Tuesday, September 4, 2018

2018 Season Preview: Part One


We’ve almost made it. Two days from now the NFL season will kick off with the Falcons battling the Eagles. Three days after that, most of the rest of the league will get the season under way. So I guess now would be the time to get my official predictions in, before we get too far and everything I expected to happen falls to pieces in front of me.

I’ve split my preview into two shorter pieces this year. I’ll start with a division by division prediction of each team’s record, including my playoff representatives. Tomorrow I’ll be back with my prediction for the award races, and of course I’ll throw in my Super Bowl prediction as well.

If you’re curious, you can check out more details for each team by clicking the links below. (And if you’re extra curious, you can look back to my preview last year to confirm that this is the only section I copied word for word. This is my fifth year doing this, so at this point why even pretend I’m not being incredibly repetitive?)



NFC
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NFC South
Atlanta Falcons: 13-3
New Orleans Saints: 11-5
Carolina Panthers: 7-9
Tampa Bay Buccaneers: 5-11
The two teams at the top of this division are arguably the two most stacked in the league. From the Hall of Fame quarterbacks, to the big bodied top ten receivers, to the young talent flowing through their defense, the Saints and the Falcons are almost mirror images of each other. The two of them will run away with the division, and ultimately it will come down to the head to head matchups. Atlanta’s defensive stars have a couple more years under their belts, which is what will make the difference in the end, letting them keep steady even when they hit an occasional bump in the road. The Saints will still have no trouble grabbing a Wild Card spot, and from there they have the talent for a deep playoff run.

The Panthers made the playoffs a year ago, but I just can’t see them repeating. Their offensive line is a total mess, and the youth movement at their offensive skill positions has yet to produce any consistent stars. They made a smart move trying to change up this offense this offseason, but they made a less smart move turning to Norv Turner to do so. He will make the same mistakes as their last coordinator, putting far too much on the arm of Cam Newton. The defense that was dominant a few years ago has slowly broken down, and I feel like this year is going to look more like 2016 than 2015 or 2017 in Carolina.

NFC West
Los Angeles Rams: 12-4
Seattle Seahawks: 9-7
San Francisco 49ers: 8-8
Arizona Cardinals: 3-13
Everyone is expecting this to be the year that the 49ers leap forward, but I still think they need some more seasoning before they’re ready to go. The final five games of 2017 went as perfect as possible for Jimmy Garoppolo, and even if he is the quarterback they’re paying him to be, there are going to be a few rough patches as he settles into the NFL. The talent around him on offense is still extremely subpar, and it only got worse with the torn ACL that will sideline Jerick McKinnon for the season.

The Rams are loading up for a run, and with the talent they have it would be a disappointment if they didn’t coast to the postseason. They’ll fight for, and eventually earn, a first round bye, and that’s when the real season starts. Anything less than a Super Bowl appearance this year will be a disappointment. This is the same position the Seahawks found themselves in a couple years ago, and now they’re scrapping just to reach the postseason again. I don’t think nine wins will get them there however, and they are going to have to work hard to rebuild both sides of the ball this coming offseason. The Cardinals are barely worth discussing. They will be the worst team in the NFC, and they just have to hope they can get Josh Rosen on the field and keep him in one piece.

NFC East
Philadelphia Eagles: 11-5
Washington Redskins: 7-9
Dallas Cowboys: 6-10
New York Giants: 5-11
Most of this division seems pretty straightforward. The Redskins will be competitive in most of their games, but they will likely lose at least as many as they win. The Eagles are the class of the NFC, and I don’t see a post-Super Bowl collapse coming for them. Things may not go as smooth as they did a year ago, but their defense is still dominating enough to win them games on its own, and once Carson Wentz gets back in the lineup and knocks the rust off their offense should be at least serviceable.

There might be a little more uncertainty to Dallas, but with the various health issues they’re facing along the offensive line I can’t see much upside here. Dak Prescott is still a good quarterback, but he showed this year he can’t carry this team on his own, and that’s what he’s going to have to do if they’re going to end up with a winning record. The real source of potential is in New York. With the return of Odell Beckham and the addition of Saquon Barkley, this offense could have an explosive component that it was lacking a year ago. But I’m not sold on Barkley, and I think this rebuilt offensive line will need at least half a year to get its feet under it. The Giants might be able to finish the year strong, but by then I think it will be too little and too late.

NFC North
Green Bay Packers: 11-5
Minnesota Vikings: 11-5
Detroit Lions: 9-7
Chicago Bears: 8-8
The battle between Green Bay and Minnesota for this division was decided in mid-October last year when Anthony Barr knocked Aaron Rodgers out and ended Green Bay’s season. Assuming Rodgers stays healthy, I think it goes down to the wire this year. The Vikings will struggle some as they adjust to the changes at quarterback and offensive coordinator, and a number of breaks that went their way last year won’t hold up (notably health on the defense, where the only time missed due to injury by a starter was one game from Everson Griffen). This battle will come down to the final week, and I think both teams finish with the same record, with the Packers winning the tiebreaker through something like record against common opponents.

