NFC Playoff Picture: Seahawks still clinging to No. 6 seed

Seahawks still clinging to No. 6 seed in the NFC playoff race despite losing to the 49ers.

The Seahawks got pounded by the 49ers pretty bad on Thanksgiving. However, the good news is that they’re still in the same position as the week before in the playoff race. Thanks to Minnesota’s Monday night loss to the Bears, Seattle is still on pace for the No. 6 seed in the conference.

Here are the updated NFC standings going into Week 13.

1. Philadelphia Eagles (10-1)

2. San Francisco 49ers (8-3)

3. Detroit Lions (8-3)

4. Atlanta Falcons (5-6)

5. Dallas Cowboys (8-3)

6. Seattle Seahawks (6-5)

7. Minnesota Vikings (6-6)


8. Green Bay Packers (5-6)

9. Los Angeles Rams (5-6)

10. New Orleans Saints (5-6)

11. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (4-7)

12. New York Giants (4-8)

13. Chicago Bears (4-8)

14. Washington Commanders (4-8)

15. Arizona Cardinals (2-10)

16. Carolina Panthers (1-10)

More Seahawks Wire stories

Ranking all 32 QBs by EPA/play going into Week 13

Power Rankings: Seahawks sink to 16, Broncos at 9

NFL standings 2022: Jaguars now 2nd place in tightening AFC South

The Jaguars made things a little interesting in the AFC South with their 36-22 win.

The Jacksonville Jaguars are still in a precarious spot, but believe it or not, the team is in the hunt for a playoff spot in the middle of December.

With a 36-22 win over the Tennessee Titans in Week 14, the Jaguars moved up a spot in the AFC South and closed the gap some on the division leader. With four weeks left in the season, here are the AFC South standings:

  1. Tennessee Titans: 7-6
  2. Jacksonville Jaguars: 5-8
  3. Indianapolis Colts: 4-8-1
  4. Houston Texans: 1-11-1

The Colts dropped to third place during their Week 14 bye and the Texans lost by blowing a fourth quarter lead against the Dallas Cowboys.

Jacksonville will finish its regular season with a home game against the Titans, offering the opportunity for the Jaguars to get back another game and secure the tiebreaker with a season sweep. That leaves three weeks for the Jaguars to make up one game on the Titans and set up a Week 18 duel for the all marbles.

That’s the simple and likeliest path to the postseason for Jacksonville, although the team isn’t far from being in the wild card hunt. The race for those three spots looks like this after the 1 p.m. ET games Sunday:

  1. Cincinnati Bengals: 9-4
  2. Miami Dolphins: 8-4
  3. New York Jets: 7-6
  4. New England Patriots: 6-6
  5. Los Angeles Chargers: 6-6
  6. Jacksonville Jaguars: 5-8

The Jaguars already have a win over the Chargers and they have a Week 16 game against the Jets. While catching up to Cincinnati or Miami is probably a lost cause, Jacksonville could come out on top of a big logjam if it strings together wins and gets a little help.

But again, the clearest path to the playoffs is by continuing to track down the slumping Titans.

The WNBA’s playoff race is the most exciting thing in sports right now and you need to pay attention

The WNBA’s playoff race is absolutely insane right now and you need to watch it

Welcome to Layup Lines, our daily NBA newsletter where we’ll prep you for a tip-off of tonight’s action, from what to watch to bets to make. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox every afternoon.

What’s good, family. It’s Sykes here again with another edition of layup lines.

Before we get started, a quick word on our schedule. Starting next week we’ll be switching to a 3-day rotation on Monday, Wednesday and Friday instead of the regular 5 days. We’re trying something different while we’re in the swing of the NBA offseason. Let us know if you like the pacing!

Now, a quick word on the WNBA’s 6-team race for the last 3 seeds in the playoffs.

Take a look at the standings. The first five seeds are pretty much on lock. The Chicago Sky and the Las Vegas Aces have locked up the first 2 playoff seeds — it’s only a matter of what order they’ll come in.

Behind those two, you’ve got the Sun, Mystics and Storm comfortably ahead of the pack in the 3, 4 and 5 slots. Those teams are playoff locks. But underneath them? There’s absolute chaos ensuing.

There’s a 3.5 game gap between the Dallas Wings as the 6th seed and the Minnesota Lynx as the 11th seed. In between them, you’ve got the Mercury at 7 with a 13-18 record. The Liberty, Sparks and Dream are behind them all with a 12-18 record and the Lynx are sitting at 12-19.

