If the Dallas Cowboys are for
real, they will win their sixth straight game and clinch the NFC East at
Indianapolis on Sunday.
If the Colts are for real, they
will knock off the Cowboys and stamp themselves as true contenders for the AFC
playoffs.
With three games remaining,
Dallas (8-5) is in control of its division, thanks to a staunch defense and a
revived air game with the addition of Amari Cooper. Has any veteran been more
worth a first-round draft pick in a midseason trade?
"I didn't know we were going
to get all that, honestly,'" says NFL rushing leader Ezekiel Elliott about
Cooper, acquired from Oakland. "But when I finally saw him in person, when
I saw him catch the ball, I saw him run around and run after the catch, that's
when I really realized he's truly special."
A Cowboys win does the trick in
the NFC East, as would losses by Philadelphia and Washington. Dallas has almost
no chance at a first-round playoff bye, though.
So what? The Cowboys were 3-5 and
sinking and now look where they are.
Talking about sinking,
Indianapolis was 1-5 two months ago. Then the Colts (7-6) won five straight
before that string ended with an awful performance at Jacksonville. So they
went to AFC South leader Houston, winner of nine in a row, and won.
In his comeback from a 2017
season lost to a shoulder injury, Andrew Luck has been sensational, working
behind an offensive line that has gone from sieve to sturdy. Luck has been
sacked 16 times, second fewest in the league.
Indy is in a four-way tie for the
second AFC wild-card slot with Baltimore, Tennessee and Miami.
Two road teams won Saturday, with
Cleveland edging Denver 17-16, and Houston beating the New York Jets 29-22,
and.
Baker Mayfield's 2-yard TD toss
to Antonio Calloway with just less than 12 minutes left provided the winning
margin for the Browns (6-7-1). They snapped an 11-game losing streak to the
Broncos (6-8).
Houston's Deshaun Watson threw a
14-yard touchdown pass to DeAndre Hopkins with 2:15 left. The Texans are 10-4,
and the Jets 4-10.
The weekend began Thursday night
with the Los Angeles Chargers' 29-28 comeback victory at Kansas City.
Philip Rivers led the Chargers to
a pair of touchdowns in the final minutes, and then hit Mike Williams for the
go-ahead 2-point conversion with 4 seconds remaining. The Chargers (11-3)
trailed 28-14 before Justin Jackson scored with 3:49 to go.
Not only did the Chargers clinch
a playoff berth, they forged a first-place tie with the Chiefs (11-3) in the
AFC West while ending a nine-game losing streak to their longtime division
rivals.
NEW ENGLAND (9-4) AT PITTSBURGH (7-5-1)
TAMPA BAY (5-8) AT BALTIMORE (7-6)
The AFC North has become a jumble
with Pittsburgh's slump (three successive defeats) and Baltimore's resurgence.
These matchups don't bode well for the Steelers, especially if Ben
Roethlisberger's rib and James Conner's ankle are factors.
The Patriots have won the past
five meetings. Of course, the 2017 version is unforgettable: Roethlisberger
threw an interception in the end zone with 5 seconds remaining after tight end
Jesse James' apparent go-ahead touchdown with 29 seconds left was overturned on
review. Officials ruled the catch did not "survive the ground;" James
jostled it after stretching across the goal line.
So the league amended the rule in
the offseason to allow some movement by the ball if a receiver maintains
possession.
New England can clinch its 10th
straight AFC East title with a win or tie and a Miami loss or tie.
Baltimore, meanwhile, will sit
the now-healthy Joe Flacco behind first-round pick Lamar Jackson, who has won
three of his four starts with Flacco (hip) sidelined. The Ravens' ground game
has been sensational with the rookie behind center:
Jackson has 336 yards rushing
over the past four games, the most by any NFL quarterback in his first four
starts during the Super Bowl era. Baltimore also is allowing an NFL-low 18.5
points per game.
PHILADELPHIA (6-7) AT LOS ANGELES RAMS (11-2)
NEW ORLEANS (11-2) AT CAROLINA (6-7), MONDAY
Top seed in the NFC is what it's
all about for the Saints and Rams, who lost to New Orleans this season.
The Rams and Saints each clinch a
first-round bye with a win and a Chicago loss or tie, or a tie and a Chicago
loss.
New Orleans has struggled
offensively the past two weeks, but this is a matchup Drew Brees enjoys. The
Saints beat the Panthers three times last season, including the playoffs. Brees
has completed 76.7 percent of his passes for 2,714 yards with 21 touchdowns and
four interceptions in the past 10 NFC South games and has 46 TDs and 20 INTs vs.
the Panthers, who have lost their past five overall. But Carolina is 5-1 at
home.
