I know you are bombarded by several predictions on
the Internet, but Dibbles and Bits did correctly pick six of the eight division
winners last year (I whiffed hardcore on the NFC East – I had the Skins
finishing second, and I didn’t see New Orleans poor play coming).
AFC East
1. Patriots
(11-5)
2. Dolphins
(9-7)
3. Bills
(8-8)
4. Jets
(8-8)
Had Brady not lost his suspension, New England
remains the class of this division. The
defending champs may experience some pain in the secondary after losing Revis,
and their schedule is brutal at the beginning, but the sky will not fall on
them this year.
I’m a Tannehill believer, and Miami’s improved
defense will help, though I think it won’t live up to the massive amount of
preseason acclaim. Still, 9-7 is possible
for the Fins, particularly since they might be 5-2 to start the season. Buffalo is starting Tyrod Taylor at
quarterback, which should be all that needs to be said. He will need to wildly exceed expectations to
get this team to nine wins, even with a terrifying defense.
The Jets likely finish last, but I think a tie with
Buffalo is very possible, assuming their new secondary remains healthy. It is theoretically possible that Brandon
Marshall returns to shining form at receiver, and maybe Chris Ivory makes other
fantasy teams cry, but quarterback continues to fail them as a position.
AFC North
1. Ravens
(10-6)
2. Steelers
(10-6)
3. Bengals
(8-8)
4. Browns
(6-10)
As usual, the AFC North is tough to judge. Baltimore continues to look like the real
formidable power in this division, and one can’t impugn their coaching staff
over the past five seasons. A similar
roster ran the Patriots to the wire in last year’s playoffs.
As you can see, I think Pittsburgh has the offensive
power to match Baltimore in record, but the teams are constructed very
differently. The Steelers did not
maintain their traditional defensive prowess last season, and none of their
current defensive players have proven to be anything special. If Ryan Shazier or Jarvis Jones takes a step
forward, it will matter for the playoffs.
Otherwise, I see Pittsburgh putting up a good record without any real
teeth to their ten wins.
The oft-predicted Year of Dalton Failure will happen
in 2015. While Cincy has a great defense
and brings a good running attack, I think in this tough a division the lack of
a top quarterback talent will hurt their record immensely.
Some pundits love the Browns, and they finished 7-9
last year. But much of their success
will depend on Josh McCown, especially given the tough couple of years for this
crop of running backs. In the end, a
McCown-Manziel year at quarterback sounds like pushing through muck.
AFC South
1. Colts
(11-5)
2. Texans
(9-7)
3. Jaguars
(5-11)
4. Titans
(3-13)
While this will be the year that Houston wins a game
in Indy, the Colts will have no problems here.
Andrew Luck returns with more offensive weapons and the defense has
re-tooled a bit.
Houston will be in the hunt for a while, but their
final placement will depend on injuries.
If Arian Foster returns and does well, the team can easily do enough to
win nine games. Brian Hoyer also factors
in…if he gets injured or doesn’t play well, should we trust a Texans offense
run by Ryan Mallett?
I think despite some truly bad years, the Jags will
fire coach Gus Bradley after this season.
Blake Bortles will need to settle in for his second year and perform to prevent
his coach losing a job. Much as Bortles
shows good pocket ability, Jacksonville’s supporting cast remains so anemic
that I don’t see more than five wins.
The Titans will be all about Marcus Mariota this year, and should be in
the hunt for the NFL’s worst record.
AFC West
1. Broncos
(10-6)
2. Chiefs
(10-6)
3. Chargers
(7-9)
4. Raiders
(5-11)
Was the abysmal end to 2014 just a blip for Peyton,
or the sign of things to come?
Regardless, his offensive line and new coach Gray Kubiak are potent
enough for the offense to succeed even if Osweiler comes in midway through the
season. With some standouts as well at
key positions on defense, Denver will win again.
I have to confess that I like the Chiefs a lot this
year. It’s not only the ridiculously
talented defensive group (headlined by safety Eric Berry, who everyone should
cheer for), but also the development of Travis Kelce at tight end. Jamaal Charles is also still there, and I
find it hard to believe Alex Smith won’t go to great lengths to build rapport
with Jeremy Maclin.
San Diego, however, is poised to miss the playoffs
again. Sure, Rivers can play and is now
all locked up contractually, but the running game has large question marks this
year, and will be primarily focused on developing Melvin Gordon. While I expect Rivers to surprise the league
with his performance after a rough 2014, the Bolts don’t have enough in this
division.
As for Oakland, Latavius Murray will become a
household name this season. But
otherwise, Derek Carr’s issues between the 20s will continue.
