NFL Week 16 Winners and Losers

After Sunday, two weeks remain in the regular season. More teams clinched postseason berths and a few teams were eliminated from playoff contention. Some teams also secured their divisions and still have chances at the number one playoff seed. The final two weeks set up more anticipation for and after the holidays. It’s time to see who or what else stood out in week 16.

Winners: Tennessee Titans

It has mostly been a season to forget in Tennessee. The Titans have been undermanned and lacked talent to stay close in a lot of games. However, there have been times Tennessee has been on a similar level with some teams, and the depleted Chiefs were one. For the first time this season, the Titans had a home-field advantage.

After a scoreless first quarter, Tennessee started a scoring barrage led by defensive tackle Jeffrey Simmons. Simmons tackled Kansas City runningback Kareem Hunt in the opposing endzone for a safety. After the Chiefs got a one point lead from a Harrison Butker 54 yard field goal, the Titans went on to score their first touchdown when quarterback Cam Ward completed a seven yard score to Chig Okonkwo. Tennessee never lost the lead again.

Ward threw another touchdown and running back Tyjae Spears ran for an additional score. On defense, the Titans had four sacks on two Kansas City quarterbacks and gave up less than 200 yards of offense. Tennessee gave their fans something to celebrate for Christmas with their first home win of the season. The game was another reminder of how special Ward is and how the organization should involve him in their coaching decisions moving forward.

Zac Taylor

Many serious NFL analysts believed the losers of Sunday’s Cincinnati-Miami game would get their head coach fired after the regular season. Since the Bengals Zac Taylor decided to play his starting quarterback and has the more consistent offense, it’s possible he saved his job for another year.

Offense is Taylor’s specialty, and it showed in a dominant win against the Dolphins. Quarterback Joe Burrow played much better and completed 25 of 32 passes for 309 yards and four touchdowns. Runningback Chase Brown ran 12 times for 66 yards and scored once. After the Bengals took a three point lead into halftime, head coach Zac Taylor made some defensive improvements and got the offense to pile on points the last two quarters.

Taylor is certainly in an unenviable situation in Cincinnati. He’s responsible for getting the most out of a top-tier offense, solid special teams, and an all-time worst defense. A cheap owner, general manager and front office has over-stressed one of the most experienced head coaches, and Burrow’s personal issues are another serious problem that should be addressed and fixed in the offseason. That’s why Sunday’s win was big. The Bengals won’t make the playoffs, but the team hasn’t quit on their head coach. That should be a rallying point for 2026.

Jacksonville Jaguars

Jacksonville now has one of the hottest NFL teams after Sunday. Many believed the Jaguars didn’t stand a chance against Denver especially on the road. Rookie head coach Liam Coen is one of the best stories of the season and has amazed audiences with how well his team plays.

Quarterback Trevor Lawrence completed 23 of 36 passes for 279 yards and three touchdowns. He also ran six times for 20 yards and another score. Receiver Parker Washington had another great game, recording six catches on ten targets for 145 yards and a touchdown.

An underrated part of Sunday’s win was Jacksonville’s defense. Although they sacked and intercepted Broncos quarterback Bo Nix once each, the Jaguars stifled Denver’s running game, forced and recovered a fumble, and made them commit two turnovers on downs.

Head coach Liam Coen had Jacksonville ready to play and left no doubt which team was better. The win keeps the Jaguars close in the first seed race and on top of the AFC South. Closing out the regular season with a wounded Colts and less talented Titans the last two weeks makes Jacksonville one of the biggest conference threats for any playoff contender.

Losers: New York Jets defense

New York hired then-Lions defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn as head coach because of how he gradually turned around Detroit’s terrible defense starting in 2021. Unfortunately for Glenn, it seems the Jets defense wasn’t going to like anyone who wasn’t former head coach Robert Saleh. That meant if Glenn tried to implement some of the same aggressive styles, the team wouldn’t buy in after the last head coach had a similar system.

There is usually one game a season where a team’s defense takes over and records a number of turnovers. That’s why the Jets not having an interception at any point this season stuns even a casual viewer. You read that right. You, me, your sleepy next door neighbor, or your pet fish have the same number of interceptions as the entire 2025 New York Jets defense. There has been some effort to play better, notably in the games after cornerback Sauce Gardner and defensive tackle Quinnen Williams were traded. Yet before the trades, neither players performed well to make quarterbacks fear Aaron Glenn’s defense.

