This article needs additional citations for
verification. (May 2013) |
First meeting | September 3, 1995 Falcons 23, Panthers 20 (OT) |
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Latest meeting | December 17, 2023 Panthers 9, Falcons 7 |
Next meeting | 2024 |
Statistics | |
Meetings total | 58 |
All-time series | Falcons, 36â22 |
Largest victory | Falcons, 41â0 (2002) |
Longest win streak | Falcons, 6 (2000â2002) Panthers, 3 (2012â2013) |
Current win streak | Panthers, 1 (2023âpresent) |
Championship success | |
Super Bowl championships (0)
Division championships (12) |
The I-85 Rivalry is a rivalry between the Atlanta Falcons and Carolina Panthers of the National Football League. The rivalry began in 1995 when the Panthers joined as an expansion team. The two teams have played each other twice a year since then, having competed in the NFC West from 1995â 2001 and would reach new heights in the early 2000s with the NFC South in 2002. [1] [2] [3] [4] Atlanta holds a 36â22 lead in the series. The two teams have not met in the playoffs.
The Falcons and Panthers have won a combined 11 division titles since 1995 and each have made two Super Bowl appearances: The Falcons in Super Bowls XXXIII and LI and the Panthers in Super Bowls XXXVIII and 50. Neither team has won a Super Bowl championship. Coincidentally, both teams lost their Super Bowls to the same two AFC teams: the Denver Broncos and the New England Patriots. On the contrary, all 14 other NFC teams have won at least one NFL championship prior to the AFLâNFL merger, a Super Bowl trophy, or both.
It known as the "I-85 Rivalry" [5] due to Atlanta and Charlotte being only four hours apart on Interstate 85. [6] [7] Games between the two teams feature large contingents of visiting fans in both cities. [8] [9] [10]
Carolina's first ever regular season game was a tightly contested 23â20 overtime loss to the Falcons on September 3, 1995. This game was notable as NFL fans in the Carolinas who were formerly Falcons fans switched allegiance when the Panthers began play, filling up the Georgia Dome. The physical nature of the game contributed to an emotional experience for fans, setting the tone for the newly formed rivalry for years to come. As Falcons play-by-play announcer Wes Durham recalled, "I remember a lot of Panthers fans being there. I remember a lot of people from Charlotte, who had obviously driven down. And it was already being promoted as the 'I-85 Rivalry.' I remember that however they scored the touchdown towards the end of regulation it got loud. It was mostly Panthers fans." [5] Later that season, Carolina defeated Atlanta 21â17 for their seventh win of the yearâthe most ever for an expansion franchise. [11] Carolina faced Atlanta in the first regular season game played at Ericsson Stadium (now Bank of America Stadium) in 1996, which the Panthers won. Carolina won at home against the Falcons in each of its first three years as a franchise, carrying a 4â2 mark over Atlanta before the Falcons evened the series to 5â5 by the end of the 1990s. [12]
In 2002, the Falcons and Panthers were moved to the NFC South along with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and New Orleans Saints, adding intensity to the rivalry. Coming off their Super Bowl appearance in 1998, the Falcons began dominating the Panthers during the early 2000s. By the end of the 2004 season, Atlanta had won 9 of 10 meetings in the decade, with Carolina's only win coming during the year of its Super Bowl appearance in 2003. A notable game occurred in 2004, when the Falcons came back to beat the Panthers with a Michael Vick rushing touchdown followed by an interception of Jake Delhomme by the Falcons defense to set up the game-winning field goal. [13] By 2007, the Panthers made it more even, sweeping the Falcons for the first time since 1997 in 2005, but were still 2â6 at home against Atlanta. [12] Overall, the Falcons won 13 of 20 games in the series during the 2000s. [14]
By 2011, Matt Ryan had long taken over at quarterback for the Falcons after Vick was involved in a dog-fighting scandal in 2007. The Panthers drafted Auburn quarterback Cam Newton first overall that year after 2010 draft pick Jimmy Clausen was an inadequate replacement for Jake Delhomme.
During the last week of the 2014 season, the Panthers and Falcons faced each other in a must-win game for the NFC South division title and playoff berth. Despite Atlanta winning earlier in the season, Carolina handily won this game 34â3, becoming just the second team in NFL history to clinch a division title with a losing record at 7â8â1. [15]
In week 16 of the 2015 season, the Panthers came into Atlanta with a perfect 14â0 record opposed to the Falcons 7â7 record. Many anticipated the Falcons, who had started 6â1, but then went 1â7, would lose as they had two weeks earlier, when they lost 38â0. [16] The Falcons however shocked the Panthers and beat them with a final score of 20â13. [17] Only the Falcons and the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl 50 beat the Panthers that season.
