Friday, February 25, 2011

Eric Clapton LIVE!!!


Eric Clapton

Feb. 25, 2011, doors 6:30 pm, show 7:30 pm
British blues-rock guitar legend ("Layla", "I Shot the Sheriff"), with guests Los Lobos.
Tix $159.50/99.50/65 (plus service charges and fees) atwww.livenation.com/FOO

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

National Margarita Day!!



Today February  22nd is National Margarita Day!! Hail Tequila and Lime!


February 22 marks National Margarita Day. A celebration of one of the most popular cocktails ever. In fact, 185,000 margaritas are consumed every hour in the USA! As with most classics, it origin is in debate. It also has spurred many variations. Here's a few we picked for you to enjoy. What's your favorite Margarita recipe?
Cheers!


Read more: http://www.drinkoftheweek.com/blog/happy-national-margarita-day-2/#ixzz1EkQscbyW
Under Creative Commons License: Attribution




  • Arizona Margarita

  • Blood Orange Margarita

  • Bloody Blood Orange Margarita

  • Cadillac Margarita

  • Chambord Margarita

  • Cherry Sling Margarita

  • Churro Margarita

  • Cranberry Mint Margarita

  • Green Bay Margarita

  • Guac This Way

  • Herradura’s Cincorita

  • Margarita

  • Margarita of Love

  • Midnight Blue Margarita

  • Modern Margarita

  • NFC Herradura Margarita

  • Partida Agave Nectar Margarita

  • PiƱa Perfection

  • Pumpkin Margarita

  • Raspberry Margarita

  • Samantha

  • The Prickly Margarita

  • Warm Winter Margarita

  • Watermelon Agua Fresca Margarita

  • Watermelon and Apple Margarita



  • Read more: http://www.drinkoftheweek.com/blog/happy-national-margarita-day-2/#ixzz1EkR5yY4O
    Under Creative Commons License: Attribution



    Any reason to celebrate  delicious cocktailz!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


    Cheers and Ole!!

    Friday, February 18, 2011

    Chicago Bears Safety found dead




    We found this report on FOX News...


    Former Chicago Bears safety Dave Duerson was found dead Thursday night at his home in Miami, according to the Miami Dade County coroner's office.


    The Bears issued the following statement:


    "We are stunned and saddened to hear the tragic news regarding Dave Duerson," the Bears said in a release Friday. "He was a great contributor to our team and the Chicago community. Today is a difficult day for all of us who loved Dave. We'll miss him. Our prayers are with his family."



    Duerson, 50, starred at Notre Dame and played for the legendary Bears defense that powered the team to a victory in Super Bowl XX. He was elected to four straight Pro Bowls from 1986-89 and also won a second Super Bowl with the 1990 Giants.
    Duerson set a record -- later broken by Cardinals safety Adrian Wilson in 2005 -- for most sacks in a single season by a defensive back, with seven.
    Following his playing career, Duerson worked for Chicago sports radio station 670 AM The Score and also owned and operated a sausage company that is now known as Fair Oaks Farm.

    SIPSUM Cocktailz sends out their condolences to his family and friends. R.I.P Dave!!

    Cinema-Donnelly Group Pub



    After our bad experience at the Lamplighter and mediocre experience at Smiley's we were not sure what to expect from Cinema House. But being the fun loving folk we are and our dedication to boozernewz we thought, ahh hell why not. We stopped in around 3 so it was down time. We do this on purpose to see if the service standard is the same as when the staff is "ON"! For those of you who don't know what I am referring to when I say "ON",  I'm talking about when its' steady top busy a bartender or good server tends to be more involved and on their toes....during down time you see what servers are truly like and how interested they are in their job...

    Needless to say we went in for a jug that was priced decent and the service was good. It ended up that Steve knew the General Manager so that didn't hurt with the visit's overall score. He sat with us at the table and even bought us a jug of beer. We will return again but this time during "ON" time!