Only 8 teams can make the postseason and there’s only between 4 to 6 games left in everybody’s season. Three of these teams will be heartbroken.

It might be the Phoenix, who was in the Finals last year and have the best point guard in the W in Skylar Diggins-Smith. It might be the Sparks with Nneka Ogwumike, who is an MVP candidate. It might be the Dream, who have one of the best rookies we’ve seen in years in Rhyne Howard. It could be the Liberty with Sabrina Ionescu and it could even be the Wings with the best young core in the W if they slip far enough.

This league, man. It’s as cutthroat as it gets. There’s so much talent to go around. Even teams with legends and All-Stars and future Hall of Famers on them aren’t safe.

That’s terrifying. It’ll be hard to put down money on any of this. But I’ll be watching every minute of it.

The Tip-Off

Some NBA goodness from around the USA TODAY Sports network.

(Photo by Cole Burston/Getty Images)

LeBron James is extension eligible starting on Thursday. The Lakers will almost certainly offer him one and he almost certainly isn’t signing it. It’s going to be a contract year for the King, which is always fun.

He has leverage and can control the Lakers’ offseason decisions moving forward. I wrote about exactly why he won’t sign the extension and why the Lakers — if things go SUPER left — might explore trading him.

“He wants two things: To play with his son and to play for a championship. To make the latter happen, James is keeping his finger pressed on the scale to push the Lakers into making moves. He wants a Russell Westbrook trade. And if it means sacrificing the Lakers’ last two future draft picks to get it done? He wants to do it.  He can force them into that corner by threatening to leave if they don’t. An extension destroys that leverage, which is why he won’t sign it.

But the Lakers still seem steadfast in their unwillingness to completely mortgage their future to grant LeBron’s wishes. So now, this is a pretty expensive game of chicken.”

They’re almost definitely not trading LeBron. But if they were going to? Those are the places they probably should call. Check it out.

One to Watch

(All odds via Tipico.)

Liberty (-6.5, -290) vs. Sparks (+225), O/U 163.5, 7 PM ET

Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-USA TODAY Sports

This game is interesting for all the reasons mentioned above here. The playoff implications in this one are huge. These two teams just played each other and the Liberty cleaned the Sparks out, 102-73. I don’t expect the result to be as drastic, but I do expect a win from the Liberty — especially with them being at home. I’ll take them -6.5.

Shootaround

— Hear Vin Scully call Kobe Bryant’s first pitch for the Dodgers and get in your feels

— Speaking of Scully, here are the best calls from the legend. No, it’s not basketball. But you’ll love it anyway.

— The Jaylen Brown-KD saga seems to be settling down in Boston.

— Ben Simmons and Doc Rivers seem to have really peaced things up between them.

That’s all, folks! Enjoy the basketball tonight.

Gannett may earn revenue from Tipico for audience referrals to betting services. Tipico has no influence over nor are any such revenues in any way dependent on or linked to the newsrooms or news coverage. See Tipico.com for Terms and Conditions. 21+ only. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER (NJ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO), 1-800-BETS-OFF (IA).

Sean Payton is a win away from being the Coach of the Year frontrunner

After a season full of adversity, Sean Payton should be a win away from being the Coach of the Year frontrunner, via @MaddyHudak_94:

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The New Orleans Saints have a storied history in battling adversity, but surmounting the 2021 NFL season might be head coach Sean Payton’s most remarkable feat yet. With all the team has endured as they enter the final week of the regular season, that they remain viable playoff contenders is astonishing. Quietly, Payton has had one of the most career-defining seasons of his tenure.

Losing your starting quarterback to a season-ending injury is typically the nail in the coffin for postseason aspirations. Even more so when the backup is recovering in concussion protocol. That’s without addressing the void that was always going to be impossible to fill; it was an uphill battle the moment Drew Brees suited up for his final season. Replacing a franchise quarterback who retires on his own terms is not without consequence for the team. Nor is it a process fit for a singular offseason. The quarterback battle that lasted all through training camp at times felt concerning. Others? A pointed exercise in due diligence. The question mark under center was always the paramount challenge – one certainly not solved nor aided by an injury carousel that saw New Orleans start four quarterbacks in one season.

