The NFL’s RedZone Channel is, in an increasingly polarized world, one thing we can all agree on. It is not a completely different version of football: The sport is a game of nuances and moments between the moments. The RedZone Channel is none of those things. It’s just pure, uncut offense that, if it starts to drag, will be replaced by something better. It is an action movie with almost no dialogue and more explosions. It is, in short, perfect. And that’s why, every year, we rank the best and the worst teams on RedZone. Here are the criteria:
- Make big plays in crucial moments: Fourth-quarter comebacks aren’t a particularly telling way to gauge a quarterback’s talent, but they’re a great way to gauge a team’s RedZone viability. If a squad is driving late, chances are it’s earning some RedZone love, hopefully by doing something wild.
- Perform in the red zone itself: The vast majority of RedZone plays come when a team is simply in the actual, physical red zone, running its typical offense. To stand out, a team needs to score a lot in those situations, and do so in exciting fashion. Two-yard runs never made anyone want to abandon their lives and marry their television. A leaping catch in the corner of the end zone, however …
- Don’t waste time: No team is perfect, but great RedZone squads avoid being bad in the spotlight. That means avoiding too many garbage-time scores that waste everyone’s time.
- Look great in short bursts: It doesn’t matter if a team is 2-5. If it looks good for a few seconds when the channel pans to it, it can contribute greatly to a football Sunday.
Let’s get to the list:
32. Dallas Cowboys
The Cowboys’ Week 15 game against the Niners was recently flexed out of Sunday Night Football night in favor of a Browns-Giants game. “Can you imagine, man, the Dallas Cowboys flexed out for the Cleveland Browns?” Michael Irvin said. “Honestly, that’s a new low. That’s just absolutely a new low.” New lows are a recurring theme for the Cowboys this year. They were bad prior to Dak Prescott’s season-ending injury in October, but they have run the gauntlet of humiliations since then. They started a quarterback, Ben DiNucci, who was so bad that owner Jerry Jones compared him to Kendall Hinton, the practice squad wide receiver the Broncos were forced to start in Week 12 when all of their quarterbacks were unavailable due to COVID-19. Zeke Elliott, who signed a six-year, $90 million deal through 2026, has been brutal this year (his dead cap is just $6.7 million in 2023, so they can cut him relatively painlessly then). Dallas, despite having a veteran coach in Mike McCarthy and a roster it expected to contend, is unable to succeed even in one of the worst divisions in modern history. Now, the Cowboys have been abandoned by the one group that has stuck with them through thick and thin: television executives. This is a team, mind you, that is so popular that even in its putrid condition, it commanded the season’s biggest television audience for its Thanksgiving game. When the Cowboys have lost TV executives, they’ve lost everything.
31. Atlanta Falcons
This is the first of many teams whose ranking is complicated. Early-season Atlanta, coached by Dan Quinn and routinely blowing games that seemed sealed, was a must-watch RedZone team. How could you miss the potential for history in every fourth quarter?
The Falcons had a 99.9% win probability against the Cowboys and lost.
— Jordan Heck (@JordanHeckFF) September 27, 2020
The Falcons had a 99.6% win probability against the Bears and lost.
Back to back weeks. pic.twitter.com/RoBag3lnHU
Under interim coach Raheem Morris, however, things have gotten dull. The Falcons are a special kind of bad in the red zone—a team that wastes time. Of the five worst red-zone teams this year, they’ve spent the most time there, making 17 more trips than the Jets. Matt Ryan is the only regular starter who completes under 50 percent of his attempts inside the 20-yard line and inside the 10. Being that inefficient inside the 10 is a particularly grim marker: Four quarterbacks are above 70 percent inside the 10. Carson Wentz—Carson Wentz!—has completed 72 percent of his passes inside the 10 this year.
30. New York Jets
I want to briefly give props to Joe Flacco: 19 percent of his pass attempts are deep balls, best in the NFL among players who have 100 dropbacks this year. Now, on to everything else. The Jets score a touchdown on 40 percent of their red-zone trips. This is not only the worst rate in the league, but it seems impossible. In the past few years, the Jets have, at times, been funny, but they’ve ceased even to make us laugh this year. Defensive coordinator Gregg Williams has been fired, and with him go Gregg Williams jokes, one of the silver linings of the season, and his propensity to play so aggressively that the Jets accidentally become visually appealing. The only joke that remains is the franchise itself. This is a bad team to watch.
