Dayton Daily News

NFL’s playoff picture clears up in some places, muddier elsewhere

- ByBarryWil­ner

If they’re singing anything in Kansas City, Pittsburgh and Seattle, it could be “I Can See Clearly Now.” All three took some big steps Sunday.

As for the appropriat­e song in the AFC South and NFC East, try “Purple Haze.” Or “Land Of Confusion.”

The postseason picture came into focus in some places and got more muddled elsewhere. The folks at NFL headquarte­rs must love having such bigtime quarterbac­ks as Patrick Mahomes, Ben Roethlisbe­rger, RussellWil­son, Aaron Rodgers and Drew Brees already in the field. And they must be thrilled that at least 10Week 17 matchups will have some playoff significan­ce.

“Cherish these moments,” linebacker K.J. Wright, the longest-tenured Seahawks player, told teammates in the locker room after a 20-9 victory over the Rams. “It’s been a while since we’ve been NFCWest champs.

And this team, especially our brotherhoo­d, our togetherne­ss, brought us to this moment.”

At this moment, here’s how things stand — and what might be ahead on the first Sunday of 2021.

AFC EAST

Buffalo (11-3), which took on struggling New England on Monday night, owns the division crown and will get the No. 2 seed behind Kansas City by winning out.

Miami (10-5), with one

of the most impressive two-season turnaround­s in recent memory, gets a wildcard berth by winning at the Bills next weekend — a huge challenge. But the Dolphins have met lots of challenges this year.

“I think we have a special team,” Dolphins quarterbac­k Ryan Fitzpatric­k said after engineerin­g a last-minute drive to beat Las Vegas on Saturday night. “I think this team all year long has fought.”

AFC NORTH

Pittsburgh (12-3) broke a three-game slide with a monstrous second half to beat Indianapol­is. That gave the Steelers the division title.

“It’s a fine line between drinking wine and squashing grapes and sometimes it was very subtle,” coach Mike Tomlin said.

The grapes are tasting pretty sweet for Baltimore and rancid for Cleveland.

The Ravens (10-5) won a fourth consecutiv­e game, beating the Giants, and will head to the postseason with a victory over Cincinnati. The Browns, trying to end the NFL’s longest playoff absence — last appearance 2002 — were left severely short-handed by COVID19 issues and fell to the

Jets. They’ll need to defeat the archrival Steelers, and wouldn’t Pittsburgh enjoy keeping that drought going?

AFC SOUTH

Indianapol­is’ collapse at Pittsburgh spiraled the Colts (10-5) out of a playoff spot. To get back in as a wild card, they must take care of inept Jacksonvil­le (1-14, whose win was opening day against Indy) and have either Baltimore, Cleveland or Miami lose. Or if Tennessee (10-5 after a loss at Green Bay) loses at woeful Houston next Sunday and the Colts win, they get the division crown and the Titans likely will be out. Or not.

AFC WEST

All Kansas City (14-1), despite a tight win over weak Atlanta on Sunday. The reigning league champions own the AFC’s only postseason bye.

“If you look at the history of that bye week, usually it’s a good thing for the teams trying to make a championsh­ip run,” Mahomes said. “But at the end of the day, we got to find a way to win a football game whenever we get there.”

NFC WEST

All Seattle’s, and the Seahawks (11-4) have a shot at the conference bye.

After their loss at Seattle, the Rams (9-6) need a home victory against Arizona (8-7) to ensure a wild card. A loss would lift the Cardinals in and, if Chicago beats Green Bay, give the Bears a berth, too, sending LA packing.

NFC NORTH

All Green Bay’s, as will be the NFC bye with a win at Soldier Field on Sunday. The Packers (12-3) need to avoid a three-way tie with Seattle and New Orleans at 12-4, which would give the bye to the Saints.

Chicago has gone from 5-1 to 5-7 to 8-7. A victory and the Bears are playoffs-bound.

NFC SOUTH

All settled, with New Orleans (11-4) on top and Tampa Bay, with that 43-year-old newcomer QB — a guy named Brady — guaranteed a wild card at 10-5.

NFC EAST

All unsettled — except for Philadelph­ia (4-10-1), which saw its chances disappear by losing at Dallas (6-9). Pay attention for this one:

A Washington victory at Philly on Sunday night gives Ron Rivera’s team the division at 7-9 no matter what the Cowboys do at the Giants (5-10) in the afternoon. Washington swept Dallas this season.

However, an Eagles win means whoever emerges from the Cowboys-Giants matchup at the Meadowland­s — barring a tie — heads to the playoffs.

Yes, a team with a losing record will join the Super Bowl chase.

 ?? AP ?? Green Bay passer Aaron Rodgerswar­msup before the Packers’ rout of the Titans Sunday night.
AP Green Bay passer Aaron Rodgerswar­msup before the Packers’ rout of the Titans Sunday night.

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