The pandemic-afflicted salary cap and subsequent exodus of key depth players didn’t exactly help matters. Despite recording seven sacks in their Week 17 win over the Carolina Panthers, the Saints defensive line was a concern dating back to this summer; the first of several offseason blows was an unexpected six-game suspension for starting defensive tackle David Onyemata. That was hard to swallow following the departures of Trey Hendrickson, Sheldon Rankins, Malcolm Brown, and other key players in the trenches. Vacating about $100 million in cap space doesn’t happen by cutting fringe players. Key playmakers like Hendrickson, Rankins, Emmanuel Sanders, and Janoris Jenkins were always going to be casualties. It was the utter loss of foundation at nearly every unit that flew under the radar but had  a lasting effect.

Alvin Kamara has been the healthiest option in the backfield for New Orleans, and he’s missed four games. No one foresaw the crippling challenges along the offensive line. It’s hard to not think Latavius Murray would’ve not only been crucial on the depth chart, but invaluable in his blocking abilities. Something former Saints tight end Josh Hill was touted for – until he eventually retired over the offseason after following Dan Campbell to Detroit. The one stroke of luck the Saints have had was in re-signing Kwon Alexander, but the linebacker situation all summer was another ambiguity. Particularly when rookie Pete Werner missed a substantial portion of camp due to injury.

Perhaps the biggest unknown this past offseason was the status of Michael Thomas. Not exactly ideal to hold a quarterback competition and move on from a 15-year starter without the receiver who was the first look for every backup who played in relief for Brees over the past few seasons. As much as fans gripe about Jared Cook’s time in New Orleans, he was third in reception yards last season and led the team with 7 touchdowns. Emmanuel Sanders was second only to Alvin Kamara in both yards and receptions. To add insult to injury, Latavius Murray ranked sixth highest in team receptions last year, followed by Marquez Callaway and Deonte Harris – the de facto WR1 and WR2 this season.

A dominant discussion, validly so, has centered on the lack of attention paid to the receiver position. One might forget that all summer, potential disciplinary action from the NFL in the form of suspension loomed over Marshon Lattimore. Those felony charges would eventually be dropped, but there was concern that he could miss the start of the season; the spotlight on CB2 in the absence of Jenkins magnified tenfold. Then Patrick Robinson abruptly retired. Then Ken Crawley got injured. Justifiably, they prioritized cornerback accordingly. They just got lucky – or unlucky – that the acquisition of Bradley Roby was superfluous. That the Saints have started a third-round rookie cornerback who didn’t play a down last season and the transition has been seamless is criminally under-recognized.

Then Hurricane Ida made landfall back in August as a Category 4 storm and caused the team to abruptly evacuate to Dallas for a month. While their accommodations were certainly more satisfactory than at a college level, I was similarly displaced with the Tulane University football team as their sideline reporter. As told on the team’s experience by Amie Just of NOLA.com, much like Tulane players, the Saints were displaced into chaotic lodging with families and dogs with little to no notice. While Payton is no stranger to this situation, not one player remains from the 2006 season. It’s not exactly comparable, but it’s not an irrelevant factor. Especially amid a quarterback competition cut short by the cancelled final preseason game.

That was all before the season started. Since then, New Orleans broke the NFL record for fielding the most starters in a single season, saw their top-flight offensive line implode with the starting five playing a total of 22 snaps together this season, had to start a fourth-round developmental quarterback in a playoff-altering game with 22 players sidelined by COVID-19, learned Michael Thomas would be out for the season, and lost their starting quarterback in Week 8 to an injury.

Here’s the kicker: losing Wil Lutz might’ve been the biggest blow of all. One might remember Brees’ late-game heroics in thrilling victories over the last few seasons, but Lutz was often the player in the clutch. In 2018, the Saints went 13-3. They narrowly beat the Browns 21-18 with Zane Gonzalez missing two field goals for Cleveland and Lutz kicking a 44-yard field goal with 21 seconds left. In their 43-37 overtime win against the Falcons, Lutz’s 13 points were the only reason they got there. They beat Baltimore 24-23 with Lutz scoring 6 points – and Ravens kicker Justin Tucker missing the first extra point of his NFL career. In a rare game with no touchdowns from Brees, Lutz nailed two field goals to win 12-9 over the Panthers. When they beat the Steelers 31-28 to clinch home field advantage for the playoffs, it came on a final-minute touchdown after Lutz recorded 7 points. That 13-3 record easily flips to 8-8, where the Saints miss the playoffs conceding the tiebreaker to Atlanta.

