Fearsome Foursome (American football)
The term "Fearsome Foursome" as applied in professional football in the United States has been used as a nickname for the defensive lines of the New York Giants and Baltimore Colts of the late 1950s in the National Football League (NFL), the San Diego Chargers of the early 1960s in the American Football League (AFL), the Detroit Lions of the early to mid-1960s, and various Los Angeles Rams' defensive lines of the 1960s and 1970s in the NFL.
The term has also been used more generically to describe a top team's high performing defensive line. In a 1972 Boston Globe article, a chart of "Famous 'Fearsome Foursomes'" was included that compared the Chargers and Rams who had the Fearsome Foursome nickname, but also included, the 1968 era Green Bay Packers' line, and the defensive lines of the Dallas Cowboys (the "Doomsday Defense"), Minnesota Vikings ("Purple People Eaters"), Kansas City Chiefs and San Francisco 49ers of the 1970s. Sportswriter John Crittenden said in 1975 there had been a dozen defensive lines known as fearsome foursomes.