COLTS BEAT TITANS;
BEARS OVER VIKINGS
Week 17 has finally arrived.
For some, there are no more next weeks ... no more standings
watching ... no more getting back on track. You're either on
track or off it. Meanwhile, it's now or never for the Vikings, Eagles, Ravens, Steelers, Colts and Titans.
Those bubble teams are playing for the right to keep playing.
That's the beauty of Week 17 in the NFL: playoff football -- one week early!
The postseason doesn't officially begin
until Wild Card Weekend, yet Bears at
Vikings will provide a playoff atmosphere. So will Browns at
Ravens, with a pair of rookie QBs facing off for the first time
(remember: Joe Flacco started Baltimore's
Week 5 game against Cleveland) in a series that could define the AFC
North for years to come. Then comes the matchup with the most prominent
big-game feel: the nightcap in Nashville. The Colts
play the Titans in a simple win-and-in scenario. That's what
the final week of the regular season is all about. Or not. As always, this
final regular-season Sunday is chock-full o' complex playoff scenarios.
Week 17: Where math meets gridiron mayhem.
The AFC's
playoff permutations are enough to make your head spin, despite
the fact that half the conference has already been eliminated. A small example:
If the Jets
upset the Patriots, the latter could go from competing for the top
seed to dropping all the way down to No. 4. Josh McCown won't
be starting that game, but who doesn't remember when a 24-year-old named Josh McCown took
one of these not-gonna-happen scenarios, and made it all too real...
Of course, this is the last week that carries a full slate
of games. So even Falcons at
Bucs get a full write-up. Ditto Dolphins at
Bills and Panthers at
Saints. Games without playoff implications need loving', too! Send
your take on any matchup: @HarrisonNFL is the place.
I went 13-3
on my predictions for Week 16, bringing my record for the season to
161-77-2. How will I fare in Week 17? My picks are below.
SUNDAY, DEC. 30
BUFFALO BILLS 25, MIAMI
DOLPHINS 13
1 p.m. ET (CBS) | New Era Field (Orchard Park, N.Y.)
If you thought the offensive
display last week in Miami was bad, wait until the Bills come
to town. One week after facing the Jags' 30th-ranked scoring offense, the Dolphins'
defense will see the league's No. 31 attack. Buffalo's offense has been stuck
in neutral -- mired in neutral -- all year. The difference
between these teams comes on defense, where the Bills have
played more consistently overall. (You try defending short fields after Josh Allen/Derek
Anderson/Nathan
Peterman throws yet another ball to a waiting DB.) Buffalo's
defense is no great shakes, but it is viable enough to keep the team close,
giving Josh Allen the
opportunity to make a big play or three (often with his legs) to steal a game.
Miami owns no such weapon on offense and must get back to basics in order to
get back to .500. Run. The. Rock. The Patriots piled
up 273 rushing yards on Sean McDermott's front seven last week.
There is no reason Adam Gase shouldn't take the same tack, even without future
Hall of Famer Frank Gore.
But alas, I'm seeing the emotionally backed Bills riding
their home crowd to a season-ending W.
DALLAS
COWBOYS 20, NEW YORK
GIANTS 17
1 p.m. ET (FOX) | MetLife Stadium (East Rutherford, N.J.)
Despite being locked into the fourth seed, the Cowboys will
not be resting their starters. This from Jerry Jones, who said as much following the win over the Bucs and again on
Wednesday. On paper, this is a Cowboys win,
with them ramping up for the playoffs. Or Dallas could fare like it did Week 15 in
Indy and sleepwalk its way through the second half, trying to
arm-tackle Saquon
Barkley. For his part, the rookie phenom needs just 114 scrimmage
yards to reach 2,000, which would have him join Eric Dickerson and Edgerrin
James as the only rookies to ever accomplish that feat. Couple Barkley with a
possible return of Odell Beckham Jr.,
and this NFC East matchup could get interesting quick. (UPDATE: Giants coach
Pat Shurmur announced on Friday that Beckham will not play in the season
finale.) Ezekiel
Elliott has a 183-yard lead in the rushing race, so he might
not get too many carries.