    Cheers to Cinema

    Tuesday, February 15, 2011

    History atta glance!!

    History Of Cocktails

    Cocktail is a drink made by mixing one or twoliquors, mainly with fruit juices, water, ice, sugar, honey and bitters. Herbs, cream and milk are also added to the drink sometimes, to enhance its taste. Liquors like gin, whisky, vodka, beer, wine, rum and brandy are commonly used to make cocktails. The history of cocktail, which was originally a mixture of distilled liquor, water, sugar and bitters, dates back to a couple of centuries. Want to know more? If yes, them read on to get some interesting information on the background and origin of cocktails.
     
    Interesting Information On Background & Origin Of Cocktail
     
    Origin
    The history of cocktail dates back to the nineteenth century. The earliest reference to the term 'cocktail' has been found in an American magazine 'The Balance', published in May 1806. It stated that "cocktail is a stimulating liquor, composed of spirits of any kind, sugar, water and bitters". According to the historical records, 'martini' was one of the first cocktails prepared in California, which is considered to be the birthplace of the beverage. The American recipe for the drink was formulated in 1862. Four parts of sweet red vermouth and one part of gin were blended together, to form martini, which was garnished with cherries.
     
    Popularity Of Martini
    It is believed that Professor Jerry Thomas, a bartender of the old Occidental Hotel in San Francisco, prepared martini (cocktail) for a gold miner, when he was on his way to Martinez, in California. The recipe for cocktail mentioned in 'Bartender's Guide' (1887), by Jerry Thomas, consisted of Old Tom gin, sweet vermouth, a dash of maraschino and bitters, as well as a slice of lemon and two dashes of gum syrup as the ingredients. By the beginning of 1900, martini had gained immense popularity nationwide. It spread to other parts of the country as well. This marked the beginning of the golden period of cocktails.
     
    Prohibition In USA
    Some of the cocktail recipes prevalent in the present times were invented in the days of 'Prohibition' in USA, a period extending from 1920 to 1933. The National Prohibition Act became the 18th Amendment to the United States Constitution, on 16th January 1920. According to the Act, the sale, transportation, import and export of 'intoxicating liquors' (such as cocktail) was illegal. However, the public still gained access to the 'illegal substances', as they were generously sold at speakeasies. Liquor was relished on, at private parties as well.
     
    The Prohibition period in USA saw the mushrooming of gangsters in the country, who concentrated on bootlegging. They smuggled crudely produced hooch and also produced and sold liquor, illegally. During this time, cocktails were served in the illegal bars, parties and the clubs of major American cities. Soon, Chicago became a hub for gambling, booze and prostitution. The mastermind behind the illegal activities in Chicago, during Prohibition, was a notorious criminal - Al Capone. He has been recorded as one of the biggest illegal manufacturers of liquor.
     
    Birth Of Margarita
    The period between 1934 and 1959 is said to be the time, when enticing cocktail recipes were invented. One of the most popular cocktail recipes - Margarita - originated in the early 1948. As per historical records, in 1948, Margarita Sames hosted a poolside Christmas party at her vacation home in Acapulco, Mexico. A game was organized in the party, in which she had to mix drinks, which her guests would test and rate. She mixed three parts of tequila with one part triple sec and the same amount of lime. To her surprise, the drink, thus derived, was very tasty. It was approved by the guests as well. The cocktail gained popularity, traveled from Texas to Hollywood, and spread across other parts of the country. With this, 'margarita cocktail' became a popular drink in the country.
     
    Late 20th Century To Present
    A number of recipes for cocktail emerged in the later half of the 20th century. At that time, having cocktail and attending cocktail parties was considered to be a symbol of status and wealth and class. The drink featured in films and was even included in literature, which further increased its popularity. Cocktail started flourishing thereafter. A number of new cocktail recipes came to be discovered on a constant pace. Today, cocktail has become one of the inevitable beverages at bars and pubs as well as in private parties.