The Robert Saleh firing looks worse no matter how New York plays every week. The entire defense needs to be re-built. They don’t seem to enjoy taking the field, even if the opposing offense is undermanned or the quarterback is a rookie trying to keep the starting job. It’s embarrassing for everyone involved with the franchise.

Darien Porter

Las Vegas came so close to an upset win in Houston. The operative word here is close. The Raiders pushed the Texans to their limit and the defense was about to give quarterback Geno Smith a chance to put together a game-winning drive with four minutes left. All they had to do was hold the Houston offense on 3rd and 20 and force a punt from deep in their own territory. Las Vegas held…in the worst way.

Raiders cornerback Darien Porter held and committed a defensive pass interference on the pivotal play. The sideline official immediately threw a flag and gave Houston not just a first down, but a chunk of yardage that brought the ball close to mid-field.

That penalty was the difference between a possible game winning drive and a heart-breaking loss. The Texans got Las Vegas to use all three of their timeouts and wound all four minutes down to seal the win. The Raiders offense never got a chance.

Dan Campbell and the Detroit Lions offense

It could be premature to call head coach Dan Campbell’s tenure in Detroit over, but it sure looked it Sunday afternoon against Pittsburgh. The Lions offense was favored to push around and throttle Pittsburgh’s T.J. Watt-less defense. Instead they were bullied most of the game.

Detroit’s offense finished the game with 15 rushing yards. Not only is that uncharacteristic of how the Lions offense should play, CBS’ Nate Burleson pointed out in the post-game that the aggressive and in-your-face style of play wasn’t there. The Steelers defensive and offensive lines did what they wanted all four quarters against Detroit’s offensive and defensive lines.

More bad habits returned and were an issue whenever the Lions did play well. Penalties on both sides of the ball punished a lot of Detroit’s gains. The biggest ones came at the end where two last-minute touchdown plays could have given the Lions a win, but were negated because of offensive pass interference. According to ESPN’s SportsCenter with Scott Van Pelt, it was the first time in 30 years the officials called two OPI penalties on a final game possession. Detroit’s playoff chances are now slim. They need to win their last two and Green Bay to lose their last two games to make the playoffs. Given how this season has gone for both head coach Dan Campbell and offensive coordinator John Morton, that looks unlikely. The Lions may have had a hard schedule this season, but there were a good number of opportunities to pull away and win the NFC North. The organization will look back after the season and regret how many chances were wasted.

2025 NFC Playoff Picks

The future looks bright in the NFC. Philadelphia had a resounding Super Bowl win this past February against the AFC best Chiefs. At one point, they led 40-6 in the title game. The Eagles weren’t just the best team in the Super Bowl, they were the best team in a stacked, resurgent conference. Detroit had their franchise best record in 2024. The Commanders hype is real. Tampa Bay, Los Angeles, and Green Bay will be more dangerous this year. Playoff hopefuls Atlanta, Chicago, Arizona and Seattle have the talent and coaching to take on and beat some serious title contenders. Every division race will be a slugfest and have a lot of drama.

Sadly, not all the teams mentioned above will make the playoffs since there are seven spots. It’s time to break down which seven teams in the conference have the best chance to reach the playoffs this season. There are a lot of quality teams, so expect a thrilling journey to the end of the season and some surprises based on this years draft and last years film.

East: Philadelphia Eagles, Washington Commanders

Jalen Hurts is one of six current starting quarterbacks to have won the Super Bowl.

What a statement 2024-2025 season from Philadelphia. Serious analysts didn’t have the Eagles making the playoffs unless they were a lower seed after the late, 2023-2024 falloff. Owner Jeffrey Lurie, general manager Howie Roseman and head coach Nick Sirianni responded with the franchise’s best season this century, adding a second Super Bowl trophy in a decisive win against Kansas City. Since the Eagles’ most important players are signed through the next few seasons and Roseman added more roster depth in the offseason, Philadelphia will remain the top name in their division, conference, and the league.

“Scary Terry” McLaurin was finally re-signed to a favorable three year, $96 million extension Monday. That’s bad news for opposing defenses facing the Commanders this year.