Statistically, the #Jets are one of the worst teams in NFL history. Comparing their average margin of defeat to the three teams that went 0-14 or worse:
— Rich Cimini (@RichCimini) December 14, 2020
‘76 Bucs: -20.5
‘20 Jets: -16.2
‘08 Lions: -15.6
‘17 Browns: -11.0@ESPNStatsInfo
29. Cincinnati Bengals
Last year, I dubbed the worst four teams on this list the Four Horsemen of the RedZone Apocalypse. They were Washington, the Jets, Giants, and Bengals. Washington and the Giants moved out of this zone this year. The Jets are firmly still in it. The Bengals had a real chance to get out of it and into watchability when they selected Joe Burrow first overall. And in September and October, they looked vaguely watchable.
Since Burrow’s injury, they, are, uh, not.
I love football.
— Alex Wilson (@AlexWilsonESM) December 1, 2020
Watch Darnay Holmes (@ProwayDarnay) absolutely PLASTER Brandon Allen on the CB blitz.
Pat Graham LOVES these CB blitzes off the edge, hits home on 1 or 2 every week. pic.twitter.com/JhTjtXu32L
Oof, there’s the Brandon Allen I remember pic.twitter.com/VBgG5ZiySO
— Andrew Mason (@MaseDenver) December 6, 2020
28. Chicago Bears
It’s not the notes you play in jazz, it’s the ones that you don’t play. The Bears can be described the same way. The only entertainment here is the subtext. The quarterbacks who are not on the roster make everything about the Bears’ quarterback situation funnier. Every huge mistake the franchise has made in the last few years hangs over them like a fog. But you can’t see that on a play-to-play basis, which makes them a terrible RedZone team. The only thing worth watching is who gets fired and who gets benched. This is entertaining but not visually appealing. They are a funny team to tweet or read about and a terrible team to watch. At least they have Allen Robinson. Chicago isn’t last on this list because a late-season Mitchell Trubisky run, potentially forcing the Bears to bring him back, would actually be one of the most entertaining things of the season. Fingers crossed.
A few years ago, NFL Network’s RedZone host, Scott Hanson, told me that because offenses can score from anywhere on the field now, the channel has had to get more precise in how and when to present each touchdown. You can’t predict a 60-yard touchdown in the same way you can a 5-yarder, yet 60-yard touchdowns are increasingly common in this era of football. The Bears are something different: a threat to score from nowhere, a slog no matter where they are on the field. An unwatchable mess.
27. Jacksonville Jaguars
I award the Jaguars points for such a transparent tank that almost anything good they do is an accident. People around the league think the team’s general manager vacancy is actually a pretty good job. One day, we might laugh at how bad this year was. Well, we’re laughing now, but we might laugh in a good way.
And the luckiest pass of the week has to be Mike Glennon's turnover-worthy TD pic.twitter.com/ADDQVDKvfy
— Steve Palazzolo (@PFF_Steve) December 8, 2020
26. Detroit Lions
Like the Falcons, the Lions reliably blew games to the point that you couldn’t keep your eyes off them. You had to watch them if they were in the double box. You never knew what was coming next.
2020 Lions have joined the 2011 Vikings as the only teams in NFL history to lose 3 of their 1st 4 games after holding double-digit leads
— NFL Research (@NFLResearch) October 4, 2020
'11 Vikings started 0-4 & blew a double-digit lead in 3 of those gms, before finishing 3-13
The Falcons could join these teams tomorrow night
And, like the Falcons, once they fired their bad coach, things got a little more boring. The Lions are tied for the league lead for the most red-zone touchdowns, so that’s something. Even Matthew Stafford, the king of creating something from absolutely nothing, has mostly failed to create any good content this year.
25. New York Giants
Last season, Daniel Jones led regular starters in what Football Outsiders calls “failed completions”—the short explanation is that he throws less than the ideal yardage on every down. This season, the Giants are one of the worst red-zone teams in football, scoring on half of their trips. There hasn’t been a lot of watchable football in New York.
The Giants deserve kudos for not being a disaster: Joe Judge seems like a decent coach, and defensive coordinator Patrick Graham has gotten the most out of players like Jabrill Peppers.
