RACE FOR NFC'S NO. 6 SEED
COULD GO TO 8-WIN TEAM
The Vikings upgraded
their quarterback position in the offseason with Kirk Cousins and
have watched their offense slowly collapse. The Seahawks said
goodbye to a raft of former world champions on defense and are likely headed
back to the playoffs.
Those were just two of the takeaways from Seattle's 21-7 throttling of
the Vikings that
would have sounded surprising in September but made all the sense in the world
on a rainy Monday night in Seattle.
Cousins' struggles will be the national
talking point coming from the game because of his contract, but the issues in
Minnesota run deeper. The offensive line is among the league's worst and new
coordinator John DeFilippo hasn't found his footing, putting him at risk of
being a one-and-done coordinator under coach Mike Zimmer if the 6-6-1 Vikings can't
turn this around. Cousins played very well overall in the first half of the
season, but three of his last four games have been ugly, mirroring some of the
late season struggles he had in Washington.
The NFC, suddenly the thinner
conference, is only five teams deep in quality. The Seahawks all
but locked up the No. 5 seed with their win Monday night and have steadily
improved all season. They have a clearly defined identity on both sides of the
ball and will be a highly dangerous Wild Card Weekend opponent, most likely in
Dallas, with Troy and Joe on the call in the late Sunday afternoon window on
January 6. (NFL games are unpredictable. Broadcasting assignments are not.)
The race for the NFC's No. 6
seed, meanwhile, could inspire a lot of hot air with little long-term
significance. The Vikings, Panthers, Eagles, Redskins and Packers are
all headed in the wrong direction and have shown little reason to believe they
could win a tough road playoff game. Minnesota's loss greatly increased the
chances that an eight-win team will win a wild-card spot for the first time
since the 2006 New York
Giants. Eight-win teams that have earned wild-card berths are 0-7
all-time in the playoffs, which makes sense because eight-win teams are
generally not very good.
The Seahawks,
on the other hand, run the type of bruising offense that defensive coaches like
Zimmer and Pete Carroll dream of. Like so many of Carroll's teams over the last
decade, this is a team that knows how to finish.
STYLES MAKE FIGHTS
Listening to Tony Romo on two
straight weeks of Ravens broadcasts
provided an education in how difficult they make life for opposing
quarterbacks. In a league full of zone defenses bending to the point of being
broken, Baltimore's aggressive style stands out.
Ravens coordinator
Don Martindale and his veteran unit forced Chiefs ingénue Patrick
Mahomes to release his best material in a comeback
win for Kansas City, but that shouldn't overshadow what
the Ravens accomplished
on Sunday. They bent the game to their will in Arrowhead Stadium, staying even
with the AFC's top team for 60 minutes in rookie QB Lamar Jackson's
fourth start. It was one of the most fascinating coaching chess matches of the
season, and there would be a lot of talk Monday about the brilliant
first-place Ravens had
Mahomes not uncorked that MVP
moment on fourth-and-9.
Romo, among others, loves to say
that "styles make fights" in the NFL. And the style Baltimore
employs, with its blitz-happy defense combined with a diverse, run-heavy
offense could be kryptonite if the Chiefs and Ravens met
again in the playoffs. But that's unlikely to happen. A rematch of
Sunday's other example of a stout defense taking the air out of a
high-flying offense -- Rams-Bears --
in the Divisional Round is much more realistic.
The humbled Rams can
take comfort in the fact that any second meeting with Chicago will likely take
place in Los Angeles, as the Rams'
playoff bye is not in much doubt, considering the team's soft upcoming schedule
(vs. Eagles, at Cardinals, vs. 49ers).
Even so, it's worth wondering if the Bears'
bullying defense is simply a bad matchup for L.A. Weather alone -- the
temperature was below freezing in Soldier Field on Sunday -- can't account for
the way Chicago's defensive line manhandled the right side of the Rams'
offensive line, and coach Sean McVay was hesitant to run all game. The Rams'
offense has failed to reach its usual heights the last two weeks, just like
the Saints.
There's a long way
to go, but the current NFC seedings project Cowboys-Saints and
Bears-Rams in
the playoffs. The style of those fights the first
time around should have the projected top seeds rooting against
January rematches.
WHAT WE KNOW AFTER
WEEK 14
ANDREW LUCK IS
CAPABLE OF CARRYING THE COLTS TO
THE PLAYOFFS: With all due respect to Mahomes, Baker
Mayfield and Tom Brady,
Luck had the best performance by any quarterback in Week 14. After five
straight scoreless quarters, with the Colts'
playoff aspirations beginning to dwindle, Luck and T.Y. Hilton put
on a dazzling display of timing, accuracy and veteran chops during the Colts' win over the
Texans.
The Colts are
statistically the best team in football at third-and-10 or longer because Luck
is as good as any quarterback at combining pocket movement and feel. When
the Texans'
opposing defense had the right play called Sunday, Luck showed an uncanny
ability to wait them out, finding throwing lanes when most quarterbacks would
have given up on the play. His arm looks stronger than it did in September.
The Colts didn't
stray from their aggressive approach just because they were shut out in
Jacksonville in Week 13. They kept passing to take out
the Texans,
and it worked. Indianapolis is now 6-1 in its last seven games, and the
high-energy defense improves every week. General manager Chris Ballard deserves
a lot of credit for infusing this mostly young roster with spice.
