs)

|-

|Rushing||Edgerrin James, Indianapolis (1,709 yards)

|-

|Passing yards||Peyton Manning, Indianapolis (4,413 yards)

|-

|Passing touchdowns||Daunte Culpepper, Minnesota and Peyton Manning, Indianapolis (33 TDs)

|-

|Receptions||Marvin Harrison, Indianapolis and Muhsin Muhammad, Carolina (102 catches)

|-

|Receiving yards||Torry Holt, St. Louis (1,635)

|-

|Receiving touchdowns||Randy Moss, Minnesota (15 touchdowns)

|-

|Punt returns||Jermaine Lewis, Baltimore (16.1 average yards)

|-

|Kickoff returns||Darrick Vaughn, Atlanta (27.7 average yards)

|-

|Interceptions||Darren Sharper, Green Bay (9)

|-

|Punting||Darren Bennett, San Diego (46.2 average yards)

|-

|Sacks||La'Roi Glover, New Orleans (17)

|}

Awards

{| cellpadding="3" cellspacing="1"

|Most Valuable Player||Marshall Faulk, running back, St. Louis

|-

|Coach of the Year||Jim Haslett, New Orleans

|-

|Offensive Player of the Year||Marshall Faulk, running back, St. Louis

|-

|Defensive Player of the Year||Ray Lewis, linebacker, Baltimore

|-

|Offensive Rookie of the Year||Mike Anderson, running back, Denver

|-

|Defensive Rookie of the Year||Brian Urlacher, linebacker, Chicago

|-

|NFL Comeback Player of the Year||Joe Johnson, defensive end, New Orleans

|-

|Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year||Jim Flanigan, defensive tackle, Chicago and Derrick Brooks, linebacker, Tampa Bay

|-

|Super Bowl most valuable player||Ray Lewis, linebacker, Baltimore

|}

Head coach/front office changes

Head coach

;Offseason

  • Dallas Cowboys – Dave Campo replaced Chan Gailey, who was fired after the 1999 season.
  • Green Bay Packers – Mike Sherman replaced Ray Rhodes, who was fired after the 1999 season.
  • Miami Dolphins – Dave Wannstedt replaced Jimmy Johnson, who retired after the 1999 season.
  • New England Patriots – Bill Belichick replaced Pete Carroll, who was fired after the 1999 season. Belichick was hired by the New England Patriots shortly after he resigned from the Jets. Bill Parcells and the Jets claimed that Belichick was still under contract to the Jets, and demanded compensation from the Patriots. NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue agreed, and the Patriots gave the Jets a first-round draft pick in 2000 in exchange for the right to hire Belichick.
  • New Orleans Saints – Jim Haslett replaced Mike Ditka, who was fired after the 1999 season.
  • New York Jets – Al Groh replaced Bill Belichick, who replaced Bill Parcells, who retired to become the full-time General Manager after the 1999 season. Defensive coordinator Bill Belichick, the first choice to replace Parcells as head coach, resigned in order to take the Patriots job.
  • St. Louis Rams – Mike Martz replaced Dick Vermeil, who retired after winning Super Bowl XXXIV.

;In-season

  • Cincinnati Bengals – Bruce Coslet resigned three games into the season and was replaced by defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau, who held the job through the 2002 season.
  • Arizona Cardinals – Vince Tobin was fired seven games into the season and was replaced by defensive coordinator Dave McGinnis, who held the job through the 2003 season.

Front office

  • Houston Texans – Charley Casserly was hired as the first executive vice president/GM of the expansion Texans on January 19th, 2000. The Texans would play their inaugural season two years later.
  • Minnesota Vikings – Head coach Dennis Green took over as de facto general manager after Tim Connolly's resignation on January 24th, 2000.
  • New Orleans Saints – Randy Mueller replaced Bill Kuharich, who was fired after the 1999 season.
  • St. Louis Rams – Charley Armey replaced former head coach Dick Vermeil, who retired after winning Super Bowl XXXIV.
  • Pittsburgh Steelers – Kevin Colbert replaced Tom Donahoe, who was fired after the 1999 season, as de facto general manager.
  • New England Patriots – New head coach Bill Belichick replaced Bobby Grier as de facto general manager, as Belichick was given the final say on personnel matters. Grier left the Patriots after the 2000 NFL draft. Belichick split the duties typically held by a general manager on most other NFL teams with player personnel director Scott Pioli.
  • San Diego Chargers – Director of player personnel Billy Devaney took the responsibility of player acquisitions after Bobby Beathard's retirement on April 25, 2000.