Jabrill Peppers is my favorite player on the defense. Plays fast, aggressive & with confidence. Isn’t afraid to make mistakes. Good job on Patrick Graham for putting him in his best spot. pic.twitter.com/2KTok5hqhb
— Bobby Skinner (@BobbySkinner_) December 7, 2020
They have a long way to go, however, to be anything other than mediocre. When Hanson or host of DirecTV’s RedZone, Andrew Siciliano, does cut to the Giants, there’s always a chance that Jones is about to fumble, which he does at a historic rate. But that’s simply not enough to get anyone excited when this team is on the channel.
Daniel Jones has lost 52 yards in sacks and fumbled 3 times. He's the first QB to have a game with 50+ sack yards and 3+ fumbles since...Daniel Jones, in 2019.
— ProFootballReference (@pfref) December 13, 2020
Jones is the first QB since 1994 to have three games like that https://t.co/gehDvlXPFA pic.twitter.com/guV5PZjBYT
24. Denver Broncos
The Broncos turn the ball over on nearly 20 percent of their drives, by far the most in the NFL, which at least keeps things interesting. It’s not all bad. Drew Lock leads the NFL in intended air yards per pass attempt—he’s the only QB averaging over 9 yards per attempt. That’s something to watch. Hinton, the aforementioned practice squad receiver who started a game for Denver at quarterback, made for one of the most thrilling concepts in a game this year. But that game, like the Broncos overall, was better in concept than in reality. The Hinton game, through no fault of his, was an unwatchable mess. And this Broncos team isn’t much more watchable on a normal week.
23. Carolina Panthers
If I could buy stock in a team improving its ranking next year, I’d probably buy Carolina’s. If offensive coordinator Joe Brady stays, and running back Christian McCaffrey is healthy, they might push for the top 10. For now, it’s mostly Teddy Bridgewater playing mistake-free football and little else.
Teddy Bridgewater is absolutely the quarterback we thought he is: 2nd best in avoiding negatively graded plays, 3rd worst in generating positively graded plays.
— Moo (@PFF_Moo) December 16, 2020
At least Matt Rhule’s smock shakes things up.
The official Panthers debut for Matt Rhule's smock. What a time.
— Alaina Getzenberg (@agetzenberg) October 25, 2020
: @MattHintonPhoto pic.twitter.com/8Lj71bdluJ
22. New England Patriots
I suppose New England would be high on your list if you’re into Pats schadenfreude. The Patriots are not particularly good, and they’re not nearly as good as they should be in the red zone. Cam Newton is tied with Derrick Henry and Dalvin Cook for most rushing touchdowns in the red zone. He leads the league in touchdowns inside the 5. But New England is still one of the most inefficient teams in the red zone and simply doesn’t score enough to be worth watching.
Patriots ranks in PPG since 2001 (first year w/ Brady starts)
— NFLonCBS (@NFLonCBS) December 16, 2020
2001: 6
2002: 10
2003: 12
2004: 4
2005: 10
2006: 7
2007: 1
2008: 8
2009: 6
2010: 1
2011: 3
2012: 1
2013: 3
2014: 4
2015: 3
2016: 3
2017: 2
2018: 4
2019: 7
2020: 26 pic.twitter.com/U0shtM4cQS
21. Houston Texans
It is hard to believe that the Texans played one of the most entertaining games of the calendar year in a wild win over Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills in last season’s wild-card game. You should watch Deshaun Watson every time he drops back—something special can always happen—but his franchise has stacked the deck against him. Bill O’Brien spent the last few years misunderstanding value and talent until Watson was left basically alone on offense. He’s still worth watching, and he’s scrambled 53 times this year, by far the most in the league. That’s exciting. It’s also part of the problem.
20. San Francisco 49ers
Injuries have dealt a huge blow to the Niners’ watchability and their success. George Kittle breaking tackles is fun. That defense destroying dudes is fun. Jimmy Garoppolo getting the ball in playmakers’ hands and letting them run through people’s faces is fun. At their best, the 49ers play a brand of bullyball that is aesthetically pleasing. But because they’ve been so decimated by injuries, I do not want them on my television.
