The 2008 NFL season was the 89th
regular season of the
National Football League, themed with the slogan "Believe in Now."
Super Bowl XLIII, the league's championship game, was at
Raymond James Stadium in
Tampa, Florida, on February 1, 2009,
with the
Pittsburgh Steelers coming out victorious over the
Arizona Cardinals 27–23 and winning their NFL-record sixth
Vince Lombardi Trophy.
Conversely, the
Detroit Lions became the first NFL team with
a winless season since the strike-shortened
1982 NFL season, finishing
their season 0–16. For the first time since the NFL expanded to the sixteen game season in 1978, three teams won two or fewer games: the Lions, the Kansas City Chiefs, and the St. Louis Rams. Previously two teams won two or fewer games in
1979,
1981,
1983,
1985,
1992, and
2001. Also, for the first time since the
1985 Denver Broncos, a
team finishing with an 11–5 record missed the playoffs.
The regular season began on September 4 with the defending
Super Bowl XLII champion
New York Giants defeating the
Washington Redskins 16–7, and concluded with the
2009 Pro Bowl on February 8, 2009, in
Honolulu.
Draft
The
2008 NFL Draft was held from April 26 to 27, 2008 at
New York City's
Radio City Music Hall. With the first pick,
the Miami Dolphins selected offensive tackle
Jake Long from
the University of Michigan.
New referees
Gerald Austin and
Larry Nemmers retired.
Carl Cheffers and
Alberto Riveron were promoted to referee.
Ron Blum also retired from line judge position.
Rule changes
The following rule changes were passed at the league's annual owners’ meeting in
Palm Beach, Florida, during the week of March 31:
*One defensive player will be allowed to wear a radio similar to the one worn by the quarterback to communicate with the coaching staff on the field.
*The "force-out" rule on catches made near the sidelines has been eliminated. A receiver now must come down with the ball and both feet in bounds for a pass to be ruled complete; previously, passes would be ruled complete if the receiver was pushed by a defender while in the air and the official judged that he would have come down in bounds had he not been pushed. However, if a receiver is wrapped up in mid-air by a defender and carried out of bounds before both feet touch the ground, the official can still rule the play a completion.
*The 5-yard incidental grabbing of the face mask penalty has been eliminated; incidental contact will not result in a penalty, though intentional grabbing of the face mask will remain a 15-yard personal foul.
*Teams that win the opening coin toss now have the option to defer the decision until the start of the second half, the same as in college and
Canadian football.
*Field goal attempts that bounce off the goal post are now reviewable under
instant replay. This change followed a decision during the previous season during a Browns-Ravens game when
Phil Dawson’s game-tying field goal hit an upright and then the curved support behind the crossbar, and then again went over the crossbar to land in front of the goal post.
*Legal forward hand offs that touch the ground and attempted snaps when the ball hits the ground before the quarterback touches it are now considered fumbles; previously, forward hand offs were treated as incomplete passes, while a snap that hit the ground before the quarterback touched it was a 5-yard illegal procedure penalty.
Preseason
In
preseason games, the annual
Pro Football Hall of Fame Game was played August 3 between the Indianapolis Colts and Washington Redskins, which aired on
NBC.
Washington won the game, 30–16. Other preseason highlights included the first game of the
Toronto Series, which was played August 14 between the
Buffalo Bills and the
Pittsburgh Steelers at Toronto's
Rogers Centre. The Bills won that game, 24–21.
Regular season
Formula
Based on the
NFL's scheduling formula, the intraconference and interconference matchups for 2008 were:
Opening Weekend
The annual
NFL Kickoff Game to start the season took place on September 4 and featured the
Super Bowl XLII champion
New York Giants winning over their division rivals, the
Washington Redskins, at
Giants Stadium by a score of 16–7. The game's kickoff was ninety minutes earlier than previous years, at 7 p.m.
