2021 NFL playoffs: How all 12 teams can win their wild-card games

With Super Wild-Card Weekend upcoming, Doug Farrar and Mark Schofield have detailed tape/stat breakdowns detailing how all 12 teams can win.

[mm-video type=video id=01fs7gafb19vgjfway20 playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01fs7gafb19vgjfway20/01fs7gafb19vgjfway20-82b3f67fa5a54b981e0c9594ebedd5db.jpg]

Starting on Saturday, we have quite the wild-card round to kick off the NFL playoffs.

The NFL expanded the playoffs last season for the first time since 1990, adding a third Wild Card team in each conference and creating “Super Wild Card Weekend”with three Wild Card games on Saturday and three games on Sunday.

With the addition of a Monday night game to the 2021 season slate, Super Wild Card Weekend will now have two Wild Card games on Saturday (4:30 PM and 8:15 PM ET), three on Sunday (1:00 PM, 4:30 PM, and 8:15 PM ET), and one on Monday (8:15 PM ET).

On Saturday, the Las Vegas Raiders play at the Cincinnati Bengals (NBC, Peacock, Universo, 4:30 PM ET) and the New England Patriots visit the Buffalo Bills (CBS, Paramount+, 8:15 PM ET).

On Sunday as the Philadelphia Eagles visit the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (FOX, FOX Deportes, 1:00 PM ET), the Dallas Cowboys welcome the San Francisco 49ers (CBS, Paramount+, Nickelodeon, Amazon Prime Video, 4:30 PM ET) and the Pittsburgh Steelers travel to face the Kansas City Chiefs (NBC, Peacock, Telemundo, 8:15 PM ET).

Super Wild Card Weekend concludes with the Arizona Cardinals visiting the Los Angeles Rams on Monday night (ESPN/ABC, ESPN2, ESPN+ ESPN Deportes, 8:15 PM ET).

At Touchdown Wire, we’ve got you covered with all the matchups. Using tape analysis and advanced metrics, Doug Farrar and Mark Schofield have put together pieces on how each of these 12 teams can advance to the divisional round.

Wild-card playoff preview: What the Eagles must to do beat the Buccaneers

If the Eagles are to unseat the defending champion Buccaneers in the wild-card round, they’ll have to do these three things.

When the Eagles came into their Week 6 Thursday night game with the Buccaneers, they were in trouble. There were serious questions about first-year head coach Nick Sirianni and defensive coordinator Jonathan Gannon, the offense with quarterback Jalen Hurts hadn’t figured itself out quite yet, and the 2-3 team did not have the look of a playoff entrant at all.

In the game itself, the Buccaneers proved to be the superior team — not a surprising result from the defending Super Bowl champs. Tom Brady and his crew put up a 28-7 third-quarter lead before the run-averse Eagles finally put things together and closed the gap to 28-22 with two Hurts rushing touchdowns.

Both Sirianni and Gannon seemed to grasp clues about their players that propelled them forward, and over time, the Eagles became a different team. This is now a run-heavy offense with great productivity and efficiency, which allows Hurts to develop as most second-year quarterbacks should — in a system where he doesn’t have to do everything, and with a defense that can get things done… to a point.

The Eagles bottomed out at 3-6 in Week 9 after a 27-24 loss to the Chargers, and they then rattled off six wins in their final right games to earn themselves a rematch with the champs.

Here’s how Sirianni’s team can create a different result this time around.

Wild-card playoff preview: What the Buccaneers must to do beat the Eagles

In the 2020 season, on their way to the second Super Bowl win in franchise history, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers had by far the league’s best injury luck. Regression hit the Bucs like the proverbial ton of bricks in their attempt to run it back – from …

In the 2020 season, on their way to the second Super Bowl win in franchise history, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers had by far the league’s best injury luck. Regression hit the Bucs like the proverbial ton of bricks in their attempt to run it back — from the receiver corps to the defensive line to the linebackers to the secondary (especially the secondary), head coach Bruce Arians and his guys have had a heck of a time fielding a competitive group at times.