The Eagles won’t have it easy with the young, determined Commanders team behind them. Washington had a great chance to win the east last year but didn’t have the experience compared to the Super Bowl champions. Year two of sophomore quarterback Jayden Daniels, defensive captain Bobby Wagner and head coach Dan Quinn should close the gap with their division rivals. Both teams will have their share of struggles after making the conference championship last season, but Philadelphia has more depth to counter serious contenders. Washington did extend franchise receiver Terry McLaurin Monday, so the offensive production shouldn’t drop or disappoint…unlike some teams in this article.

South: Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Another year, another season Tampa Bay’s offense will overwhelm opposing defenses.

While Carolina should continue building off of late 2024’s progress, New Orleans will be one of the NFL’s worst teams this year. Just like last year’s prediction, the division will be a two team race between Atlanta and Tampa Bay.

There is a lot to love with the Falcons. Michael Penix Jr. was fantastic and Atlanta barely missed the division title last year. Head coach Raheem Morris has a lot more to work with and knows which players to push for better production.

However, Tampa Bay stays ahead top to bottom.

Head coach Todd Bowles finds ways to get the best out of every Buccaneers player. Tampa has the superior offense, defense and special teams. The Buccaneers do have the harder schedule all but one month of the regular season, but that’s expected for one of the NFC’s best veteran teams. There’s also more game film of Penix Jr., so teams will find weaknesses this year. Count on Tampa Bay’s Bowles to find some.

North: Green Bay Packers, Detroit Lions

This will be the most important season of quarterback Jordan Love’s career.

Minnesota doesn’t inspire confidence with quarterbacks J.J. McCarthy and Carson Wentz behind center. Letting Sam Darnold walk in free agency was a big mistake. The Vikings could go from losing to two teams all of 2024, to a fall to the bottom of the north.

Chicago has a good case to sneak into the playoff discussion. The Bears could very well steal a playoff spot from a deserving contender like Atlanta or any of the west teams not in first place. Chicago’s first half of the season is more likely to be marred by mistakes, forcing them to play catch up and just miss out. Still, there should be a lot of optimism and good games for the Bears.

For the serious contenders, there are big expectations for Green Bay this year. Yes, wide receiver Christian Watson will be out most of the season with last year’s torn ACL, but it’s up to head coach Matt LaFleur and quarterback Jordan Love to show why they’re paid big money and get touted as offensive gurus and leaders. While the Packers have a brutal schedule, there are some weeks or months they could go on a hot run and leave the other three teams behind. If that happens, LaFleur and Love must stay determined and not hold back.

The biggest question for the NFC is how deadly Detroit’s offense will be without offensive coordinator Ben Johnson.

Despite drawing the NFL’s hardest and worst schedule, Detroit is in the conversation for the 2026 playoffs. The Lions will have nine road games, and all but one will be against playoff favorites. Detroit went undefeated on the road last year, but no one believes it can happen again this season. The Lions also lost their top coordinators to head coaching jobs in the offseason. There will be an obvious drop in offensive production, but both general manager Brad Holmes’ bullseye drafting and nearly the whole defense returning from injured reserve will keep Detroit in the playoff conversation all year. Don’t be surprised if the Lions follow the old, Tom Coughlin-led New York Giants route and get hot the second half of the season. Should that happen, there might not be a team that could stop Detroit from going all the way.

West: Los Angeles Rams, Seattle Seahawks

It should be another great season for Rams running back Kyren Williams (23).

Easily the hardest division to decide which teams make the playoffs, the west could have just one team (the division winner) or three teams play in the postseason. All but one made necessary roster changes and all coaches have evolved in their schemes. It also helps the west that all four teams have some of, if not the easiest schedules this season. It will be disappointing if somehow only one of the four teams makes the playoffs.

San Francisco is probably the weakest due to their roster turnover, lack of offensive talent and lack of depth on the defensive line. Arizona could have success, but questions remain about the offense and head coach Jonathan Gannon’s coaching after two inconsistent seasons.

While Los Angeles has some similar issues as the Cardinals, the differences are at head coach, quarterback and offensive line. The trio of Matthew Stafford, Jimmy Garoppolo and Stetson Bennett IV gives the Rams more room to adapt to any offensive system. General manager Les Snead again delivered in the draft and coach Sean McVay is a former Super Bowl champion who still finds ways to get the most out of unexpected and underrated players. The division race will be close, but Los Angeles gets the nod because they have better coaching and a more veteran roster than do the other three teams.

