With
three weeks left to go in the NFL regular season, we have reached the crucial
stretch where the final spots in the playoffs are decided. After last night’s
game four teams have clinched a playoff spot (the Rams, Chiefs, Chargers, and
Saints), while the Bills, Jaguars, Jets, Raiders, Cardinals, and 49ers have
been eliminated. Astonishingly, that means there are still 22 teams competing
for the final eight playoff spots. Most of them will go home disappointed in three
weeks’ time, while the others will stay alive for the ultimate prize.
Or
will they? The common belief is that the NFL playoffs are a total crapshoot, a
single elimination tournaments where a team just needs to get hot at the right
time to run off a winning streak and claim the title. We saw this for three
straight years at the beginning of the decade, when a pair of four seeds and a
six seed were crowned champions. All you need is another Eli Manning or Joe
Flacco type run, and your team can go from scraping into the playoffs to
hoisting the Lombardi trophy.
Of
course, Baltimore’s Super Bowl title was six years ago, and since then things
have swung in a different direction. Over the past five years in the playoffs
home teams are a combined 35-15 (not counting the rather meaningless
designation of home versus away in the Super Bowl). Nine out of
the ten Super Bowl participants over that stretch have been the team with the best record in
their conference that year. The only time a top seed fell before the Super Bowl
was Dallas in 2016, and in that case the NFC was represented by the lowly
second seeded Falcons.
That’s
right. Each of the past five Super Bowl winners had home field advantage up to
that point, and every runner up had earned at the very least a first round bye.
The NFL playoffs have been shockingly devoid of upsets (discounting whatever
you thought of the wounded but still top ranked Eagles a year ago), and right
now it seems like the league has swung towards the best teams winning on any
given day.
There
are 26 teams left alive right now, but how many of them have realistic Super
Bowl hopes? The four I mentioned as already clinching a playoff spot. The
Patriots, because they’re the Patriots. I suppose I’ll throw the Bears in there
as well, since they did just beat the Rams, though things will undoubtedly go
different if that game is replayed in Los Angeles. And I guess I’ll grab
Houston as well in the AFC. Not that I think they have a chance to actually
win, but they did just lose their first game since September.
On
the other side, I won’t waste time talking about the teams with less than a
five percent chance of making the playoffs (according to 538’s playoff
probabilities). The Falcons, Bengals, Giants, Browns, Buccaneers, Packers,
Lions, and Broncos are all but dead at this point, and right now they should be
focusing on getting quality tape put together so they have something to show
heading into next season. I’m also going to exclude the Redskins, even though
they mathematically still have a 10 percent chance of making the playoffs, because
with Mark Sanchez and Josh Johnson at quarterback they are more or less dead in
the water.
That
still leaves ten teams fighting for five chances, most of which will end up
wiped off the board quickly when the actual playoffs roll around. So the question
remains, what is the point of this? What do they have to gain, lose, or prove
over the final three weeks and their abbreviated playoff runs, assuming the
goal is to come back in the next few years with an actual chance at winning the
Super Bowl?
(Yes,
I am aware that me writing this just about guarantees that one of these teams
will break the trend. No, I don’t need to hear snide comments when it happens.)
Dallas
Cowboys
We’ll
start with a team that has more or less already locked up a playoff spot. A few
weeks ago that statement would have seemed absurd, but the Cowboys turned it on
just as the Redskins and the Eagles fell to pieces. Most of the credit has gone
to the acquisition of Amari Cooper, but the biggest factor has been the
performance of their defense, led by young linebackers Jaylon Smith and
Leighton Vander Esch.
This
team has turned around, but the problems that plagued them early in the season
are still lurking beneath the surface. We don’t know if Dak Prescott is the
long term answer at quarterback, and he will enter 2019 on the last year of his
contract. Jason Garrett is still a problem at head coach, and his continued
presence may depend on how they finish 2018. If they continue strong into the
playoffs, he will likely be back. But if they limp down the stretch and put up
little fight in an early round exit, the Cowboys may come to the correct
conclusion that it is time to move on.
Seattle
Seahawks
Seattle
has also more or less locked up their place in the postseason after shutting
down Minnesota on Monday night. Bouncing back after disassembling the core that
won them a Super Bowl, they have rebuilt themselves around a dangerous pass
rush and a versatile rushing attack. Their offensive line has improved
significantly with the absence of coach Tom Cable, and life has gotten much
easier for Russell Wilson after he was forced to single handedly keep the
offense afloat last season.
Still,
this team needs to prove that they have what it takes to compete at the level
they were at three years ago. They’ve won so far by controlling games on the
ground against mediocre opponents, but once they reach the postseason they will
face a much different challenge. Can their young secondary hold up against a
top notch quarterback? Can their offense function if they fall behind and can’t
trust their running game and defense? Seattle is a good team, but they have yet
to prove themselves against any real challenge.
Pittsburgh
Steelers
Three
straight embarrassing losses have turned the Steelers from AFC contenders into
a team fighting for their playoff lives. Despite outplaying their opponents in
each of these games, the Steelers lost in the last minute against teams they should
have beaten. Most of the blame for this is deservedly falling on the coaching
staff. I’ve been a defender of Mike Tomlin for years, but his in-game
performance this year has been brutal to witness.