And yet… the Bucs come into the 2021 wild-card round with a 13-4 record (two more games than they won in the 2020 regular season), Tom Brady ripping up the league at age 44, and some key players returning from injuries and COVID concerns. After all kinds of agita, the Bucs are in their best possible shape to climb the ladder once again. It’s not perfect, but it’s good enough.

In the wild-card round, the Bucs will face an Eagles team that looks radically different than it did in Week 6, when Tampa Bay overcame a furious second-half Philly comeback to emerge victorious, 28-22. The Bucs have won seven of their last eight games, and outside of a Saints team Brady and Co. just can’t seem to figure out, they’ve looked every bit a Super Bowl contender against most opponents — even with all the injuries, and Antonio Brown being, y’know, Antonio Brown.

But before we can crown the Bucs once again, they’ll have to get past these Eagles, who are quite a bit spicier than they were in the first half of the season.

Here’s how they can pull that off.

Film study: Why Joe Burrow, Bengals offense are peaking at right time

Touchdown Wire’s Laurie Fitzpatrick examines the film to see how the Bengals offense exploited the Chiefs’ press-man coverage.

The Cincinnati Bengals enjoyed a memorable win on Sunday, rallying from an early 14-point deficit to beat the mighty Kansas City Chiefs and clinch their first AFC North title since 2015.

After falling behind by two touchdowns, Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow and wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase hit the reset button with a 72-yard touchdown connection late in the first quarter. That was just the start, as the former LSU Tigers teammates connected for two more scores to help Cincinnati earn a landmark 34-31 victory.

Chase finished the game with 11 receptions for 266 yards, and Burrow totaled 446 yards and four touchdowns on 30-of-39 passing.

How did Burrow and Chase dissect the two-time defending AFC champions so effectively?

As it turns out, the Bengals didn’t have to draw up anything special on offense, because the Chiefs had one plan in mind — attack Burrow. But that strategy allowed the dangerous Chase to run wild through Kansas City’s defensive backfield.

Let’s dive into the film to see how the Bengals exploited the game plan.

• • •

One thing that makes this Bengals offense so special is their receivers’ ability to separate at the top of their routes.

Chase, at 6-foot, 201 pounds, isn’t one of the biggest receivers in the NFL, but he finished in the 90th percentile in all of his pro day drills — including the 20-yard shuttle, which measures quickness, change of direction and body control.

In the clip below, he showcases those exact skills. He separates at the top of his comeback route to get open underneath.

With the Chiefs running man-to-man press coverage all game, this gave the Bengals’ wideouts many opportunities to show their skills. Burrow wasn’t throwing amazing passes, but his receivers adjusted well mid-route, and they were meeting the ball at the highest point possible.

On Chase’s second touchdown of the day, the Bengals lined up just inside the red zone. With Chase on an island to the outside, Burrow showed why he can trust his rookie receiver to make the plays to take this offense to the next level.

Chase, shown at top of screen, is lined up against a press-coverage defender. Burrow noticed mid-route that the defender had a step on Chase, so instead of throwing the ball over the top, he threw it to the back shoulder. Chase then made a great adjustment to reel in the ball.

When the Chiefs switched out of man coverage into a two-high zone underneath, they got scorched.

In both of the plays in the clip below, the Bengals exploit the gaps within the Chiefs defense. On the first play, Chase is lined up on the inside running an out route, as the outside receiver runs his defender out of the play and opens the underneath route.

In the second clip, we see the same concept run for the offense. The defense then collapses on the underneath route to prevent another similar play with massive yards after the catch — but that left Chase wide open down the sideline for what turned out to be a 69-yard touchdown reception.

After the Chiefs tried their zone defense and got burned, they decided the best way to stop a moving train was to clog up the tracks. So they went back to the press-man coverage game plan, forcing the Bengals receivers to fight in order to get open.

