In 1999, the Tennessee Titans went 13–3 but finished second in their division to the 14–2 Jacksonville Jaguars, giving Tennessee the distinction of having the most wins for a wild-card team in NFL history. The 1986 Chicago Bears, 1998 Atlanta Falcons and 2004 New England Patriots are the only teams to win 14 games and not receive a No. 1 seed.
This season could be a historic anomaly in the NFC. Usually when a team like the Detroit Lions is 11-1 and seemingly on its way to 15 or 16 wins, it doesn’t have to worry too much about winning the division or getting the No. 1 seed. But the Philadelphia Eagles and Minnesota Vikings, both at 10-2, could keep the pressure on all season.
The Lions have the NFL’s third-toughest remaining schedule, according to Tankathon, which doesn’t help. The Vikings are fourth, and part of every team’s problem is that they play each other in Week 18 in Detroit. That game could have an incredible impact on the NFC playoff bracket. The Lions also have tough games remaining vs. Green Bay (Thursday night), Buffalo and San Francisco, giving the Eagles plenty of hope to steal the No. 1 seed.
Philadelphia has the 23rd toughest remaining schedule. The Eagles have just two games left against winning teams (Pittsburgh and Washington). It’s possible that a 15-2 team doesn’t get the top seed in the NFC, and a 14-3 team doesn’t win its division.
Detroit should be comfortable at 11-1, but may seem like it needs to go 16-1 to get the all-important top seed in the NFC. It should be a great race in the end.
Here are the power rankings after Week 13 of the NFL season: