COLTS, TITANS,
STEELERS JOCKEYING FOR PLAYOFF POSITION
The Steelers are
good enough to almost beat the NFL's top team on the road. The Steelers are
bad enough to miss the playoffs entirely. Mike Tomlin's enigmatic squad is
symbolic of a league where one play so often separates a championship contender
from an also-ran. The Steelers couldn't
make that one play Sunday in the
Superdome.
Pittsburgh's blown fourth-quarter lead over the Saints was
extra painful because of other Week 16 results. Wins by the
Titans and Colts blocked
any route for the Steelers to
make the playoffs as a wild-card team. Baltimore's
victory over the Chargers in Los Angeles on Saturday night
helped the Ravens
take control of the AFC North,
with John Harbaugh's squad needing a win over
the Browns in Week 17 to take the division and send the Steelers home
before the tournament starts for the first time since 2013.
That has to grate on Ben Roethlisberger and Antonio Brown,
who proved again they are capable of taking over a game against any team, as
they did in New Orleans, connecting 14 times for 185 yards and two scores. Had
Pittsburgh stopped the Saints on
a fourth-and-2 play at the two-minute warning, or if the Steelers hadn't
fumbled two times in scoring position, they could have been in line for a home
playoff game in an AFC field where every team has flaws.
The gap between the top seeds and the rest of the field
feels smaller than ever, with this being a rare year in which all 12 playoff
teams have a legitimate chance to win a title. In this week's Debrief, let's
take a look at the playoff
picture for each conference, breaking down what each contending
team has at stake in Week 17 and beyond.
AFC
1) Kansas City
Chiefs (11-4): Patrick
Mahomes and friends still have a strong grip on home-field
advantage for the AFC playoffs despite Sunday
night's slip-up in Seattle. They can clinch the No. 1 seed
with a win over
the Raiders in Week 17. An unforgivable loss against Oakland,
however, would open the door for the Chargers, Patriots or
even Texans to climb into the top spot, with Kansas City potentially
falling to the No. 5 seed.
The flaws of the Chiefs --
who have gone 2-3 in their last five games -- are more apparent on the road. It
was telling that Coach Andy Reid used Sunday night's game to test drive young
cornerbacks Charvarius
Ward and Tremon Smith.
It was worth a shot, but it's a bad sign that Kansas City is still scrambling
to find a workable secondary in Week 16, with Russell
Wilson throwing for 271 yards and three touchdowns. Mahomes can
make a final closing statement for his MVP case against the Raiders,
while his primary competition, Drew Brees,
likely rests in Week 17.
2) New England
Patriots (10-5): They have never needed a bye
so badly. Houston's
loss in Philadelphia on Sunday allowed the Patriots to
regain the No. 2 spot in the AFC, with an outside chance to climb to No. 1 in
Week 17. New England's workmanlike
24-12 victory over the Bills gave
the Patriots a
record-setting 10th straight playoff spot and tied the 49ers'
mark of 16 straight seasons with 10-plus wins. A week off could help some of
the team's hobbled elder statesmen get some much-needed time to recuperate.
It's remarkable that the Patriots have
won so many games with such a flawed team. Their passing game hit a new Low
Sunday, with Tom Brady antsy
under pressure and Rob
Gronkowski being a liability again. While the Patriots are
a far better team at home -- where they are 7-0 -- even beating the
Jets in Foxborough in Week 17 doesn't feel like a lock, because
of New York QB Sam Darnold's
recent play (594 passing yards, five TDs and zero INTs in his last two games).
To put it another way: Are the Patriots built to survive in a shootout?
3) Houston
Texans (10-5): Despite clinching a playoff spot, the Texans had
a rough Sunday. Their loss to
the Eagles knocked them down to the No. 3 seed and kept the AFC
South up for grabs. The Texans need to win over the
Jaguars next week, or they will fall out of the top position in
the division -- supplanted by the winner of Titans-Colts --
and to the No. 6 seed as a wild-card team.
Already thin on playmakers going into Week 16, the Texans lost
wideout Demaryius
Thomas to injury. NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport
reported that it is believed Thomas tore his Achilles tendon.
Cornerbacks Kareem
Jackson and Kayvon
Webster also were hurt for a group suddenly limping to the finish
line after winning nine straight from Week 4 to Week 13.
4) Baltimore
Ravens (9-6): No AFC contender had a better
weekend. Baltimore's victory over the
Chargers in Los Angeles and Pittsburgh's
loss have positioned the Ravens to
get a rematch against Philip Rivers in
the Wild Card Round, this time in Baltimore. The Ravens have matchup
against the streaking Browns,
who already beat Baltimore in Week 5.
That was a different Ravens team,
though. This group has established an unshakeable identity on offense, while
the defense has become the toughest to prepare for in football. Rivers (who
threw for 181 yards, zero TDs and two picks while getting sacked four times)
didn't know where pressure was coming from on Saturday night -- he just knew
that it was coming. Ravens fans
will remember that they were in a similarly advantageous position heading
into Week 17 last
year and blew it
against Cincinnati. If Baltimore were to lose to the Browns,
Harbaugh and Co. would likely would fall right out of the playoffs.
5) Los Angeles
Chargers (11-4): Saturday's
loss may have hurt a little more after watching the Chiefs
lose. The Chargers could
have jumped to the No. 1 seed, but they should still be motivated to win next weekend
in Denver, just in case the Chiefs collapse
against Oakland. If the Chiefs get a big lead early, the Chargers may
be tempted to rest starters, with a potential playoff rematch against the Ravens or Steelers coming
soon.