EDT, because of a time conflict with the
2008 Republican National Convention.
Other featured games during the opening week included the
NBC Sunday Night Football game between the
Chicago Bears and the
Indianapolis Colts (the first regular season game at
Lucas Oil Stadium and a rematch of
Super Bowl XLI), in which the
Kyle Orton-led Bears upset the Colts 29–13. In addition, there were two
Monday Night Football contests, both
division rivalries, as part of the now annual
doubleheader: The
Minnesota Vikings at the
Green Bay Packers (the Packers’ first Monday night game without
Brett Favre since 1992) in which
Aaron Rodgers helped the Packers win, 24–19, and the
Denver Broncos at the
Oakland Raiders, where
Jay Cutler and
Eddie Royal led the Broncos in beating the Raiders, 41–14. Also,
New England Patriots quarterback
Tom Brady suffered a season-ending injury against the
Kansas City Chiefs.
Flexible scheduling
The 2008 season also was the third season of the use of the "flexible scheduling" for Sunday games starting with Week 11.
As had happened in 2007, a team played on consecutive Sunday nights due to a game being moved into the Sunday night time slot. The originally scheduled New York Giants-
Dallas Cowboys game on December 14 was followed by a flexed December 21 home game for the Giants against the
Carolina Panthers; the Giants-Panthers game was flexed because it carried serious playoff implications, as the winner would clinch the
NFC's top seed and home-field advantage throughout the playoffs. This was the second of three flexed games, with a December 7 interconference matchup between the
Baltimore Ravens and
Washington Redskins. The league filled the open spot on December 28 with a game between the
Denver Broncos and
San Diego Chargers with major playoff implications, as the winner of that game would win the AFC West and earn a home game in the playoffs while the loser would be eliminated.
International play
This was the second consecutive season that the league played at least one regular season game outside the United States as part of the
NFL International Series. The contest between the
San Diego Chargers and the
New Orleans Saints was played at
Wembley Stadium in London on October 26, with New Orleans winning 37–32.
The Chargers played at Buffalo the week beforehand on October 19 so they could immediately travel to London afterward in order to get used to the time difference.
The league has also approved the Bills’ request to play at least one regular season home game at Toronto's
Rogers Centre over each of the next five seasons.
Team owner
Ralph Wilson petitioned the league to play at least one game in Canada to strengthen his club's fan base in
Ontario. The game in Toronto was on December 7, after the end of the
2008 CFL season,
against the
Miami Dolphins; Miami won 16–3. CBS televised both games regionally; the Toronto game was carried across Canada on
Rogers Sportsnet and
City TV.
Thanksgiving
The traditional
Thanksgiving Day games were held on November 27, with the
Detroit Lions hosting the
Tennessee Titans at 12:30 PM
EST on
CBS (with the then 10–1 Titans handily defeating the then 0–11 Lions by a 47–10 score), and the
Dallas Cowboys’ home game following suit on
Fox at 4:15 PM EST against the
Seattle Seahawks (Dallas Cowboys defeated the Seattle Seahawks by a score of 34–9). A third game on
NFL Network, featuring the
Arizona Cardinals and the
Philadelphia Eagles followed at 8:15 PM EST.
It was the first home game for the Eagles on
Thanksgiving Day since 1940, and their first Thanksgiving game at any location since the infamous
Bounty Bowl Game in
1989; the Eagles defeated the Cardinals by a score of 48–20. (The Cardinals and Eagles would, two months later, rematch in the
NFC Championship Game, with Arizona winning this time by a score of 32–25.)
Christmas
Despite NFL tradition to play games on Christmas if the holiday lands on a day of the week when the NFL normally plays, and the fact that Christmas landed on a Thursday in 2008, the NFL opted not to hold a
Christmas game this season, instead scheduling all of its week 17 matchups for Sunday, December 28.
Pro Bowl
The NFL's
Pro Bowl all-star game at the end of the season was played at
Aloha Stadium in the
Honolulu, Hawaii, for the 30th consecutive season. The league had the option under their current contract to hold the game elsewhere, including the possibility of moving it to the host site of the
Super Bowl.