For the sake of brevity, there were 5 similar wins in the 2019 season in which Lutz was crucial – including a 58-yard field goal as time expired against the Texans to win the first season opener for the team since 2013, and the 12-10 victory against Dallas scored entirely by Lutz was the first win since 1998 to feature no touchdowns. That record equally flips to 8-8. There were three wins last season, two in overtime, that played out similar, and their three-point loss to Philadelphia with Taysom Hill under center saw Lutz miss two field goals. The final years of Brees’ career went 13-3 in consecutive seasons and ended with 12-4. Hard to imagine his legacy would remain unaltered by those three seasons swinging back to the years of 7-9.

The kicker position all season has been as unstable as the receiving group – and just as if not more costly. New Orleans lost back-to-back games to the Falcons and Titans, both narrow two-point victories. The team has a separate two-point conversion problem, but the latter game in Tennessee was decided by then-kicker Brian Johnson missing both extra points. A trio of Johnson, Aldrick Rosas, and Cody Parkey missed a combined three field goals and five extra points this season. Things have since stabilized with Brett Maher, who was actually the first kicker to be signed over the summer but waived with an injury settlement. He singlehandedly defeated Tampa Bay with all 9 points scored on field goals, and his four field goals against Carolina gave the Saints a crucial lead to hold on until the late touchdown.

New Orleans is not the first, nor will it be the last, team to be decimated by injury. They’re likely the only team who’s dealt with a multitude of natural disasters. The wide receiver room is the only unit the team can be faulted for; one can only be so culpable in not leaving any leeway for an unprecedented pandemic. They’re not the first team to traverse the pitfalls of replacing a longtime franchise quarterback.

But they may be the first to start four quarterbacks the immediate season following after losing their starter in Week 8; behind an injury-riddled offensive line missing both starting tackles and left guard; while battling extraneous factors like Covid-19 and its ripple effect on salary cap and roster; be without their top receiver for the second consecutive season; endure a five-game losing streak with their QB3; and yet, have a strong possibility of making the playoffs with a final win against the Falcons.

For perspective, the Denver Broncos went 6-10 following Elway’s retirement in 1999 and didn’t win another playoff game until 2005. Steve Young retired unexpectedly following a concussion in 1999; the 49ers went 6-10 in 2000 and struggled for years until Jim Harbaugh arrived. Troy Aikman had a great supporting cast and retired on top in 2000.  Dallas went 5-11 the next year and floundered until Tony Romo. After going 6-10 following Jim Kelly’s retirement in 1996, the Buffalo Bills had a 17-year postseason drought until Josh Allen showed up in 2018.

In order for New Orleans to make the postseason, it’s as simple as beating Atlanta and hoping the Los Angeles Rams don’t lose a sixth straight game to San Francisco. There’s a world where those back-to-back two-point losses swing the team’s record from 8-8 to 10-6, potentially an 11th win if they were able to field even half the 22 players out against Miami. Frankly, whether they make the playoffs feels almost irrelevant in light of circumstances. All things considered, the Saints should be falling apart at the seams. The primary if not paramount factor is their head coach and organizational culture.

As the season winds down, annual awards for individual accolades take center stage – and last bids for Coach of the Year. The frontrunners are rather obvious, as tends to be the case, and the award is often decided by a trifecta of free agency, healthy rosters, and luck. A coach hasn’t won it with a losing record since Jimmy Johnson in 1990 with Dallas, and no one since had more than 6 losses. But there’s a common thread in those victors: overcoming circumstances and adversity. Much like Payton when he won the award in the 2006 season after Hurricane Katrina. Unless you’re the Rams, there’s no quick fixes in football – and their case study in ignoring the draft remains to be seen as a viable strategy. But after the past two seasons dictated by a life-altering pandemic and consequently affecting team abilities to draft, at what point does perseverance through adversity take precedence? At what point is the value of coaching highest when the going is chaotic and rough?

People might validly point to the five-game losing streak, failing to anoint Brees’ successor before his retirement, inattention to receiving depth, and no postseason guarantee as immediate disqualifiers; dominance and wins more often than not rewarded. If you ask the players, a great coach is almost everything but records and playoff berths. Eight players (including Demario Davis) were asked the three most important qualities in an NFL head coach amidst the disruption of the 2020 season. Of the 24 traits listed, only three pointed to scheme, detailed in the playbook, and knowledge of the game. Five valued listening, flexibility and communication, three named connectivity and gaining player trust, four pointed to honesty, three highlighted leadership, and the rest emphasized consistency, sound competitive spirit, organization and staff assembly, philosophy, and will to win.