19. Las Vegas Raiders
The Raiders are not unwatchable, but they’re not nearly as watchable as they could be. Las Vegas leads the NFL with 13 field goals from 20 to 29 yards. By comparison, the Packers have one field goal from that range despite being near the end zone much more frequently. The Raiders have not attempted a two-point conversion this year. If they have one saving grace, it’s that they are the only team to allow points on over half their drives this year. They have the pieces to get more exciting: Henry Ruggs III and Josh Jacobs are watchable. Derek Carr is fine. I’m OK with this team in a triple box. Maybe a double box.
18. Washington Football Team
Alex Smith’s completed air yards per pass, 3.9, is last in the league. No one is all that close to that mark. This team does not play an arresting style of football. But it does have individual talents worth watching: Chase Young is starting to take over games.
CHASE YOUNG. @youngchase907 #WashingtonFootball
— NFL (@NFL) December 13, 2020
: #WASvsSF on FOX
: NFL app // Yahoo Sports app: https://t.co/3alYfT3slD pic.twitter.com/dv5glFuSMh
Terry McLaurin is one of the NFL’s best young receivers.
Terry McLaurin is such a good route runner pic.twitter.com/gA7gw2zlNF
— Mark Bullock (@MarkBullockNFL) December 13, 2020
This team’s watchability heyday has yet to come. But it’s coming.
17. Minnesota Vikings
This week, Bills star Stefon Diggs revealed he wanted to leave Minnesota because of its run-heavy offense.
Stefon Diggs now revealing that he demanded out of Minnesota because they over-committed to the run and I love Stefon Diggs now https://t.co/RsWHcBb2nU pic.twitter.com/NRlX2PG0o0
— Computer Cowboy (@benbbaldwin) December 14, 2020
Diggs is right that the Vikings prefer a more conservative style, but they can be watchable in spurts, which is the point of this list. Only Aaron Rodgers has more deep completions this season than Kirk Cousins, according to Pro Football Focus. Rookie wide receiver Justin Jefferson is a revelation. Dalvin Cook is one of the most exciting players with the ball in his hands.
16. Philadelphia Eagles
Last year, I wrote of the Eagles: “Not just bad, boring.” They are still bad, but they are no longer boring. There are two Eagles teams. One can be described thusly:
Jalen Hurts is what Sean Payton thinks Taysom Hill is
— Moo (@PFF_Moo) December 13, 2020
The other can be described with this:
How bad is Carson Wentz's 2020 falloff? He's currently second only to the 2015 Ghost of Peyton Manning in the biggest dropoff in DYAR from his previous three seasons' average. He'd have to hit -1,535 passing DYAR to pass Manning pic.twitter.com/2bQwlNu452
— Bryan Knowles (@BryKno) December 3, 2020
The Wentz version would be in contention for dead last on this list. The Hurts version is too new to make declarations about, but it exhibits some competence. Pro Football Focus’s Seth Galina made the case this week that the Eagles improved across the board with Hurts as the starter. The Hurts-led version of the Eagles is clearly better and has a very high watchability ceiling.
15. Indianapolis Colts
A fine team with great players. Not particularly exciting unless we had a live feed of this:
"Dagummit!"
— ESPN (@espn) December 8, 2020
Legendary trash talker Philip Rivers turns 39 today
(via @NFLFilms) pic.twitter.com/Xz15UEoaro
14. Tampa Bay Buccaneers
A few years ago, I talked to Siciliano about the RedZone Channel era of the NFL. He mentioned that if there’s a Mount Rushmore, the first two names on the list are Tom Brady and Drew Brees. These two, he explained, always deliver. When they are on, things will happen. In Tampa, however, the things that are happening are not all that good. Twenty percent of Brady’s throws are labeled as bad throws by Pro Football Reference, third-worst in the league. His deep passing problems late in this season are well documented.
Per @NextGenStats Tom Brady was 0-6 with 2 INT on deep passes against the Rams. Brady is 0-19 on deep passes in his last 4 games and missed on his last 22 deep attempts. That's the longest streak for any QB since 2017. pic.twitter.com/Lg7d4PVMce
— NFL Research (@NFLResearch) November 24, 2020
The Bucs offense will probably click at some point—there’s too much talent to not improve by January, and Brady and Bruce Arians are too good at their jobs not to figure it out. I just don’t want to watch them until it’s figured out.
13. Pittsburgh Steelers
Well, this is a type of watchability.
