Five NFL teams that could make the playoffs after postseason droughts in 2022

The Panthers, Jets, Lions, Colts, and Browns are Natalie Miller’s five NFL teams who might make the playoffs after postseason droughts in 2022.

We see it every NFL season, where multiple teams who failed to make the playoffs the year before make the leap the following season and make noise in the postseason chase. Whether it’s due to more team chemistry, solid additions in free agency, key coaching additions, or rookies contributing at a high level.

Let’s take a look at five teams who very well may be playing in the postseason in just a few months after playoff droughts in the 2022 season.

AFC Championship All-22: How Mike Hilton’s ‘creeper’ blitzes could upend Patrick Mahomes

Patrick Mahomes will kill you if you blitz him straight up. Here’s how the Bengals make their blitzes hard to stop with creepers and simulated pressures.

In the modern NFL, championship-level defense is as much about deception as it is about execution. Whether it’s coverage switches on the back half, or all kinds of stunts and games at the line, defenses are more determined than ever to counter offenses that are more diverse than ever with looks that vary pre- and post-snap.

The ultimate goal is to tie pressure to coverage in seamless ways, so the opposing offense has no consistent answers to what you’re putting out there.

Simulated pressures and creepers are the order of the day as a result. Defenses have been exchanging coverage players and pressure players in both base looks and blitzes since the late 1960s, and through the years, zone blitzes and exchanges have made things more difficult for offenses.

Now, we have these concepts in more varied looks than ever before. Creepers, which put an off-ball defender in a position to pressure the quarterback as an on-ball defender drops into coverage, are one popular concept. Simulated pressures, where defenses show pressure from five or more defenders pre-snap, and then rush fewer and drop more defenders into coverage, are another.

If you want to read a more detailed analysis of how creepers and sims work, the great Cody Alexander has an outstanding piece here

As this applies to Sunday’s AFC Championship game between the Cincinnati Bengals and the Kansas City Chiefs, there is the reality of what generally happens to your defense when you blitz Patrick Mahomes, and the need to pressure him somewhat consistently.

When facing five or more pass-rushers in the 2022 season, Mahomes has completed 107 of 161 passes for 1,173 yards, 467 air yards, seven sacks, 76 pressures, and a passer rating of 117.8. Mahomes’ passer rating against the blitz is by far the NFL’s highest among anyone who’s been blitzed at least 100 times in the 2022 season, Jared Goff (!) ranks second at 105.7. Joe Burrow ranks third at 105.1, which is a heads-up to Kansas City’s defense. Mahomes’ EPA of 27.42 against the blitz this season is similarly preposterous.

However, we have discussed all the ways in which the Cincinnati Bengals have presented Patrick Mahomes with looks he did not expect and did not like, and varied pressure looks have been a big part of that equation in Cincinnati’s three-game winning streak, and you should expect cornerback Mike Hilton to be a major part of that equation in this AFC Championship game.

In Cincinnati’s 27-24 Week 13 win over the Chiefs, Hilton didn’t blitz much — he was primarily responsible for slot coverage. He took after Mahomes three times from the edge on what turned out to be run plays. The one time he got after Mahomes on a pass play, Mahomes tried to throw quick to the other side, the ball was deflected, and Hilton nearly ended up with the ball in his hands.

But in Cincinnati’s 27-10 thrashing of the Buffalo Bills in the divisional round, Bengals defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo made Josh Allen’s life absolutely miserable by sending cornerback Mike Hilton off the edge in coordinated sims and creepers. Hilton has blitzed off the edge on 93 snaps this season. He did so four times against the Bills, and nearly every Hilton blitz hit its mark.

All four of Hilton’s blitzes against the Bills on passing plays came in the fourth quarter, as Buffalo was down by that same 27-10 margin, and it was pretty easy to get that this was going to be in Allen’s hands. The first one came with 10:53 left in the game, and the Bills had first-and-10 from the Cincinnati 43-yard line. Hilton’s delayed pressure from the defensive left side forced Allen to huck the ball out of bounds.

“A contained blitz. I saw [left defensive end] Cam Sample go inside,” Hilton said of this play. “I knew Cam, with his leverage, was going to [funnel Allen] out to me. I tried not over pursue, stayed outside, contained and forced him to throw it. I stepped up in between Cam and the linemen. There was a lot of space between me outside, Cam inside and the defensive line pushing to me. There was still a lot of space between those two, but Cam did a good job forcing him out to me and I was there to get a pressure. That was the whole game plan. Keep him in the pocket. You know how he is outside the pocket.”

The second blitz, which came with 10:16 left in the game, was based on a similar concept — Sample turning right tackle Spencer Brown inside, and Hilton rushing to take advantage. This time, Hilton pressured Burrow from the pocket. The other difference on this play was that a defensive lineman — right end Trey Hendrickson — dropped into coverage.