Barely if any mention of the Xs and Os, and nearly all value placed on leadership, organizational function and philosophy, a sense of stability, communication, competitiveness, and a will to win that starts at the top. While undoubtedly correlated with winning records, coaching is most meaningful between the lines and within a strong team culture. There are several other coaches who have surmounted similar blows like Mike Vrabel on the Tennessee Titans, impressive organizational turnarounds by the likes of Nick Sirianni of the Eagles, Zac Taylor in Cincinnati, and Kliff Kingsbury with the Cardinals. There’s also the case of the Houston Texans. While one player shy of the record set by New Orleans, Houston has started 56 players and comparatively are 4-12; as did the 2019 Miami Dolphins who fared 5-11. Besides Baltimore, teams that have played three quarterbacks this season have all lost 10 or more games. Not one of those teams was moving on from a 15-year starter, and not one reached four quarterbacks.

Barring the Titans this season and 49ers last year, it’s hard to think of any recent team more decimated by injuries to key players of this magnitude, let alone start four kickers and four quarterbacks. Yet, Sean Payton’s name is rarely even mentioned in passing in Coach of the Year discussions. Some circumstances are controllable, but to mitigate an avalanche of staggering uncontrollable factors with competitiveness, consistency and culture should be what dictates greatness. There’s little to no shot of the underdog winning the highest award, much like Wild Card teams rarely reach the Super Bowl. But if the Saints can persevere and win out, Sean Payton has a uniquely compelling case for Coach of the Year.

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Browns Playoff Hopes: Week 15 games that could be of impact

Six more games this week that Cleveland will have a specific rooting interest in related to their playoff chances:

The Cleveland Browns Week 15 game is postponed and still very little information about how many players might get activated off the reserve/COVID-19 list for the game. No matter what, Cleveland needs a victory over the Las Vegas Raiders especially now that their Christmas Day matchup with Green Bay got harder on a short week.

The Browns also would like to see help from a number of teams throughout Week 15 to make their chase for a playoff spot easier. That started on Thursday Night Football with the Los Angeles Chargers losing.

One down, six to go.

Here are the rest of the games and Cleveland’s desired outcome:

Saturday Night

Patriots vs Colts

At 9-4 and a likely division champion, the Browns are more interested in seeing New England keep up their winning ways Saturday. Indianapolis currently holds the tiebreaker over Cleveland so a loss would help knock them behind the Browns and impact their conference record, a key tiebreaker.

Sunday 1 PM

Panthers vs Bills

While unlikely, Cleveland is rooting for Carolina to beat Buffalo Sunday. The Bills have been hot and cold all year but are likely to have a bounce-back this week against a weak Panthers team. Like the Colts, a loss would drop the Bills behind the Browns but not impact the tiebreaker due to them playing an NFC team.

Jets vs Dolphins

Perhaps not a big one now but given the unstable nature of the league could be a big one down the road. Miami sits one game out of the playoffs, as well as some tiebreakers, so a loss would all but eliminate them from the discussion.

Titans vs Steelers

Another game where the division leader is the team the Browns are rooting for. In this case, Cleveland wants Tennesee to come out on top and, almost, bury Pittsburgh’s playoff hopes.

Sunday 4:05 PM

Broncos vs Bengals

Two 7-6 teams that currently lose tiebreakers to the Browns, Cleveland is rooting for Denver to knock of Cincinnati to make the route to the AFC North easier. Cleveland will also always win the tiebreaker against the Broncos but a late-season loss to the Bengals could change their tiebreaker advantage.

Packers vs Ravens

This one is pretty easy and pretty big for the Browns. As we shared earlier this week, a Baltimore loss to the Green Bay Packers and a Cleveland victory in Week 15 puts the Browns at the top of the AFC North. While unlikely because they are currently tied with two other teams for the top seed in the NFC, a Packers win could also give them less motivation against Cleveland on Christmas Day.

2020 updated NFL draft order: Cowboys’ tale of 2 paths over final 3 weeks

The Cowboys will likely not make noise in the playoffs if they make it, but there’s ALWAYS a chance and tomorrow isn’t promised.

The Dallas Cowboys are either going to be NFC East champions, or one of the teams in the bottom half of the NFL. Which one will be determined over the course of the last three weeks of this topsy-turvy 2019 NFL season. Sitting with a 6-7 record courtesy of four wins against their miserable division, the Dallas Cowboys are tied with the Philadelphia Eagles.

