The NFL has already defined the contenders for the Super Bowl, but a week before the big game, the League holds a week of Pro Bowl activities, as a way of celebrating a successful season that is about to come to an end.

The Pro Bowl was held for the first time in 1951 in Los Angeles, California, with the best exponents of the National League and the American League, in a game that over time changed to the format that this 2’25 is disputed, with a skills contest and a Flag Football game.

Origin of the Pro Bowl

The Pro Bowl is the NFL’s all-star game, featuring the best players of the season as voted on by fans, players and coaches.

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The first National Football League All-Star Game format from 1939 to 1942 pitted the league champions against that year’s star players.

In 1951, we had the first official Pro Bowl in which stars from the American/Eastern Conference faced off against players from the National/Western Conference.

From 1970 to 2013 and into 2017, the format was based on the selection of both conferences and the Pro Bowl pitted the best players from the AFC against the best players from their NFC counterparts for years.

Between 2013 and 2017, the NFL tried a different format in which honorary captains, who were Hall of Fame inductees, were selected and chose their respective teams by combining talent from both conferences.

In 2023, the NFL changed the format to replace the traditional game with a series of skills competitions and flag football games.

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