BILLS PICK-SIX ON BIG BEN
— Bleacher Report (@BleacherReport) December 14, 2020
(via @NFL)pic.twitter.com/JNpevUSAOw
The Steelers blitz at one of the highest rates in the NFL and they pressure and knock down quarterbacks more than anyone in the league. At different points this season, they have had weapons who have looked like legitimate stars, like Chase Claypool and Diontae Johnson, before he started dropping passes. Although they are a generally pleasant team to watch, Ben Roethlisberger is simply very limited in what he can do.
Ben doesn't even try to throw to the intermediate/deep middle of the field anymore. It was @pff_seth who first pointed this out to me, and now I can't unsee it.
— Steven Ruiz (@theStevenRuiz) December 3, 2020
It's all deep sideline shots and underneath stuff. pic.twitter.com/wyH8dv4ZNk
On defense, Pittsburgh has playmakers like Minkah Fitzpatrick and T.J. Watt to spice things up, but they don’t offset how unfun it is to see Big Ben hobbling around. This is a very good team with a real chance of a playoff run. That doesn’t mean you should be excited when RedZone cuts to them.
12. Cleveland Browns
The idea of the Browns winning games is more exciting than watching the Browns win games. Baker Mayfield has had six games with fewer than 200 yards passing, which is partly attributable to the weather Cleveland has played in, and partly due to a change in their style of play. Browns fans absolutely do not care whether it looks particularly pretty as long as they make their first playoff appearance in almost 20 years. But this list cares. In 2018, the Browns were ranked no. 1 in these rankings. “The Browns will not make the playoffs,” I wrote then. “Mayfield is 6-6 as a starter and he’ll have to settle for being hyped up for the next nine months. But the Browns accomplished something as impressive in 2018: They are fun as hell to watch.” The Browns have gotten more boring since that chaotic season. (Gregg Williams was their coach!) They’ve also gotten much, much better. They’ll take that.
11. Arizona Cardinals
The Cardinals have a good chance to compete for this list’s no. 1 spot in future seasons. Kliff Kingsbury’s play-calling has been strange this year, and Kyler Murray has been slightly banged up in recent games. Still, Arizona plays an appealing brand of football. Murray has the most pass attempts in the league on RPOs and is second to Lamar Jackson in rushing attempts by a quarterback. Kyler has the capability to be one of the league’s best quarterbacks and soon.
Players to rack up a first down or TD on at least 40% of their rush attempts in a single season 2010-2020 (min. 100 carries, PFF)
— Ian Hartitz (@Ihartitz) December 15, 2020
2014 Cam Newton (43.7%)
2015 Newton (42.4%)
2011 Newton (41.8%)
2020 Newton (41.6%)
2020 Kyler Murray (40%)
Kyler Murray is special.
— Pat Leonard (@PLeonardNYDN) December 14, 2020
2nd & 9, Cardinals 35-yard line, 2nd quarter at Giants.
His feet. His eyes. Rocket arm. This play in particular so impressive to watch in person Sunday at MetLife Stadium. pic.twitter.com/CK9hLn6Njn
There’s also this keeping the Cardinals out of the top 10:
DeAndre Hopkins route tree over his last three games has been... limited pic.twitter.com/dQzK9ZQtbV
— Graham Barfield (@GrahamBarfield) December 8, 2020
10. Baltimore Ravens
It pains me to put the Ravens, last year’s top-ranked team, this low. Last year I wrote: “The Baltimore Ravens are the only NFL team to score on over half of their drives. If an alien came down tomorrow and asked to see a football team to learn what the sport is, we’d take them to Baltimore.” That was very much true a year ago. Now we’d take them to Kansas City. Or Green Bay. Or Buffalo (we gotta get the aliens to a Bills tailgate). The offense has looked stagnant at times this season. Lamar Jackson has questioned the predictability of the team’s play-calling, and offensive coordinator Greg Roman has come under fire. But we have to watch for one reason: When Jackson drops back, there is a chance that we are about to see the coolest thing we’ve ever seen.
Lamar to Mark Andrews! #RavensFlock pic.twitter.com/baPz5D57qK
— Roto Street Journal (RSJ) (@RotoStJournal) December 15, 2020
9. Miami Dolphins
The Dolphins create fun. They force turnovers on 17 percent of their defensive snaps, the highest rate in the league. They are allowing the second-fewest points. On offense, Tua Tagovailoa leads the NFL in aggressive throws. They are a fun, young team competing for the playoffs sooner than anyone thought. Let’s watch this team!
