JO_75
Hall of Famer
After a crazy weekend that was Wild Card Weekend, what does the Divisional Round have in store for us this weekend?
Saturday January 17th
Bills @ Broncos: The Buffalo Bills and Denver Broncos meet again in the postseason, but this time with a trip to the AFC Championship on the line. Buffalo dominated last year’s playoff matchup 31–7 at home; now Josh Allen and company head to Mile High looking for their second straight road playoff win. While the spotlight falls on Allen and Bo Nix, this game may be decided on the ground. Denver’s priority will be slowing James Cook, the league’s top rusher, who was held to 46 yards last week. On the other side, the Broncos’ run-heavy approach could exploit a shaky Bills run defense and limit Allen’s time on the field.
Buffalo enters banged up, losing both Gabe Davis and Tyrell Shavers to ACL injuries, forcing a heavier reliance on tight ends Dalton Kincaid and Dawson Knox against a Denver defense allowing the seventh-fewest passing yards. The Bills will also be short-handed in the secondary, while Denver comes in healthy giving the Broncos a clear edge as the stakes rise.
49ers @ Seahawks: The NFC West made a statement on Wild Card Weekend, with all three playoff teams advancing, and now San Francisco and Seattle meet for the third time this season with a trip to the NFC Championship on the line. The 49ers began their Super Bowl LX path by knocking off the defending champions, but the grind of injuries continues to loom large. San Francisco deserves credit for surviving despite key losses, yet the injury toll may finally be catching up. The loss of George Kittle to an Achilles injury is massive, removing one of their most reliable offensive weapons. Still, this group has found ways to win all season, leaning on depth, defense, and execution in critical moments.
Seattle, meanwhile, has flourished under Mike Macdonald, capturing the NFC West and the No. 1 seed in just his second season. In the Week 18 meeting, the Seahawks controlled the game on the ground as Kenneth Walker III and Zach Charbonnet combined for 171 rushing yards; a blueprint they may need again with Sam Darnold questionable due to an oblique injury. With the regular-season series split, the tiebreaker comes here, and only one team will move on to the NFC Championship.
Sunday January 18th
Texans @ Patriots: Defense takes center stage in Foxborough, where the Houston Texans and New England Patriots meet with a potential AFC Championship Game hosting spot on the line if Buffalo advances. For Houston, this is historic territory; the Texans have never reached an AFC title game and their path runs through a dominant defense that smothered Aaron Rodgers and the Steelers on Monday night.
The Texans now face their toughest test yet in Drake Maye, who has played at an MVP level but is coming off a game where he was sacked five times. Houston’s defense, fresh off four sacks and two defensive touchdowns against Pittsburgh, will look to replicate that pressure. Houston will also need cleaner play from C.J. Stroud, whose turnovers last week loom large especially with top receiver Nico Collins sidelined.
New England’s defense has been just as impressive, holding Justin Herbert and the Chargers to three points in the Wild Card round. If the Patriots are without star corner Christian Gonzalez, it could help offset Houston’s loss of Collins, but this game still shapes up as a trench battle defined by pressure, turnovers, and field position.
Rams @ Bears:
Saturday January 17th
Bills @ Broncos: The Buffalo Bills and Denver Broncos meet again in the postseason, but this time with a trip to the AFC Championship on the line. Buffalo dominated last year’s playoff matchup 31–7 at home; now Josh Allen and company head to Mile High looking for their second straight road playoff win. While the spotlight falls on Allen and Bo Nix, this game may be decided on the ground. Denver’s priority will be slowing James Cook, the league’s top rusher, who was held to 46 yards last week. On the other side, the Broncos’ run-heavy approach could exploit a shaky Bills run defense and limit Allen’s time on the field.
Buffalo enters banged up, losing both Gabe Davis and Tyrell Shavers to ACL injuries, forcing a heavier reliance on tight ends Dalton Kincaid and Dawson Knox against a Denver defense allowing the seventh-fewest passing yards. The Bills will also be short-handed in the secondary, while Denver comes in healthy giving the Broncos a clear edge as the stakes rise.
49ers @ Seahawks: The NFC West made a statement on Wild Card Weekend, with all three playoff teams advancing, and now San Francisco and Seattle meet for the third time this season with a trip to the NFC Championship on the line. The 49ers began their Super Bowl LX path by knocking off the defending champions, but the grind of injuries continues to loom large. San Francisco deserves credit for surviving despite key losses, yet the injury toll may finally be catching up. The loss of George Kittle to an Achilles injury is massive, removing one of their most reliable offensive weapons. Still, this group has found ways to win all season, leaning on depth, defense, and execution in critical moments.
Seattle, meanwhile, has flourished under Mike Macdonald, capturing the NFC West and the No. 1 seed in just his second season. In the Week 18 meeting, the Seahawks controlled the game on the ground as Kenneth Walker III and Zach Charbonnet combined for 171 rushing yards; a blueprint they may need again with Sam Darnold questionable due to an oblique injury. With the regular-season series split, the tiebreaker comes here, and only one team will move on to the NFC Championship.
Sunday January 18th
Texans @ Patriots: Defense takes center stage in Foxborough, where the Houston Texans and New England Patriots meet with a potential AFC Championship Game hosting spot on the line if Buffalo advances. For Houston, this is historic territory; the Texans have never reached an AFC title game and their path runs through a dominant defense that smothered Aaron Rodgers and the Steelers on Monday night.
The Texans now face their toughest test yet in Drake Maye, who has played at an MVP level but is coming off a game where he was sacked five times. Houston’s defense, fresh off four sacks and two defensive touchdowns against Pittsburgh, will look to replicate that pressure. Houston will also need cleaner play from C.J. Stroud, whose turnovers last week loom large especially with top receiver Nico Collins sidelined.
New England’s defense has been just as impressive, holding Justin Herbert and the Chargers to three points in the Wild Card round. If the Patriots are without star corner Christian Gonzalez, it could help offset Houston’s loss of Collins, but this game still shapes up as a trench battle defined by pressure, turnovers, and field position.
Rams @ Bears:
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