Milwaukee Journal Sentinel - Packer Plus

PLAYOFF SCENARIOS

- Ryan Wood

Packers set their sights on the No. 2 seed

Green Bay — No matter what the New Orleans Saints did Monday night when they hosted the Indianapol­is Colts, they trail the Green Bay Packers for the second seed in the NFC playoffs with two weeks remaining.

That’s the beneficial position the Packers find themselves in. The Packers did more than just clinch their first playoff berth since 2016 with their 21-13 win over the Chicago Bears on Sunday, and the Los Angeles Rams’ subsequent loss in Dallas: If the Packers win their next two games, nobody can catch them for the second seed, which would net a first-round bye.

But the Packers could set their sights a little higher. San Francisco’s surprising loss to Atlanta on Sunday might have cracked open the door for homefield advantage throughout the playoffs, though the Packers still need a lot of help.

Here’s a look at the Packers’ playoff possibilit­ies with two games left:

No. 1 seed

Perks: Home-field advantage throughout the postseason.

How it happens: Packers win out at Minnesota and Detroit, and Seattle (11-3) loses at home to Arizona in Week 16, San Francisco (11-3) loses at Seattle in Week 17. Or Packers win out, San Francisco loses at home to the Los Angeles Rams in Week 16, and Seattle loses to San Francisco in Week 17. Either way, the Packers need to win the next two weeks, and they need Seattle and San Francisco to lose once more. Because if they finish with identical records, the Packers would lose a tiebreaker to the Seahawks and 49ers. They lose the tiebreaker to the Seahawks because of win percentage against common opponents. The Packers and Seahawks have played four common opponents this season: San Francisco, Philadelph­ia, Minnesota and Carolina. The Seahawks beat all four of those teams, with their Week 17 home game against the 49ers looming. The Packers are 2-2. So even if the Seahawks lose to the 49ers, their 4-1 record against common opponents would prevail if both are 13-3. With the 49ers, it’s much simpler: Their Week 12 trouncing of the Packers in San Francisco gives them the head-to-head tiebreaker.

No. 2 seed

Perks: First-round bye, home-field advantage for divisional-round game.

How it happens: Packers win out.

That’s all they need to do. It might be challengin­g, given their trip this week to Minnesota. If the Packers lose this week but win next week, they would need the Saints to lose once more. In this scenario, the Packers’ preference would be the Saints losing Week 17 at Carolina, which would ensure Green Bay finishes with the better conference record, thus securing the second seed. If the Saints lose to an AFC team (the Colts or Tennessee Titans) but beat Carolina, the Packers and Saints would have identical records in conference (9-3) and against common opponents (4-1). The next tiebreaker is strength of victory, which the Saints lead (.503 to .457), but that could change.

No. 3 seed

Perks: Home-field advantage in wild-card round, play the sixth seed.

How it happens: Packers win one more game. Could be Monday night against the Vikings. Could be the regular-season finale at the Lions. Just one more victory will clinch the NFC North title, and with it at least one home game in the playoffs. (They also could clinch if Minnesota loses its Week 17 home game against Chicago.) That’s because closing the season 1-1 would give the Packers a 5-1 division record, which would trump Minnesota’s two division losses.

No. 4 seed

Perks: Home-field advantage for wild-card game.

How it happens: It doesn’t. If the Packers win the NFC North, they will finish ahead of the NFC East champ, whether it’s Dallas or Philadelph­ia.

No. 5 seed

Perks: Playing the fourth seed in the wild-card game, instead of the third.

How it happens: This can’t happen, either. If the Packers go 1-1 to close the season, they’re the three seed. If they lose both, they’re the six. Even if Seattle or San Francisco lose both games to close their season, which is unlikely, the Packers lose tiebreaker­s to both.

No. 6 seed

Perks: Being in the playoffs.

How it happens: Packers lose their last two games, Vikings win their last two games, Seattle and San Francisco finish with identical records as Green Bay. If this happens, the Packers lose the NFC North title to the Vikings. In this scenario, the Vikings would finish 12-4, and the Packers would be 11-5.

 ?? DAN POWERS / USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN ?? Jamaal Williams and the Green Bay Packers are in the running for the No. 2 seed in the playoffs.
DAN POWERS / USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN Jamaal Williams and the Green Bay Packers are in the running for the No. 2 seed in the playoffs.

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