The NFL has reached the 10 game mark in its 20234 season. The Kansas City Chiefs remain undefeated—barely. KC leads the AFC. The Detroit Lions have one loss—barely. Detroit leads the NFC.
Besides KC, the teams expected to be in playoff spots in the AFC had the season ended last week were Buffalo, Houston, Baltimore, and the LA Chargers. The surprises are Pittsburgh, in first place in the AFC North and Denver, the third place team in the AFC West.
Yet both those teams merit the spots they are in. Pittsburgh has become a dynamic offensive team with Russell Wilson fully recovered from his training camp injury. The defense is very strong, making the Steelers a legitimate force in their division.
However, the Steelers have a daunting schedule to finish the season. In a scheduling oddity where they haven’t played any intra-division opponents until this late in the season, Pittsburgh plays division foes Baltimore, Cleveland and Cincinnati twice.
If that isn’t daunting enough, the non-division teams they play are Philadelphia and those Kansas City Chiefs who come to Pittsburgh on Christmas Day, a Wednesday, four days after the Steelers travel to Baltimore for a game in the Ravens Nest.
Should Pittsburgh survive this gauntlet, then they are a most worthy playoff team. For on this past Sunday, it took a fortuitous spot and a booth review of a fourth down play by Washington to secure a one point victory over a very good Commanders squad.
Denver gets the too bad, so sad award for losing Sunday’s game in Kansas City. The Broncos, behind rookie Bo Nix and quarterback, fought the Chiefs hard. Hard enough that the Broncos were in position to win the game and knock KC from the unbeaten ranks with a game-ending field goal. Almost a chip shot.
Except that KC found a way to block the kick and preserve the victory. Good for the Chiefs, a possibly deflating loss for Denver. Going forward, the schedule is not light. If they need a win to get into the playoffs on the final Sunday, it would be over KC at Mile High.
Denver’s main competitors for the last Wild Card slot are Indianapolis, Cincinnati and Miami. All currently have below .500 records and are in search of their identities.
In the NFC, two other NFC North teams besides the Lions are in line for the playoffs. Minnesota and Green Bay are legitimate teams with good quarterbacks at the helm. Even the Chicago Bears, experiencing growing pains and coaching problems, can be spoilers in such a top heavy division.
Meanwhile, Detroit continued to build on the successes they have had with Jared Goff at quarterback. To me, he is the NFL M.V.P. thus far. Goff engineered a fourth quarter comeback in Houston which resulted in a significant road win over the AFC South leaders.
Philadelphia and Washington are the class of the NFC East. Dallas suffered a great loss with Dak Prescott out for the remainder of the season, but the Cowboys are a flawed franchise, beginning with the owner, Jerry Jones. The New York Giants are as big a flop as the New York Jets, with whom they share Met Life Stadium.
Out West, it is the surprising Arizona Cardinals who have gotten everybody’s attention. Beating the Jets soundly at home looks really good; Marvin Harrison, Jr. is the real deal at wide receiver. I don’t think the Cardinals are a fluke. A lot of football has to be played—San Francisco, Seattle and the Los Angeles Rams all remain in contention for the division title, although the Rams looked bad on Monday night at home against the Dolphins.
In the NFC South, Atlanta leads the pack. As Kirk Cousins goes, so goes the Falcons. The schedule does the Georgia team no great favors. While the Giants, Raiders and Panthers are to be played, so too does ATL have to travel to Denver this weekend and visit Minnesota and Washington while hosting the Chargers and Panthers. Should the Falcons fall from their perch, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers behind Baker Mayfield and New Orleans with a healthy Derek Carr might return to its early positive form and make a run for the NFC South crown.
The highlight games for this weekend include Washington at Philadelphia on Thursday night; Baltimore at Pittsburgh early on Sunday then the Falcons at Broncos and a titanic rematch in Buffalo between Kansas City and the Bills. All important contests. If you are a pro football fan, then this is a good weekend to watch good football.
Turning to college football, most schools have two or three games to play before conference championships. Four of the top five are Big Ten schools. #1 Oregon has only a road trip to Wisconsin before ending the season at home versus Washington. Barring the unthinkable, the Ducks should be in Indianapolis to play the winner of Indiana and Ohio State, to be played on November 23 in Columbus. All three, plus Penn State are virtual locks for the twelve team playoff.
By record, Texas is the best team in the SEC. Perhaps that is true. Tennessee may disagree with that, along with Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia. If Georgia gets by Tennessee on Saturday in Athens, they have an easy opponent in UMass prior to hosting Georgia Tech, which knocked off ACC leader Miami last weekend, in a rivalry game. Ole Miss is on the road at Florida in The Swamp and meets Mississippi State in the Egg Bowl. Alabama has Mercer and Auburn at home and goes to Norman to face a downtrodden Oklahoma.
It is Texas which clearly has it the roughest. This weekend is a renewal of an old and bitter rivalry as the Longhorns go to Fayetteville to take on the Razorbacks. A decent Kentucky comes to Austin. The finale is at College Station where the 7-2 Aggies have been frothing to finally play their rival which they left behind in the Big 12. A&M could dash Texas’ SEC title hopes; the ‘Horns should make it through to the playoffs.
Notre Dame appears to be a lock for the playoffs, although they tangle with unbeaten Army on November 23rd in South Bend. Miami needs to recover from its shocking loss; I don’t know the tie breakers in the ACC, but SMU is in control and it is between Clemson and the U as to who plays in the Charlotte title contest and which team maybe makes the playoffs.
BYU and Colorado appear headed to a showdown in the Big 12. Coach Prime, a.k.a. Deion Sanders has resurrected the Buffaloes and will possibly be heading to the NFL with his son who will be a very high draft pick.
Other worthy playoff teams might be Boise State and Washington State. Both play Oregon State in the final two games, so the Beavers might determine which team goes to the playoffs.
There is a long way to go. It’s going to be an exciting finish. The selections might raise an eyebrow or two. Then the playoffs will begin and the real fun will start.
As the Emirates NBA Cup is underway, it is time to notice the start of the Cleveland Cavaliers, Oklahoma City Thunder, Golden State Warriors, Phoenix Suns, Denver Nuggets and Boston Celtics. All red hot out of the gate, with the Cavs unbeaten and the others have no more than three losses. Phoenix may have some difficulty with Kevin Durant out of the lineup. Ditto OKC with big man Chet Holmgren sidelined with a fractured tailbone. The Lakers are 4-0 at home; Lebron James is playing like the best player in the world not named Victor Wembanyama, who merely scored 50 points almost effortlessly on Wednesday night for San Antonio.
I won’t get into the rest of the league. Too mediocre right now.
Finally—someone give the Winnipeg Jets a saliva test. Entering Thursday’s game in Tampa, the Jets sported an incredible 15-1 record. Whether it is the start of the season or any stretch during it, that is an amazing feat.
But isn’t playing the games what it is all about—record setting?