The NFL's 10 least aggressive passers vs. 10 most aggressive (number is % of throws where a defender is within 1 yard or less of the receiver at the time of pass), per NGS.
— Kaelen Jones (@kaelenjones) December 7, 2020
Interesting so many effective scramblers (Mahomes, Wilson, Rodgers, Darnold, Murray) are among first group pic.twitter.com/zN27Jc8brm
8. Los Angeles Rams
Sean McVay is back. Defensive coordinator Brandon Staley has one of the most interesting defenses in the sport. And the team does enough to make Jared Goff look OK:
Jared Goff's average pass traveled 3.5 yards past the LOS Sunday - the lowest of any starter. And he still threw for 351 yards.
— Sheil Kapadia (@SheilKapadia) December 8, 2020
Rams had 253 yards after the catch - second most by any team in a game this season.
That was a coaching clinic on how to make life easier for your QB.
A bonus: The stadium legitimately looks cool on television!
Also this:
Jared Goff with an absolutely flawless spike after his rushing TD today. pic.twitter.com/ZVHNQqNhRV
— Field Yates (@FieldYates) October 11, 2020
7. New Orleans Saints
Let’s say this up top: If Jameis Winston started in place of the injured Drew Brees, the Saints might be no. 1 on this list. Instead, it’s Taysom Hill, a different type of entertainment. Hill makes far fewer mistakes than Winston—who threw 30 interceptions last season and somehow still led the league in interceptions that should have been thrown. Taysom Hill averages 9.3 yards per scramble. Among regular starters, that is behind only Newton. He is getting better as a passer:
TAYSOM HILL #Saints pic.twitter.com/gUgJT2mMoY
— uSTADIUM (@uSTADIUM) December 14, 2020
Taysom Hill with the DIME and the #Saints aren’t done pic.twitter.com/GK2CK5M81u
— The Game Day NFL (@TheGameDayNFL) December 13, 2020
Brees will likely return at some point and bring a higher level of competence to a team with exciting players like Alvin Kamara and Michael Thomas. For now, just enjoy the weirdness. It’s not Jameis, but it’s the next best thing.
Taysom Hill TD x 2
— Sporting News (@sportingnews) November 22, 2020
Not bad for a tight end pic.twitter.com/ZgmJwvM8P4
6. Tennessee Titans
The ingredients for a great game: terrible pass rush and letting teams stay in it by allowing them to convert third downs. There is an unpredictability to everything the Titans do, coupled with the fact that A.J. Brown and Derrick Henry can do basically anything they want at any time.
A.J. Brown with an UNREAL catch
— Field Yates (@FieldYates) December 13, 2020
( : @Titans pic.twitter.com/DTPF3Roz7T)
Henry is tied for the NFL lead with 11 rushing touchdowns in the red zone, so he gets the job done there. More importantly he can do this from anywhere on the field:
DERRICK HENRY GAME-WINNING TD
— Bleacher Report (@BleacherReport) November 22, 2020
(via @NFL)pic.twitter.com/xGSXYfH0bQ
5. Seattle Seahawks
I don’t actually remember what prompted me to tweet “The Seahawks have literally never played in a normal game” last November. It seemed like an obvious statement during a pretty wild 49ers-Seahawks game. The reason it connected with Seahawks fans is that it is their reality. It turns out Seattle simply doesn’t play normal games. The data backs this up.
Turns out the Seahawks really have never played a normal game.
— Nate Weller (@NateWellerr) April 30, 2020
Using Excitement Index I looked back at some of the weirdest stretches of games we've seen over the last four seasons. https://t.co/vEEknB5pz0 pic.twitter.com/N8ltiFWX6c
Per The Wall Street Journal in January 2020:
“On 53 plays this season, Seattle’s win probability in a given game either increased or decreased by at least 15 percent. That wasn’t just the most in the NFL. It was leagues beyond the norm. The league average team had only 26.6 plays that created that much change, or around the Seahawks. The next closest team, the 49ers, had 47, or a difference of more than 10 percent.”
