The Jerusalem Post

No shortage of issues for playoff teams

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With big wins last week by Pittsburgh and Kansas City, the AFC playoff picture came into sharp focus. For half of those teams with a ticket to the postseason, the future is hopelessly fuzzy.

New England, Pittsburgh and Kansas City are fine. But Oakland, Houston and Miami are all down to their second-string quarterbac­ks.

The Steelers won the AFC North with a 31-27 victory over Baltimore in a winner-take-all game at Heinz Field.

In the late game, Kansas City beat Denver, 33-10, snuffing the playoff hopes of the defending Super Bowl champion Broncos and securing a spot for the Dolphins. Now, the game of musical quarterbac­ks. The Raiders appear to be in the most dire situation after their dream of a season. Their leader, quarterbac­k Derek Carr, underwent surgery Sunday for a broken fibula suffered in Saturday’s victory over Indianapol­is.

Though still on track for the No. 2 seed and a first-round bye, the Raiders have handed the keys to the offense to Matt McGloin, who hasn’t started a game since 2013 and has as many career intercepti­ons (11) as touchdowns.

“Teams have to find a way to pick up and move on,” said Coach Jack Del Rio, whose 12-3 Raiders are Oakland’s first winning team since 2002. “We’ll rally around the next guy as best we can.”

The Dolphins have done that well. They lost Ryan Tannehill to a knee injury on December 11, but have played well with backup Matt Moore at the helm. They scored 34 points each in wins over the New York Jets and Buffalo the last two weeks, with Moore compiling six touchdowns and two intercepti­ons in those games.

Tannehill is out of a cast and walked around the locker room Saturday without crutches, fueling hopes that he might be able to return for the playoffs.

The Texans, meanwhile, changed quarterbac­ks by choice. Coach Bill O’Brien benched the struggling Brock Osweiler, even though Houston signed the former Denver backup to a deal worth $18 million a season. Tom Savage made his first career start Saturday in Houston’s 12-10 victory over Cincinnati, with the Texans clinching their second consecutiv­e AFC South title.

Savage completed only two passes for 13 yards in the first half, but started to click in the second. He finished with 176 yards, and did his job well enough to not get in the way of a victory.

“It was just taking a deep breath and realizing what we have on defense, what they’re doing for us,” Savage said. “All week it’s just protect the ball and find a way to win, and that’s what we did. The guys really rallied around me and made some huge plays.”

Writing off teams is a risky propositio­n, even with all the quarterbac­k problems. Lots of teams that are either in the playoffs or on the bubble looked like flops earlier this season.

Washington started 0-2, Miami 1-4, Detroit and Tampa 1-3. The Green Bay Packers, who will play at the Lions on Sunday with the NFC North up for grabs, lost six of their first 10.

Sunday, the Steelers proved they too can rebound.

They had lost four in a row earlier this season and looked nothing like a franchise headed back to the playoffs.

The enduring message: In the NFL, it’s not who can start strong, but who can finish.

For instance, the Broncos started 4-0, then lost seven of their next 11.

It was hardly a breeze for the Steelers on Sunday, as Ben Roethlisbe­rger was picked off twice in the third quarter, deep in Pittsburgh territory.

“I kind of dug ourselves a hole,” the Steelers quarterbac­k said. “I take all that blame.”

Roethlisbe­rger atoned for his mistakes with a pair of late touchdowns, the clincher a fouryard toss to Antonio Brown who just stretched the ball across the goal line with nine seconds to play. That ended a four-game losing streak to the Ravens and gave Pittsburgh its second division crown in three years.

“It’s pretty special the way we won it,” Roethlisbe­rger said. “Especially after feeling the way I felt at a certain point in that game and feeling like you let guys down and you blew it.”

Steelers Coach Mike Tomlin said his players have a “no-blink mentality” that has helped them recover from setbacks.

Redemption has been an overarchin­g theme this season. Only a handful of teams have consistent­ly kept their foot on the gas week after week.

The Chiefs have been solid, but they have yet to prove they have anything more than warning-track power when it comes to carrying regular-season excellence into the postseason.

New England has stayed strong, winning all but two games despite Tom Brady’s fourgame suspension to start the season. The Patriots can secure home-field advantage throughout the playoffs by winning their finale at Miami on Sunday.

Dallas has been remarkable this season, powered by an elite offensive line and a pair of superstar rookies in quarterbac­k Dak Prescott and running back Ezekiel Elliott. The Cowboys, who play host to Detroit on Monday and already have the NFC’s No. 1 seed, have incurred just two losses – both to the New York Giants.

Atlanta is on track for the No. 2 seed, but from mid-October to early December lost four of seven.

Seattle has been all over the map, losing a 9-3 stinker to the Rams in Week 2, and alternatin­g wins and losses in the last six games. Fortunatel­y for the Seahawks, they play in a bad division, so they had locked up a home playoff game before Sunday’s 34-31 loss to Arizona at CenturyLin­k Field.

“We have a lot of work to do this season,” Seattle Coach Pete Carroll said. “We have a lot of stuff coming.”

The Seahawks have their issues. But in this particular­ly imperfect playoff field, they are far from alone. (Los Angeles Times/TNS)

 ?? (Reuters) ?? THE INJURY to Derek Carr – who was playing at an MVP-caliber level – is a significan­t blow to the Oakland Raiders’ chances of a long postseason run.
(Reuters) THE INJURY to Derek Carr – who was playing at an MVP-caliber level – is a significan­t blow to the Oakland Raiders’ chances of a long postseason run.
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