NFC East
1. Eagles
(11-5)
2. Cowboys
(10-6)
3. Giants
(8-8)
4. Redskins
(4-12)
DeMarco Murray’s switch will be the most important
move this offseason, in that I think it will mean they finish first. After 10-6 with Nick Foles and Mark Sanchez
last year, a Bradford-Sanchez unit with a very improved running game can do
better. Plus they secondary, which
killed Philly last year, has been upgraded.
That’s not to say Dallas will slouch too much in
2015. Sean Lee returns, and the Cowboys
brought in Greg Hardy and Randy Gregory to bolster the pass rush. While their choice of running back will loom
large, the O-line is good enough to block well.
If Tony Romo has the ability (like he did last season) to feed a running
game, he will have another great year.
The Giants seem perpetually stuck in neutral right
now. Odell Beckham is great on the
outside, but the Giants were not a good defensive team last year, and not much
has changed. As for the Redskins, this
season will be terrible. Kirk Cousins may
have a flash of brilliance or two each game, but as long as he keeps throwing
picks, 5 wins is the ceiling.
NFC North
1. Packers
(12-4)
2. Lions
(9-7)
3. Vikings
(9-7)
4. Bears
(6-10)
The Packers have been so consistent that it feels
weird to not pick them, even after losing Jordy Nelson. Aaron Rodgers remains his prodigious self,
and the Pack might be able to make the Super Bowl this year.
The Lions need a running attack, and Ameer Abdullah
may prove to be the answer. Pairing him
with Joique Bell could make for a nice two-headed attack. I think Detroit will fall short of the
division win, however, because the back of the defense remains fairly
fluid. The addition of Haloti Ngata will
help replace Ndamukong Suh, but Detroit will need to outscore opponents to win. That’s tough to do consistently.
The Vikings should be a great bet to rise this
season. Teddy B under center showed
promise last year, and anything except a really bad sophomore slump will make
for an acceptable season. Adrian
Peterson also returns, so there’s that.
The Bears are lovable, and yet they can’t live up to
this division right now. If Kyle Fuller
takes a good step in development, that will be great news for last year’s
third-worst pass defense. Otherwise,
this is likely the last year for Cutler in Chicago.
NFC South
1. Falcons
(9-7)
2. Panthers
(7-9)
3. Saints
(7-9)
4. Bucs
(5-11)
One year removed from a 7-8-1 division winner, the
NFC South remains the worst in football for my money. A 9-7 division champ looks likely here, and
even that might be generous.
The Falcons were abysmal on defense last year, so
much so that they have to be trending upwards, especially after bringing in Dan
Quinn to be the new head coach. That
said, another Julio Jones injury could tank the Falcons, and no one has any
idea who will be their premier running back.
The Panthers had difficulty scoring last year, which
will be exacerbated now that Kelvin Benjamin is out. On defense, they remain very strong in a
division with little to no defensive ability, so if Cam Newton can make up for
Benjamin’s absence, there might be hope.
The Saints are going in the wrong direction. Drew Brees can only do so much after losing
several key players due to cap concerns, one of whom happened to be his red
zone weapon in Jimmy Graham. He can only
do so much.
The Bucs are a trendy team to do well, and a 7-9
record is very possible. There are too
many holes to fill, however, and I think Tampa ends the season feeling good
about Jameis Winston.
NFC West
1. Seahawks
(10-6)
2. Cardinals
(8-8)
3. Rams
(7-9)
4. 49ers
(3-13)
Seattle is due for a step back at some point soon,
and this year could be when it happens.
But I still think they take the division regardless, primarily because
the quarterback play is consistent there and the defense is still
formidable. The holdout of Kam
Chancellor, however, will impact this team’s early games, though I expect he
will be resigned before too long.
The Cardinals have many of the pieces, but given the
injury history of Carson Palmer and Andre Ellington, it would be a mistake to
pick them to finish above .500. After consistently
rising above 20 points per game with Palmer, the team didn’t; achieve that
without him once, and backed into the playoffs.
Remember that comment about quarterbacks? Well, the Rams will need Nick Foles to prove
he isn’t just a Kelly guy. I think a
losing record is in the cards, however, because even with a tough defense the
Rams have a patchy O-line and a still unfounded running game. Not to mention the scarcity at receiver, and
this team will win by defense.
San Fran is going to be bad this year. Too much turnover, and way too many questions
on defense. I think, however, that Jim
Harbaugh’s absence will be felt too in the locker room. That can’t be proven, of course, but the guy
ran a tight ship and resuscitated the Niners quickly after he took over.