The bigger questions are whether the other two teams can jump up into this competition. Detroit has been feisty for several years, but they always seem to fall just short, and it’s hard for me to look at their team and think they are any different than they’ve been in years past. All the good pieces are still there, but they haven’t supplemented them with enough to make either their offense or their defense truly great. The Bears are on the flip side of things, a team that has been bad for several years running and is now going for an aggressive turnaround. With the foundation of a very good defense already in place and improved weapons on the offensive side of the ball, it all comes down to Mitch Trubisky. I think he is capable of taking them to where they want to go, but in all likelihood they will probably need to wait another year or two.


AFC
AFC South
Houston Texans: 10-6
Jacksonville Jaguars: 8-8
Tennessee Titans: 7-9
Indianapolis Colts: 6-10
Probably the most noticeable mark here is the dropoff of the Jaguars. Last year they won ten games and made it all the way to the AFC Championship Game, and most include them in the conversation with the Patriots and the Steelers as the elites of the AFC. I don’t see it. Their defense is still incredibly strong, but they won’t benefit as much from turnover luck as they did a year ago. On the other side, they won’t be able to keep Blake Bortles from shooting himself in the foot, and they are going to struggle their way to eight wins. Of course, as you will see from the records of the rest of the conference listed below, this is still enough for them to snag the last Wild Card spot.

The rest of the division will go about how everyone expects. The Texans will leap forward with the return to health of Deshaun Watson and JJ Watt and should be able to comfortably win the division, even if they aren’t yet ready to compete with the top teams in the league. Tennessee could put up a fight, but I still think their team has too many middle of the pack players to consistently control games. Maybe in a year or two once talent like Corey Davis and Adoree Jackson really develop, but not this year. The Colts will only be worth watching to see if Andrew Luck is back to full health, because even if he is, I don’t see any way this team can win more games than it loses even against an easy schedule.

AFC West
Los Angeles Chargers: 11-5
Kansas City Chiefs: 7-9
Oakland Raiders: 5-11
Denver Broncos: 5-11
I told myself I wouldn’t do it, yet here I am again, picking the Chargers to run away with the AFC West. It’s not just that I think the Chargers are good, though they are, with the best pass rushing duo in the league, a very good secondary that will only be better with the addition of Derwin James, and an offensive line that finally has the potential to leap forward. It’s also that I have no faith in any of these other teams. The Broncos are the same team that won only five games a year ago, just with Case Keenum swapped in for Trevor Siemian (which I’m not convinced is an improvement). The Raiders just traded away their only good defensive player and will be starting a rookie project at left tackle to protect a quarterback who is notoriously inept under pressure.

The only team that could really push the Chargers is Kansas City. The talent on offense is certainly eye popping, with Tyreek Hill to stretch the field, Travis Kelce flying over the middle, Kareem Hunt working out of the backfield, and Sammy Watkins attacking everywhere else. Their offensive line is good, and their defense will be at least average. But in the end it will come down to Pat Mahomes, and I’m not sure I can put any faith in him just yet. Even with the tutelage of Andy Reid, he is too raw and too unpolished to outrace the Chargers. The Chiefs may be able to snag a Wild Card spot, but in the end I think they will fall a game or two short.

AFC East
New England Patriots: 13-3
Miami Dolphins: 7-9
New York Jets: 7-9
Buffalo Bills: 2-14
The Patriots are going to win this division and get the top seed overall and will probably make the Super Bowl. Because the world is bad and nothing ever changes.

The Bills are at the other end of the spectrum. They have some nice things going on in their defensive backfield, and I’m a bigger fan of Josh Allen than most people. But they have the worst offensive line and worst receiving corps in the entire league, and I really struggle to see how they are going to score any points. They will be in the running for the first overall pick in the draft, and I think they pull it off.

The Dolphins and Jets will be fighting for some spot in the middle. Neither team is good enough to pull off a playoff run, but I don’t think either will bottom out. For the Jets this will come as a sign of forward progress in the first year under Sam Darnold. For the Dolphins that may spell the end of the Adam Gase and Ryan Tannehill eras. They will face some hard choices if they don’t make the playoffs this year, which I think is the most likely outcome.

AFC North
Pittsburgh Steelers: 10-6
Baltimore Ravens: 9-7
Cincinnati Bengals: 7-9
Cleveland Browns: 6-10
Pittsburgh is going to have a ougher time than they did a year ago. The rest of the division isn’t going to push them any harder, and most of the trouble they face will be internal. Antonio Brown has struggled with injuries during the preseason. Ben Roethlisberger has been shaky over the past couple years. And no one knows when or if Le’Veon Bell will join the team, still in the midst of his contract dispute. This defense is still suffering from the loss of Ryan Shazier, and though they have invested a lot of draft picks in young talent over the past few years, very few have shown promising signs of developing into stars.

That said, they remain much more talented than the other teams in the division. I expected the Browns to take a big leap forward last year, and I was very, very wrong, so I’m being a bit more cautious this year. There is definitely a bright future here, but I think it will come with a different coaching staff. The Ravens and Bengals aren’t particularly good teams either, but in the weak AFC I think Baltimore’s edge at coaching is enough to keep them in the division and eventually claim a Wild Card spot. I don’t know if this will come with Joe Flacco or Lamar Jackson playing quarterback, and I don’t think it really matters. The Ravens have a very good defense and a top five head coach, and that is enough to give them a chance to win most games.

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