RAMS, SAINTS,
EAGLES SIT ATOP CONFERENCE
Our Roster Reset series takes a division-by-division look
at where things stand across the league heading into the 2019 NFL Draft.
At this time a year
ago, I listed six NFC teams that appeared to be legitimate championship contenders. Three of
those teams -- the Falcons, Packers and Vikings --
didn't even make the playoffs.
The other three -- the Rams, Eagles and Saints --
all made it to the Divisional Round. The NFC remains the NFL's deeper
conference, but this trio enters 2019 as the resident favorites. History
indicates they won't all stay near the top for long, but let's take a quick
crack at where the NFC stands leading up to the draft.
PLAYOFFS OR BUST
LOS ANGELES
RAMS, NEW ORLEANS
SAINTS, PHILADELPHIA
EAGLES.
The Rams have
identified their core young players and done an enviable job locking many of
them up long-term. That provides the backbone of the organization, with veteran
pickups like Eric Weddle and Clay Matthews --
as well as the one-year deal to keep Dante Fowler Jr.
-- filling in the cracks. While some role players and coaches have departed,
the key ingredients to Sean McVay going 24-8 the last two regular seasons all
remain in place.
The Saints have
the most trustworthy quarterback in this tier and a sneaky young roster built
on the team's boffo draft class of 2017. Getting over their second crushing
playoff loss in as many seasons looks like a bigger task than any of the team's
offseason departures.
There was a lot of concern in Philadelphia about the team's
lack of cap space entering February. Then general manager Howie Roseman found a
way to bring in DeSean
Jackson, Malik Jackson and Jordan Howard without
losing that much. The strength on both the offensive and
defensive lines combined with Carson Wentz
being another year removed from ACL surgery should give the Eagles some
margin for error, especially if their awful injury luck turns around.
Anything less than a playoff appearance from these teams
would qualify as a huge disappointment.
THE CROWDED MIDDLE
MINNESOTA
VIKINGS, CHICAGO BEARS, DALLAS
COWBOYS, GREEN BAY
PACKERS, ATLANTA
FALCONS, SEATTLE
SEAHAWKS, CAROLINA
PANTHERS.
The continuity that Vikings coach
Mike Zimmer and general manager Rick Spielman have built on their talented and
expensive defense is remarkable. They kept that trend going by retaining
Anthony Barr and keeping Everson
Griffen this offseason. With Kirk Cousins entering
the second year of his three-year contract, it sure feels like the Vikings are
in a win-now window before the group breaks up.
The arrival of Bears coach
Matt Nagy felt like the start of something special in Chicago last year, but
it's going to be difficult to repeat such a dominant defensive campaign.
The Cowboys had
a strange offseason, adding players past their prime like Randall Cobb, Jason Witten and Robert Quinn,
while trying to save money for extending their young stars. Teams quarterbacked
by Aaron Rodgers and Matt Ryan should not
remain under .500 for long unless there are serious problems elsewhere in the
organization. The Packers did
plenty to buoy coordinator Mike Pettine's defense in free agency, so it's on
new head coach Matt LaFleur to deliver offensive improvements.
The Seahawks and Panthers have
been among the most consistent NFC teams all decade because of their
quarterbacks and head coaches. Those enormous assets remain in place and both
teams made some quiet, smart moves to fortify their offensive lines this
offseason.
DON'T SLEEP ON US
SAN FRANCISCO
49ERS, TAMPA BAY
BUCCANEERS, DETROIT LIONS.
There is some serious post-hype potential for the 49ers and
Bucs, two former "it" teams that buzz now has forgotten. It's Year 3
of the John Lynch/Kyle Shanahan partnership, with enough raw talent on defense
and offensive acumen from Shanahan to win 10 games in 2019 after winning 10
games combined over the last two campaigns.
In an offense-first league, Bruce Arians is taking over a
Bucs attack with an abundance of talent and a 25-year-old quarterback in Jameis
Winston who has already produced plenty. The Bucs' defense was
the bigger issue under former coach Dirk Koetter.
The Lions added
some quality starters (Trey Flowers,
Justin Coleman) to Matt Patricia's defense, and they still have an
above-average starting quarterback in Matthew Stafford.
While both the Bucs and Lions are
saddled by difficult division schedules, it shouldn't be a shock if any team in
this tier finds a way to January.
UPHILL BATTLE TO
THE PLAYOFFS
WASHINGTON
REDSKINS, NEW YORK
GIANTS.
Only three NFC teams have enough systemic problems to be
considered true playoff long shots. Two of those organizations are in the NFC
East. Both the Redskins and Giants'
quarterback situations figure to change after the draft, but will a rookie
signal-caller be ready to change either team's fortunes?
The problems for both teams are similar: They are hoping for
veteran quarterbacks to be "good enough" without the defensive personnel
to pull off that strategy. The Giants lost
talent from a below-average unit from a year ago. Redskins coach
Jay Gruden has been searching for an identity on defense for years, and
former Giants safety Landon Collins can't
turn the group around by himself. Winning eight games would qualify as
overachieving for either team, which is not where you want to be with a
38-year-old quarterback like Eli Manning or
a coach entering his sixth season at the helm like Gruden.
THE ONE TEAM WITH
NO EXPECTATIONS
ARIZONA CARDINALS
General manager Steve Keim, whose job status could be
tenuous, would probably disagree with the heading above. But the Cardinals are
among the very few NFL teams entering 2019 with close to zero playoff hopes.
That doesn't mean it's impossible, but they will be installing their third
offense and third defense in as many seasons, presumably with a rookie quarterback at the helm.
It's not the worst place to be for a first-time head coach like Kliff
Kingsbury. Six wins and a competent offense qualifies as a great year.
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