Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Race to NFL playoffs enters stretch

- Barry Wilner Associated Press

If your team is not in the NFL playoff race heading into the final four weeks of the schedule, well, that team must be pretty bad.

Except for the Lions, Texans, Jaguars, Bears and the two New York teams (Rotten Big Apple, indeed), everyone else remains in the conversati­on for the postseason. Division races in many cases aren’t so much in question, but the wild cards are so uncertain that the likes of Seattle (5-8) and a slew of 6-7 clubs can’t be ignored.

That’s exactly what the league wanted when it added a 17th game and, more specifically, a third wild card in each conference.

Not that everybody is looking at the big picture and assessing their chances.

“I do not care,” Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said. “My agenda is the Pittsburgh Steelers. I didn’t waste any of my time this weekend pondering that perspectiv­e. I was just looking at our place in this fray and the things that we’re capable of getting accomplish­ed.”

NFC

There’s little doubt who will win three of the divisions, with Green Bay (10-3), Tampa Bay (10-3) and Dallas (9-4) all in position to clinch this week. The Cowboys could be challenged a bit if they stumble at the Giants – don’t bet on it – and the Eagles knock off Washington on Sunday.

Out West, it’s a two-team contest between the Cardinals (10-3) and Rams (9-4), who beat Arizona on Monday night. Both are in excellent shape to get into the playoffs.

“It’s all in front of us right now,” Cardinals quarterbac­k Kyler Murray says.

Home-field advantage hasn’t been much of an edge across the NFL this season, and the Bucs proved last year it’s no big deal to go on the road throughout the postseason, particular­ly for the conference title game, winning at Green Bay in January. But the one available bye and week off could be huge after the extension of the schedule to 17 games.

As for the wild-card scramble, it truly is a wild scramble. Heading into Week 14, the Rams and 49ers (7-6) are in the best spots, followed by all those 6-7 teams: Washington, Philly, Minnesota, Atlanta and New Orleans.

Does anyone have an edge? Considerin­g how inconsiste­nt they all are, probably not.

AFC

Buffalo’s collapse has handed over the AFC East to New England – yes, the Patriots (9-4) are contending even without Super Bowl mainstay Tom Brady. The Bills (7-6) suddenly are looking around the conference landscape to gauge where they stand in the wild-card race that also includes the entire AFC North, plus the Colts, Broncos and Chargers. Maybe even the Dolphins, who have gone from 1-7 to 6-7.

The Titans (9-4) have a two-game lead over Indianapol­is (7-6) in the South and won both meetings. But the Colts have made a remarkable surge from a 1-4 start behind the spectacula­r work of running back Jonathan Taylor, and a playmaking defense that got healthier.

Kansas City’s sizzling finish on Thursday night after three periods of mediocrity against the Chargers stamps the Chiefs – when operating at full efficiency – as a team to fear. But they can’t afford any missteps as they take on three playoff contenders in Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and Denver to close out the schedule.

“We didn’t win those games kind of at the early part of the year,” Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes said, “but we always had the confidence that we knew we had the guys in the locker room to win them. I think we’re still building on trying to become great, but I think we got the guys to do it, so I’m excited for these last few weeks and the playoffs. “

The North is such a garbled tangle that any of the four teams – Baltimore (8-5), Cincinnati (7-6), Cleveland (7-6) or Pittsburgh (6-6-1) – could win it. And the other three might wind up with an early vacation should Buffalo, Indianapol­is and one of the West teams close strongly.

The immeasurab­le factor in all of this is how the coronaviru­s will impact the schedule, teams’ rosters and the quality of play.

The clubs that advance into the postseason might be the healthies and not necessary the most talented.

One thing is certain amid all the uncertaint­y: When the NFL flexes two finales in Week 18 from Sunday to Saturday, those games will have major postseason implicatio­ns.

 ?? RALPH FRESO/AP ?? Rams quarterbac­k Matthew Stafford (9) looks to pass during Monday’s game against the Cardinals in Glendale, Ariz. Both teams are in the hunt for playoff spots.
RALPH FRESO/AP Rams quarterbac­k Matthew Stafford (9) looks to pass during Monday’s game against the Cardinals in Glendale, Ariz. Both teams are in the hunt for playoff spots.

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