32 total teams in 8 divisions. NFC north south east and west AFC north south east and west
In 2010 the Titans will play the following - Their division opponants - The Colts, the Jaguars, and the Texans - twice. The AFC West, hosting the Broncos and Raiders while traveling to San Diego and Kansas City. The NFC East, hosting the Eagles and Redskins while traveling to Dallas and to New York. The AFC North and AFC East teams with the same divisional finish as they - i.e. if the Titans finished fourth in the AFC South they would play the fourth-place teams from the AFC North (the Browns) and the AFC East (the Bills).
AFC- AFC east, AFC west, AFC north, AFC south NFC- NFC east, NFC west, NFC north, NFC south
Oh, what a lovely question! NFC and AFC teams typically do play each other in the regular season, but not very often. Most of the games are played within each conference to determine playoff standings. When they do play, it's always a special treat to see different teams come together on the field.
The NFL Divisions are NFC North NFC South NFC East NFC West AFC North AFC South AFC East AFC West
The Patriots play in the American Football Conference and in that conference's Eastern Division. There are fifteen other teams in the conference -In the AFC EAST with the Patriots -New York JetsBuffalo BillsMiami DolphinsIn the AFC SOUTH -Indianapolis ColtsTennessee TitansJacksonville JaguarsHouston TexansIn the AFC NORTH -Pittsburgh SteelersBaltimore RavensCleveland BrownsCincinnati BengalsIn the AFC WEST -Oakland RaidersSan Diego ChargersDenver BroncosKansas City Chiefs
There is no team outside of the AFC East that the New England Patriots play every year. This is the case with all NFL teams. Each NFL team's 16-game schedule includes six games within the team's own division (one home, one away for each division rival); four games against teams from a single other division within the same conference (on a rotating basis); and four games against teams from a division from the other conference (on a rotating basis). The other two games are played against teams from the remaining two divisions within the same conference, selected by the teams' final positions within their division standings the previous season. Thus, for example, in 2013, the Patriots play the other three AFC East teams (Buffalo Bills, New York Jets and Miami Dolphins) twice each; all four teams from the AFC North (Baltimore Ravens, Cincinnati Bengals, Cleveland Browns, and Pittsburgh Steelers); and all four teams from the NFC South (Atlanta Falcons, Carolina Panthers, New Orleans Saints, and Tampa Bay Buccaneers). And since the Patriots finished 2012 in first place in the AFC East, they also play the Denver Broncos, who finished first in the AFC West, and the Houston Texans, who finished first in the AFC South. In 2014, the Patriots will play the Bills, Jets and Dolphins; all four teams in the AFC West; all four teams in the NFC North; and whichever teams finish in the same place in the AFC North and South as the Patriots finish in the AFC East. While the Patriots, thus, will play the Broncos in each of those years, this is only because the teams finished first in their divisions in 2012 and because the AFC East is matched up with the AFC West in 2014. There is no guarantee within the NFL scheduling formula that the Patriots will play any team from any division outside the AFC East in consecutive years.
There are 4 divisions in each conference. East, North, South, and West. Each has 4 teams. There are 2 conferences NFC and AFC for a total of 32 teams.
No. The AFC division they play in 2010 is the AFC West.
There are 16 AFC teams, rookie.AFC East - Patriots, Bills, Jets, DolphinsAFC North - Ravens, Steelers, Bengals, BrownsAFC South - Colts, Jaguars, Titans, TexansAFC West - Broncos, Chargers, Raiders, Chiefs
No, the Redskins won't play the Dolphins until 2011. The Redskins play the AFC South in 2010. This year they play the AFC West, In 2008 they played the AFC North and in 2007 was when they played the AFC East, including being the victim of one of New England's perfect regular season.
The National Football League has a proven formula for its regular-season schedules. Let's use the Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks as an example. In 2014, the Seahawks will play their three NFC West rivals twice -- at home and away. That means Seattle will host games against the San Francisco 49ers, the Arizona Cardinals and the St. Louis Rams. And they will play road games against the three teams. In 2014, the teams of the NFC West will play the teams of the AFC West, so Seattle will host home games against the Denver Broncos and the Oakland Raiders and play on the road against the San Diego Chargers and the Kansas City Chiefs. According to the rotating schedule the Seahawks will play the AFC North teams in 2015, the AFC East teams in 2016 and the AFC South teams in 2017. In 2014, NFC West teams will play the NFC East teams, so Seattle will host games against the Dallas Cowboys and the New York Giants and play on the road against the Philadelphia Eagles and the Washington Redskins. In 2015, the Seahawks will play the NFC North teams and in 2016, they will meet the NFC South teams. The rest of the Seahawks' 2014 schedule will be against NFC teams that finished first in their respective divisions in 2013, just as Seattle did. During the regular season, they will play a home game against the Green Bay Packers and meet the Carolina Panthers on the road.