FIRST LOOK AT
CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIP MATCHUPS
And then there were four. Following the divisional-weekend
games, the Kansas City
Chiefs, New England
Patriots, Los Angeles
Rams and New Orleans
Saints are all just one win away from reaching Super Bowl LIII.
Let's reset the field,
breaking down the upcoming Rams-Saints and Patriots-Chiefs conference
championship games with early projections from Football Power Index (FPI).
Note: Both games
will be Sunday, Jan. 20.
NFC: (2) LOS
ANGELES RAMS AT (1) NEW ORLEANS SAINTS
TIME: 3:05 p.m.
ET
TV: Fox
WHERE: Mercedes-Benz
Superdome
EARLY FPI PROJECTION: New Orleans, 62.1 percent
RAMS' BEST CHANCE TO WIN: Run the ball the way
they did Saturday night against the Cowboys. In their 45-35 loss to the Saints
in Week 9, the Rams had just 92 rushing yards on 19 carries. Part of the reason
was the Saints built a 35-14 second-quarter lead and the Rams had to throw to
get back into the game (which they did, by the way, tying it at 35-35 in the
fourth quarter). But that just serves to underline the importance of
establishing the run early and getting some control of the game. The Rams had a
somewhat excessive 273 rushing yards on 48 carries in Saturday's playoff
victory over the Cowboys. It is probably too much to expect a repeat of that,
but keeping Drew Brees on
the sideline by running the ball and controlling the clock is the way to go.
FPI CHANCES TO WIN THE SUPER BOWL
CHIEFS
|
33.8 percent
|
SAINTS
|
33.1 percent
|
RAMS
|
18.1 percent
|
PATRIOTS
|
15.0 percent
|
SAINTS' BEST CHANCE TO WIN: Keep Aaron Donald and
the Rams' pass rush off Brees. Donald hit Brees four times in the first
meeting, but no one else on the Rams hit him even once, and he was not sacked.
(Neither quarterback was sacked in the game, actually.) Michael
Thomas, the Saints' top wide receiver, had 211 yards and a touchdown
on 12 catches in that game (he had 12 catches against the Eagles on Sunday).
And while Aqib Talib wasn't
playing in that game and is now back from his injury, Brees should be able to
find openings in the Rams' secondary if the line can keep him clean.
STAT TO KNOW: Counting the one he threw on his
first pass Sunday, Brees has thrown only six interceptions all season, but he
has thrown one in five of his past six games. Only two teams -- Chicago and
Miami -- intercepted more passes in the regular season than the Rams.
BOTTOM LINE: The conference championship games
are rematches of two of the most exciting games of the season, and the reason
this game is in New Orleans and not Los Angeles is the Saints won the first
matchup against the Rams, as each team finished 13-3. Each team scored more
than 500 points. Rams coach Sean McVay is the red-hot young offensive genius
everyone is trying to copy, while Saints coach Sean Payton is the
long-established offensive genius who'd just love to remind everyone he has been
at this for a while. The result will either be Brees' second Super Bowl
appearance or Jared Goff's
first.
AFC: (2) NEW ENGLAND
PATRIOTS AT (1) KANSAS CITY CHIEFS
TIME: 6:40 p.m.
ET
TV: CBS
WHERE: Arrowhead
Stadium
EARLY FPI PROJECTION: Kansas City, 66.2 percent
PATRIOTS' BEST CHANCE TO WIN: Run the ball and
keep Patrick
Mahomes off the field. As easy a time as Tom Brady had
Sunday, a big reason the Patriots were so dominant was their Sony Michel-led
running game, which helped bleed off the first quarter before Philip Rivers even
took the field. New England had the fifth-most rushing yards and the
fourth-most rushing touchdowns in the league this season. The Patriots averaged
a time of possession of 32 minutes, 21 seconds in their wins and 28:17 in their
losses. Against Mahomes, who had 50 touchdown passes this season, and a Chiefs
running game that rolled up 180 yards in Saturday's home playoff victory over
the Colts, it's vital the Patriots control the ball, the clock and the game
with their offense.
EARLY VEGAS GAME LINES
From Westgate Las Vegas SuperBook
SPREAD
|
O/U
|
SAINTS -3.5
|
56.5
|
CHIEFS -3
|
57.5
|
CHIEFS' BEST CHANCE TO WIN: Well, based on
Sunday, it's obviously not "load up on defensive backs, sit back in an
insanely soft zone and let Brady pick you apart as if he's playing on a
football-toss machine at Dave & Buster's." That didn't work too well
for the Chargers. No, the Chiefs' best chance to win is to do what they did
Saturday and play out of their minds on defense. Kansas City was able to
pressure Andrew Luck just
enough (especially considering how hard that was to do in 2018) while its
corners covered as well as they have all season. If Kansas City's defense can
crank it up at home again the way it did in the divisional round, the Chiefs
will make it a lot tougher on the Patriots than the Chargers did. But that
isn't saying much.
STAT TO KNOW: Chiefs coach Andy Reid is 1-4 in
conference championship games -- all in the NFC while he was coaching the
Eagles, and none since 2008. Patriots coach Bill Belichick, meanwhile, is 8-4
in conference championship games (all with the Patriots). Belichick will be
coaching in his eighth consecutive AFC Championship Game and has won the past
two.
BOTTOM LINE: The game is at Kansas City, not
Foxborough, Massachusetts, and that could make the difference. During the
Brady/Belichick era, the Patriots are 20-3 in postseason home games, but just
3-4 in playoff games as the visiting team. They haven't won a road playoff game
and the Super Bowl in the same season since 2004. The past two times they
played an AFC Championship Game on the road, they lost -- in Denver three and
five years ago. This season, the Patriots are 9-0 at home and 3-5 on the road,
including double-digit losses at Jacksonville, Detroit and Tennessee. The
Chiefs are 8-1 at home. When they faced the Patriots in Week 6, it was in
Foxborough, and New England beat them 43-40 on a
last-second field goal in a game that featured 30 combined fourth-quarter
points. This should be a classic rematch, and the fact that it's in the Chiefs'
building would seem to give them a chance to slay the league's most fearsome
January dragon.
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