Atlanta Falcons vs. Carolina Panthers Season-by-Season Results | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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1990s (Tie, 5â5)
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2000s (Falcons, 13â7)
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2010s (Falcons, 14â6)
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2020s (Tie, 4â4)
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Summary of Results
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cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (
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This article needs additional citations for
verification. (May 2013) |
First meeting | September 3, 1995 Falcons 23, Panthers 20 (OT) |
---|---|
Latest meeting | December 17, 2023 Panthers 9, Falcons 7 |
Next meeting | 2024 |
Statistics | |
Meetings total | 58 |
All-time series | Falcons, 36â22 |
Largest victory | Falcons, 41â0 (2002) |
Longest win streak | Falcons, 6 (2000â2002) Panthers, 3 (2012â2013) |
Current win streak | Panthers, 1 (2023âpresent) |
Championship success | |
Super Bowl championships (0)
Division championships (12) |
The I-85 Rivalry is a rivalry between the Atlanta Falcons and Carolina Panthers of the National Football League. The rivalry began in 1995 when the Panthers joined as an expansion team. The two teams have played each other twice a year since then, having competed in the NFC West from 1995â 2001 and would reach new heights in the early 2000s with the NFC South in 2002. [1] [2] [3] [4] Atlanta holds a 36â22 lead in the series. The two teams have not met in the playoffs.
The Falcons and Panthers have won a combined 11 division titles since 1995 and each have made two Super Bowl appearances: The Falcons in Super Bowls XXXIII and LI and the Panthers in Super Bowls XXXVIII and 50. Neither team has won a Super Bowl championship. Coincidentally, both teams lost their Super Bowls to the same two AFC teams: the Denver Broncos and the New England Patriots. On the contrary, all 14 other NFC teams have won at least one NFL championship prior to the AFLâNFL merger, a Super Bowl trophy, or both.
It known as the "I-85 Rivalry" [5] due to Atlanta and Charlotte being only four hours apart on Interstate 85. [6] [7] Games between the two teams feature large contingents of visiting fans in both cities. [8] [9] [10]
Carolina's first ever regular season game was a tightly contested 23â20 overtime loss to the Falcons on September 3, 1995. This game was notable as NFL fans in the Carolinas who were formerly Falcons fans switched allegiance when the Panthers began play, filling up the Georgia Dome. The physical nature of the game contributed to an emotional experience for fans, setting the tone for the newly formed rivalry for years to come. As Falcons play-by-play announcer Wes Durham recalled, "I remember a lot of Panthers fans being there. I remember a lot of people from Charlotte, who had obviously driven down. And it was already being promoted as the 'I-85 Rivalry.' I remember that however they scored the touchdown towards the end of regulation it got loud. It was mostly Panthers fans." [5] Later that season, Carolina defeated Atlanta 21â17 for their seventh win of the yearâthe most ever for an expansion franchise. [11] Carolina faced Atlanta in the first regular season game played at Ericsson Stadium (now Bank of America Stadium) in 1996, which the Panthers won. Carolina won at home against the Falcons in each of its first three years as a franchise, carrying a 4â2 mark over Atlanta before the Falcons evened the series to 5â5 by the end of the 1990s. [12]
In 2002, the Falcons and Panthers were moved to the NFC South along with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and New Orleans Saints, adding intensity to the rivalry. Coming off their Super Bowl appearance in 1998, the Falcons began dominating the Panthers during the early 2000s. By the end of the 2004 season, Atlanta had won 9 of 10 meetings in the decade, with Carolina's only win coming during the year of its Super Bowl appearance in 2003. A notable game occurred in 2004, when the Falcons came back to beat the Panthers with a Michael Vick rushing touchdown followed by an interception of Jake Delhomme by the Falcons defense to set up the game-winning field goal. [13] By 2007, the Panthers made it more even, sweeping the Falcons for the first time since 1997 in 2005, but were still 2â6 at home against Atlanta. [12] Overall, the Falcons won 13 of 20 games in the series during the 2000s. [14]
By 2011, Matt Ryan had long taken over at quarterback for the Falcons after Vick was involved in a dog-fighting scandal in 2007. The Panthers drafted Auburn quarterback Cam Newton first overall that year after 2010 draft pick Jimmy Clausen was an inadequate replacement for Jake Delhomme.
During the last week of the 2014 season, the Panthers and Falcons faced each other in a must-win game for the NFC South division title and playoff berth. Despite Atlanta winning earlier in the season, Carolina handily won this game 34â3, becoming just the second team in NFL history to clinch a division title with a losing record at 7â8â1. [15]
In week 16 of the 2015 season, the Panthers came into Atlanta with a perfect 14â0 record opposed to the Falcons 7â7 record. Many anticipated the Falcons, who had started 6â1, but then went 1â7, would lose as they had two weeks earlier, when they lost 38â0. [16] The Falcons however shocked the Panthers and beat them with a final score of 20â13. [17] Only the Falcons and the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl 50 beat the Panthers that season.
Atlanta Falcons vs. Carolina Panthers Season-by-Season Results | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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1990s (Tie, 5â5)
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2000s (Falcons, 13â7)
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2010s (Falcons, 14â6)
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2020s (Tie, 4â4)
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Summary of Results
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