    Saturday, February 12, 2011

    Wine and Beer Festival 2011




    More InfoThe 2011 Wine & Beer Festival will be held on Saturday March 26th, 2010 at The Edgewater Casino in Vancouver. This event will feature a great selection of local and international wines and beers.

    The festival ticket price will be 'all inclusive' meaning you pay one price for all samples and there will also be some door prizes.

    The list of participating Vendors will be updated on a regular basis. Check back soon or contact your favourite wine/beer company and recommend the 2011 Wine & Beer Festival to them!

    The 2011 Wine & Beer Festival
    The Best Tasting Deal In Town!

    For more festival information, to become a sponsor or showcase your products at the festival contact:

    info@justhereforthebeer.com / 778-227-8977

    Details:

    Date: Saturday March 26th, 2010
    Time: 7:00-11:00 pm
    Location: The Edgewater Casino, Vancouver
    Tickets: $45 - includes all wine & beer samples and a souvenir mini-mug ($50 at the door)
    Website: www.justhereforthebeer.com/2011

    Sex and drinks and rock'n'roll

    Check out this article we found.....
    Illegal drugs are out and old-fashioned alcohol is back in. Can it really be true? Our man at the bar, Steve Jelbert, recounts the twinned histories of popular music and booze
    Is it my imagination, or are there more people than ever at the bars of London's music venues these days? From garage rock nights at The Garage to arty Hoxtonite events at the ICA, the one thing you can guarantee is a long wait for a scoop. It's not like the dancefloors and mosh pits are empty, either. The public is still going out in large numbers, yet it's clear that drinking is back.
    Perhaps drugs have lost their allure due to their omnipresence. When it takes more effort to score a "pint" than a "dime bag", they hardly seem worth the trouble for the unaddicted or socially competent. This year's up-and-coming bands, like The Strokes, White Stripes and The Hives, provide ideal soundtracks for consumption, especially for the crucial over-25 audience, who can hold their ale properly. Andrew WK might not have sold many records, but his "party-hearty" themes are attuned to the times. (Conversely, metal, traditionally favoured by horny handed sons of toil whose thirsts require assuaging, is now beloved by the very young, as if the boiler-suited Slipknot are the logical next step after the Teletubbies.)
    It's appropriate, then, that Scandinavian combos like The Hives and International Noise Conspiracy delight crowds of imbibers. Bar prices are so extreme in Sweden that drinking here, even at metropolitan prices, holds the same allure to Scandies as an Amsterdam "coffee" shop does for the British. Having seen a Noel-less Oasis in a Norwegian park, where the drinkers were corralled into one corner of the site, I can vouch that not even the cost of a round dissuaded boozy Norsemen and Norsewomen from leaping onto eminently collapsible plastic furniture at every familiar chorus and sending a week's wages (i.e. three pints of weedy lager) skywards. Liam Gallagher's well-oiled turn at Wembley had nothing on such berserk behaviour towards garden fittings.
    Of course, the drinkers haven't only been in the audience. Apocryphally, Black Sabbath's drummer Bill Ward was said to have arrived at the airport for their first US tour carrying two pieces of luggage, each a flagon of cider. If Ozzy Osbourne's wife hadn't hidden the Sabbath singer's clothes in an attempt to stop him going out on the lash, he would never have peed on The Alamo while wearing one of her dresses. Jim Morrison was a greater drinker than poet, once relieving himself into several empty wine jugs placed into position by friends worried for their couch.
