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American Football Conference The American Football Conference is one of
the two conferences of the National Football League . This conference and its counterpart,
the National Football Conference , currently contain 16 teams each, making up the 32 teams
of the NFL. Current teams
Since 2002, the AFC has 16 teams, organized into four divisions each with four teams:
East, North, South and West. Season structure
Each AFC team plays the other teams in its division twice (home and away) during the
regular season, in addition to 10 other games assigned to their schedule by the NFL the
previous May. Two of these games are assigned on the basis of the team's final division
standing in the previous season. The remaining 8 games are split between the roster of two
other NFL divisions. This assignment shifts each year. For instance, in the 2007 regular
season, each team in the AFC West played one game against each team in both the AFC South
and the NFC North. In this way division competition consists of common opponents, with the exception
of the 2 games assigned on the strength of each team's prior division standing. (i.e.
the division winner will face the other two division winners in the AFC divisions that
they are not scheduled to play) The NFC operates according to the same system.
At the end of each football season, there are playoff games involving the top six teams
in the AFC (the four division champions by place standing and the top two remaining non-division-champion
teams ("wild cards") by record). The last two teams remaining play in the AFC Championship
game with the winner receiving the Lamar Hunt Trophy. The AFC champion plays the NFC champion
in the Super Bowl. After Super Bowl XLVII the AFC has won 20 Super Bowls to the 24 won
by the NFC. Since losing 13 consecutive Super Bowls in the 1980s and 1990s (XIX–XXXI),
the AFC has won 10 of the last 16. The coach of the team with the best record that lost
in the AFC Divisional round is the coach of the Pro Bowl.
History Both the AFC and the NFC were created after
the NFL merged with the American Football League (AFL) in 1970. The AFL began play in
1960 with eight teams, and added two more expansion clubs (the Miami Dolphins in 1966
and the Cincinnati Bengals in 1968) before the merger. In order to equalize the number
of teams in each conference, three NFL teams that predated the AFL's launch (the Cleveland
Browns, Pittsburgh Steelers, and the then-Baltimore Colts) joined the ten former AFL teams to
form the AFC. The two AFL divisions AFL East and AFL West were more or less intact, while
the Century Division, in which the Browns and the Steelers had played since 1967, was
moved from the NFL to become the new AFC Central. Since the merger, five expansion teams have
joined the AFC and two have left, thus making the current total 16. When the Seattle Seahawks
and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers joined the league in 1976, they were temporarily placed in the
NFC and AFC respectively. This arrangement lasted for one season only before the two
teams switched conferences. The Seahawks eventually returned to the NFC as a result of the 2002
realignment. The expansion Jacksonville Jaguars joined the AFC in 1995.
Due to the relocation controversy of the Cleveland Browns, a new AFC franchise called the Baltimore
Ravens was officially established in 1996 while the Browns were reactivated in 1999.
The Houston Texans were then added to the league in 2002, joining the AFC.
Between 2000 and 2012, the AFC had sent either the Baltimore Ravens (2 times), the Indianapolis
Colts (2 times), the New England Patriots (5 times), the Pittsburgh Steelers (3 times),
or the Oakland Raiders (1 time) to the Super Bowl. By contrast, the NFC has sent 11 different
teams during that same time frame. Logo
The merged league created a new logo for the AFC that took elements of the old AFL logo,
specifically the "A" and the six stars surrounding it. The AFC logo basically remained unchanged
from 1970 to 2009. The 2010 NFL season introduced an updated AFC logo, with the most notable
revision being the removal of two stars (leaving four representing the four divisions of the
AFC), and moving the stars inside the letter, similar to the NFC logo.