How to watch the AFC and NFC championship games

Kickoff time, TV channel, and streaming options: How to watch Chiefs-Ravens, Lions-49ers in the AFC and NFC championship games

We’ve got two pivotal matchups lined up for Sunday afternoon with the AFC and NFC championship games kicking off — and these are the most important games of the year, with the winners advancing to compete in Super Bowl LVIII at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas.

Hopefully the New Orleans Saints can make it back to this stage. In the meantime, take your pick of rooting interests; there are 17 former members of the black and gold suiting up for each of these four teams in the conference title games.

And here’s how you can tune in:

What: Kansas City Chiefs (13-6) at Baltimore Ravens (14-4)

Where: M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore

When: Sunday, Jan. 28 at 2:00 p.m. CT

TV channel: CBS

Streaming: FuboTV (try it for free), NFL+, YouTube TV, Paramount+

SiriusXM Radio: Channel 88 (National), 815 (Kansas City), 802 (Baltimore)

Betting line: Ravens -4.5 (-105)

And here’s the broadcast info for the NFC title game:

What: Detroit Lions (14-5) at San Francisco 49ers (13-5)

Where: Levi’s Stadium, Santa Clara, Calif.

When: Sunday, Jan. 28 at 5:30 p.m. CT

TV channel: FOX

Streaming: FuboTV (try it for free), NFL+, YouTube TV, FOX Sports app

SiriusXM Radio: Channel 88 (National), 810 (Detroit), 827 (San Francisco)

Betting line: 49ers -7 (-120)

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Jets Wire’s AFC and NFC Championship Game picks

Who are you taking to reach the Super Bowl?

The Jets may not be playing in Sunday’s AFC and NFC Championship Games, but we’ll still go ahead and take a shot and picking who will be playing in two weeks in Las Vegas at Super Bowl LVIII. This should be an exciting day of football with two really good games, so let’s get after it.

Behind Enemy Lines: Previewing the NFC Championship with Niners Wire

Behind Enemy Lines: Previewing the NFC Championship with Niners Wire and some great tidbits from Kyle Madson

It’s gameday. The Detroit Lions and San Francisco 49ers face off at 6:30 p.m. ET tonight with the NFC Championship and a trip to the Super Bowl on the line.

Both teams earned their way here with great seasons and impressive playoff wins. The Lions and 49ers haven’t played since the 2021 season, back when Detroit was a much different team and the 49ers had a different feel, too. To help get caught up on the top-seeded 49ers, I asked a few questions of my colleague Kyle Madson of Niners Wire.

He was gracious to shed some light on Brock Purdy, the 49ers defense, what worries him about the game, and a final score prediction.

Lions vs. 49ers: Last-minute thoughts and final score prediction

Lions vs. 49ers: Last-minute thoughts and final score prediction for the NFC Championship game

We’ve made it to the NFC Championship game! For just the second time in the Super Bowl era, the Detroit Lions are playing with a Super Bowl appearance on the line.

Sunday night’s game against the top-seeded 49ers in San Francisco figures to be a great one. As I anxiously mull about on Saturday night before an early-morning trip to the Senior Bowl in Mobile, here’s what I’m thinking about the matchup between the Lions and 49ers and how the game might play out.