Historical note: It was 25 years ago when Emmitt
Smith played the "shoulder game," a Dallas-New York classic that
decided both the NFC East and home-field advantage on the
final Sunday of the season.
ATLANTA
FALCONS 26, TAMPA BAY
BUCCANEERS 24
1 p.m. ET (FOX) | Raymond James Stadium (Tampa, Fla.)
Another meaningless game in the NFC, as neither the Bucs
nor Falcons are
vying for a playoff spot. In fact, both are trying to avoid the NFC South
cellar. If Tampa loses, it will have finished last for the second straight year
and in eight of the previous 10 seasons since Jon Gruden departed. If you
recall, the previous
meeting between these two teams nearly finished in Kenyan
Drake/Miami miracle fashion, when DeSean
Jackson dropped the final lateral on one of those routine
pitch-the-ball-around-500-times plays that have become a Sunday tradition.
If Matt Ryan (33:6
TD-to-INT ratio, 108.5 passer rating) plays as effectively as he has for the
bulk of the season, Atlanta should pick up its seventh win. The only real
difference between his performance at home and on the road has been how many
sacks he's taken (17 in eight games at home compared with 23 in seven on the
road) and his yards per attempt (8.8 to 7.3). Otherwise, the passing game has
been consistent. As far as the other quarterback, it's hard to know what to
expect from Jameis
Winston at this point ... or going forward. Will this be his
last start as a Buc?
NEW ORLEANS
SAINTS 26, CAROLINA
PANTHERS 20
1 p.m. ET (FOX) | Mercedes-Benz Superdome (New Orleans)
What looked like a sexy Week 17 matchup two months ago now
feels like a slow march -- death march -- for the Panthers,
and a Super Bowl march for
the Saints.
New Orleans has already secured the No. 1 seed in the NFC, eerily similar to
when the Saints faced
the Panthers in
the final week of the 2009 season. Sean Payton sat Drew Brees and
gave Mark Brunell a turn at quarterback. Word on the street is Payton is
bringing Brunell back for this game, too. Just kidding. How much Teddy
Bridgewater Carolina sees is anyone's guess. Expect the Panthers to
play hard, as they don't want to depart 2018 with a total whimper by losing
eight in a row. With the rumor mill encircling Ron Rivera, his locker room is
sure to rally, as well. Strategically, OC Norv Turner must find ways to create
vertical opportunities for third-stringer Kyle Allen.
Why not feature D.J. Moore;
too, to get a better idea how capable the 2018 first-rounder is of becoming a
full-service WR1?
NEW ENGLAND
PATRIOTS 35, NEW YORK JETS 27
1 p.m. ET (CBS) | Gillette Stadium (Foxborough, Mass.)
How the Jets respond
from last week's
crushing loss to the Packers could have a major impact on much
of the AFC playoff field. If New York upsets Bill Belichick and friends and
Houston takes care of Jacksonville, New England will drop to the third seed or
possibly even the fourth seed, if Baltimore beats Cleveland.
This means the Patriots would miss out on a bye and instead would host a
wild-card game. That's huge for a number of reasons, including that the fifth
seed will either be the Chiefs or
the Chargers.
What a significant swing that'd be. Yep, all that has to happen is for Sam Darnold to
get hot, like he was in the first three quarters against Green Bay. Also at
issue: Gang Green's 26th-ranked run defense. In other words, the Jets are
better off making Tom Brady beat
them. New England's ground game stacked up nearly three bills last week, and by
and large, Todd Bowles' defense has stunk in this area. Patriots win.
