The NFL announced the AFC and NFC rosters for the 2023 Pro Bowl Games. The players from each conference will compete in a series of exciting Pro Bowl Skills competitions throughout the week and the first AFC vs. NFC flag football games on February 5 at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas.
See the complete 2023 Pro Bowl Games Rosters
The 2023 Pro Bowl Games will begin with both new and fan-favorite skills live on ESPN and continue with skills and flag games on ESPN and ABC. Visit probowl.com/tickets to buy tickets and watch the NFL’s best players in person.
Roster selections are determined by the consensus votes of fans, players and coaches. Each group’s vote counts one-third toward determining the 88 all-star players. The NFL is the only sports league that combines voting by fans, coaches and players to determine its all-stars.
There were 30 teams that had at least one player selected to the 2023 Pro Bowl Games roster, with 18 having multiple players chosen. The Philadelphia Eagles led all teams with eight Pro Bowl selections while the Dallas Cowboys and Kansas City Chiefs each had seven players chosen. Three additional teams – the Baltimore Ravens (six), Minnesota Vikings (five) and San Francisco 49ers (six) – each placed at least five players.
Four of the six quarterbacks selected to the initial roster – Buffalo’s Josh Allen, Cincinnati’s Joe Burrow, Philadelphia’s Jalen Hurts and Kansas City’s Patrick Mahomes – are age 27 or younger. Mahomes earned his fifth consecutive Pro Bowl selection while Minnesota’s Kirk Cousins was selected to his fourth Pro Bowl. Seattle quarterback Geno Smith was chosen for his first Pro Bowl in his 10th career season and became the first quarterback since Rich Gannon (1999) to earn his first Pro Bowl selection in year 10 or later of his career.
San Francisco’s Trent Williams was selected to his 10th Pro Bowl, the most among players chosen for the initial roster, becoming the ninth offensive lineman ever with at least 10 career Pro Bowl selections.
Los Angeles Rams defensive lineman Aaron Donald was selected to his ninth career Pro Bowl and is the only defensive lineman ever to make the Pro Bowl in each of his first nine seasons. Only Pro Football Hall of Famers Reggie White (13) and Bruce Smith (11) have more Pro Bowl selections among defensive linemen. Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill was selected to his seventh consecutive Pro Bowl and joins A.J. Green as the only wide receivers to earn Pro Bowl honors in each of their first seven career seasons.Cincinnati Bengals’ Ja’Marr Chase and Dallas Cowboys’ Micah Parsons were named to their second consecutive Pro Bowl since entering the NFL in 2021 while four other second-year players – Philadelphia Eagles’ Landon Dickerson, San Francisco 49ers’ Talanoa Hufanga, Kansas City Chiefs’ Creed Humphrey and Denver Broncos’ Pat Surtain II – each earned their first Pro Bowl selections.
Twenty-five of the players selected to the Pro Bowl are first-time All-Stars, including rookie cornerbacks Ahmad “Sauce” Gardner (New York Jets) and Tariq Woolen (Seattle Seahawks). It marks the second time ever that two rookie cornerbacks made the Pro Bowl roster.