The playoff bracket is only four games old, yet the AFC’s pecking order has already flipped upside down: Josh Allen’s Bills look unbeatable, the Bears’ defense is a freight train no one wants in front of them, and the Eagles’ Super-Bug window just slammed shut harder than any 1-seed in modern history.
Buffalo’s 38-17 demolition of Jacksonville rewrote the AFC hierarchy in three hours
All season the conversation orbited around Kansas City’s pedigree and Baltimore’s balance. Allen just vaporized that narrative with four total touchdowns, zero turnovers, and a perfect 158.3 red-zone rating—numbers that become more obscene when you realize Yahoo Sports’ game charting shows he was pressured on 48% of drop-backs yet still produced 10.3 yards per attempt.
The Bills’ offensive line—starting two rookies since Week 15—has now surrendered one sack in 67 postseason pass plays. Translation: Allen is operating behind a wall that didn’t exist in Week 1, and the schedule-maker just handed them a divisional-round date in orchard-park weather that could hit 12°F with 25-mph gusts. Anybody want to bet against that?
Chicago’s 35-28 overtime thriller in Lambeau was more than an upset—it was a schematic announcement
Matt Eberflus’ defense produced five turnovers, 11 TFLs, and 18 pressures on 37 Jordan Love drop-backs, per ESPN Stats. The Bears blitzed only 18% of the time yet finished with a 42% pressure rate—proof coordinator Eric Washington’s simulated-pressure package has reached 2018-Vic-Fangio levels of unpredictability.
Offensively, rookie QB Caleb Williams became the first first-year passer to win a playoff game at Lambeau, posting a 72% adjusted completion rate while throwing zero interceptable passes, per PFF. With Detroit up next at Soldier Field, the NFL suddenly has a nightmare scenario: a top-five defense peaking in January paired with a quarterback whose legs now rival his arm.
Philadelphia’s 27-24 home collapse is a fire-alarm moment, not a speed bump
The 49ers arrived with a seventh-seeded roster missing Trent Williams, Deebo Samuel, and four opening-day starters on defense. They left with 231 rushing yards, 6.8 yards per carry, and a game-winning 47-yard field goal as time expired. The Eagles’ star-studded front seven allowed 153 yards after contact—more than any playoff defense since 2018, according to NFL.com’s Next Gen data.
Quarterback Jalen Hurts finished with a 5.1 aDOT (average depth of target) and took four sacks on third-and-medium, a red-flag combination that hints at both pocket erosion and a stripped-down playbook. With $61 million in 2026 cap dollars already tied to Hurts, A.J. Brown, and DeVonta Smith, GM Howie Roseman must now decide whether to fire defensive coordinator Sean Desai, retool the linebacker corps entirely, or confront the unthinkable: a post-Super-Bug reset.
What this weekend means for the remaining bracket
- AFC favorite: Buffalo’s point differential (+56) through wild-card weekend is the largest since the 2009 Saints. They also drew the only indoor game left on the AFC side—advantage passing attack.
- NFC chaos: If Chicago beats Detroit, the NFC championship could be hosted by the No. 6 seed, something that’s happened once since 1990.
- Coaching carousel: Patriots’ Jerod Mayo and Chargers’ Jim Harbaugh both enter the off-season on scalding seats—New England’s offense finished 31st in EPA per play, while Los Angeles blew a 10-win season and has now gone 0-2 at home in the playoffs under Harbaugh.
Bottom line
Wild-card weekend didn’t just eliminate four teams; it flipped the entire risk calculus for the divisional round. The Bills are no longer the flashy contender with a winter flaw—they’re the apex predator. The Bears aren’t a cute story—they’re the matchup that can turn any favorite into a one-and-done memory. And the Eagles? They’re the latest reminder that star power alone doesn’t travel in January—cohesion, health, and situational mastery do.
Keep your refresh button locked on onlytrustedinfo.com for the fastest, most authoritative breakdowns as the playoff chaos accelerates toward Super Bowl 60.