There’s irony in Sam Darnold going to Seattle after franchise star cornerback Devon Witherspoon spooked him last year.

Seattle can make it a close race all season. Mike MacDonald’s defense will be a top five unit in the league with star-studded names and depth on the defensive line and secondary. Offensive improvement starts with the offensive line. It appears general manager John Schneider doubled down on that in the draft, and with MacDonald’s philosophy of running the football to establish dominance and time of possession advantages, the Seahawks are poised to be a pain for more than just their division rivals.

Total 2024-2025 regular and postseason NFC picks: 8-5

2025 NFC Divisional Round Playoff Picks

The NFC wildcard weekend had everything audiences wanted. History was made with Washington’s first playoff win since 2005. Los Angeles won an emotional neutral location game last Monday night. The remaining four (the Detroit Lions had a week off) teams have a great shot at getting to both the conference championship and the Super Bowl. Even with an inexperienced Commanders team remaining, no team is an easy out. It’s time to analyze which two teams have the best chance at making the next round.

#6 Washington Commanders v. #1 Detroit Lions

The red-hot tight-end Sam LaPorta (89) and Detroit Lions offense returns to action after a week off.

The last time Washington won a playoff game, they played another road game in a loud, hostile atmosphere against the NFL’s best scoring offense led by a runningback with at least 20 touchdowns. Two decades and one more postseason win against the Buccaneers later, the Commanders get to play…another road game in a loud, hostile atmosphere against the NFL’s best scoring offense led by a runningback with at least 20 touchdowns. While it’s been a memorable year for Washington, they don’t have enough to stop a healthier and more determined Lions.

Prediction: Lions win 28-14

#4 Los Angeles Rams v. #2 Philadelphia Eagles

Philadelphia’s passing attack needs to improve against a rising Rams secondary. Wide receiver A.J. Brown should have a big game Sunday.

Another divisional round matchup that was featured on Sunday night football during the regular season, this re-match will be in Philadelphia instead of Los Angeles. Head coach Sean McVay has the Rams playing their best football since December while the Eagles passing game struggles.

Ironically, Philadelphia’s passing struggles shouldn’t be a problem in this matchup. They have the better offensive and defensive lines. The talent and depth showed when the Eagles throttled Los Angeles 37-20 in their regular season meeting. Quarterback Jalen Hurts should make more plays this weekend, but Philadelphia doesn’t need him to play his best yet.

Prediction: Eagles win 40-24

NFC wildcard weekend predictions record: 2-1

2025 NFC Wild Card Weekend Playoff Picks

The 2024-2025 NFL regular season is over. Seven teams in each conference have a chance to win the Vince Lombardi championship trophy. For those unfamiliar with the updated playoff format, an extra team was added. That means there’s one bye week for the top seeded team in each conference and a Monday night playoff game. Everyone wants to know which three teams in the NFC advance to the divisional round, so here are the best picks come Sunday.

#7 Green Bay Packers v. #2 Philadelphia Eagles

It’ll be a long day for Green Bay’s defense with a fully rested and healthy Saquon Barkley (26) ready to go.

Talk about a nightmare end to the regular season for Green Bay. The loss of Christian Watson to a non-contact knee injury will have Philadelphia’s defensive front feasting on the Packer offense. Runningback Josh Jacobs should soften some of the blows, but it’ll be a long day for quarterback Jordan Love. If it wasn’t lopsided enough, the Eagles will play all their rested offensive starters. A fresh Saquon Barkley will run rampant through a Packers defense that could be on the field most of the game.

Prediction: Eagles win 31-13

#6 Washington Commanders v. # #3 Tampa Bay Buccaneers

The last time an NFL team from Washington D.C. won a playoff game, it was in 2006 against the Chris Simms led Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Much has changed in 20 years, including the team favored to win. The Commanders had a great season under head coach Dan Quinn and rookie quarterback Jayden Daniels, but the Buccaneers are better. Head coach Todd Bowles has plenty of tricks, schemes and disguises he didn’t use in the week one matchup against Washington. He also has the defense to snuff out the Commanders run game.

On the flip side, Tampa’s offense is superior to Washington’s defense. The feel-good story for the Commanders is nice, but they aren’t the better and more disciplined team.

Prediction: Buccaneers win 31-13

#5 Minnesota Vikings v. #4 Los Angeles Rams

Despite a thorough Thursday night home win against Minnesota, most audiences believed the Vikings could’ve tied before an egregious, uncalled facemask against the Rams sealed the loss.