HOUSTON
TEXANS 23, JACKSONVILLE
JAGUARS 10
1 p.m. ET (CBS) | NRG Stadium (Houston)
The Jaguars won
last week while the Texans lost
for the second time in three games. (That was my ill-fated attempt to make this
game seem more competitive.) Tilting this matchup is the fact that Houston is
at home, with much to play for. If the Patriots lay
an egg (a musket?) versus the Jets,
the Texans could
secure a first-round bye with a win. They might have Lamar Miller's
services this week to help them do that, at least according to head coach Bill
O'Brien. That's important because Deshaun
Watson won't have Demaryius
Thomas -- and perhaps not DeAndre
Hopkins, either. If you watched the fourth quarter of the Texans'
crazy loss to the Eagles on Sunday, then you know Watson can take
over a game by himself. He chucked a touchdown pass to a guy from Limewood
College who spells his name "Vyncint." Sorry, it was Limestone
College. Blake Bortles will
get the nod at quarterback, with one more chance to show Tom Coughlin and Co.
he can be the answer. You know what? I'm rooting for the guy.
GREEN BAY
PACKERS 29, DETROIT LIONS 21
1 p.m. ET (FOX) | Lambeau Field (Green Bay, Wis.)
Once upon a time, Matthew
Stafford and Matt Flynn closed out a season at Lambeau with
about a zillion yards passing. Not sure if Eric Hipple and Lynn Dickey managed
such nonsense in their day, but wouldn't be surprised to see Aaron Rodgers close
out the year with 350 yards and three scores. The Lions'
defense has hung in games most of the season, although the unit
gifted Kirk Cousins a Hail Mary last week that put Detroit
firmly behind the eight ball. Let's hope they don't re-gift Rodgers another
desperation heave like a few years back. As eluded to
in the Power Rankings, Matt Patricia and staff must use this last
week to find some synchronicity on offense. Get all the unconnected parts to
start, well, connecting, because this Detroit attack has been terrible for two
months. The Lions haven't
scored more than 22 points since Week 7. They're 28th in yards
per play at a scant 5.1. In the red zone, that total shrinks to 2.3. That's
pathetic. Meanwhile, Green Bay has discovered a pair of receivers who will
figure into 2019 plans in MVS and ESB.
Maybe Detroit needs an acronym, like a GT.
Oh, wait -- they had one of those ... and traded him.
PHILADELPHIA
EAGLES 21, WASHINGTON
REDSKINS 17
4:25 p.m. ET (FOX) | FedExField (Landover, Md.)
The Eagles have
much on the line this week. They are the only team in the NFC currently outside
of the top six seeds that still has a chance to make the playoffs. All the
other NFC participants have been mathematically eliminated. (Had the Redskins pulled
out a road win against the Titans last
week, then both Philadelphia and Washington would've been playoff-viable.) As
it stands now, the Eagles need
a victory and a Vikings loss
to the Bears to
earn the right to defend their Super Bowl title.
They also need Nick Foles to
ball out ... again. The run game has been hit or miss all season, thus if the
passing game gets off to a slow start, it could be a long day for Philadelphia.
The Redskins have
shown plenty of fight the last two weeks, while doing a bang-up job against
Tennessee's vaunted running game. They held Derrick Henry and
friends to less than 100 yards for the first time since Week 11. So anticipate
the Eagles giving Darren
Sproles touches, either on draw plays or quick screens, to
neutralize Ryan Kerrigan and Preston Smith,
help Foles and not lean on the Josh Adams-led ground game too hard.
LOS ANGELES
CHARGERS 28, DENVER
BRONCOS 14
4:25 p.m. ET (CBS) | Broncos Stadium
at Mile High (Denver)
The Chargers come
into this matchup looking to not only rebound after a terrible outing against
the Ravens,
but to possibly secure home-field throughout the playoffs. The
Bolts would need to beat the Broncos,
and then hope that the Raiders pull
off a massive upset at Arrowhead against the Chiefs.
If that plan falls through, then they'll be locked into the fifth spot. Sounds
wild, but that's how the AFC has played out down the stretch this season. Of
course, after the way in which Philip Rivers and
Co. played last week,
they can't afford to look past Denver. Anthony Lynn's group will get Austin Ekeler back,
which helps in both the run and pass games. The Broncos have
played uninspired football for three weeks. This past
Monday night represented their floor, coming out flat against
the Raiders,
then wilting in the final moments of the game. To play spoiler, Case Keenum must
find better chemistry with a wide receiver corps sans veterans. He hasn't
accomplished that -- or much productivity, period -- this entire month.