By virtue of their head-to-head victory earlier in the year, Dallas could conceivably win the division with just seven wins. In fact, Dallas could lose this week against the Los Angeles Rams, the Week 16 tilt against the Eagles and still win the division if they beat the Washington Redskins in Week 17 and the Eagles lose their two non-Cowboys games.

With such a wide range of possible season-record outcomes, Dallas in turn has a wide range of draft order scenarios as well. The 20 teams which do not qualify for the playoffs are put in order from worst record to best, with any similar record ties broken by each team’s strength of schedule. The worst a strength of schedule, the better the draft slot. Each playoff team is sorted by round they lose, and any ties there are sorted by winning percentage, and then again by strength of schedule.

Entering Week 15, by virtue of their tiebreaker advantage, Dallas has the NFC East lead and therefore is drafting No. 21.

The Eagles, sitting at 6-7 with an opponents SOS of .582, are at No. 13.

If everything else in the league plays out as it currently stands (it won’t) but the Eagles overtake the Cowboys, that’s the spot in the draft order Dallas would fall into.

The tiebreaker difference is a matter of 8 draft slots, and theoretically the difference between grabbing a player with a first-round grade and a second; most drafts contain 18-20 prospects who are graded as first-round talents even though there are 32 picks in the round.

To make matters more interesting, there are four teams with five wins sitting right atop the Eagles’ current spot. It’s not out of the question if one of the two NFC East teams loses out, they then jump those clubs and could move all the way up to 8th or 9th in the 2020 NFL draft order.

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NFC Playoff race heading into Week 11

The NFC Playoff race doesn’t have much drama with the wildcard. The teams that don’t win the North and West will most likely make it to the tournament. There are a ton of interesting divisional races. (Photo by Richard Rodriguez/Getty Images) NFC …

The NFC Playoff race doesn’t have much drama with the wildcard. The teams that don’t win the North and West will most likely make it to the tournament. There are a ton of interesting divisional races.

(Photo by Richard Rodriguez/Getty Images)

NFC East

Dallas Cowboys 5-4

Dallas blew a winnable game against Minnesota, but that’s what the Cowboys have been doing all year. Blowing winnable games. Now they are in a tight race with the Eagles. They could shoot for a wild card if they slip up in the NFC East, but the Vikings now have the tiebreaker and it will be difficult to catch the loser of the NFC West race between the Seahawks and Niners. The Eagles game in Week 16 could decide the division.

Remaining Games: @Lions, @Patriots, Bills, @Bears, Rams, @Eagles, Redskins

Philadelphia Eagles 5-4

The Eagles need to split their next two games at worse. If they don’t all isn’t lost though. Their schedule is pretty easy after Week 12. Those NFC matchups outside of the Cowboys game are cakewalks. Their record looks like 10-6 at the worst.

Remaining Games: Patriots, Seahawks, @Dolphins, Giants, @Redskins, Cowboys, @Giants

AFC Playoff race heading into Week 11

The Patriots, Ravens, and Texans are battling for byes while the AFC Wild Card race is getting exciting.

The AFC has two interesting playoff races that don’t have to do with the divisions — because the division races have pretty clear paths. The competition for a first-round bye currently has three teams with clear paths: New England, Baltimore, and Houston. The other interesting thing to look at is the race of the for the wild cards. Buffalo, Indianapolis, Pittsburgh, and Oakland are all vying for two spots with the Titans, Chargers, and maybe the Browns looking frisky if they can run the table.

Credit: Greg M. Cooper-USA TODAY Sports

AFC East

New England Patriots 8-1

This is the toughest stretch of the Patriots season. They should be hoping to go 3-1 over their next four games. A 2-2 record will put the top seed in the AFC at risk — especially if one of those losses is to Houston which is entirely possible. New England should be able to get right the last three games of the season. They should be hoping that the Dolphins game doesn’t matter.

Remaining Schedule: @Eagles, Cowboys, @Texans, Chiefs, @Bengals, Bills, Dolphins

Buffalo Bills 6-3

The Bills looked like they could cruise to 11 wins this season. Now they could be in trouble. They will be underdogs against the Cowboys, Ravens, Steelers, and Patriots. If they lose all those games, the best they can finish is 9-7. They shouldn’t want to rely on tiebreakers to get them into the playoffs.

Remaining Schedule: @Dolphins, Broncos, @Cowboys, Ravens, @Steelers, @Patriots, Jets