Regular season standings
Division
Conference
Postseason
The playoffs began with Wild Card Weekend on January 3–4, 2009. The Divisional Playoffs were played on January 10–11 and the Conference Championship Games on January 18.
Super Bowl XLIII was played on February 1 at
Raymond James Stadium in
Tampa, Florida, with the Pittsburgh Steelers winning their record sixth Super Bowl.
Playoffs bracket
Notable events
Detroit Lions going 0–16
The
2008 Detroit Lions would mark the capstone of the ill decisions of President/General Manager
Matt Millen since arriving on the job in 2001. After an 0–3 start, the Lions fired Millen on September 23 after seven seasons, during the team's bye week. During that time, the Lions compiled the worst record in the league (31–84, .270 percentage) and had many questionable draft choices.
However, by that point, the damage had been done. The Lions went on to lose every game and finished 0–16,
the first winless season in the NFL since the strike-shortened
1982 NFL season saw the
Baltimore Colts finish 0–8–1, and the first full-season imperfect season since the
expansion 1976 Tampa Bay Buccaneers finished 0–14. It marked the first time that a non-expansion team, non-strike shortened team, non-merged team finished winless since the
1944 Brooklyn Tigers finished 0–10. It was the second winless season for the Lions, who finished 0–11 in
1942. The 0–16 record would be later matched by the
2017 Cleveland Browns.
Retirement/Unretirement of Brett Favre
The 2008 season marked the first time since September 20, 1992, that someone other than
Brett Favre started at quarterback for the
Green Bay Packers, as
Aaron Rodgers became the new offensive "Leader of The Pack." At first, this was given Favre's announcement on March 4, 2008, that he would retire from the league after seventeen seasons. He owns many NFL records, including most wins as a quarterback, most
touchdowns thrown, (broken by Peyton Manning in 2014) and most consecutive starts at quarterback, as well as most interceptions. He started every Packers game, regular season and postseason, for nearly sixteen full seasons (September 27, 1992 – January 20, 2008).

The Packers were scheduled to retire Favre's #4 jersey in a ceremony during the first week of the season. However, on July 2, 2008, he publicly indicated that he wanted to play again as the starting quarterback. On July 11, 2008, Favre sent a letter to the Packers management asking for an unconditional release which will allow him to play for another team. The Packers did not give it to him, but they were unwilling to release him for fear that he would sign with division rival Minnesota Vikings (Favre's choice for an alternate team). Also, the Packers would not start him as quarterback if he came back to the team, and named the other Packers quarterback
Aaron Rodgers as the starting quarterback and Favre as the backup.
From July 14 to 15, Favre did TV interviews discussing his comeback, Rodgers taking his place, and frustrations on the Packers for not being honest with him, personally and publicly.
On July 16, 2008, the Packers filed tampering charges against the Vikings for alleged improper communication between Favre, Vikings head coach
Brad Childress and Vikings offensive coordinator
Darrell Bevell. Favre filed for reinstatement on July 29, 2008, and by August 4, NFL Commissioner
Roger Goodell reinstated Favre.
Three days later on August 7, the Packers traded Favre to the
New York Jets for a conditional draft pick. He played well for most of the year, but entering December he suffered a shoulder injury which dropped the Jets out of playoff contention. Favre again retired following the 2008 season. The Jets then released Favre in favor of moving in the direction of getting a star college quarterback in the draft, eventually landing
Mark Sanchez. Another protracted "will he/won’t he retire’ saga emerged in 2009 which concluded in August of that year when Favre signed with, as expected, the Minnesota Vikings.
Hurricane Ike
Hurricane Ike forced several changes to the 2008 schedule. The
Houston Texans' Week 2 home game against the
Baltimore Ravens was first postponed to Monday, September 15, before Ike made landfall; damage to
Reliant Stadium forced a further postponement, to Week 10, on Sunday, November 9, giving the Texans and the Ravens their bye weeks in Week 2. Furthermore, to accommodate this move, the Texans’ home game against the
Cincinnati Bengals was moved forward from November 9 to Sunday, October 26, pushing the Bengals’ bye week from Week 8 to Week 10. Although no other games were postponed, Ike and its remnants also impacted several other Week 2 games on September 14.