Why I think the Lions will win

  • Jared Goff is playing some seriously inspired football. His confidence and mastery of the Lions offense is exemplary, and Goff’s play has risen when the stakes have gotten higher. He’s got big-game experience from his Rams days, and he won’t be fazed by playing a team he’s seen many times over the years.
  • The 49ers defensive front is designed to get pressure on the QB, not stop the run. Not that Javon Hargrave, Arik Armstead, Nick Bosa, et al, aren’t capable against the run, but it’s not their forte. David Montgomery and Jahmyr Gibbs have both been among the NFL leaders in yardage on first-down carries and red zone success rate. Moreover, the Niners aren’t used to a team sticking to the run even when San Francisco holds a lead. Detroit won’t abandon it and that can be very effective.
  • The Lions played a stylistically similar type of opponent last week, notably on defense. Tampa Bay and San Francisco do a lot of the same things defensively from the same base formations. The Lions won’t have to adjust the game plan of attack to accommodate a divergent style of defense. Meanwhile, the 49ers defense faced the Packers, who do a lot more deep throwing and quarterback movement than Detroit does. They’ll need to do more to adapt to the more diverse weaponry, power/gap run scheme and superior offensive line the Lions are bringing to the table.
  • Aidan Hutchinson is riding a heater, and he will primarily match up against 49ers right tackle Colton McKivitz. That’s the weakest right tackle in pass protection he’s faced in weeks. With Brock Purdy vulnerable to making mistakes under pressure, if Hutchinson stays hot, the Lions pass defense could get chances to make plays. They’ve been better at making those than the Packers defense that couldn’t corral Purdy’s mistakes last week.
  • Dan Campbell told his team in the locker room after last week’s win (paraphrasing here) that they’re too young to know they’re not supposed to keep winning. There’s no pressure on them. For the 49ers, there is considerable pressure to not lose the NFC Championship game for the third year in a row. Campbell knows how to coach that plucky underdog type of team, whereas I don’t trust Kyle Shanahan to wear the front-runner hat all that comfortably.

What worries me about the 49ers

  • They’re the No. 1 seed because they’re a very well-rounded team. Top five scoring offense. Top five scoring defense. They don’t need one unit to thrive to win. Detroit doesn’t need that either, but the 49ers have more margin for error built in.
  • Brock Purdy throws the most accurate deep ball (over 20 air yards) in the league, completing 70 percent of his deep downfield passes per SIS. He pulls that off in part because he’s got several targets who can get open deep, from Brandon Aiyuk to Deebo Samuel, George Kittle to Jauan Jennings. The Lions pass defense is infamously terrible at covering the deeper throws against inferior quarterbacks to Purdy with fewer quality options.
  • The injury situation on the Lions offensive line could be a lot worse, but it’s still suboptimal to face the 49ers rush without starting left guard Jonah Jackson and with Frank Ragnow nursing injuries to more body parts than a trainer learns exist on the first day of med school. As good as Goff, Amon-Ra St. Brown, Sam LaPorta and the run game are all playing, it all functions because the offensive line is great. Kayode Awosika was rough in pass protection in relief of Jackson last week, and there is zero depth behind anyone else. There could be some negative blocking impact from losing TE Brock Wright, too.
  • The fact I made it this far in talking about how good the 49ers are and didn’t even mention Christian McCaffrey, the NFL’s best all-around running back, is telling. Detroit’s decline in tackling of late must end, or else McCaffrey will prove why he deserves more MVP consideration.

Final score prediction

I think the 7-point line favoring the 49ers is way too high. I think the Lions would win about 46 of 100 matchups between these two current teams in San Francisco. Here’s hoping it’s one of the 46! But I can’t in good faith pick against the NFC’s top team at home with how good they are on both sides of the ball. 49ers 32, Lions 28.

Barry Sanders will be the honorary Lions captain vs. 49ers

Barry Sanders will be the honorary Lions captain vs. 49ers

The last time the Detroit Lions played for the NFC Championship, Barry Sanders was the team’s featured star. On Sunday, the Lions will once again play and advance to the Super Bowl, and Sanders will once again be with the team.

The Lions announced that Sanders will be the team’s honorary captain for Sunday’s NFC Championship game in San Francisco. The Hall of Fame running back has been a fixture with the Lions during this postseason run and will get to rep his team at the coin toss.

The last time the Lions made it this far, Sanders was in his third season and helped lead the team into the NFC Championship game after the 1991 season. Unfortunately, those Lions ran into a buzzsaw in the then-Redskins.

Hopefully Sanders can help get the Lions over the hump against the 49ers.