That was the hill they died on, as Chase racked up his impressive numbers.

Even when Chase wasn’t getting the ball, the Chiefs defense still had to accommodate for him. That exposed them to screen passes, like in the clip below.

The Bengals offense did a great job spreading the ball around to other playmakers when the Chiefs tried to double- and triple-team Chase. Tee Higgins, Tyler Boyd and Joe Mixon all stepped up to make plays.

The high-powered Bengals rank third in the league in yards after catch, and Chase leads the league with 18.1 yards per reception (among players with at least 25 catches).

If Burrow continues to click this well with his receivers, the Bengals will be a tough out in the playoffs.

The Chiefs lived and died by their press-man coverage on Sunday while trying to attack a mediocre Bengals offensive line and pressure Burrow. Other AFC playoff teams should take note of the result.

Why the Browns’ offensive line was Baker Mayfield’s biggest problem against the Steelers

The Browns had a horrible outing against the Steelers. Blame an abysmal offensive line performance before you point fingers at Baker Mayfield.

When a quarterback has a disastrous game, the fault formula for that disaster is generally part quarterback, part receivers, and part offensive line. Football is the ultimate team sport, and no horrible outing is usually one person’s fault.

In the case of Baker Mayfield and the Cleveland Browns against the Pittsburgh Steelers on Monday night, it was everybody’s problem. In a 26-14 loss, Mayfield completed 16 passes on 38 attempts for 185 yards, two touchdowns, two interceptions, nine sacks, and a passer rating of 53.1. We’ve discussed at length all the issues with Cleveland’s offense this season, and generally speaking, we’ve let the offensive line off the hook. But we can’t do so in this case.

Yes, Mayfield had some errant throws. Yes, his receivers dropped passes. But the primary instigators of this particular offensive malady were the five guys up front. Steelers edge-monster T.J. Watt racked up four sacks, mostly against overwhelmed right tackle James Hudson, but Hudson wasn’t the only problem, and Mayfield brought that up after the game.

“I’m not going to get into too many details about that as a full season evaluation,” the quarterback said when asked about the round-robin at the right tackle position due to injury. “We’ve, obviously, been pretty banged up. I believe in James — I pray to God you guys don’t spin this into something where I’m criticizing James Hudson. That’s not what I’m doing. We’re talking about an All-Pro that he’s going up against and he hasn’t had very many starts. So I’m proud of James. He kept swinging, he kept fighting.

“Now, when it comes to, what we’ve had to deal with all season, there’s been a lot of ups and downs. You know, do I believe I can play better? Absolutely. Do I believe there’s better that we as an offense could have been put in that are better? Absolutely. There’s so many critiques throughout the year, if there wasn’t, we wouldn’t be sitting here at 7-9. So, it is what it is.”

Was Hudson a problem? Absolutely. Was he the only problem along the front five in this game? Absolutely not. Everybody on that line, including and especially guards Joel Bitonio and Wyatt Teller, who in most weeks could be called the NFL’s best guard duo, had games they’d like to forget.

We’re going to spend all kinds of time this offseason discussing Mayfield’s future, and whether he’s the best quarterback option for the Browns, but this whomping wasn’t nearly as much Mayfield’s fault as some might prefer to believe.

Three throws with Scho: Shoebox throws

Mark Schofield breaks down some of the best quarterback moments from Week 15 of the NFL season.

A moment that is seared into my mind comes courtesy of FOX broadcaster Gus Johnson, who has delivered numerous memorable moments through his career. It stems from a Big Ten Championship game between Michigan State and Iowa a few years back, that saw Connor Cook lead the Spartans on a game-winning drive in the closing moments.

During that drive, Cook hit on a seam route up the right hashmarks against a Cover-2 coverage from the Hawkeyes, with a defender playing the receiver with tight coverage. As Johnson exclaimed, Cook “threw it into a shoebox.”