Hilton’s third blitz came with 9:24 left in the third quarter. Now, Hilton was rushing off the defensive right side, and now, it was Hendrickson taking left tackle Dion Dawkins outside, and Hilton cleaning up in the empty space between Dawkins and left guard Rodger Saffold, who was busy occupying tackle B.J. Hill.

Hilton’s fourth and final blitz came with 1:59 left in the game, and the Bills in Total Desperation Mode, still down 27-10.

Blitzing Patrick Mahomes in a straight-up fashion is a recipe for defensive disaster. But the Bengals, especially with Mike Hilton as the blitzer, have enough ways to fool you with their pressure looks to make things more complicated for Mahomes than he would like, and you should expect to see more of that in Sunday’s game.

AFC Championship All-22: How the Bengals can beat the Chiefs

What do the Bengals need to do to beat the Chiefs again, besides show up and do what they did before? Doug Farrar has a few ideas.

Perhaps the best thing the Cincinnati Bengals can do to beat the Kansas City Chiefs in Sunday’s AFC Championship game is to… well, show up and do what they’ve done before. The Bengals have famously beaten the Chiefs in each of their last three matchups, and in each of those games, defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo’s halftime adjustments (which exist, no matter what Peyton Manning says) have made life pure hell for Patrick Mahomes.

Mahomes’ first-half/second-half and overtime splits in those three losses, including last season’s loss in last season’s AFC Championship game, could not be much more stark.

Mahomes in the first halves: 43 completions in 57 attempts (75.4%) for 503 yards (8.8 yards per attempt), 267 air yards (4.7 yards per attempt), six touchdowns, no interceptions, one sack, 19 pressures, and a passer rating of 136.8.

Mahomes in the second halves/OT: 25 completions in 44 attempts (56.8%) for 253 yards (5.8 yards per attempt), 129 air yards (2.9 air yards per attempt), no touchdowns,  two interceptions, five sacks, 20 pressures, and a passer rating of 54.5.

Anarumo will no doubt have all kinds of bear traps for Mahomes in Sunday’s game, and that process will be accentuated to a greater or lesser degree by how much mobility Mahomes has with the high ankle sprain he suffered in the divisional round against the Jacksonville Jaguars.

The Anarumo-Mahomes battle is the most obvious deciding tilt in this game. If the Bengals are to beat the Chiefs for the fourth straight time, and head to their second straight Super Bowl, they’ll also have to follow these particular bullet points.

(All advanced metrics courtesy of Football Outsiders, Sports Info Solutions, and Pro Football Focus unless otherwise indicated). 

AFC Championship All-22: How the Chiefs can beat the Bengals

If Patrick Mahomes wants to avoid more losses to the Bengals than he has nicknames, the Chiefs will have to do these things in the AFC Championship game.

When you visit Patrick Mahomes’ player page on Pro Football Reference, at least two things stand out. First, the man has a LOT of nicknames: Grim Reaper, Showtime, Magic Man, The Musician, Fatrick, The Gunslinger, and Mahomeboy. Second, the Kansas City Chiefs don’t have a losing record against many teams when Mahomes is on the field.

The most glaring example of a team that does seem to have Mr. Mahomes’ number, of course, is the Cincinnati Bengals. Mahomes and the Chiefs knocked Cincinnati around 45-10 in 2018, Mahomes’ first season as an NFL starter and his NFL campaign. Since then, it’s been nothing but disappointment. The Bengals beat Kansas City 34-31 in Week 17 of the 2021 regular season. They beat the Chiefs 27-24 in overtime of the 2021 AFC Championship to advance to Super Bowl LVI. They beat the Chiefs 27-24 in Week 13 of the 2022 season, and they have a chance to make it four in a row (probably by a field goal, if the past is prologue) in Sunday’s AFC Championship rematch.

As a result, the Chiefs are a home underdog in the postseason for the first time in Mahomes’ career.

“Yeah, we’ve obviously lost to this team three times in a row,” Mahomes said this week, when asked about that drought. “And we’ve had great football games against them, but they’ve been able to beat us situationally at the end of games. And so, how can we be better there? We know it’s going to be a close football game. Every team you play in this position is going to be a close football game. But how can we be better situationally that we go out there and that we’re able to execute on third down and the red zone and the end of games in order to win against a good football team?”

If the Chiefs want to avoid having more consecutive losses to the Bengals than Patrick Mahomes has nicknames, they’ll have to accomplish these things on Sunday.

(All advanced metrics courtesy of Football Outsiders, Sports Info Solutions, and Pro Football Focus unless otherwise indicated). 

NFC Championship: How the Eagles can challenge the 49ers’ defense with the run game

The Eagles’ run game against the 49ers’ defense? That’ll be a pivotal matchup in the NFC Championship game. Laurie Fitzpatrick has the tape.