The matchup in Denver could also provide a stiff test for
a Chargers offensive
line that is showing cracks.
6) Indianapolis
Colts (9-6): It's win-and-in
next Sunday night in Tennessee for the Colts,
a team that was once 1-5. Any team with eight wins in its last nine games has
to be taken seriously as a title contender; it's as if the whole season has
been a fourth-quarter comeback for Andrew Luck.
The Colts can
still win the AFC South with a win and a Texans loss.
7) Tennessee
Titans (9-6): The Titans face the same
scenario as the Colts.
It's unclear if Marcus
Mariota -- who left Saturday's
win over Washington with a
shoulder stinger -- will be available to play on Sunday night.
If not, the Titans will
need a quality Blaine
Gabbert performance to avoid their third straight 9-7 finish.
8) Pittsburgh
Steelers (8-6-1): They aren't done quite yet. A
win over the Jeff
Driskel-led Bengals and a Ravens loss to the
dangerous Browns would give Pittsburgh the No. 4 seed and an
AFC North title. In that scenario, they would host the AFC West runner-up. In
the other, more likely scenario, Mike Tomlin will have to answer questions
about perhaps the most frustrating end to a season in a decade full of such finishes.
NFC
1) New Orleans
Saints (13-2): Sunday's
stirring win over the Steelers --
featuring some incredible quick-decision throws by Drew Brees under
pressure -- clinched the No. 1 seed. With Week 17's
matchup against the Panthers being played in New Orleans,
home-field advantage locked up through the playoffs and Super Bowl LIII set for Atlanta's
domed venue, the Saints won't
play outdoors again this season, no matter what happens. While nothing is
official yet, the expectation in New Orleans is that Brees and several Saints star
players could sit out the season finale against Carolina. Brees
wasn't even active in 2009 in a similar scenario. Teddy Time
awaits.
2) Los Angeles
Rams (12-3): The Rams'
offense dominated the Cardinals even without
banged-up stud running back Todd Gurley,
racking up 33 first downs and 461 yards. Unlike Week 17 of last year, when
Gurley, Jared Goff, Aaron Donald and
others rested ahead
of the postseason, the Rams will
be motivated to win their 2018 finale against
the 49ers.
A victory over the feisty Fighting' Shanahans would clinch the No. 2 seed and a
playoff bye. A loss would open the door for the Bears to
pass them.
Considering the Rams'
offensive struggles before facing Arizona, coach Sean McVay will also want to
engineer another positive performance by Goff before the playoffs start.
3) Chicago Bears (11-4): The Bears face
an awkward dilemma in Minnesota
in Week 17: Go all out to help knock out the Vikings,
or set up a potential rematch with Minnesota in Chicago in the Wild Card Round?
I see the Bears as
a mostly young team with a lot to work on offensively. Staying sharp and trying
to win in a playoff-like atmosphere while ending the season of a division rival
sounds like a challenge coach Matt Nagy would embrace.
A Bears win
in Minnesota coupled with a Rams loss
to the 49ers would
also give the Bears the
No. 2 seed in the NFC, essentially advancing them a round in the playoffs. It
seems insanely risky to pass on that opportunity, even if it's a long shot.
The 49ers'
strong run of recent play, witnessed in person by the Bears
on Sunday, is another reason to believe the No. 2 seed is still up
for grabs.
4) Dallas
Cowboys (9-6): Sunday's
victory over the Bucs was typical of this Cowboys season.
They clinched the NFC East with a pair of scores set up by the defense, while
the offense stayed out of the way in a close game. Dallas' last six wins have
been by one score. The Cowboys have
only one win all season by more than one score, back in Week
6 against the Jaguars.
Jason Garrett will be tempted to rest his starters against the Giants in Week 17 because
the Cowboys are
locked in to the No. 4 seed, with the Seahawks being
their most likely Wild Card Round opponent.
5) Seattle
Seahawks (9-6): The win
against the Chiefs proved again that Seattle can compete with
any team. It also clinched Pete Carroll's seventh playoff spot in nine seasons
with the Seahawks. Cardinals
next week in Arizona would clinch the No. 5 seed and a trip to Dallas.
The Seahawks Cowboys
this season and should do whatever possible to avoid a trip to Chicago in the
Wild Card Round.
6) Minnesota Vikings (8-6-1): The Vikings are
closing strong, with two of their most
convincing wins of the season coming after coach Mike
Zimmer fired
offensive coordinator John DeFilippo. The Vikings need
to beat the
Bears in Week 17 or have the Eagles lose to the
Redskins to clinch a playoff berth. A win over the Bears and a Seahawks
loss would bump the Vikings up
to the No. 5 seed. There's a strong chance that the Vikings could
have to play the Bears in
back-to-back weeks, not unlike in 2012, when the Leslie Frazier-led team beat
the Packers to
make the playoffs, then lost to them the following week in the
playoffs.
7) Philadelphia
Eagles (8-7): Nick Foles Season
is the best season. After Foles' stirring
game-winning drive against the
Texans, the Eagles need
to win in
Washington next week and get some help with a Bears win
in Minnesota. It seems somehow fitting that the NFC's two best teams from a
year ago are fighting for the last spot in this year's playoffs, highlighting
once again how precarious a spot near the top of the league is. Then again,
whichever team earns that No. 6 spot will do so by playing its best ball of the
year, with full belief that another playoff run could be around the corner.
Even in the NFC, the top seeds and the wild-card teams are closer than they
appear.
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