In the years since, I have often worked that phrase into discussions of quarterback play, making sure to attribute Johnson’s flowery description in the process. Playing quarterback is damn hard, and when you can make those shoebox throws, you’re doing something special.

We see more than a few such throws in this week’s installment of Three Throws With Scho.

Has Taylor Heinicke done enough to be Washington’s quarterback of the future?

Touchdown Wire’s Laurie Fitzpatrick breaks down the film to analyze the skill set of Washington QB Taylor Heinicke.

The Washington Football Team is in an uncertain spot when it comes to their quarterback of the future.

Taylor Heinicke has shown some resilience this season. After taking over for the injured Ryan Fitzpatrick in a season-opening loss to the Chargers, Heinicke rallied a fourth-quarter comeback against the Giants. After a 2-2 start, Washington endured a four-game losing streak. Then, after the bye week, Washington went on a four-game winning streak.

It’s been an interesting but bumpy ride with Heinicke under center, and last week’s loss against the Dallas Cowboys may have confirmed one thing; it’s unlikely that he’s the future of the franchise, but he can certainly help his offense win and make a playoff run when his team is healthy.

When we go to the tape, Heinicke has showed positives throughout the season, but also some concerns.

After the bye week, Heinicke was looking to get his team back on track after four consecutive losses. Washington traveled to Tampa Bay to take on the Buccaneers, who were already 6-3 on the season, and Washington hadn’t beaten a team that was above .500 yet.

Washington’s defense held the Bucs to only 14 points and allowed only four third-down conversions, but what Heinicke did in the passing game was impressive as well. He finished 26 for 32 and had 256 yards through the air with one touchdown and a 110.4 quarterback rating.

Heinicke attacked the Buccaneers’ secondary and tore through their defense using play-action and pre-snap motion.

Heinicke has a receiver concept on the right side of the field with three defenders deep with man-match coverage underneath. The wide-out (top of clip) ran his cornerback out of the play, and this left the tight end one-on-one.

A few weeks later against the Los Angeles Raiders, another motion from the tight end identified zone coverage underneath with a safety over the top. With a concept route, post/corner, Heinicke only had to throw in the gap within the zone — which he did with ease.

When we go back to the Buccaneers game, we see that common theme between the motion and concepts which exploited one side of the defense. These throws get harder against Cover-3, as those gaps in the zones get smaller.

However, Heinicke has shown an ability to find openings in Cover-3 man under, Cover-1 zone under and Cover-3 zone under.

On the play below, Heinicke used motion to identify zone coverage. The play-action holds the safety, Jordan Whitehead, near the line of scrimmage, which leaves a little bit of space between the first and second level of the defense; Heinicke was lucky this one wasn’t picked off.

Per Sports Info Solutions, Heinicke with play-action this season is 106 of 146 for 1,188 yards, eight touchdowns, and no interceptions. Without play-action, it’s a different story, as he had completed 172 of 272 passesfor 1.743 yards, 11 touchdowns, and 12 interceptions.

When we move to last week’s game against the Cowboys, Dallas’ defense had seen Heinicke’s success against zone and play action, so they threw in some disguises post-snap to force Heinicke to go through all of his reads.

On this play, the linebacker dropped deep into coverage, taking away Heinicke’s initial reads in the middle of the field.

Instead of just remaining patient and throwing the crosser, as he wasn’t being pressured, Heinicke tried to check down, then scrambled when he realizes his back was covered as well.

When we go back to Week 5 against the Saints, New Orleans’ defense used that same tactic.

Play-action gave Heinicke time to read linebacker Demario Davis, but when Davis dropped back to pick up the receiver, who is attempting to split the deep safety, Heinicke needed to move to the next read. It was too late, and Heinicke took a sack. Dallas used this same tactic last week.

When Heinicke saw a dropping linebacker paired with a heavy pass rush, instead of settling for the shallow completion, he forced it deep.