What’s important here is that the Seahawks’ games are getting weirder: Seattle’s defense is worse this year and its offense is better. Russell Wilson is better than ever, yet he leads the league in picks inside the 10-yard line (three), which is enough to keep things interesting. The Seahawks are getting more exciting. They are getting less normal. I’ll take all of that you got.
4. Buffalo Bills
Ahem.
Is there anything Josh Allen can't do?
— Buffalo Bills (@BuffaloBills) November 15, 2020
#BUFvsAZ on CBS pic.twitter.com/vBKF5ufIVo
...
The fact that Josh Allen completed this pass is crazy @JoshAllenQB @BuffaloBills
— The Checkdown (@thecheckdown) November 15, 2020
#BUFvsAZ on CBS pic.twitter.com/KPrNAYqW3T
…
Josh Allen has a Pass TD & Rush TD in a game for the 15th time in his career, the 2nd-most by a player in his first 3 seasons in NFL history behind Cam Newton's 20.
— ESPN Stats & Info (@ESPNStatsInfo) November 29, 2020
Allen's 15 such games are by far the most in the NFL since he entered the league in 2018. pic.twitter.com/DVE0Pl8QND
3. Green Bay Packers
Hanson once told me that the worst RedZone teams are the ones who get there and then waste time with no efficiency. The Packers are definitely not that. Davante Adams leads the NFL in receptions inside the 10, catching 81 percent of his passes. He’s tied for first with Mike Evans in touchdowns inside the 10 and second in touchdowns inside the 20. Aaron Rodgers has the best completion percentage among regular starters in the red zone. He leads the NFL in red zone touchdowns with 28, three more than Russell Wilson. Unsurprisingly, he has zero interceptions there, either.
I know Aaron Rodgers makes the impossible look pretty routine, but this play is just absolutely ridiculous... #GoPackGo #GOAT pic.twitter.com/jBEwqZt5c3
— Eli Berkovits (@BookOfEli_NFL) December 13, 2020
Here's a wow stat: Aaron Rodgers has more touchdown passes (39) than JK Scott has punts (38) in 2020. pic.twitter.com/wKDG3p231c
— Zach Kruse (@zachkruse2) December 14, 2020
2. Kansas City Chiefs
I have written, conservatively, tens of thousands of words about the Chiefs since the start of the 2018 season—about Patrick Mahomes’s ability to make miracles look normal, or his ability to correct mistakes in mid-drive or mid-play. But no description can match seeing it for oneself:
Since the start of 2019, the Chiefs are now 8-1 (.888) with Patrick Mahomes at QB after falling behind by 10+ points.
— Field Yates (@FieldYates) December 13, 2020
The rest of the NFL is 68-356-1 (.160) combined when trailing by 10+ points during that same period.
A lead isn’t a lead against the Chiefs, and that’s why they are incredible to watch. They can feature any player they want, whether it’s Mahomes, Travis Kelce, Tyreek Hill, or whomever else, and score quickly and emphatically. They are the perfect offense.
1. Los Angeles Chargers
The two most important days of your life, the saying goes, is the day you’re born and the day you figure out why. If you’ve wondered why the Chargers exist—a team mostly unwanted by the city they play in, and who have contributed almost nothing to the greater good of the sport in recent years—we are getting closer to finding the answer. They are the perfect cocktail of football entertainment. Justin Herbert looks like he’s going to be one of the league’s best passers for years to come, but he’s been surrounded by so many little disasters that he not only doesn’t win, he aggressively loses. The Chargers do things like this:
Ladies and gentlemen, the Los Angeles Chargers
— Pro Football Network (@PFN365) December 13, 2020
pic.twitter.com/sB6XiCttff
Or this:
QB IS SNEAKING WHEN O-LINE IS DROPPING IN PASS PRO
— Warren Sharp (@SharpFootball) November 29, 2020
FIRE EVERYONE pic.twitter.com/633syvqRNr
This week, The Wall Street Journal detailed that, statistically, the Chargers have by far the most horrible losses in the sport. The same paper also found that in 2016, the Chargers lost four consecutive games in which they had win probabilities in the third quarter or later of 77.9 percent, 84.7 percent, and 99.9 percent twice. The WSJ found, incredibly, that the Chargers had a 1-in-30 million odds of losing all four of those games given those circumstances.
Since then, they have changed quarterbacks, cities, and coaches. They have promise. They also have a purpose. To play the most entertaining football in the league.