LabattBlue Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 Yes every team has highs and lows(see Pittsburgh this week vs last week), but I look at a couple things... 1 - Have to win your home games. Having 2 losses or less at home, IMO is a must. I hope losing the home opener against a mediocre team doesn't come back to haunt them. 2 - When the season is on the line, find a way to win. Remember losing to Pittsburgh's 3rd stringers a few years back? 3 - Have to have above average QB play all season long. Will TT give them that? 4 - Must win against teams that are likely not going to be playoff teams(see next 3 games). I don't care if the Rams are 3-1, I'd be shocked if they are in the playoffs with that QB and offense.
Nanker Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 I'll take, "Many more wins than losses for $300" Alex.
bobobonators Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 Good coaching; limited penalties; a dash of good fortune.
CardinalScotts Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 flat out the biggest factor and it's not even close SCHEDULE
ricojes Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 Yes every team has highs and lows(see Pittsburgh this week vs last week), but I look at a couple things... 1 - Have to win your home games. Having 2 losses or less at home, IMO is a must. I hope losing the home opener against a mediocre team doesn't come back to haunt them. I don't like the Jets, but they are a little better than "mediocre".
Luxy312 Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 Stats-wise, the single biggest determinant to football games is turnovers. Historically, teams that are -1 in games lose about 90% of the time. -2 raises that figure to 95% and -3 raises it to over 97%. If you go back and actually run correlations of teams with a significantly positive turnover margin, they're in the playoffs almost all of the time. All of the top-10 teams in turnovers last year were in the playoffs. The other 6 teams ranked 10th (3 teams tied), 14th, 15th, and 19th. There's always exceptions to the rule (Denver was 19th last year), but this mostly does hold true.
DrDawkinstein Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 Being in the AFC South instead of the AFC East.
GG Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 Yes every team has highs and lows(see Pittsburgh this week vs last week), but I look at a couple things... 1 - Have to win your home games. Having 2 losses or less at home, IMO is a must. I hope losing the home opener against a mediocre team doesn't come back to haunt them. I will continue to beat on this. Jets aren't mediocre and they played a perfectly executed game, Fitz played out of his mind and his WRs bailed him out, when needed.
Boatdrinks Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 Being able to consistently move the ball and score points on offense, consistency playing solid D. The Bills have not won back to back games very often during this drought . Playoff teams string together wins.
CardinalScotts Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 find a playoff team that had more than 9 wins and played a good schedule.....you beat the bad teams and lose to the good ones most years you are in the playoffs. See Andy Reid, Marvin Lewis, Mike McCarthy, newest guy is Bill O'Brien. There sysytem beats bad teams consistently but rarely beat a good team. 10 11 wins
PatsFanNH Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 IMO what separates a Playoff from a non playoff team. Don't get to high on a win, and don't get to low from a loss. Aka the ability move on to the next opponent with complete focus.
Nick the Greek Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 Stability with coaching. Look at Pats, Bungles, Steelers, Packers as prime examples.
HeHateMe Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 Stability with coaching. Look at Pats, Bungles, Steelers, Packers as prime examples. Or hall of fame quarterbacks? Minus the Bungles.
Perry Turtle Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 Stability with coaching. Look at Pats, Bungles, Steelers, Packers as prime examples. Or the Broncos... There's no one way to win in the NFL. There are multiple paths to success. Having decision-makers smart enough to pick the right path is the key to success.
NoSaint Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 (edited) 1 - Have to win your home games. Having 2 losses or less at home, IMO is a must. I hope losing the home opener against a mediocre team doesn't come back to haunt them. 2 - When the season is on the line, find a way to win. Remember losing to Pittsburgh's 3rd stringers a few years back? 3 - Have to have above average QB play all season long. Will TT give them that? 4 - Must win against teams that are likely not going to be playoff teams(see next 3 games). I don't care if the Rams are 3-1, I'd be shocked if they are in the playoffs with that QB and offense. 1) winning 6 (7 or 8) of your home games sure does help. suddenly 2-6 or 3-5 in the other 8 games is your bench mark to get in. If you win 75% or more at home, odds are you are a good enough team to beat some teams on the road (especially the bad ones, see point 4) 2) winning the win and you are in games does seem like an obvious demarcation between the teams that are in and out 3) above average qb sure does help 4) yup - losing to bad teams means you have to beat good teams to get in. that is more challenging. Edited October 3, 2016 by NoSaint
BuffaloHokie13 Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 1) winning 6 (7 or 8) of your home games sure does help. suddenly 2-6 or 3-5 in the other 8 games is your bench mark to get in. If you win 75% or more at home, odds are you are a good enough team to beat some teams on the road (especially the bad ones, see point 4) 2) winning the win and you are in games does seem like an obvious demarcation between the teams that are in and out 3) above average qb sure does help 4) yup - losing to bad teams means you have to beat good teams to get in. that is more challenging. To your first point, winning 5 of your 6 division games puts you in a decent spot usually as well.
NoSaint Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 To your first point, winning 5 of your 6 division games puts you in a decent spot usually as well. yes. starting with a 2 game lead (and tie breakers) in the division with 10 games to play is normally a good start to success. especially in a race with teams you beat and may be better than.
Cugalabanza Posted October 3, 2016 Posted October 3, 2016 1. The fans have to be sufficiently fired up about every little detail including always calling for the heads of several players and coaches.
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