Washington had to basically abandon play-action when they faced the Cowboys because of linebacker Micah Parsons’ 4.3 speed.

Not having the advantages of play-action really hindered Heinicke’s performance. He wasn’t settling for the shallow passes, continued to throw into triple coverage in the middle of the field. Opponents won’t continue to leave their corners on an island, and when they do, they will make sure they blitz to force him into bad decisions.

Heinicke is a capable system quarterback who can thrive in situations where his defense and rushing attack can help him win games. But unless he’s in a heavily-schemed offense, he’s unlikely to beat a team that he shouldn’t beat.

Just as long as Heinicke doesn’t turn the ball over, he puts the Washington Football Team in a decent position for playoffs; as they play only one team that is above .500 for the remainder of the season.

Beyond this season, Washington will have an interesting decision to make. Do they want to develop Taylor Heinicke as their quarterback of the future, or do they attempt to find a quarterback who is more scheme-transcendent?

Is the Saints defense Tom Brady’s new kryptonite?

Touchdown Wire’s Laurie Fitzpatrick breaks down the film to determine why Tom Brady has struggled against the Saints.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers will host the New Orleans Saints in one of the more intriguing games of Week 15 on Sunday night.

Since joining the Bucs last season, Tom Brady is 0-3 against the Saints. Have the Saints become Brady’s kryptonite, as the Giants seemingly were back when Brady was in New England?

The Bucs (10-3) are a 10½-point favorite over the Saints (6-7), according to Tipico Sportsbook, but it likely still will be a battle for Brady. Last season, Brady threw five interceptions in two games against the Saints. In the most recent Bucs-Saints matchup, back in Week 8, Brady threw four touchdown passes. But he also threw two interceptions (including a pick-six) as the Saints came out with the win, 36-27.

The Saints are looking to climb their way into wild-card position, but Friday they learned that head coach Sean Payton will miss Sunday’s game after testing positive for COVID-19.

However, the Saints defense will get a boost from the return of defensive end Cameron Jordan, who is back from the COVID-19/reserve list.

Brady praised the Saints defense when asked about the matchup.

“They’ve got a great, powerful front,” Brady told media on Thursday. “They’ve played together a long time. It’s been one of the top defenses in the league. [New Orleans defensive coordinator] Dennis Allen does a great job preparing those guys. They’re just a very fundamentally sound defense. They make you earn it.”

The Saints started 5-2 on the season before their defense was beset by injuries. They’ve lost five of six since that hot start.

New Orleans boasts a bend-but-don’t-break pass defense which ranks 18th in the NFL in passing yards allowed — but ranks seventh in touchdown passes allowed and eighth in completion percentage.

Marcus Williams is ranked as the fourth-best safety in the league by Pro Football Focus. As Williams patrols over the top and Marcus Davenport applies pressure on the edge, it likely will be up to inside linebacker Demario Davis to disrupt Brady.

If there is one thing Brady hates, it’s the inside pass rush. Back in Week 8, there were several key plays that showed how much it impacts Brady’s performance.

In the clip below, it’s first down and the Saints wanted to bring pressure. So they sent Davis up the middle one-on-one against the right guard. A late stunt from the backside of the play got into the face of Brady, who rushed the throw that led to an interception.

Although Davis was picked up by a blocker, key players on the defensive line forced double-teams. That allowed defensive tackle David Onyemata to get in Brady’s face up the middle and force him to get rid of the ball.

In the clip below, Davis burst through the line untouched, and Brady was fortunate to get rid of the ball.

Once Brady is feeling the blitz, the Buccaneers often try quick passes in hopes of getting yards after the catch to move the sticks.

Davis likely will have a big job this week. Back in Week 8, he covered the middle of the field and also was the main player expected to make reads on quick screens and quick outs with the responsibility to protect the line of scrimmage.