The Philadelphia Eagles’ offense and the San Francisco 49ers’ defense will be an incredible matchup of physics.

P = F*v (Power equals Force times velocity)

The Eagles’ offense is pass-first, but there are a ton of run-pass options in there. The threat of the run-option is what can freeze a defense, and that half-second hesitation can make or break a play. That frozen moment in time is when the play is decided.

The Eagles’ offense thrives off a defense’s split-second decisions, and the 49ers defense rarely hesitate to give up big plays.

Let’s go to the film and diagnose how the Eagles will use their backfield against the 49ers’ dominant run defense.

Poll: Which team will win Super Bowl LVII?

Share your thoughts on which team will win Super Bowl LVII.

We want to hear from you! Sound-off and tell us which team you think will hoist the Lombardi Trophy following Super Bowl LVII.

The winner from our first poll — Buffalo — no longer is in the hunt for a championship, so let’s revisit the topic.

[polldaddy poll=11320466]

[lawrence-related id=474220]

4-Down Territory: Dak, Bills rebuild, best QB left, who goes to Super Bowl LVII?

On this week’s 4-Down Territory: Dak’s future, why the Bills need a rebuild, best QB left in the playoffs, and who goes to Super Bowl LVII.

Every week in “4-Down Territory,” Touchdown Wire’s Doug Farrar and Luke Easterling of Bucs Wire and Draft Wire go over the things you need to know about, and the things you need to watch, in the NFL right now. With the divisional round done, and Conference Championship Sunday just around the corner, there’s a lot to talk about!

00:00 – Are the Cowboys now stuck with an unsolvable problem at QB?

05:57 – Is it time to start wondering if the Bills’ window is starting to close?

11:09 – Which QB would you most want to tie your postseason fortunes to?

15:22 – Which two teams will make it to Super Bowl LVII?

You can watch this week’s episode of “4-Down Territory,” sponsored by KIA, right here.

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It’s past time for the Buffalo Bills to reconsider their offensive approach

The Buffalo Bills built their entire offense out of Josh Allen. It’s past time for them to reconsider that particular approach.

In the end, any team based primarily on the efforts of one player, no matter how great that player may be, is doomed.

The Buffalo Bills just found that out the hard way. While the Cincinnati Bengals, who beat the Bills 27-10 in the divisional round to advance to their second straight AFC Championship game, has built their team on both sides of the ball over time, Buffalo’s primary construct, with all due respect to a bunch of really good players on that roster, has been to put too much in the hands of quarterback Josh Allen, and assume that it will all work out.

The Bills team-built to a point to get to where they are, to be sure, but Allen has been in the crucible all year long, and against the Bengals, he simply ran out of gas. As big and strong and gifted as he is, and as much as he has put his own indelible stamp on the quarterback position in his five NFL campaigns, he was also trying to take the Bills to their first Super Bowl since the end of the 1993 season with an iffy-at-best offensive line, one star receiver in Stefon Diggs, and a multi-back run game that could never carry the load for any real stretch of time.

Allen is good, but he’s not that good. Nobody is. Even the greatest quarterbacks need help. Tom Brady spent a few years in the mid-2000s lost in the weeds with Deion Branch, Troy Brown, and Reche Caldwell as his primary targets. The New England Patriots got tired of it, grabbed Randy Moss and Wes Welker in the 2007 preseason, and put up one of the greatest single-season offensive performances in pro football history. Not that they won the Super Bowl in their nearly-undefeated 2007 season, but they were back in the hunt.

Right now, Allen has one gun with which to hunt. He has his Randy Moss in Diggs, some average-to-good receivers in Gabe Davis, Isaiah McKenzie, the recently re-signed Cole Beasley, and tight end Dawson Knox. an offensive line that isn’t a big help, and a three-pronged running back group in James Cook, Devin Singletary, and Nyheim Hines that doesn’t really scare anybody. The only Bills runner who strikes any fear in enemy defenses is Allen, which reinforces the overall point.

The Bills and Josh Allen must find the bridge between boom and bust

Buffalo’s wild-card win over the Miami Dolphins perfectly summarized the boom-or-bust nature of this offense. His 352 passing yards marked a career high — but so did his three turnovers and seven sacks. Buffalo pulled that win out, but it was much closer than people imagined it would be, especially after the Bills worked up a 17-0 second-quarter lead, and got out of there with a 34-31 squeaker.

Anybody who watched the Skylar Thompson-led Dolphins nearly pull off that particular upset had to have a suspicion that a Bengals team led by Joe Burrow, Burrow’s three-headed hellscape of receivers in Ja’Marr Chase, Tee Higgins, and Tyler Boyd, an offensive line that performed magnificently despite the absence of three starters due to injury, and the underrated efforts of running back Joe Mixon, could blow the Bills right out of their own stadium.