Lions elevate 2 from practice squad but Zach Ertz isn’t one of them

Lions elevate 2 from practice squad for the NFC Championship game but Zach Ertz isn’t one of them

The Detroit Lions elevated two players up from the practice squad to the active roster for Sunday’s playoff matchup with the 49ers. However, former Pro Bowl tight end Zach Ertz is not one of them.

Ertz was signed during the week to the practice squad after the Lions lost TE Brock Wright to injury. However, Ertz wasn’t able to convince the coaching staff that he’s ready for playoff action. He’s been sidelined since October with a leg injury that led to his departure from the Cardinals.

The Lions elevated FB Jason Cabinda and OL Michael Schofield. Cabinda played last week in the win over Tampa Bay. Schofield provides depth with LG Jonah Jackson ruled out with a knee injury.

All-Pro receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown reflects on the Detroit Lions’ rise to prominence

Amon-Ra St. Brown prepares for the biggest game of his young life.

The Detroit Lions will try to do something on Sunday they have never previously done. They will try to go to the Super Bowl. It has never happened in the previous 57 seasons of the Super Bowl era, but the Lions have a chance. Amon-Ra St. Brown and the rest of the Lions will go to Santa Clara to face the San Francisco 49ers in the NFC Championship Game. It is just the second time the Lions have managed to play for the NFC title. The first time came in the 1991 NFL season. The Lions went to Washington, D.C., to face the Redskins in January of 1992. They were wiped out by an elite Redskin team which won Super Bowl XXVI against the Buffalo Bills.

Amon-Ra St. Brown carries the banner for USC into the NFC title game. He recently appeared on The Rich Eisen Show to talk about his own success and the Lions’ rise to relevance in the NFL. USC fans will be cheering on the Lions on Sunday, primarily for St. Brown, but also because USC defensive line coach Shaun Nua developed Lion pass rusher Aidan Hutchinson. A big win for Hutchinson will help Nua on the recruiting trail.

Visit our friends at Fighting Irish Wire, Buffaloes Wire, and Ducks Wire.

Former Raiders on Conference Championship teams

Former Raiders on Conference Championship teams

Sunday four teams will vie to raise their respective trophies for each conference and head to the Super Bowl. Among the players who have a shot at a ring one suited up for the Raiders while their former team sits at home watching.

AFC Championship game

12pm (3pm ET)

Chiefs

DT Neil Farrell
S Tyree Gillespie (PS)

Ravens

WR Nelson Agholor
QB Josh Johnson*
OG John Simpson
CB Rock Ya-Sin
CB Daryl Worley (IR)
CB Trayvon Mullen (NFI)

NFC Championship game

3:30pm (6:30pm ET)

Lions

FB Jason Cabinda (PS)
DL Chris Smith (PS)

49ers

G Jon Feliciano
DE Clelin Ferrell (IR)
S Erik Harris (PS)
WR Willie Snead IV (PS)

*Raiders offseason roster or practice squad
Bold demotes former Raiders draft pick

Some of these players are starters while others won’t be active for the game. But if they contributed at all to the season for their team, they could get a ring for their efforts and be part of the celebration just the same.

And you just never know who will step up and be a factor either in this Sunday’s game or the Super Bowl in Las Vegas in two weeks.

How to buy San Francisco 49ers NFC Championship Game tickets

Want to see this weekend’s NFC Championship Game in person? Tickets for 49ers vs. Lions still remain for as little as $610

The San Francisco 49ers are headed to the NFC Championship Game.

The 49ers defeated the Green Bay Packers 24-21 with the help of a late 4th-quarter touchdown from Christian McCaffrey, punching their ticket to the NFC Championship Game.

San Francisco will host the Detroit Lions on Sunday. Jan. 28 at 6:30 p.m. EST.

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The 49ers opened as a big favorite against the Lions.

Unsurprisingly, 49ers’ NFC Championship Game tickets will be pricey. The cheapest ticket available at the time of publication was $610.

If you’re looking to sit in the lower bowl of the stadium, the cheapest lower level ticket available will cost you $848.

If you’re looking for the ultimate VIP experience, the most expensive NFC Championship ticket will only run you about $8,000.

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