With the Rams coming off the
lowest-scoring performance under Sean McVay, a 15-6 loss to the Bears, they try
to avoid falling in consecutive games with McVay in charge. Indeed, he has won
at least two straight after all seven of his career defeats.
Eagles QB Carson Wentz is
battling a back injury. He tore up his knee at LA last year and missed his
team's run to the championship.
TENNESSEE (7-6) AT NEW YORK GIANTS (5-8)
The other weekend game at MetLife
Stadium; notice the neutral end zones.
New York once was 1-7, yet has a
very long shot at making the playoffs. A retooled offensive line has provided
time for Eli Manning to show he isn't over the hill, and for rookie running back
Saquon Barkley to go wild.
Tennessee has had at least 400
yards in each of the past two games, and hasn't managed three straight since
Oct. 1-16, 2000. It has allowed the fewest touchdowns in the league this
season, 27.
GREEN BAY (5-7-1) AT CHICAGO (9-4)
MIAMI (7-6) AT MINNESOTA (6-6-1)
Chicago's last-to-first climb in
the NFC North could be finalized against its biggest rival. A win over Green
Bay, which leads the NFL's longest series 97-94-6, gets it done. So does a
Minnesota loss or tie.
The Bears lead the NFL in
turnover differential (plus 13) and interceptions (25).
Green Bay, under interim coach
Joe Philbin, must win out for any chance to play in January. The Packers have
won eight in a row at Soldier Field and nine of the past 10 meetings overall.
But with a win, Chicago would finish 7-1 at home for the first time since 2005.
Miami's stunning "Drake
Escape" victory against New England kept it viable in the AFC playoff
chase. The Dolphins are second in the NFL with 19 interceptions and tied for
third with 25 takeaways.
Minnesota was overwhelmed last
Monday night at Seattle, and fired offensive coordinator John DeFilippo. In
their past three losses, all on the road, the Vikings have averaged just 274
yards and 12 points per game. But they're at home and the Dolphins are 0-5 on
the road since beating the Jets in Week 2.
SEATTLE (8-5) AT SAN FRANCISCO (3-10)
Surging Seattle has won four
straight and its defeats are to opponents who are a combined 36-16, with two of
losses to the 11-2 Rams. The Seahawks have the league's top rushing team and
have become as stingy as anybody on defense despite being in a rebuild.
A win gets them into the
postseason, and they have won 10 straight in this NFC West rivalry, starting
with the conference title game in January 2014. Linebacker Bobby Wagner, making
a hefty statement for NFL Defensive Player of the Year, seeks his eighth
straight game with at least eight tackles. Wagner had 12 tackles, one sack, one
forced fumble, two passes defensed and a 98-yard interception return for a TD
in the Week 13 win over San Francisco.
DETROIT (5-8) AT BUFFALO (4-9)
Don't look for much scoring here.
With 3,187 yards passing, Detroit
QB Matthew Stafford is in jeopardy of ending his seven-season streak of topping
4,000 yards. His counterpart, first-round pick Josh Allen, has a combined 335
yards rushing in the past three games. He's the second NFL QB to top 90 yards
rushing in three consecutive games, joining Green Bay's Tobin Rote in 1951.
ARIZONA (3-10) AT ATLANTA (4-9)
Atlanta might do some scoring
here, while Arizona ranks at the bottom in most offensive categories. Its
pitiful 178 points are 23 lower than the next-worst team, Buffalo. The
Cardinals started five rookies on offense last week.
After being held without a TD
catch in the first seven games, Atlanta WR Julio Jones has five in the past six
games. Jones leads the NFL with 1,429 yards receiving and has topped 100 yards
in nine games.
OAKLAND (3-10) AT CINCINNATI (5-8)
Banged-up Cincinnati has been in
freefall, dropping five in a row and seven of eight. This is its final home
game. The Bengals have averaged 51,673, the second-smallest attendance since
Paul Brown Stadium opened in 2000. They're 3-4 at home.
The Raiders fired GM Reggie
McKenzie on Monday, one day after a stunning upset of Pittsburgh.
WASHINGTON (6-7) AT JACKSONVILLE (4-9)
What does a team do when its top
two QBs have broken legs and the third guy has a broken career? In Washington's
case, it turns to someone who hasn't started since 2011, is 0-5 in the NFL and
recently had a contract with the startup Alliance of American Football, Josh
Johnson.
Redskins RB Adrian Peterson needs
112 yards rushing to pass Hall of Famer Eric Dickerson (13,259) for eighth most
in NFL history.
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