Which is exactly what happened. The Bengals bracketed Diggs, got after Allen over and over (one sack, but eight quarterback hits), and limited the Bills to 63 yards on 19 carries. Allen completed 25 of 42 passes for 265 yards, no touchdowns, one interception, and a lot of frustration.

Diggs’ frustration — he caught four passes on 10 targets for 35 yards in this game — was also evident.

What can the Bills do about it? Not a lot in the upcoming free agency period. Based on an estimated 2023 salary cap of $225 million (it may be more), Buffalo is more than $8 million over that number, and there aren’t a lot of obvious cuts to be made, because general manager Brandon Beane pushed contracts into the future, thinking that the window was now.

So, it’ll be up to the draft. The Bills would do well to get a legitimate running back like Texas’ Bijan Robinson or Alabama’s Jahmyr Gibbs. Maybe they go with the best possible option in a stacked receiver class in the later rounds, and they need at least one new offensive lineman to round it out.

It’s a lot to ask of the Bills, but the Bills have already and clearly asked too much of Josh Allen. Now, it’s time for everybody else to step up.

Bengals crush Bills to set up rematch with Chiefs in AFC Championship Game

The Bengals went to Buffalo and banished the Bills

The Cincinnati Bengals did more than neutralize the Buffalo Bills.

They crushed the AFC East champions, 27-10, on Sunday at Highmark Stadium to advance to the AFC Championship Game.

The Bengals will go to Arrowhead Stadium and face the Kansas City Chiefs on January 29 with a spot in the Super Bowl in the line.

That erased the possibility of a game at Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium between the Bills and Chiefs.

The streaking Bengals were not happy they were disrespected when it came to deciding whether they would be involved in the venue for the AFC Championship.

Joe Burrow threw for 242  yards and a pair of touchdowns. Joe Mixon ran for 105 yards and a score.

This was a thorough beatdown from start to finish, Cincinnati surged to a 14-0 lead in the first quarter and never was headed.

For Buffalo, it was a disappointing end to the season that started with the Bills as Super Bowl favorites.

Bills DB Damar Hamlin, who suffered a cardiac arrest on January 2 in a game against the Bengals, watched from a suite at Highmark Stadium.

 

 

Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni is fed up with DC Jonathan Gannon’s detractors

Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni is tired of local radio bashing defensive coordinator Jonathan Gannon, and he had a lot to say about it.

In the 2022 regular season, the Philadelphia Eagles finished sixth in Defensive DVOA, and first against the pass. They had a historic time in which four different players (Haason Reddick, Javon Hargrave, Josh Sweat, and Brandon Graham) had at least 11 sacks. Darius Slay and James Bradberry may have been the league’s best cornerback duo, and new additions like Reddick and C.J. Gardner-Johnson had (and are having) career years. And they completely decimated the New York Giants’ offense in Philly’s 38-7 divisional-round thrashing.

That would seem to point to the idea that Jonathan Gannon, who has run the Eagles’ defense over the last two seasons, it pretty good at his job. But as tends to be the case with sports radio in that particular environment, there are going to be inevitable detractors, no matter how well things are going.

After that Saturday playoff win, Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni took time to eviscerate those who would slander Gannon’s good name.

“Man, what did they score? Seven. Yeah, big time. Jonathan Gannon puts these guys in great positions. Obviously, we have great players. Sometimes I have to hear some things about Jonathan Gannon, and I don’t know if it’s you guys. Might be more other people. I won’t say names – [SportsRadio 94WIP Morning Show Host] Angelo [Cataldi] — right?

“But this guy is an unbelievable coordinator. The fact that he doesn’t get respect from our radio station blows my mind. It blows my mind. I know you work at the radio station too so I’m not going to say anything about you. It blows my mind.

“This guy is an incredible coordinator. People love to play for this guy. Listen, you want me to keep going?”

Gannon did recently complete an interview with the Houston Texans, so that could be a thing after the Eagles’ season ends… whenever it does.

Sirianni was then asked why he even pays attention to this stuff.

“[Senior Vice President, Communications] Bob [Lange] has to put me on to — the only reason I have to pay attention is because Bob does such a good job at his job that he preps me for questions that I have to answer,” Sirianni said. “So, every time I hear an answer about Jonathan Gannon I laugh to myself. As a matter of fact, coaches from other teams ask me, does Jonathan Gannon get crap here? I’m like, somehow, yeah. Like this guy is incredible.

“He’s going to be a head football coach in the National Football League because of what he does. This guy is a stud. He’s a stud. I can’t wait to talk to Angelo on Monday.”

After the Eagles’ divisional-round win, Sirianni will also be preparing his team for an NFC Championship game against the winner of today’s divisional game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Dallas Cowboys.