    Present-day performers who seem to require something for their nerves include Badly Drawn Boy and Ryan Adams, while the rider requirements of Guided By Voices frontman Robert Pollard (an ex-teacher, so he probably got the taste before going pro) and Queens of the Stone Age inspire awe, even among hardened promoters. Aidan Moffat of Arab Strap, the definitive poet of the hangover, sometimes looks rough enough to manage Manchester United.
    Drunkenness respects no genre. The Cure's Lol Tolhurst got the bullet for regularly achieving levels of inebriation noticeable even to his famously merry bandmates, and for wearing filthy trousers at a video shoot (their odour remains unrecorded). Blur's Graham Coxon and Alex James took louche living to extremes. Ash have never been shy of the sauce, though they were shy of letting their families see the video of their early tours. Rightly so, for who wants their parents to see what they're up to at that age? What if it's nothing?
    Less impressively, Ocean Colour Scene vocalist Simon "Foxy" Fowler appeared on one of those "celebrities at their worst" clip shows, blowing beer out of his nose after a gulp on stage, while his audience jumped up and down, a pint in each hand, spilling nary a drop.
    Hip-hop has had a long, sometimes dishonourable relationship with "pop". A decade ago, the drink of choice was malt liquor in 40oz bottles, the "forties" of so many raps. Cypress Hill adapted their "I Could Just Kill a Man" for advertising purposes by simply changing the last word to "can".
    Now aspirational swilling has taken over. Tha Alkaholiks became simply "Tha Liks", Busta Rhymes and P. Diddy recently collaborated on "Pass the Courvoisier", and Jay-Z"s offhand line "Six model chicks, six bottles of Cris" – a reference to Roederer's Cristal champagne, once favoured by the Tsars of Russia – is typical. (Krug, however, is out, presumably due to its unsavoury associations with Jeffrey Archer.) Thankfully, Stockwell's Roots Manuva prefers a British brew, admitting that at "breakneck speed we down 10 pints of bitter" on his hit "Witness (One Hope)".
    Stupid drinking even has its own club night. Though not as feted as the ubiquitous School Disco, Club Beer has played pretty much the same predictable sounds for a few years now, describing its playlist as "music that only sounds good when you're drunk". The event even boasts an inexplicable set of video testimonials from hip-hop luminaries on its website (www.clubbeer.co.uk), including some potty mouthed stuff from Tim "Halfords" Westwood.
    Back in the mists of time, when drinking laws were more restrictive, large groups of people were only allowed to have a good time at Faces concerts, when Rod Stewart and his lads led a singsong, and Ronnie Wood paused only to sniff some nose-up out of organist Ian McLagen's handy carnation. Such shenanigans were an inspiration to the likes of Finnish drinkers and erstwhile musicians Hanoi Rocks, who reportedly needed to be strapped into their bunks when travelling. Their hairstyles and dress sense (the "drunk drag queen" look) inspired Guns n' Roses, whose T-shirt design was based on the label of Mr Jack Daniels's rock'n'roll mouthwash. Gunners fans included the Manic Street Preachers, whose James Dean Bradfield is clearly fond of a pie and a pint. And so the tradition continues.
    Drinking tends to be a good thing for rock music, though. The mid-Seventies pub rock scene – rock played in pubs by drinkers to people drinking – was a greater influence on punk than is recognised. The late-Eighties Seattle explosion caught on with young people who staggered out of shows in subsidised student union venues, mumbling things like "Tad are the greatest band in the world, man" and "I heard Nirvana were on. Were they any good?". At this rate, we can expect many exciting, insensitive bands over the next 18 months. I'll be there, at the bar.

