No. 5 Browns at No. 4 Texans, Saturday, 4:30 p.m. | NBC CJ Stroud is absolutely terrific. So is the Browns’ defense.
No. 6 Dolphins at No. 3 Chiefs, Saturday, 8 p.m. | Peacock The Dolphins do not like the cold, and it’s going to be hovering around zero degrees that night in Kansas City.
No. 7 Steelers at No. 2 Bills, Sunday, 1 p.m. | CBS Buffalo (five straight wins) and Pittsburgh (three straight wins) are riding high.
No. 7 Packers at No. 2 Cowboys, Sunday, 4:30 p.m. | Fox The top two touchdown passers of the year — Dak Prescott (36) and Jordan Love (32) — meet.
No. 6 Rams at No. 3 Lions, Sunday, 8 p.m. | NBC Matthew Stafford and Jared Goff both face their former team, the first such matchup in NFL playoff history.
No. 5 Eagles at No. 4 Buccaneers, Monday, 8 p.m. | ABC Let’s talk about the Eagles …
Some teams are surging into the postseason. Others are limping — literally and figuratively — and the Eagles are one of those squads. Philadelphia benched many of its starters before halftime with the offense doing nothing and the defense stopping nothing in an eventual 27-10 loss to the Giants. To make matters worse, A.J. Brownsuffered a knee injury in the first quarter.
The Eagles have lost five of their last six games. Using defensive success rate (a measure of down-to-down efficiency), only the Commanders have been worse over that span. The pass rush — dominant last year — is milquetoast. The linebackers and secondary are a complete mess. It’s not much better on offense: 25th in success rate over the last six weeks, right behind the Jets and Giants.
The slate is wiped clean in the postseason, but it’s really ugly right now.
Week 18 can be as brutal as it can be beautiful. You work for months and months — years and years, really — for games like this, all to lose in agonizing, infuriating fashion. That explains the slumped looks of devastation on the Jaguars’ sideline after a 28-20 loss to the Titans eliminated Jacksonville from playoff contention.
When we talk about a game of inches, we talk about Trevor Lawrencecoming up inches short on fourth-and-goal late. We talk about Lawrence missing Calvin Ridley by inches on a potential long touchdown on Jacksonville’s final drive of the season.
But we also must talk about how it never should have gotten to this point. The Jaguars lost five of their last six games. For all the “game of inches” talk, this was a game of way too many yards allowed and way too many mistakes.
Ryan Tannehill, also likely playing his final game with the Titans (and only playing because Will Levis was hurt), threw two touchdown passes. He had two all season entering Sunday.
Lawrence threw two interceptions, one off an awful drop by Evan Engram, another off an awful throw to (or miscommunication with) Zay Jones. The Jaguars’ offense finished this season with the fifth-most expected points lost on turnovers.
I still believe in Lawrence, who needs to get healthy, and the Jaguars need to invest in his line and wide receivers over what will be a very long offseason.
Here are the five other teams that were eliminated over the weekend:
One of Arthur Smith‘s final acts as Falcons coach was yelling at Dennis Allen postgame following a late Saints touchdown in a 48-17 beatdown that eliminated Atlanta from the playoffs. The clock struck midnight on Smith (literally, the firing was announced at 12:02 a.m.) after three 7-10 seasons and zero playoff appearances. Our coach and GM tracker is up and running.
The Seahawks and Saints were eliminated with the Packers’ win. The Seahawks need defensive help. The Saints are in salary cap hell (again) after putting together a win-now roster that didn’t even make the playoffs (again).
The Vikings were eliminated after losing to the Lions. All eyes will be on the quarterback plan with Kirk Cousins set to hit free agency.
The Colts were eliminated by losing to the Texans, but things are looking up. I can’t wait for a healthy Anthony Richardson in Shane Steichen‘s offense.
Fornelli:“From an efficiency standpoint, Michigan matches up well with Washington’s offense. … The Wolverines have the best defense in the country, thanks primarily to their outstanding defensive line. It’s simply better than your offensive line and runs deep. … Washington has excellent players on defense at every level … but it doesn’t boast the depth of Michigan’s talent pool. Pick: Michigan -4.5“
Tom also notes, though, that when you have Michael Penix Jr., Rome Odunze,Jalen McMillan and Ja’Lynn Polk, individual talent can simply make enough plays to win, and I loved this Dennis Dodd story on Penix.
Michigan’s biggest name, meanwhile, is its coach. Is this Jim Harbaugh‘s last game at Michigan? Will he face discipline for a pair of controversies? What type of coach even is he (other than a successful one)? Dennis dove deep on one of the game’s great enigmas.
After missing essentially all of 2023 with a hip injury he sustained in the last Australian Open, Nadal returned at the Brisbane International, advancing to the quarterfinals.