By far the best wildcard matchup in the conference, many think this will be closer and kinder for the road team. That’s hard to believe when Los Angeles dominated Minnesota at the line of scrimmage in their regular season matchup. In many ways, last weekend’s whooping by Detroit’s defense was similar to how the Rams shut down the Vikings in late October. Minnesota’s defense also struggled against veteran quarterback Matthew Stafford and the Los Angeles offense. Stafford exploited one-on-one coverage matchups against receivers Puka Nacua and Cooper Kupp. When Minnesota did counter the pass, runningback Kyren Williams averaged four yards a carry and wore out the Vikings defensive line.

Something else to watch is how Minnesota receiver Justin Jefferson plays against an aggressive defense. He was terrible in his last playoff performance (two years ago when the Vikings lost at home to the New York Giants) and was held to three catches for 54 yards in Minnesota’s most important game in the regular season. It’ll be interesting to see the takes on Jefferson if he disappears against a defense he had eight catches and 115 yards against almost three months ago.

Upset prediction of wildcard weekend: Rams win 35-24

2023 regular season playoff picks record: 4-3

NFL Week 14 Winners and Losers

The fourteenth week of the regular season eliminated teams from playoff contention and solidified division leaders. The postseason is a month away and most franchises are getting ready for a higher playoff seed or the offseason. Time to break down this weekends winners and losers.

Winners: Zach Charbonnet

Seattle went into Sunday without starting runningback Kenneth Walker III and played their second game against Arizona in three weeks. Not only did that put more pressure on starting quarterback Geno Smith to get creative and throw for more yards behind a young offensive line, it was a test for the runningbacks to get more positive yardage against a Cardinals defense that’s improved each week.

Charbonnet had his best game of the season and led Seattle to a 30-18 road win. He ran 22 times for 134 yards and two touchdowns. Charbonnet’s second score was a 51 yard run in the second quarter. That gave the Seahawks their first double digit lead of the afternoon.

One of the best parts of Zach Charbonnet’s breakout game was how he adapted. The offensive line did well and created open holes, but the backup runningback created a lot of problems for Arizona’s defensive front with his agility and creativity. Charbonnet’s big game led Seattle to their third divisional win of the season and shows coach Mike Macdonald can count on him in must-win games.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

I wrote on here back in August that Atlanta or Tampa Bay would win the NFC south in a close race. December would be the month we’d see which team pulls away. It’s safe to say after Sunday the Buccaneers should be the team that wins the south.

Tampa Bay rolled over Las Vegas in a 28-13 home win. Quarterback Baker Mayfield completed 18 of 29 passes for 295 yards, three touchdowns, two interceptions and a 101.9 quarterback rating. Mayfield started hot and played his best on the Buccaneers last scoring drive, throwing his third touchdown to receiver Jalen McMillan.

When Raiders kicker Daniel Carlson made a field goal to cut Tampa’s lead to four, the Buccaneers defense knocked out quarterback Aidan O’Connell and played tighter defense. Tykee Smith’s interception off an O’Connell pass late in the third quarter eliminated any chance of Vegas getting their third win of the year.

It got better for the Buccaneers when Minnesota pulled away in the second half versus the Falcons and won 42-21. Tampa Bay is now in sole possession of first place of the NFC south. Both rivals have one team with a winning record each on their schedules, but that one game advantage after yesterday gives the Buccaneers the edge.

Byron Murphy Jr.’s one handed interception against Kirk Cousins

Speaking of Minnesota, their win wasn’t the only impressive feat against Atlanta.

Cornerback Byron Murphy Jr. had a fabulous, one handed interception against Falcons quarterback Kirk Cousins with six minutes left in the fourth quarter. One would’ve thought he was the receiver if the uniforms weren’t different. Down 14, Atlanta had a chance to score and cut the Vikings lead to seven. That would’ve forced Minnesota to play smart and wear down Atlanta’s defense.

Murphy Jr’s sixth interception of the season sealed a Vikings win. He also downed the ball in the endzone, giving Minnesota enough room to start another scoring drive. That’s a play no one will forget anytime soon.

Losers: Will Levis

Tennessee had an opportunity to build offensive confidence, beat a division rival that’s almost quit the regular season, and give fans some hope. None of that happened in a home loss to Jacksonville.