    Sunday, February 6, 2011

    Steelers vs Packers Game Center


    ARLINGTON, Texas -- Green Bay Packers president Mark Murphy still expects the team to reconcile with former quarterback Brett Favre at some point.
    Speaking at the Packers' Super Bowl Media Day session Tuesday, Murphy said the team plans to reach out to Favre, although it remains unclear when that might happen.
    "At the appropriate time, we'll reach out to him," Murphy said. "I envision that he'll come back into the fold. We want to make sure it's the right time for him and for us."
    Murphy has said he expects the team to eventually repair its relationship with Favre, the former face of the franchise now led by Aaron Rodgers. And Favre seemed to take a step toward reconciliation last month, telling ESPN that he was rooting for the Packers to "win it all."
    Favre had a public falling-out with the team's front office in 2008, amid yet another round of waffling on his retirement. The Packers traded Favre to the New York Jets, and he later played two more seasons for the NFC North rivalMinnesota Vikings before calling it quits again.
    Murphy said he's proud of the way the team handled a difficult situation. Murphy also said the controversy galvanized his working relationships with general manager Ted Thompson and coach Mike McCarthy.
    "Few players had a bigger impact on an organization that Brett did," Murphy said. "It tested us. Obviously, I think a lot of people disagreed with the decision, but I'm proud, looking back, (of how) the organization handled it. Also, as I look back on it, one of the benefits was that early on in my tenure, it forced Ted and myself and Mike to really come together on an issue. I think looking back on it now, it's been really positive."
    Of course, it wouldn't have worked out so well had Rodgers not become the player he is today, leading the Packers into Sunday's Super Bowl against the Pittsburgh Steelers.
    "I'm really glad that Aaron's a good player," Murphy said.
    Thompson said he expects Packers fans to embrace Favre at some point, but he didn't want to discuss the circumstances of the quarterback's split with the team after 16 seasons.
    "I think certainly Brett is a very important part of the Packers' history, and yes, he will be embraced by the Green Bay Packers and all those things," Thompson said. "The other part, we've moved on from."
    Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press

    We love this writer!!
    The opponents for all 2011 regular-season games have been determined and a complete list of each team's home and away matchups was issued today by the NFL.
    The scheduling formula implemented in 2002 with realignment guarantees that all teams play each other on a regular, rotating basis. After the 2008 season, a decision was made to continue with the same rotation in 2011.
    Under the formula, every team within a division plays 16 games as follows:
    » Home and away against its three division opponents (six games).
    » The four teams from another division within its conference on a rotating three-year cycle (four games).
    » The four teams from a division in the other conference on a rotating four-year cycle (four games).
    » Two intraconference games based on the prior year's standings (two games). These games match a first-place team against the first-place teams in the two same-conference divisions the team is not scheduled to play that season. The second-place, third-place, and fourth-place teams in a conference are matched in the same way each year.
    Beginning in 2010, a change was made to how teams are paired in the schedule rotation to ensure that teams playing the AFC and NFC West divisions would not be required to make two west coast trips (e.g. at San Francisco and at Seattle), while other teams in their division had none (e.g. at St. Louis and at Arizona). The pairings of teams are listed in the 2010 NFL Record and Fact Book (pages 16-19).
    The official 2011 schedule, with playing dates and times, will be announced in the spring.
    NFL Kickoff 2011 Weekend will begin on Thursday night, September 8, and the regular season will conclude on January 1.
    Wild Card Weekend will be Saturday and Sunday, January 7-8; Divisional Playoff games on the weekend of January 14-15; and the AFC and NFC Championship Games on Sunday, January 22.
    The 2012 Pro Bowl will be played at Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaii on Sunday, January 29.
    Super Bowl XLVI at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana will be played on Sunday, February 5

    2011 Opponents


    AFC East


    Buffalo Bills
    Home: Miami, New England, N.Y. Jets, Denver, Oakland, Tennessee, Philadelphia, Washington
    Away: Miami, New England, N.Y. Jets, Kansas City, San Diego, Cincinnati, Dallas, N.Y. Giants

    Miami Dolphins
    Home: Buffalo, New England, N.Y. Jets, Denver, Oakland, Houston, Philadelphia. Washington
    Away: Buffalo, New England, N.Y. Jets, Kansas City, San Diego, Cleveland, Dallas, N.Y. Giants

    New England Patriots
    Home: Buffalo, Miami, N.Y. Jets, Kansas City, San Diego, Indianapolis, Dallas, N.Y. Giants
    Away: Buffalo, Miami, N.Y. Jets, Denver, Oakland, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Washington

