NFL 2025 Season - PS1
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Articles published multiple times per week, offering insights and picks on upcoming games.
 
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Article Archive

Wild Card Weekend
Playoff Revenge
Beep-Beep-Beep
Week 18
Both Right
Final Scramble
Unraveling the South
Win and Hope
Wasted Prayers
Long Odds
Last Punch
No Way Out
Week 17
Rams for the Future
Top Seed Grab
Better Make Sure
Dream Buster
One for the Road
Complicated Conclusion
Three for Christmas
Topped Out
Right Again
Week 16
First of Three
Surprises
December Battles
New York, New York
Two for Two
Unlocked
With the Book
Medicine Cabinet
Last Call
Week 15
Home Heat
Different Objectives
Top Underdogs
Who Know What
Wrong is Right
Need and Focus
Pair of Strugglers
Friends and Foes
Sour Bite
Week 14
Time Spent
Weather Factor
With Insurance
Like Locusts
Mischievous Grin
As Good as it Gets
On a Roll
Head Hunting
Week 13
Left the Station
By Design
Looking Ahead
Here It Comes
Offense versus Defense
In Your Dreams
Oh for Three
Thanksgiving Trifecta
Just Visiting
Week 12
First in Sight
Pair of Leaders
Bears on Top
Same Old, Same Old
Exposure Reduced
History Lesson
Juggling Act
Bounce Back Big
Fade to Black
Week 11
Highs and Lows
Finally They Meet
Battle for First Place
Mission From God
Business as Usual
Under Play
Unfinished Business
Second Half Sprint
Hope for the Future
Week 10
Pack Tonight
Two Sides
NFC West War
Points Count
White Flag
Blind Spot
Seems Easy
Call Waiting
Return Meeting
Week 9
Defense Still Matters
Good Again
Returning Quarterbacks
Not So Bad
Blowouts Rule
Dolphins Dipping
Score This
Missing Score
Week 8
Expectations Leveled
Grudge Match
NFL and Gambling World Cry Foul
High Seas
Race to Five
Struggling Playoff Teams
Argue This
DeMeco Team Due
Week 7
Weighing Wins
Addition by Subtraction
Sharp or Not
Spark the Fuse
Hocus Pocus
Boarding the Jets
Cushion Crunch
Hot Meet Stout
Pedestal Perch
Week 6
Tightening Races
Arrowhead or Hammer
Missing Signal Callers
Little Boys
Special Circumstances
Then and Now
Old Versus New
Dolphins to Titans
Week 5
More to Know
Dominance in Streaks
Two Back is Hot
Spike Side
41 is Up
Bounce Back
Deal with the Devil
Cool Your Jets
Sleep Walking
Week 4
Backup to Win
Cold and Hot
Not So Obvious
Early Start
Yes We Can
New Clues
Up is Down
Dooms Night
Dead Center
Week 3
That's Entertainment
Road Trip
Perfect and Imperfect
About Time
Better Bet
Quarterback Resurgence
Cruise Control
Look of a Champion
Sitting Duck
Week 2
No Respect
QB Rivalry
Inches Short
Kidding Aside
Coaching Advantage
Turf Toe Spike
Prime Opener
Solo Act
Early Returns
Week 1
NFC North Battle
Everybody is Right
Assumptions
Happy Ending
QB Swap
Beginning of the End
Too Easy
Road Cowboys
Choose Wisely
Schedule It
Season Win Totals
Super Bowl Pick
Credit Collision
Burn in Hell
Before Relevance
No Repeats
Home and Auto
So Close
Preseason 3
Cheshire Cat Grin
Reverse Records
Clear Choice
Moving Parts
Not Ready for Prime Time
Preseason 2
Success and Failure
Jury Out
Real Competition
Quarterback Rich
Worst to First
Time to Reload
Sweet Spot
Preseason Magic
Preseason 1
Two Up, Two Down
Book Bet
Gone Fishing
Smart Rats
Early Value
Streaky
Hall of Fame
Two Good Ones
Ups and Downs
Offseason
Cause and Effect
Looking Forward
Purdy Value
Business for Profits
     
 
Yes & Yes
by Dennis Ranahan

Every team in the National Football League has at least one win after five weeks of regular season play. The Jacksonville Jaguars were the last team to notch a season triumph yesterday in their victory over the Indianapolis Colts.

Two teams are currently undefeated. The Minnesota Vikings won their fifth straight game yesterday in London, downing Aaron Rodgers and his Jets, and the other unbeaten team is in action tonight. The Kansas City Chiefs have won their first four games without a blowout on their resume. Close wins for the defending champs and tonight they are favored at home over the New Orleans Saints.

The Vikings and Chiefs being the lone undefeated squads brings up history between these two teams. When there still was an American Football League the first four Super Bowls were games between the AFL and the longer established National Football League. The Green Bay Packers showed superiority over the AFL with dominating victories over the Chiefs and Oakland Raiders in the first two Super Bowls.

Then came the upset of all time when Joe Namath led the New York Jets over a Baltimore Colts team that was favored by as many as 20 points. That game went down in history as an upset, but achieving true parity between the two leagues began to take shape the next year when the double-digit underdog Chiefs upset the Vikings in Super Bowl IV. That was the last Super Bowl played before the AFL dissolved into the NFL and the league formed the two conferences, the National and American.

To balance the two new conferences, three established NFL teams moved to the AFC. They were the Baltimore Colts, Pittsburgh Steelers and Cleveland Browns. In Super Bowl V, the first one played after the merger was completed, two original NFL teams met, the Dallas Cowboys and Baltimore Colts. So, one can see that the AFL still had a ways to go to be considered on a par with the NFL.

The next year, the Miami Dolphins represented the AFC and they got throttled in Super Bowl VI by the Dallas Cowboys. In 1972, Don Shula and his Dolphins won a second straight AFC title with a perfect record during regular season play. Postseason wins over the Cleveland Browns and Pittsburgh Steelers, two original NFL teams, led to Miami looking to complete their perfect season in Super Bowl VII against the Washington Redskins.

While the Dolphins had not lost a game that year, they were underdogs to George Allen’s “over the hill” gang in that Super Bowl. Miami won, completing the only perfect season in modern football history, and the AFC was finally respected on a par with the long-established NFL. The following season, the Dolphins won a second straight Super Bowl, 24-7, while both being favored and looking far superior to their NFC competition, the Minnesota Vikings.

So, beginning with the Jets upset over the Colts to complete the 1968 season and the Chiefs win over the Vikings in the last game before the two leagues merged, the new AFC still needed three seasons to be fully recognized on a par with the NFC.

How about now?

Well, the Chiefs are two-time defending champions and the Vikings, while winning their first five games, are not yet considered the best team in the NFC. The AFC is loaded with quality squads that include the Baltimore Ravens and Buffalo Bills, a pair of squads that would likely be ranked higher than any current NFC team.

So, how do the Chiefs do tonight? Do they come out of their encounter with the New Orleans Saints matching their 5-0 won/loss mark?

Why yes, yes they do.

The bigger question is whether they cover the point spread and if there's a bright wager opportunity banking on that?

Well, yes again.

Qoxhi Picks: Kansas City Chiefs (-5½) over New Orleans Saints