Tennessee entered the fourth quarter against the Jaguars with six points. Starting quarterback Will Levis struggled against a defense that can’t stop deep-field threats and mobile quarterbacks. Levis excels in both areas, but went 19 of 32 for 168 yards.

The two most important drives of the game after Jacksonville took a four point lead turned into turnover on downs. Levis completed only short passes after Calvin Ridley’s 30 yard catch and run on the first play of the penultimate drive. His three straight, forced incompletions led to the Jaguars getting their third win of the season.

It’s been a wild year for Will Levis. His inability to get the Titans more wins due to his drop in play at serious moments validates the views he’s not a quarterback who can lead a franchise to at least a division title.

Buffalo Bills

Many sports pundits will harp on MVP front-runner Josh Allen’s amazing gamestats and laud Buffalo for only losing by two points to a playoff contender. The comeback and stats are ok, but losing on the road to a Rams team they were favored to beat makes the Bills one of Sundays biggest losers.

For one of the few times this season, Buffalo’s corners were outplayed as Los Angeles receivers Cooper Kupp and Puka Nacua did whatever they wanted for four quarters. The receiving duo combined for 17 catches, 254 yards and two touchdowns. When Kupp and Nacua weren’t shredding the Bills secondary, runningback Kyren Williams ran through Buffalo’s front seven with little resistance.

The loss is a step back for the Bills after they beat Kansas City and trailed them for the one seed by one loss. Buffalo is now the third seed in the AFC and would draw Baltimore on wildcard weekend if the standings stay the same. The Ravens pummeled the Bills early in the season and they have the better roster and coaching staff. There’s little chance Buffalo gets the one seed if Kansas City goes into Pittsburgh on Christmas and wins. That could hurt the heads of the same people going crazy over empty stats in a two point loss.

Thomas Brown’s coaching debut

What a circus in Chicago. Bears players and staff members wanted former coach Matt Eberflus fired after complaints of poor leadership and not wanting to win after a jaw-dropping Thanksgiving loss in Detroit. One would think that firing would’ve given Chicago a better chance to win, especially since their next opponent was a battered 49ers team on the road. Talk about wishful thinking.

It was a lopsided loss in San Francisco and the Bears didn’t score until the game was out of reach midway through the third quarter. Interim coach Thomas Brown had a week and a half to prepare Chicago against a depleted 49ers roster and a head coach that could be traded next year. At one point in the first half, San Francisco had 310 yards on offense while the Bears had two. The score made people wonder if the 49ers All-Pro offense was fully healthy.

There’s one month of Chicago football left and that might be too long for any serious fan. Brown has four games left to show why he can be a head coach. Unfortunately they’re all against playoff favorites, (three are against division rivals). It’s also possible Chicago considers another full roster rebuild if things look worse by January.

NFL Week Six Winners and Losers

Week six was full of eye-opening play and revealed who is closer to the playoffs. On the opposite end, some teams are close to preparing for the offseason. Time to break down the weekends winners and losers.

Winners: Tampa Bay Buccaneers

It’s been a hard, emotional week for anyone affiliated with the Tampa area. While they weren’t at home yesterday, the Buccaneers played to keep the divisional tie with Atlanta and for hometown pride.

Tampa Bay started hot with a 17 point first quarter. Starting quarterback Baker Mayfield threw his first of two touchdowns to Chris Godwin for an early lead. Less than two minutes later, safety Antoine Winfield Jr. recovered a Chris Olave fumble and returned it 58 yards for another touchdown.

New Orleans took the lead after a 27 point second quarter, but the Buccaneers got the lead back in the third with Godwin’s second score of the game. Tampa’s offense had a three touchdown, 20 point fourth quarter while the defense shut out the Saints offense in the second half.

The Buccaneers had to rebound after a wild, Thursday night loss almost two weeks ago. A strong second half against another divisional rival was important to stay in their first place tie with Atlanta. Tampa Bay’s schedule gets harder and they have to win more divisional games by playing well on all sides of the ball. That’s why the road win in New Orleans was important for the Buccaneers playoff chances.

Joe Flacco

What a wild chapter in Colts backup quarterback Joe Flacco’s career. He’s led Indianapolis to two wins in their last three games after sophomore starter Anthony Richardson’s been out with an oblique injury.