The
Steelers haven’t fired a coach in 50 years, but with games remaining against
both the Patriots and the Saints they have a very difficult path to the
playoffs, and if they fall short thanks to their second half collapse they are
going to need to look long and hard at the leadership of this team. The Steelers
have been built to compete for a championship for several years now, and they
seem to fall short for the same reasons every year. At a certain point when a
team is making the same mistakes over and over, a drastic change might need to
be made, and Tomlin needs a strong finish to the season to prove that he is
still the guy they have believed he is for the past decade.
Minnesota
Vikings
The
final few games will be a referendum on Kirk Cousins. This offense has fallen
apart over the past few weeks, and most of the blame deserves to go to the
quarterback. But how much of this is his fault, and how much is the situation
he finds himself in? After firing offensive coordinator John DeFillipo this
week, the final three regular season games will give them a chance to evaluate
Kevin Stefanski, a respected assistant who was considered a hot coordinator
prospect even before his promotion this week. Any tick up in performance will
likely be credited to him, and will give them some clarity on that side of the
ball headed into the offseason.
This
is a team built around a three year window that lines up with the contract they
signed with Cousins. They are going to have to decide this offseason how
aggressively they want to pursue this window. How much future flexibility are
they willing to sacrifice for a roster built around a quarterback who likely
isn’t championship caliber? Do they perhaps surrender future draft picks to try
to improve the offensive line in front of him, or do they keep those in their
back pocket, in case they have to look at adding someone from a 2020
quarterback class that is looking promising?
Baltimore
Ravens
Baltimore
is at a crucial turning point. For years they have floated around the middle of
the league thanks to a strong defense that carried a mediocre offense, and now
they are faced with a choice of either trying to maintain that strategy or tear
it down and start all over. The Lamar Jackson era is under way, and this
offseason will give them a chance to go all in on building around his unique
talents, if they choose to take it. A playoff berth will likely mean more of
the same from them, but if they falter over the final three games, I could see
their new front office deciding to start from scratch, including parting ways
with long time coach John Harbaugh.
Tennessee
Titans
Somehow
we are almost through the fourth season of Marcus Mariota and we still don’t
know whether he is the long term answer for Tennessee. They have failed at
every attempt to build talent around him on offense, and yet they will
undoubtedly try again this offseason, as they bring him back on the expensive
fifth year option of his contract. They should have spent this year
experimenting with everything they could manage on offense, to see what works
and what doesn’t, and the fact that they haven’t is an indictment of their
realistic goals. This team won a playoff game a year ago, but they should have
known from the start of the season that they weren’t ready to compete in the
AFC. The first year of the Mike Vrabel era has been mostly wasted, and they
should do what they can over the final few weeks to see what if anything they
can learn to help their offense in the future.
Indianapolis
Colts
The
Colts have come on strong as the season has progressed thanks to a developing
young core. This is a roster in the midst of a total overhaul, and the final
few games will give them a chance to evaluate where they are at. Obviously
players like Quenton Nelson and Darius Leonard are going to be stars for years
to come, but it’s worth seeing what other young pieces are going to stick
around. Do they have something real in Marlon Mack and Eric Ebron, or are their
strong 2018 seasons just flashes in the pan, likely to regress if the Colts
don’t find more capable replacements?
Miami
Dolphins
This
team does not seem like they should be as good as their record. The Dolphins
have managed explosive gains in the passing game all year long, and they have
generated a lot of turnovers from the back end of their defense, but outside of
that this team is fairly mediocre. All the advanced metrics scream for
regression next year, and the final stretch of games will determine whether
they delude themselves into believing they are capable of more heading into
next year. If they finish strong and scratch their way into the playoffs, they
could make the mistake of investing big in a core that isn’t really
competitive. If however the regression catches up to them before the season
ends, they may enter the offseason with a full understanding of how much work
remains ahead of them to fix this roster.
Philadelphia
Eagles
With
Carson Wentz likely done for the year and the secondary still in shambles, it’s
difficult to see any upside for the defending Super Bowl champions. The
playoffs will be a difficult reach, and even if they do make it they will face
a much more difficult road this year than last, when they had the comfort of a
first round bye and two games at home. So for a team that succeeded last year
mostly through creativity, they might as well get weird down the stretch. Mix
up their coverages, see if their young cornerbacks can do any better in a
different scheme. Dig deep into their bench, and figure out if they have anyone
else capable of contributing towards what will hopefully be a bounceback 2019.
Carolina
Panthers
A
promising start to the season has fallen to pieces in front of the Panthers,
and now they face a sharp uphill road to the playoffs, likely needing to win
out even with two of their final three against the Saints. Their offense has
gone belly up after an explosive start to the season, and over their remaining
games they need to identify what the issue is. Is it just an injury to Cam
Newton that has sapped his accuracy and effectiveness? Or have teams caught
onto the changes in scheme Norv Turner made in his year off from football? The
playoffs are likely out of reach, but they can come up with a plan for the
offseason that will prevent the same sort of collapse from happening next year.
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