Stadium changes

  • The Cincinnati Bengals moved from Cinergy Field to Paul Brown Stadium, named after team founder Paul Brown
  • The Seattle Seahawks began playing at Husky Stadium while the Kingdome was demolished and a new Seahawks stadium built in its place
  • Giants Stadium's Astroturf was replaced with natural grass

Uniform and logo changes

  • The Baltimore Ravens introduced a new Ravens wordmark logo, a new Ravens shield logo was placed on the sleeve ends, and there was new pants stripping with the "B" logo on hips.
  • The Kansas City Chiefs began wearing red pants with their white jerseys for first time since 1988.
  • The New England Patriots introduced new uniforms, darkening the shade of their blue from royal to nautical blue. The new white jerseys were worn with blue block numbers and blue pants.
  • The New Orleans Saints updated their fleur-de-lis helmet logo to be a bit smaller but with a wider white and black outline. Also introduced was an alternative old gold logo. They also returned to wearing old gold pants with their white jerseys.
  • The New York Giants unveiled new uniforms. The blue jerseys were a modernized version of the team's design used in the 1950s. The white jerseys still retained elements of the 1980s design (such as the 1980s' blue collars and nameplates, and missing the 1950s' red sleeve stripes) but with red numbers like the 1950s version. Gray pants were worn with both the blue and white jerseys. The helmet also returned to featuring the lowercase "ny" logo, in addition to the TV numbers moving from the sleeve to the shoulder.
  • The San Diego Chargers wore a patch on their uniforms commemorating the teams 40th anniversary, also had brought back their throwback powder blue uniforms for the first time since 1994 for one game.
  • The St. Louis Rams introduced new uniforms, darkening the shades of blue and gold to "New Century Blue" and "Millennium Gold". Among other modifications, the curling rams horns on the sleeves were replaced by a new logo featuring charging ram's head, in addition to the TV numbers moving from the sleeve to the shoulder.

Television

This was the third year under the league's eight-year broadcast contracts with ABC, CBS, Fox, and ESPN<!--Do not link directly to NFL on ESPN, as it currently redirects to Monday Night Football--> to televise Monday Night Football, the AFC package, the NFC package, and Sunday Night Football, respectively.

ABC fired Boomer Esiason, reportedly because he and Al Michaels never got along in the MNF booth. ABC decided to go in a radical direction by hiring comedian Dennis Miller, along with Dan Fouts, to join Michaels.

Dick Enberg joined CBS, becoming the #2 play-by-play commentator, alongside Dan Dierdorf, while Verne Lundquist returned to call college football for CBS after week 2. Also, Mike Ditka joined The NFL Today as an analyst. Daryl Johnston joined CBS as a color commentator, with Kevin Harlan starting week 6 replacing Sam Wyche who underwent offseason vocal chord surgery as he called one game in week 2, having Todd Blackledge from The SEC on CBS (Week 1) and Randy Cross (Weeks 3-5) from The NFL Today fill in temporarily. Blackledge would also fill in for Phil Simms (week 2) with Greg Gumbel as Simms underwent an emergency appendectomy.

Notes

  • Football Outsiders 2000 DVOA Ratings and Commentary
  • Pro Football Reference.com – 2000

References

  • NFL Record and Fact Book ()
  • NFL History 1991–2000 (Last accessed October 17, 2005)
  • Total Football: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Football League ()
  • Steelers Fever – History of NFL Rules (Last accessed October 17, 2005)