The Colts played a close game to divisional rival Tennessee. Late in the third quarter, Titans runningback Tony Pollard gave Tennessee the lead after a 23 yard touchdown run. Joe Flacco led a scoring drive the next possession and Indianapolis cut the deficit by four. Halfway through the quarter, the former Super Bowl champion quarterback threw the eventual game winning touchdown to Michael Pittman Jr. The Colts struggled last month to score in the fourth quarter of close games. The veteran quarterback completed a comeback win the second Sunday of October.

It’s hard to admit, but Indianapolis is a playoff contending team when Flacco’s under center. Receivers Pittman Jr., Josh Downs and Mo Alie-Cox play harder and run better routes when he leads the offense. Joe Flacco’s performances give the Colts a hard choice in who starts at quarterback when Richardson’s fully healthy.

Detroit Lions offense

The last game Detroit played before Sunday was a shootout home win over Seattle without an incomplete pass. What the Lions offense did Sunday against the Cowboys was almost better.

Detroit didn’t punt once in a dominant road win in Dallas. Quarterback Jared Goff wasn’t perfect (unlike his last Monday night performance), but he completed 18 of 25 passes for 315 yards, three touchdowns and a 153.8 passer rating. Goff was rewarded with rest late in the game as the Lions led by 38 points.

While Detroit’s passing attack shredded the Cowboys secondary, the runningback tandem of David Montgomery and Jahmyr Gibbs combined for 24 touches, 143 yards and two touchdowns. Montgomery and Gibbs cut through the Dallas front seven for at least five yards a carry.

Offensive coordinator Ben Johnson’s creativity was the highlight of the game. Goff threw a flea flicker touchdown to tight-end Sam LaPorta early in the second quarter. Starting right tackle Penei Sewell would’ve had his first career touchdown if it wasn’t for two offensive linemen drawing an illegal downfield penalty (offensive linemen can’t go past one yard of the line of scrimmage unless the ball-carrier is further ahead). Left tackle Taylor Decker almost caught a few passes. Backup tackle Dan Skipper lined up as a wide receiver against the Cowboys secondary. Detroit preferred turning the ball over on downs late in the game than punting it back to Dallas. The Lions let backups at multiple positions seal the win. No team has a hotter offense than Detroit. The NFC north might be the league’s best division, but it’ll be hard for any of the three teams to get an edge over the Lions offense.

Losers: Bo Nix

Denver’s rookie quarterback has improved since the first two weeks of the season, but there will be games where he both looks like a rookie and part of an offense needing more offensive talent.

The Broncos offense was smacked around by the Chargers defense yesterday. Midway through the third quarter, Nix completed four of 14 passes for 27 yards. Los Angeles had a 23 point shutout lead before the fourth quarter and only sacked Bo Nix twice.

Chargers defensive coordinator Jesse Minster had a great game plan to confuse the rookie quarterback, but Nix could’ve ran the ball more instead of throwing forced passes off his back foot. Head coach Sean Payton will emphasize that throughout the week.

Johnny Hekker’s 15 yard punt

This is the first and should be one of the few times a punt makes the losers section. If there was a play to summarize the Panthers season, it would be this one.

Late in the second quarter, former All-Pro punter Johnny Hekker punted back to Atlanta when defensive lineman Zach Harrison partially deflected it. The punt went 15 yards. Falcons cornerback Clark Phillips III returned it for 15 yards. However, Atlanta was gifted more yardage after a holding penalty was called on Carolina. The Falcons offensive possession started at the Panthers 27 yard line. As one can guess, Atlanta scored a touchdown their last possession of the first half.

The NFL’s primetime scheduling

At least a few times a year, the NFL decides not to flex their primetime games. This leads to audiences complaining about terrible teams and match-ups shown on national broadcast t.v.

Thankfully, most people weren’t subjected to the horror that is the Jacksonville Jaguars in the early morning. That was cancelled out by the Sunday night atrocity that is the Cincinnati Bengals and New York Giants. The Bengals offense and Giants defense are fun to watch, but Cincinnati’s defense and New York’s offense are awful. It’s hard to have a good game when at least one side of the ball stinks.

It didn’t matter which team won Sunday night, the league should’ve flexed for the Washington-Baltimore matchup. Unlike the teams in the night game, both the Ravens and Commanders are near the top in their divisions. The NFL pushed to flex primetime games earlier in the season and somehow doesn’t act on this change despite having the power. It would be fun if the league could somehow flex next week’s game or the week nine matchup with Jacksonville before news outlets complain.