The Texans ended up having to wait until Week 5 against the
Indianapolis Colts to have their home opener, the latest an NFL team went into the season before playing at home since the
New Orleans Saints played their entire schedule on the road in 2005
due to the damages of the city of
New Orleans as a result of
Hurricane Katrina. (Every other NFL team had at least one home game by the end of Week 2.) With the Ravens eventually advancing to the AFC Championship Game against the rival
Pittsburgh Steelers (and having to enter the playoffs as a
wild card team), the impromptu decision to give the Ravens and Texans their bye week so early in the season ended up having the unintended effect of the Ravens playing in an NFL-record 18 consecutive weeks without a break in the schedule.
New formations result in high scores
The 2008 season saw a marked increase in the use of two new offensive philosophies (at least for the NFL, these offenses previously saw extensive use in
college or
Canadian football for a few years): the "
wildcat formation," a formation based on the
halfback option play, the "
spread offense," which uses multiple wide-receiver sets and the quarterback frequently in
shotgun, and the "Suggs package," which features two quarterbacks on the field at once. In week 3 of the season, the wildcat formation, used up until this point primarily as a
trick play, was used eight times, including four times in a
Miami Dolphins game and three times in a game between the
Oakland Raiders and
Buffalo Bills. Season-ending injuries to the starting and backup quarterbacks for the Chiefs prompted the team's offensive coordinator
Chan Gailey to switch to a spread offense after six games.
In Baltimore, the Ravens, led by rookie head coach
John Harbaugh, implemented the "Suggs package", which places two quarterbacks on the field at once,
Joe Flacco and
Troy Smith.
[Can't-Miss Plays: Best trick plays of 2008](_blank)
NFL.com. January 24, 2009. Due mainly to the new formations, 837 points were scored league wide in Week 12, the most ever for one NFL weekend.
The wildcat formation in particular was credited with turning the Miami Dolphins from a last-place team into the winner of the AFC East, and four of the top ten plays ranked by NFL.com were directly based on the wildcat (two others featured wide receivers throwing passes).
Tie game
On November 16, during Week 11, a game between the
Philadelphia Eagles and the
Cincinnati Bengals at
Paul Brown Stadium ended in a 13–13 tie,
the first NFL tie game since November 10, 2002, when the
Atlanta Falcons and the
Pittsburgh Steelers ended in a 34–34 draw. After the game,
Donovan McNabb mentioned that he did not know there were ties in the NFL, apparently confusing the NFL's postseason rules (where teams can and have played double overtime games because those contests continue until a team finally wins) with the regular season rules. This drew the ire of many fans, who thought that a quarterback of his caliber should know some fundamental rules; however, none of McNabb's critics accused him of not playing to win during the OT period in Cincinnati, and his play was tied into a game that was widely derided as one of the ugliest, most disjointed, and controversial results in NFL history,.
Ironically, the tie game ultimately helped the Eagles make the playoffs, as it was the deciding tiebreaker for the #6 seed in the NFC; the Eagles went on to lose to the Cardinals in the
NFC Championship Game.
Tributes
St. Louis Rams and Georgia Frontiere
On January 18, 2008,
Georgia Frontiere, owner of the
St. Louis Rams died due to complications with
breast cancer. The Rams wore a commemorative patch in her honor, with her signature on their left shoulder.
Kansas City Chiefs and Lamar Hunt
On January 31, 2008,
Clark Hunt, chairman of the board for the
Kansas City Chiefs announced that henceforth the team's
Lamar Hunt/
American Football League tribute patch that was introduced in the 2007 season will be a permanent part of the Chiefs’ uniform. joining the
Chicago Bears (with
George Halas) and the
Cleveland Browns (with
Al Lerner) with such a patch.