    New York Jets
    Home: Buffalo, Miami, New England, Kansas City, San Diego, Jacksonville, Dallas, N.Y. Giants
    Away: Buffalo, Miami, New England, Denver, Oakland, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Washington


    AFC North


    Baltimore Ravens
    Home: Cincinnati, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Houston, Indianapolis, N.Y. Jets, Arizona, San Francisco
    Away: Cincinnati, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Jacksonville, Tennessee, San Diego, St. Louis, Seattle

    Cincinnati Bengals
    Home: Baltimore, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Houston, Indianapolis, Buffalo, Arizona, San Francisco
    Away: Baltimore, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Jacksonville, Tennessee, Denver, St. Louis, Seattle

    Cleveland Browns
    Home: Baltimore, Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, Jacksonville, Tennessee, Miami, St. Louis, Seattle
    Away: Baltimore, Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, Houston, Indianapolis, Oakland, Arizona, San Francisco

    Pittsburgh Steelers
    Home: Baltimore, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Jacksonville, Tennessee, New England, St. Louis, Seattle
    Away: Baltimore, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Houston, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Arizona, San Francisco


    AFC South


    Houston Texans
    Home: Indianapolis, Jacksonville, Tennessee, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Oakland, Atlanta, Carolina
    Away: Indianapolis, Jacksonville, Tennessee, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Miami, New Orleans, Tampa Bay

    Indianapolis Colts
    Home: Houston, Jacksonville, Tennessee, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Kansas City, Atlanta, Carolina
    Away: Houston, Jacksonville, Tennessee, Baltimore, Cincinnati, New England, New Orleans, Tampa Bay

    Jacksonville Jaguars
    Home: Houston, Indianapolis, Tennessee, Baltimore, Cincinnati, San Diego, New Orleans, Tampa Bay
    Away: Houston, Indianapolis, Tennessee, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, N.Y. Jets, Atlanta, Carolina

    Tennessee Titans
    Home: Houston, Indianapolis, Jacksonville, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Denver, New Orleans, Tampa Bay
    Away: Houston, Indianapolis, Jacksonville, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Buffalo, Atlanta, Carolina


    AFC West


    Denver Broncos
    Home: Kansas City, Oakland, San Diego, New England, N.Y. Jets, Cincinnati, Chicago, Detroit
    Away: Kansas City, Oakland, San Diego, Buffalo, Miami, Tennessee, Greeen Bay, Minnesota

    Kansas City Chiefs
    Home: Denver, Oakland, San Diego, Buffalo, Miami, Pittsburgh, Green Bay, Minnesota
    Away: Denver, Oakland, San Diego, New England, N.Y. Jets, Indianapolis, Chicago, Detroit

    Oakland Raiders
    Home: Denver, Kansas City, San Diego, New England, N.Y. Jets, Cleveland, Chicago, Detroit
    Away: Denver, Kansas City, San Diego, Buffalo, Miami, Houston, Green Bay, Minnesota

    San Diego Chargers
    Home: Denver, Kansas City, Oakland, Buffalo, Miami, Baltimore, Green Bay, Minnesota
    Away: Denver, Kansas City, Oakland, New England, N.Y. Jets, Jacksonville, Chicago, Detroit


    NFC East


    Dallas Cowboys
    Home: N.Y. Giants, Philadelphia, Washington, St. Louis, Seattle, Detroit, Buffalo, Miami
    Away: N.Y. Giants, Philadelphia, Washington, Arizona, San Francisco, Tampa Bay, New England, N.Y. Jets

    New York Giants
    Home: Dallas, Philadelphia, Washington, St. Louis, Seattle, Green Bay, Buffalo, Miami
    Away: Dallas, Philadelphia, Washington, Arizona, San Francisco, New Orleans, New England, N.Y. Jets