Ben Johnson tells Seahawks, Commanders he’s staying with Lions

Seattle SeahawksNFLstnbreakingdetroit lions2+

And now at the 11th hour a mean, hard-breaking curveball has been thrown into mix of the Seahawks’ search for their next head caoch.

According to a report by Tom Pelissero at NFL network, Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson has informed both the Seahawks and the Commanders that he’s staying in Detroit.

#Lions OC Ben Johnson informed the #Seahawks and #Commanders that he’s staying in Detroit, per sources.

Johnson is still only 37 and will be a hot head coaching candidate again next year. But first, he wants to take another shot at bringing a Lombardi Trophy to Detroit. pic.twitter.com/lPg2Po33sx

— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) January 30, 2024

Johnson did the same thing last year, bowing out of the head coach race in order to stick with the Lions as OC. Nevertheless, this time around it comes as a shock as Johnson was the hottest head coach candidate still on the market. The most-recent reporting suggested that the Commanders were going all out to get him, but the Seahawks were still in the running.

Speaking of Seattle, today the team is interviewing Ravens defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald, whose chances of landing the head coach job just went up.

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Ranking all 32 NFL teams by cap space going into 2024

2024 NFC Conference Championship Playoff Pick

Three games remain. Four teams with two in each conference. The remaining two in the NFC are the north winning Detroit Lions and the west division and conference leading San Francisco 49ers. Both teams have potent offenses, underrated quarterbacks, hard-hitting defenses, and intelligent coaches. Time to determine who will advance to the Super Bowl.

#3 Detroit Lions v. #1 San Francisco 49ers

The last time the Lions played San Francisco, it was the first game Dan Campbell coached for the franchise. A lot has changed especially at quarterback for the 49ers.

Unlike the AFC matchup, both teams are dealing with injuries to important players. Detroit’s tight-end Sam LaPorta, center Frank Ragnow and middle linebacker Alex Anzalone are playing with some form of muscle injury or bone fracture. San Francisco’s most important player Deebo Samuel doesn’t have a hairline fracture in his shoulder, but he’s struggling with full movement.

Injuries aside, the winner of this conference championship must be more physical and own the time of possession each half. Detroit has to rely on their runningback tandem of David Montgomery and Jahmyr Gibbs to keep San Francisco’s front seven off-balance. Quarterback Jared Goff is winless in his last five games against the 49ers, but the Lions receiving core and offensive line are better than when these teams faced off week one in 2021.

San Francisco’s offense doesn’t have to rely as much on Samuel against the Aaron Glenn-led Lions defense. The 49ers offensive line is equipped to neutralize Detroit’s pass-rush. The Lions linebackers and whole secondary struggled to tackle receivers A.J. Brown and Mike Evans the last two games. Brandon Aiyuk, Christian McCaffrey, Jauan Jennings and George Kittle will be hard to tackle one-on-one. It’ll be a long day for Detroit’s defense.

Prediction: 49ers win the NFC championship 38-24 and advance to Super Bowl LVIII

NFC divisional round playoff picks record: 2-0

2024 NFC playoff picks record: 4-1

Seahawks-Cowboys Thursday night game sets record for Prime Video and NFL streaming

Associated Press

Mon, December 4, 2023 at 3:25 PM CST·1 min read

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Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Brandin Cooks (3) catches a pass for a first down as Seattle Seahawks safety Jamal Adams (33) defends in the first half of an NFL football game in Arlington, Texas, Thursday, Nov. 30, 2023. (AP Photo/Roger Steinman) (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Dallas Cowboys’ 41-35 victory over the Seattle Seahawks on Thursday night set a record as the most-streamed game in NFL history as well as setting a new mark as the most-watched game on Amazon Prime Video.

The previous standard for both was the Sept. 14 game between the Minnesota Vikings and Philadelphia Eagles.

According to Nielsen and Amazon, the game averaged 15.26 million on Prime Video and on local broadcast stations in Seattle and Dallas. That surpassed the 15.1 million that watched Vikings-Eagles.

The streaming-only number was 11.1 million on Prime Video, Twitch and NFL+. The old mark was 10.4 million.

Through 11 weeks, “Thursday Night Football” is averaging 12.58 million, a 29% increase over last season.