REGGIE MCKENZIE DESERVED
BETTER: McKenzie inherited perhaps the worst salary cap/roster
situation of the 20th century when he took the Raiders'
general manager job in 2012. He tore it all down, fixed the team's cap issues
and had the Raiders in
the playoffs in 2016 for the first time since 2002. The organization hasn't
been the same since Derek Carr's broken leg that
2016 season, and the marriage between Jon Gruden and McKenzie was never going
to work, because Gruden wants to run the show. McKenzie, who was fired
Monday, made his share of mistakes directing the team, but the Raiders have
long been one of the most challenging personnel jobs in football. Heading into
last offseason, he had improved the roster and salary cap situation to the
point that they were far better than what he'd inherited. Will Jon Gruden ever
be able to say the same?
WHAT WE DON'T KNOW
AFTER WEEK 14
HOW THE DOLPHINS ARE
7-6: It's not just about the Miami
Miracle. The Dolphins,
who have been outscored by 55 points this season, have won in the strangest
ways all season long. (Remember the longest NFL game ever in Week 1?
The Albert Wilson trick-play
show in Week 3? The
Brocktober surprise over the Bears in 6?)
The Dolphins'
excellent special teams have accounted for a big edge in many weeks, but that
wasn't the case against the Patriots on
Sunday, when a punt was blocked and another was deflected.
Frank Gore's
victory-lap season topped itself against New England, with the veteran back
generating 116 yards from scrimmage on only 13 touches. Receiver Kenny Stills logged
more yards against the Patriots (135)
than he did in the previous six weeks combined (128). Adam Gase is a unique
coach with a knack for dialing up big plays that keep opponents off balance,
but there is very little continuity in what the team looks like from one week
to the next. Perhaps they are headed to 8-8 ambivalence, like so many
post-Marino era Dolphins teams,
but Gase deserves credit if he hits eight or nine wins in a season that
included too many injuries and too much Brock
Osweiler.
IF ROB
GRONKOWSKI'S GAME WAS A GOOD SIGN OR NOT: Before
Gronk's Rodney Harrison-like moment on the wrong end of an all-time
classic play, the Patriots tight end had his best game of the
season. He caught all eight targets sent his way for 107 yards and a touchdown,
including his first red-zone catch of the season. He keyed the Patriots'
best old-school passing-game performance in months, complete with nine Julian
Edelman catches. That's the good news. The rest of the story is
not just about the Dolphins'
final play.
On a second-and-7 in the first
quarter, Gronk caught a pass with acres of open room in front of him. The
29-year-old Gronkowski's lack of juice with room around him was tough to watch,
with Dolphins linebacker Jerome Baker making
up ground fast to stop the future Hall of Famer short of a first down.
The Patriots punted
two plays later.
PLAYOFF PICTURE
TAKEAWAYS AFTER WEEK 14
1) The Patriots' final-play
meltdown in Miami didn't cost them positioning for a playoff
bye, since Houston lost
to the Colts on Sunday. It's quite possible the Patriots could
lose in Pittsburgh and
still wind up with their ninth straight playoff bye. But the uncharacteristic
game-long struggle with situational football against the Dolphins will
cost the Patriots any
realistic chance at the No. 1 seed. That's significant for a Patriots team
that is 6-0 at home this season and 3-4 on the road.
2) The Browns'
road to playoff relevance isn't that crazy. At the very least,
there are a number of scenarios in which the Browns could
enter Week 17's game against the
Ravens at 7-7-1, with a path to the playoffs still open via the
wild card or AFC North title. Just the fact that Browns-Broncos
on Saturday night has playoff implications at all in Week 15 is
a reward for a starved Browns fan
base that has been bringing the noise all season.
3) The Cowboys' win
over the Eagles all but ensured Jason Garrett's third playoff
trip -- and postseason home game -- in eight seasons as Cowboys head
coach.
"That is far cry from a
month ago isn't it, on a house cleaning?" owner Jerry Jones said after the
game, probably prepping a new contract for Garrett.
4) The Francisco
was the most destructive for a playoff hopeful Sunday, with Kyle Shanahan
reminding John Elway why the Broncos should have hired The Mastermind's son two years ago.
5) Following
the Steelers'
loss in Oakland, Mike Tomlin should be concerned about missing the
playoffs entirely, with the Patriots and Saints next
on the schedule. Two more losses would put the Steelers at
7-7-1 on a five-game losing streak entering Week 17, with a difficult offseason
of soul-searching ahead. I still believe they are too talented -- especially up
front -- to let the slide get that far.
MVP WATCH
1) PATRICK
MAHOMES, QB, KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: That fourth-and-9
throw to Tyreek Hill was his MVP moment. Mahomes is rewriting
what's possible at the position, forced to beat perfectly called defensive
plays with even better throws.
2) DREW BREES,
QB, NEW ORLEANS SAINTS: Tampa has traditionally been a tricky place to
win for Sean Payton's Saints,
so I won't knock Brees for waiting a half to wake up from his slumber. In my
mind, the MVP race is still very tight.
3) AARON DONALD,
DT, LOS ANGELES RAMS: The Bears did
everything possible to limit Donald's impact, double- and triple-teaming him
every play. Donald's teammates need to make opponents pay for this approach.
4) PHILIP RIVERS,
QB, LOS ANGELES CHARGERS: If Rivers balls out over the next two weeks
in wins against the Chiefs and Ravens,
he could still steal the award.
5) DEANDRE
HOPKINS, WR, HOUSTON TEXANS: I believe no wide
receiver is more important to his team's success than Hopkins is to the Texans.
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