All 32 teams

NFL Team Pages

Updated June 20, 2026 by Rishabh Prabhu. SnapStats is an independent football research project and is not affiliated with the NFL.

Use this page as the public starting point for SnapStats team research. It lists every NFL team and links into team-specific pages that connect standings context, player profiles, stat leaderboards, fantasy research, and matchup questions.

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Arizona CardinalsARI Atlanta FalconsATL Baltimore RavensBAL Buffalo BillsBUF Carolina PanthersCAR Chicago BearsCHI Cincinnati BengalsCIN Cleveland BrownsCLE Dallas CowboysDAL Denver BroncosDEN Detroit LionsDET Green Bay PackersGB Houston TexansHOU Indianapolis ColtsIND Jacksonville JaguarsJAX Kansas City ChiefsKC Las Vegas RaidersLV Los Angeles ChargersLAC Los Angeles RamsLAR Miami DolphinsMIA Minnesota VikingsMIN New England PatriotsNE New Orleans SaintsNO New York GiantsNYG New York JetsNYJ Philadelphia EaglesPHI Pittsburgh SteelersPIT San Francisco 49ersSF Seattle SeahawksSEA Tampa Bay BuccaneersTB Tennessee TitansTEN Washington CommandersWSH

How To Research A Team

Team research usually starts broad and then narrows. First, check the team in the standings to understand division and conference context. Next, open schedules and recent scores to see how the results were built. Then move into player pages or fantasy views when you need to know which players are driving the team profile.

SnapStats keeps these paths close together so a user does not have to treat scores, standings, players, and fantasy tools as separate products. The app is especially useful when a matchup question turns into a player question, or when a fantasy decision depends on team context.

  • Scores show current and historical game context where supported by the available data source.
  • Standings help explain division races, conference order, records, and point differential.
  • Player pages make it easier to move from team-level questions into position-specific production.
  • Fantasy tools connect team roles to lineup, draft, and watchlist decisions.

Why The Team Index Matters

A public team index gives visitors a clear navigation path before they enter the app. That matters for users and crawlers: people can see what the site covers, and search systems can follow normal links instead of guessing how a JavaScript dashboard is structured.

Each team page now has its own crawlable URL, team-specific copy, related player links where SnapStats has build-time player data, and paths into the broader research library. The index keeps those pages organized instead of making users hunt through a long footer.

Best Team Research Workflow

Choose a team below, then compare team context against player pages, stat leaderboards, and upcoming matchups. If you are preparing for fantasy football, pay attention to usage paths, scoring environment, and how team context affects individual opportunity. If you are following standings, check division context before reading one result as a season-changing signal.