KANSAS CITY
CHIEFS 35, OAKLAND
RAIDERS 20
4:25 p.m. ET (CBS) | Arrowhead Stadium (Kansas City, Mo.)
This is simple: The Chiefs win
and they earn both the AFC West title and the No. 1 seed in the conference.
Now, the simplest way to do that is to run on these Raiders often.
Teams have employed the ground forces at will on Oakland, making third downs
quite manageable. This is part of the reason why Jon Gruden's team ranks 30th
in third-down defense. Damien
Williams' workload aside, Patrick
Mahomes is just 184 pass yards away from 5,000 and just two
throwing touchdowns shy of 50. Those are remarkable stats for a second-year
player. Granted, Dan Marino threw for 5,084 yards and 48 touchdowns his
sophomore year against defenses that weren't hamstrung by the NFL rulebook.
Marino also started most of his rookie season, while Mahomes had only one start
under his belt entering this year. All that said, don't look past these Raiders,
who have won three of their last six and gave the Chiefs all they
could handle earlier this month.
CHICAGO BEARS 24, MINNESOTA
VIKINGS 22
4:25 p.m. ET (FOX) | U.S. Bank Stadium (Minneapolis)
The Bears have
much to play for this Sunday in Minnesota, as a Chicago win coupled with a Rams loss
to the 49ers would vault Matt Nagy and Co. into the No. 2 seed,
giving them a bye. It'd also mean that Chicago's Divisional Round opponent
would then have to travel to bone-cold Soldier Field in mid-January to
face that defense. If the Vikings are
to prevail, they must give Dalvin Cook more
work on the ground to slow down the Bears'
pass rush. Cook has yet to carry the football 20 times in a game this season,
but his increased rushing attempts over the last two weeks have contributed to
wins. If Minnesota wins this weekend, the Vikes secure at least the No. 6 seed
-- No. 5, if the Seahawks falter against the
Cardinals. The latter probably won't happen, meaning there's a good
chance Mike Zimmer's boys will end up playing these same Bears on
Wild Card Weekend. Weird.
BALTIMORE
RAVENS 23, CLEVELAND
BROWNS 20
4:25 p.m. ET (CBS) | M&T Bank Stadium (Baltimore)
This matchup is an absolute beauty. With Gregg Williams now
in charge and Baker
Mayfield's star ascending, the Browns are
suddenly viable against anybody. The challenge for Mayfield will be to let the
game come to him. He's going up against perhaps the most disciplined defense in
the league, a group that not only leads the NFL in points allowed, but also
yards allowed and yards per play. The Ravens also rank third in big plays
allowed (20-plus yards), so Mayfield must be patient. Cleveland won
a dogfight against Baltimore earlier in the season by leaning
on the defense, before their rookie QB converted a huge third-and-long in OT to
grab the win. The difference this time around is what's at stake -- with
the Ravens playing
for the AFC North title -- and the signal-caller on Baltimore's side. Joe Flacco started the
Week 5 game in Cleveland, but now it's Lamar Jackson,
who presents a whole new series of challenges for opposing defenses. Browns DEs Myles Garrett and Emmanuel
Ogbah must do the same thing as Mayfield: Let the game come to
them. If they crash down on running plays, Jackson will pull the football out
of his RB's belly and go wild.
LOS ANGELES
RAMS 37, SAN FRANCISCO
49ERS 24
4:25 p.m. ET (FOX) | Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum (Los
Angeles)
The 49ers have
been such a tough out lately that nothing is guaranteed here for the home team.
If the Rams can
handle their pesky division foes from the north, they will retain the No. 2
seed. Last time these two teams met up, the 49ers could
not block the Rams up
front. Aaron Donald had
a career day, C.J. Beathard got
pummeled -- and so did the
Niners. Nick Mullens has
performed a notch or three better than Beathard, though, and will seek to
put last week's
poor decision on fourth down behind him. Los Angeles,
meanwhile, could feature a Todd Gurley/C.J. Anderson combo,
unless the former isn't ready to rock or this game gets outta hand early. Sean
McVay needs his lead tailback healthy for the postseason, with Anderson's
punishing runs (and fresh legs) enough to earn a win at the Coliseum. Don't
expect these Niners to go down easy. They came
awfully close to upsetting the same Bears team
that absolutely
stifled the Rams three weeks ago.