Tim Russert
The stretch of highway outside
Ralph Wilson Stadium along
U.S. Route 20A in
Orchard Park, New York, has been named the
Timothy J. Russert Highway. Russert, who was
NBC News's chief Washington bureau correspondent and the host of ''
Meet the Press'', was a Buffalo native and noted Buffalo Bills fan. He died of a heart attack in June 2008.
Gene Upshaw
The league honored
National Football League Players Association leader
Gene Upshaw, who died suddenly at age 63 on August 20 just three days after being diagnosed with
pancreatic cancer. For the entire season, the Oakland Raiders wore a patch on the left chest of the jerseys with the initials "GU" and his number 63, his jersey number with the Raiders. All NFL teams also honored Upshaw with a video tribute and a replica of the uniform patch painted onto the field during the opening weekend. Originally, the patch on the field and the video tribute were only going to be done in Oakland at the Raiders' home opener against the
Denver Broncos as Upshaw played his entire 15-year Hall of Fame career with the Raiders, and at
Giants Stadium, when the Giants and Redskins opened the NFL season on September 4. All players wore the same patch during Week One, and later changed to a smaller helmet decal. The Raiders wore the patch through the remainder of the season.
Sean Taylor
The
Washington Redskins honored the anniversary of death of
Sean Taylor this season in a home game against the visiting
New York Giants.
Steelers ownership restructure

On July 7, 2008, owners of the
Pittsburgh Steelers, including
Art Rooney's five sons who own 80% of the franchise,
[ looked to restructure the ownership plan of the franchise in order to comply with NFL ownership regulations. Current Steelers Chairman, Dan Rooney, and his son, Art Rooney II, President of the franchise, wished to stay involved with the franchise, while the remainder of the brothers — Art Jr., Timothy, Patrick and John — wished to further pursue racetracks that they own in Florida and New York. Since 2006, many of the racetracks have added video slot machines, causing them to violate "NFL policy that prohibits involvement with racetrack and gambling interests". On July 11, it was confirmed that investor Stanley Druckenmiller had been in discussion with the five Rooney brothers.] A Steelers fan for many years, Druckenmiller "has been known to paint his face black and gold" during games. Coach Mike Tomlin stated that the situation could become a distraction, but "I'm here to coach, they're he playershere to play. Those questions will be answered by the Rooneys." On September 18, Druckenmiller withdrew his bid to purchase the team.
NFL owners unanimously approved the restructuring of ownership on December 17, 2008, with Dan and Art II getting the mandated 30% stake. Meanwhile, brothers Timothy and Patrick (the ones who own race tracks with slot machines, which violate NFL ownership rules) sold their shares outright, while Art Jr., John, and the McGinley family selling some shares but retaining smaller ownership roles, with the brothers reducing their shares from 16% to 6% and the McGinley family reducing their shares from 20% to 10%. Joining the ownership group were Pilot Travel Centers president Jim Haslam III, Legendary Pictures president a
D CEO Thomas Tull, and the Paul family each getting a 16% stake in the team. Dan Rooney mentioned he has no ill will towards Druckenmiller, mentioning he's a great Steelers fan and wishes he remains one.