    Philadelphia Eagles
    Home: Dallas, N.Y. Giants, Washington, Arizona, San Francisco, Chicago, New England, N.Y. Jets
    Away: Dallas, N.Y. Giants, Washington, St. Louis, Seattle, Atlanta, Buffalo, Miami

    Washington Redskins
    Home: Dallas, N.Y. Giants, Philadelphia, Arizona, San Francisco, Minnesota, New England, N.Y. Jets
    Away: Dallas, N.Y. Giants, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Seattle, Carolina, Buffalo, Miami


    NFC North


    Chicago Bears
    Home: Detroit, Green Bay, Minnesota, Atlanta, Carolina, Seattle, Kansas City, San Diego
    Away: Detroit, Green Bay, Minnesota, New Orleans, Tampa Bay, Philadelphia, Denver, Oakland

    Detroit Lions
    Home: Chicago, Green Bay, Minnesota, Falcons, Carolina, San Francisco, Kansas City, San Diego
    Away: Chicago, Green Bay, Minnesota, New Orleans, Tampa Bay, Dallas, Denver, Oakland

    Green Bay Packers
    Home: Chicago, Detroit, Minnesota, New Orleans, Tampa Bay, St. Louis, Denver, Oakland
    Away: Chicago, Detroit, Minnesota, Atlanta, Carolina, N.Y. Giants, Kansas City, San Diego

    Minnesota Vikings
    Home: Chicago, Detroit, Green Bay, New Orleans, Tampa Bay, Arizona, Denver, Oakland
    Away: Chicago, Detroit, Green Bay, Atlanta, Carolina, Washington, Kansas City, San Diego


    NFC South


    Atlanta Falcons
    Home: Carolina, New Orleans, Tampa Bay, Green Bay, Minnesota, Philadelphia, Jacksonville, Tennessee
    Away: Carolina, New Orleans, Tampa Bay, Chicago, Detroit, N.Y. Giants, Houston, Indianapolis

    Carolina Panthers
    Home: Atlanta, New Orleans, Tampa Bay, Green Bay, Minnesota, Washington, Jacksonville, Tennessee
    Away: Atlanta, New Orleans, Tampa Bay, Chicago, Detroit, Arizona, Houston, Indianapolis

    New Orleans Saints
    Home: Atlanta, Carolina, Tampa Bay, Chicago, Detroit, N.Y. Giants, Houston, Indianapolis
    Away: Atlanta, Carolina, Tampa Bay, Green Bay, Minnesota, St. Louis, Jacksonville, Tennessee

    Tampa Bay Buccaneers
    Home: Atlanta, Carolina, New Orleans, Chicago, Detroit, Dallas, Houston, Indianapolis
    Away: Atlanta, Carolina, New Orleans, Green Bay, Minnesota, San Francisco, Jacksonville, Tennessee


    NFC West


    Arizona Cardinals
    Home: St. Louis, San Francisco, Seattle, Dallas, N.Y. Giants, Carolina, Cleveland, Pittsburgh
    Away: St. Louis, San Francisco, Seattle, Philadelphia, Washington, Minnesota, Baltimore, Cincinnati

    San Francisco 49ers
    Home: Arizona, St. Louis, Seattle, Dallas, N.Y. Giants, Tampa Bay, Cleveland, Pittsburgh
    Away: Arizona, St. Louis, Seattle, Philadelphia, Washington, Detroit, Baltimore, Cincinnati

    Seattle Seahawks
    Home: Arizona, San Francisco, St. Louis, Philadelphia, Washington, Atlanta, Baltimore, Cincinnati
    Away: Arizona, San Francisco, St. Louis, Dallas, N.Y. Giants, Chicago, Cleveland, Pittsburgh

    St. Louis Rams
    Home: Arizona, San Francisco, Seattle, Philadelphia, Washington, New Orleans, Baltimore, Cincinnati
    Away: Arizona, San Francisco, Seattle, Dallas, N.Y. Giants, Green Bay, Cleveland, Pittsburgh