These quick outs have been key for the Buccaneers this season, but the Saints shut them down in the previous matchup.

In the clip below, the Saints’ defensive backs dropped back into zone coverage when the Buccaneers lined up with twin receivers on the outside. This is done so that rub routes by receivers aren’t as effective.

This is where it will be key for Saints defenders to make solo tackles on the outside.

Below, cornerback Marshon Lattimore shows how important that is with a third-down stop against Buccaneers wideout Chris Godwin.

In two games against the Saints last season, Brady only completed 60.8% of his passes for 6.05 yards per attempt. He threw for 375 yards and four touchdowns against them in Week 8 of this season, but he also tossed those two costly picks.

The Saints can take away key Buccaneers weapons if they are able to successfully follow a plan similar to what they used in Week 8. The keys this week for the Saints defense will be the inside rush by Davis, his ability to read quick passes on the outside, and Lattimore continuing to dominate on the outside.

If New Orleans can execute in those areas, the Saints have an opportunity to upset the mighty Bucs.

Film Room: Bills’ second-half adjustments almost worked against the Buccaneers

The Bills have struggled to stay consistent on offense throughout the season. Against the Buccaneers, it was a tale of two halves once again.

The Buffalo Bills looked like they were going to be on the losing end of a blowout on Sunday against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. At halftime, the score was 3-24 and in that entire first half, the Bills didn’t convert a single third down, (0-5). Coming into the game, the Bills ranked third in the NFL on third-down conversions.

So, it wasn’t a great sign that they weren’t able to sustain a drive for the first thirty minutes of the game. Their red-zone issues also contributed to the deficit, as they were 0-1 there, and settled for a field goal when the offense got all the way up to the Buccaneers’ three-yard line.

If we look at the stats in the first half, the Bills had 43 rushing yards, but none of those yards were by a running back in the backfield. This was the first time since 1991, where a team went an entire half without a single rushing attempt by a running back.

Were the Bills trying to make a statement after the Patriots game the week before? Or did they value the Bucs run defense a little too much, as they were second in the NFL in rushing yards allowed. 

Throughout the game, quarterback Josh Allen passed the ball on 11 out of 13 third downs, even when they saw a third-and-3 in the second quarter, they came out in an empty set.

That being said, what the Bills did in the second half to make a comeback and to take the game into overtime was nothing short of a miracle.

Lets go to the film to see what changed from the first to the second half.

To start the game, the Bills drew up some run plays for Josh Allen, but they weren’t successful because of the lack of variety from the backfield, its easy to stop a one-dimensional offense. As a defense, you can double team an assignment when there is zero threat from the other weapons.

In order to stop Allen from running it with his legs, inside linebacker Devin White remained a quarterback spy for the rest of the game. This would ultimately be used against them in the second half.

When it came to throwing the ball in the first half, Allen only had time for flat short yardage passes against the fierce pass rush of the Buccaneers. They often blitzed two extra players, bringing a total of six defenders, putting pressure on Allen. This led to three sacks, one tackle for loss, two quarterback hits and an interception all in the first half.

The Bills had to make some adjustments when the second half rolled around; they used that quarterback spy and nickel defense to their advantage. With more defensive backs, and an inside linebacker assigned to the quarterback, the run-game was sure to succeed.

On the Bills’ second drive in the second half, Devin Singletary saw his first carry, and it went for 29 yards.

With this run success, and the Buccaneers defense still in a 4-2-5 defensive look, the defense was forced to honor the misdirection, which then opened up the middle of the field.

With one linebacker as spy, the Bills noticed a hole in Tampa Bay’s middle defense, so they started running more run-pass-options. This allowed Allen to get rid of the ball quicker, or keep it if the read was there.

That was successful for the next two quarters of the game.

As the Bills closed the margin to only seven points, they marched down the field to get the ball out quick, not allowing that pressure to get to Allen.