Milestones
The following teams and players set all-time NFL records during the regular season:
Regular season statistical leaders
Awards
----
;All-Pro Team
Team Superlatives
Offense
*Most points scored: New Orleans, 463
*Fewest points scored: Cleveland, 204
*Most total offensive yards: New Orleans, 6,571
*Fewest total offensive yards: Cincinnati, 3,926
*Most total passing yards: New Orleans, 4,977
*Fewest total passing yards: Oakland, 2,369
*Most rushing yards: New York Giants, 2,518
*Fewest rushing yards: Arizona, 1,178
Defense
*Fewest points allowed: Pittsburgh, 223
*Most points allowed: Detroit, 517
*Fewest total yards allowed: Pittsburgh, 3,795
*Most total yards allowed: Detroit, 6,470
*Fewest passing yards allowed: Pittsburgh, 2,511
*Most passing yards allowed: Seattle, 4,149
*Fewest rushing yards allowed: Minnesota, 1,230
*Most rushing yards allowed: Detroit, 2,754
2008 AFC Players of the Week
2008 NFC Players of the Week
Coaching changes
The following teams hired new head coaches prior to the start of the 2008 season:
The following head coaches were fired during the 2008 season:
The firing of Kiffin and Linehan marked the first time since the AFL–NFL merger in 1970 that multiple head coaches were fired before Week 5 of the season, and the first since 1989 that any coach was fired this early in a season. Both were released heading into their teams’ respective bye weeks, while Nolan was released prior to the game just before the 49ers’ bye.
Stadium changes
In addition to the Bills playing one home game in Toronto's Rogers Centre, this was the first season that the Indianapolis Colts played their home games at Lucas Oil Stadium.
2008 was the final year that the Dallas Cowboys played at Texas Stadium; they moved to Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, in 2009.
McAfee Coliseum reverted back to the Oakland Coliseum after McAfee declined to renew the naming rights. In addition, Monster Park reverted back to Candlestick Park permanently after the naming right deal with Monster Cable expired, per the terms of Proposition H, passed by San Francisco voters in 2004, that prohibited the city from accepting another naming rights deals for that stadium.
Uniforms
The Tennessee Titans switched their home jerseys. They changed their alternate Columbia blue jersey to make it their primary color while the navy blue jersey became the alternate jersey.
The Denver Broncos brought back the alternate orange jerseys after a three-year hiatus and wore them for games against the New Orleans Saints and Kansas City Chiefs.
In their first two home games, the New England Patriots wore their white jerseys against the Kansas City Chiefs and Miami Dolphins. It was the first time the Patriots had worn white at home since 1994.
For the first time in the team's history, the Oakland Raiders wore their white jerseys at home against the San Diego Chargers.
New league logo
2008 was the first season that the NFL used a new, updated logo. Unveiled on August 31, 2007, in ''USA Today'', the new design features eight white stars, representing each of the league's eight divisions, instead of 25 on the old logo. The football has been redesigned and rotated to the same angle as the one on the top of the Vince Lombardi Trophy given to the Super Bowl champion. Darker shades of red and blue, specifically navy blue, are also used, along with font lettering to that of the league's current typeface for other logos. The new logo officially made its debut during the 2008 NFL Draft on April 26.
Apparel
The 2008 season marked just the third time in the salary cap era (and first since 2001) that no NFL team made major changes to their uniforms or logo. Since 1993, half of the league's teams (Arizona, Atlanta, Buffalo, Cincinnati, Denver, Minnesota, New England, New York Giants, New York Jets, Philadelphia, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, St. Louis, Tampa Bay, and Tennessee) have completely redesigned their uniforms (The Patriots doing it four times, though none since 2000) while another five (Detroit, Green Bay, Miami, New Orleans, and Pittsburgh) making minor, though noticeable, changes. The Titans are swapping home and alternate designations on their light blue and navy blue jerseys though.
The Detroit Lions, in celebration of their 75th season in Motown as well as by popular demand by the fans, abandoned their black third jerseys in favor of their 1950s style throwback uniforms. They wore these uniforms against Jacksonville (November 9) and Tennessee (Thanksgiving Day – November 27). In addition, the Pittsburgh Steelers will make their throwbacks from the previous season their alternate uniform, wearing them against the Baltimore Ravens on September 29 and the New York Giants on October 26. The Jets wore their New York Titans throwbacks at home against Arizona on September 28 and Cincinnati on October 12 this season, and the Bills donned their retro uniforms at home against Oakland Raiders September 21.
