USA TODAY US Edition

Saints, Chiefs sit in conference driver’s seats

- Lorenzo Reyes

This is the time of the NFL season during which teams not necessaril­y in control of their own situations do plenty of scoreboard watching.

And in a wild Sunday in Week 14, plenty of results, many of them complete surprises, had serious playoff ramificati­ons. Here are winners and losers from a packed slate.

Winners

Chiefs: It wasn’t so much that they beat the Ravens, a resurgent squad, 27

24 in overtime to clinch a playoff berth and improve to 11-2. It was more that the Patriots stumbled against the Dolphins, so Kansas City’s grip on the No. 1 seed in the AFC got even stronger. The Chiefs now have a two-game lead on New England. With a difficult remaining three games — Week 15 at home against the Chargers (10-3); Week 16 at the Seahawks (7-5); Week 17 at home against the Raiders (3-10) — picking up an extra game was huge. New England’s schedule is more forgiving, with the lone tough matchup remaining coming against the Steelers next weekend. So as long as the Chiefs take care of their business, the postseason in the AFC should run through Arrowhead Stadium. And that’s an environmen­t that’s really tough in January.

Jerry Jones: The Cowboys — and Jones, specifical­ly — caught a lot of heat for the decision to trade a first-round pick to the Raiders for wide receiver Amari Cooper. Well, after a thrilling 29

23 victory against the Eagles in overtime, Dallas holds a commanding twogame lead in the NFC East and is 5-1 since the trade, and no one is criticizin­g Jones now. Cooper torched the Eagles

(10 catches, 217 yards, three touchdowns), and it’s clear his presence has opened up the entire offense. Though quarterbac­k Dak Prescott needs to work on protecting the ball and avoiding occasional bad misses, his connection with Cooper is undeniably a seasonturn­ing weapon. Cooper is 24 and set to enter his fifth-year option in 2019. The issue for Jones now is paying him.

Saints: Not only did the Saints clinch the NFC South with their victory against the Buccaneers, they reclaimed the NFC’s No. 1 seed, thanks to help from Chicago. With the Bears clamping down on the Rams, New Orleans and Los Angeles are 11-2. But because the Saints won their head-to-head matchup in Week 9, they hold the tiebreaker advantage. Admittedly, the first half for New Orleans was a struggle. Quarterbac­k Drew Brees, after throwing one intercepti­on in the first 10 games of the year, has thrown one in each of the last three. But in the second half, when the Saints needed to move the ball, they scored 25 unanswered points. The ability to adjust and overcome early-game struggles, that’s the mark of a good team.

Dolphins home games against the

Patriots: With their stunning last-second, double-lateral game-winning touchdown, the Dolphins have toppled the Patriots in five of the last six games they’ve played in Miami. It’s surprising that the Patriots — one of the most consistent teams in the NFL — have this issue in South Florida. And it couldn’t have come at a better time for the Dolphins (7-6). Though they’re tied with the Ravens, they’re currently the No. 7 seed, just one back of the sixth and final playoff berth in the AFC. This is the kind of game that can generate momentum for a potential playoff push.

Losers

Steelers: This isn’t what teams supposedly in contention for a Super Bowl do. Yes, the shoddy turf that made kicker Chris Boswell slip on a potential tying field goal as time expired could be questioned. But this was a Pittsburgh team that had dropped two consecutiv­e games because of repeated self-inflicted errors. And this is a Steelers squad whose next two games are at home versus the Patriots (9-4) and on the road against the Saints (11-2). A 24-21 loss to the rebuilding Raiders dropped Pittsburgh to 7-5-1, and their playoff pursuit is seriously in doubt. The Ravens (7-6), Browns (5-7-1) and Bengals (5-8) are each alive. Injuries have been an issue, but this would be an epic collapse if Pittsburgh coughed up the AFC North lead.

Bruce Allen: After getting waxed 4016 by a mediocre Giants team, you can all but write the obituary on the season for the Redskins. Losing Alex Smith and Colt McCoy to leg injuries was unfortunat­e, but the front office — and specifical­ly president Bruce Allen — deserves a heavy dose of criticism for several headscratc­hing moves. The latest was opting to go with Mark Sanchez as its quarterbac­k. Sanchez went 6 of 14 for 38 yards and threw two intercepti­ons, one of which was returned for a score. He was benched in the third quarter in favor of Josh Johnson, who hadn’t attempted a regular-season pass since 2011. The franchise said it discussed bringing in Colin Kaepernick but that he wasn’t a fit for the offense and that Sanchez was. They later signed Johnson, whose skill set, interestin­gly enough, is quite similar to Kaepernick’s. All those excuses, after this collapse, are, at best, disingenuo­us. At worst, it’s collusive.

Texans: The division-rival Colts are an ascending team and the Texans had won nine games in a row. So it’s hard to criticize them too much and it’s not a shock that Houston stumbled 24-21 against Indianapol­is. But that Houston had the chance to seize the No. 2 seed in the AFC because the Patriots dropped their game against Miami is just a missed opportunit­y. The biggest concern for Houston (9-3) is that it shut Colts quarterbac­k Andrew Luck down for one half. But the Texans couldn’t finish the game and let receiver T.Y. Hilton go off for explosive play after explosive play. With the Colts and Titans both just two games out at 7-6, the AFC South is still open.

Vance Joseph: The Broncos came in

6-6 and desperatel­y needing a victory against a hapless 49ers team that entered the day already eliminated from playoff contention. Every team Denver was competing with for a wild-card berth, except for the Ravens, won. That Denver came out as flat as it did and had no answer for George Kittle, who was

5 yards shy of setting the NFL singlegame receiving yard record for receiving yards from a tight end with 210, is a reflection of the head coach. The offense spectacula­rly underwhelm­ed, earning only 274 total yards and converting 2 of

15 third-down attempts. So Joseph, who had eased some concerns with a threegame winning streak, might be back on the hot seat.

 ?? KEVIN JAIRAJ/USA TODAY ?? Mark Ingram celebrates a TD against the Bucs in a victory that, coupled with the Rams’ loss, put the Saints ahead for the top seed in the NFC.
KEVIN JAIRAJ/USA TODAY Mark Ingram celebrates a TD against the Bucs in a victory that, coupled with the Rams’ loss, put the Saints ahead for the top seed in the NFC.

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