With the RPO, the Bills finally found their success. This completely turned their offense around from the first to second half. The Bills didn’t allow a single sack, or tackle for loss.

In the end, the Buccaneers stopped running zone prevent, and went back to blitzing extra guys, but this time running press man-coverage on the outside. Each Bills receiver was locked up at the line of scrimmage and it was up to Allen to throw his targets open if he was able to get the ball out in time.

Ultimately, the Bills’ second half adjustments worked. Allen ended the game with 308 yards and two touchdowns through the air and ran for 109 yards and a touchdown; becoming the fourth quarterback in the league to throw for 300 plus yards and rush for 100 or more in the same game.

But in the end, when the Bucs went back to the plan from the beginning of the game, pressure the quarterback, stack the box and early take away the quarterback’s first read. This put the Bills back to squareone, as they only ran the ball one-time in overtime and through the air, only the flat or check-downs were open down field.

The Bills went three-and-out, as they weren’t able to move the ball which put it back into Tom Brady’s hands. Generally speaking, you don’t want that.

In the second half, the Bills saw success with the RPO but their lack of run-game creativity in the first half ultimately lost them the game. They will have a lot to prove in these remaining four games of the season. Other defenses may not find success running the same nickel look as the Buccaneers, but this is why the Bucs are the defending champions, they have the guys that can stop a top-five offense in the league.

How the Chiefs’ defense went from Legion of Whom? to Legion of Boom! overnight

The Chiefs went from having one of the NFL’s worst defenses to one of the NFL’s best literally overnight. How on earth did this happen?

Before 2021, the last team to hold its opponents to less than 10 points per game in four of five games was the 2014 Seahawks, in their third of four years leading the NFL in scoring defense — something no other team has done in the Super Bowl era.

Last Sunday, after holding the Raiders in a vise in a 48-9 beatdown, the 2021 Chiefs became the first team to accomplish that four-in-five stretch since the Legion of Boom pulled it off. Steve Spagnuolo’s defense held the Packers to seven points in Week 9, the Raiders to 14 points in Week 10, the Cowboys to nine points in Week 11, the Broncos to nine points in Week 13, and the Raiders to nine points in Week 14. Outside of the Broncos, that’s a bunch of generally high-powered offenses that turn very normal when they meet this defense.

Interestingly enough, the Chiefs’ defense bottomed out in the second half of the 2020 season, dropping from 14th to 29th in Defensive DVOA, and the uptick wasn’t nearly as significant in 2019, the team’s Super Bowl-winning season, when the defense moved from 16th to 11th. This season? The Chiefs ranked 28th in Defensive DVOA in Weeks 1-9, and only the Patriots have a better Defensive DVOA since Week 10. They’re third in Defensive DVOA behind the Patriots and Cowboys since Week 6, so this isn’t an in-season blip that can be ignored.

This is a new level of greatness for a defense that has been able to take risks because the Chiefs’ offense was so explosive. Which makes this turnaround even more impressive, because for the most part, the Chiefs’ offense has been anything but. That offense has seen a nice uptick from 11th to fourth in the second half of the 2021 season, but the second half of the season also includes a two-game stretch against the Cowboys and Broncos in which Patrick Mahomes failed to throw a touchdown pass. If the second half of the season didn’t also include a two-game roll against the Raiders in which Mahomes threw seven touchdown passes and no interceptions, it’s hard to say where the 9-4 Chiefs would be.

(Darren Yamashita-USA TODAY Sports)

Where the 9-4 Chiefs are right now is at the top of the AFC West, one game ahead of the Chargers, who they face this Thursday night. The Chargers beat the Chiefs, 30-24, in Week 3, but Justin Herbert and friends will face an entirely different threat this time around. That defense is the key to the team’s six-game winning streak after a 3-4 start, and it’s worth investigating what changed, and why this is no flash in the pan.

The Kansas City Chiefs are now led by their defense, as if 2021 wasn’t already weird enough.

How the heck did this happen?