Media
Television
This was the third season under the league's current television contracts with its American broadcast partners. CBS Sports and Fox Sports televised Sunday afternoon AFC and NFC away games, respectively. For primetime games, NBC broadcast ''Sunday Night Football'' and ESPN airs ''Monday Night Football''. The NFL Network's ''Run to the Playoffs'' also broadcast seven Thursday and one Saturday late season night games, although there were reportedly negotiations to move those games to ESPN Classic.
This was also the last NFL season to be broadcast over the air in analog television in the United States; the digital television transition occurred in June 2009. Border stations in Canada and Mexico will continue to broadcast in analog; cable stations are unaffected and will be distributed in the format of the cable provider's choice.
NBC broadcast Super Bowl XLIII, their first Super Bowl since Super Bowl XXXII at the end of the 1997 season.
Changes
ESPN reduced the on-air roles of sideline reporters Michele Tafoya and Suzy Kolber during the ''Monday Night Football'' telecast. Also, Emmitt Smith has been replaced on ''Sunday NFL Countdown'' by Cris Carter, who came over from HBO.
Meanwhile, NBC's ''Football Night in America'' reunited Dan Patrick with Keith Olbermann on television for the first time since 1997 when they co-hosted ''SportsCenter''.
The in-house NFL Network saw Bryant Gumbel resign as their play-by-play announcer after two seasons on the network's ''Run to the Playoffs'' package after critics described his play-by-play calling as "lackluster." New York Giants radio announcer Bob Papa took his place.
Additionally, NFL Films-produced ''Inside the NFL'' changed premium cable homes from Time Warner's HBO after three decades to CBS’ Showtime. Also changed: James Brown (from the parent network's ''The NFL Today'') as host and Phil Simms as one of the analysts. Cris Collinsworth is staying, but Dan Marino has been dropped as a studio analyst, and the aforementioned Cris Carter moved to ESPN. Taking their place is Warren Sapp.
3-D Telecast
On December 4, the NFL Network broadcast its game between the Oakland Raiders and the San Diego Chargers to theaters in New York City, Boston and Los Angeles using state of the art 3-D technology. The viewings, which were limited to NFL and consumer electronics executives, served as a test for future use of 3D in NFL television games. Because of a technical glitch, the first half was not shown.
Radio
On radio, Westwood One separated from its longtime corporate sister, CBS Radio and the Sports USA Radio Network, another syndicator, has been sold along with parent company Jones Radio Networks to the Triton Media Group.. This led to the former "NFL on Westwood One" giving way in 2011 to "NFL on Dial Global".
Internet television
On Internet television, both NFL.com and NBCSports.com carried complete live games of ''NBC Sunday Night Football'' for the first time ever. NFL.com continued its live coverage of ''Thursday and Saturday Night Football'', which began in 2007, however for the first time the complete game rather than live look-ins was shown.
Home video
The Pittsburgh Steelers 2008 season/Super Bowl XLIII championship home video went on sale on DVD on February 24, 2009. One week later on March 3, it was released on Blu-ray Disc, making it the first NFL Films home video release to be on Blu-ray Disc.[''Super Bowl XLIII Pittsburgh Steelers'' Blu-ray Disc] The Blu-ray copy is "officially" sold exclusively through Amazon.com, though it is also available through the Sports Illustrated Super Bowl offer as well as eBay. Among its exclusive content included having most of the features in high-definition video as well as the NFL on Fox fourth-quarter coverage of the Steelers matchup against the Dallas Cowboys at Heinz Field in its entirety. The matchup, which took place during Week 14 and renewed the rivalry the two teams had in the 1970s & 1990s, saw the Steelers come back from a 4th quarter ten-point deficit to win 20–13.
The New York Giants 2007 season/Super Bowl video was only released on DVD the previous year despite the fact that Toshiba dropped support of HD DVD (the primary rival of Blu-ray) just two weeks after Super Bowl XLII.
See also
*Super Bowl XLIII
*2008 NFL Draft
External links
2008 NFL season at NFL.com
Football Outsiders 2008 DVOA Rankings
References
{{Super Bowl XLIII
Category:National Football League seasons