PITTSBURGH STEELERS 26, CINCINNATI
BENGALS 10
4:25 p.m. ET (CBS) | Heinz Field (Pittsburgh)
The Steelers hope
to reboot their playoff chances against Cincy, although they will need help.
First, they must dispatch the Bengals at
Heinz Field, without keeping too much attention on the scoreboard. The Browns will
be visiting the
Ravens at the same time, which means this whole AFC North deal
could come down to the waning moments. Remember, though, it was these
same Bengals who
ruined Baltimore's playoff chances last year on the final day of the season.
Pittsburgh can ill afford to look past them as it did the Raiders in
Week 14, a loss that
put the Steelers in
this win-and-need-help-to-get-in predicament in the first place. Cincy has
stayed in games with Jeff Driskel,
although the offense generated a paltry 209 total yards last week.
OC Bill Lazor was uber-conservative with his young quarterback in Cleveland,
opting for a balanced approach that resulted in the Bengals generating
just 107 net yards passing. Given that Pittsburgh hasn't allowed 100 yards
rushing by an opponent since November, Lazor can't lean on Joe Mixon to
win the day. Thus the Driskel-[INSERT NAME HERE] connection will have to
reprise the Andy Dalton-Tyler Boyd magic
from last year to send Mike Tomlin's group fishing.
SEATTLE
SEAHAWKS 34, ARIZONA
CARDINALS 10
4:25 p.m. ET (FOX) | CenturyLink Field (Seattle)
Oooh, boy. This game could get ugly fast -- unless Josh Rosen decides
this is the week to break out. He will need help up front more than anything
else to keep his Arizona 'mates in it. Pete Carroll has said the Seahawks won't
rest players, even though they've already clinched a playoff berth. On that
note, if Seattle wins, it will travel to Dallas to play the Cowboys in
the wild-card round. If they lose, and the Vikings beat
the Bears this
weekend, then the Seahawks would
travel to Chicago. Where would you rather go this time of year? Which team
would Seattle rather play? The answers to both of those questions are easy, as
the Seahawks'
road to victory on Sunday will be if Arizona can't find improved ways to slow
the run. Last time
these teams met, the Seahawks rushed
for 171 yards in what was a close game in Arizona. Back to the Cardinals'
offensive line: Rosen has been sacked 39 times despite starting just 12 games,
while the team averages a league-low 3.8 yards per carry. These are not
promising figures when going on the road to the toughest place to play in the
league.
INDIANAPOLIS
COLTS 23, TENNESSEE
TITANS 20
8:20 p.m. ET (NBC) | Nissan Stadium (Nashville, Tenn.)
This is perhaps the matchup of the weekend, as it's a
win-and-in scenario for both the Colts and Titans.
But if they tie ... yuck. Then this whole AFC wild-card deal gets funky.
The Steelers,
assuming they beat the Bengals and
the Ravens beat
the Browns,
would leapfrog into the sixth seed on the strength of tiebreakers. While Indy
at Tennessee does promise to be a close affair, Andrew Luck and
the Colts should come out on top. The Titans will
be without Jurrell Casey,
who suffered a knee injury last week, while Marcus
Mariota is banged up.
The Colts'
franchise QB is the difference, as he is not only a leading candidate for
Comeback Player of the Year but remains in the MVP conversation, as well. Luck
heads into Nashville sporting an 11-1 career record against top-five scoring
defenses (Week 5 or later), per NFL Research. Tennessee is currently second in
that category at 18.0 points allowed per game.
Odd note: Marlon Mack owns
more 100-yard games this season than Derrick Henry.
Who would have guessed that? Unless Henry and the Tennessee offense gobble the
entire game clock, I'm going with the visitors on Sunday night.
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