
1. Baltimore (10-2): The Ravens’ win over San Francisco combined with New England’s loss at Houston means the AFC goes through Baltimore if it keeps winning. :at Buffalo.
2. Seattle (10-2): A fake punt helped the Seahawks survive against Minnesota. :at L.A. Rams.
3. San Francisco (10-2): The 49ers held Baltimore’s Lamar Jackson to 105 yards passing, but allowed him to rush for 101 yards. :at New Orleans.
4. New Orleans (10-2): Job No. 1 for the Saints after last Thursday’s win — practice recovering on-side kicks. :vs. San Francisco.
5. New England (10-2): Forget the 448 yards they piled up against Houston. The Patriots should be panicking about their offense. :vs. Kansas City.
6. Green Bay (9-3): The Packers needed a response after getting run over by San Francisco and delivered it via four touchdown passes. :vs. Washington.
7. Kansas City (8-4): To reach the , the Chiefs will likely need to play at the Patriots in the second round. Call this Sunday a test run. :at New England.
8. Houston (8-4): The Broncos’ best hope for an upset Sunday is adding to the Texans’ total of 36 allowed sacks. :vs. Broncos.
9. Buffalo (9-3): Do we know if the Bills are any good despite their record? We’ll find out Sunday. Next: vs. Baltimore.
10. Minnesota (8-4): Bad news for the Vikings — quarterback is 0-8 all-time in Monday night games and they host Green Bay in the Week 16 Monday matchup. :vs. Detroit.
11. Tennessee (7-5): Who knew when the Titans were shut out by the Broncos in Week 6 that they would be in playoff contention? Not us. :at Oakland.
12. Pittsburgh (7-5): Six Steelers have at least 30 catches and four have at least three touchdown receptions. :at Arizona.
13. L.A. Rams (7-5): In win over Arizona, Jared Goff passed for 323 yards … in the first half. :vs. Seattle.
14. Indianapolis (6-6): Cross off the Colts from playoff contention. Next: at Tampa Bay.
15. Dallas (6-6): Only the futility of the Eagles, Giants and Redskins have allowed the Cowboys to sit atop the NFC East. :at Chicago (Thursday).
16. Philadelphia (5-7): The Eagles allowed Miami to gain 404 yards of offense; the Dolphins entered the game averaging 264.9. :vs. (Monday).
17. Chicago (6-6): Mitch Trubisky passing for 338 yards against Detroit says more about the Lions (they’re terrible) than anything. Next: vs. Chicago (Thursday).
18. Oakland (6-6): The Raiders went from thinking about a division title to being outscored 74-12 in road losses to the Jets and Chiefs. Next: vs. Tennessee.
19. Cleveland (5-7): A crippling loss at Pittsburgh probably ended the Browns’ slim playoff chances. :vs. Cincinnati.
20. Carolina (5-7): Nothing suggests, “Have stopped listening to the coaching,” than awful run defense. The Panthers were gashed for 248 yards in upset loss to Redskins. :at Atlanta.
21. Tampa Bay (5-7): The Buccaneers raced to a 25-0 lead at Jacksonville. :vs. Indianapolis.
22. Broncos (4-8): Kareem Jackson Homecoming Game — he played the first nine years of his career for the Texans. :at Houston.
23. L.A. Chargers (4-8): Itap time for the Chargers to convince ownership that giving or Easton Stick some time at quarterback makes sense. :at Jacksonville.
24. N.Y. Jets (4-8): The Jets lost by 12 points at 0-7 at Miami in October and lost by 16 at 0-11 Cincinnati on Sunday. Pathetic. Next: vs. Miami.
25. Jacksonville (4-8): Sixteen penalties in home embarrassment/loss to Tampa Bay. :vs. L.A. Chargers.
26. Atlanta (3-9): The Falcons should onside kick at least four times a game. Whatap there to lose? :vs. Carolina.
27. Arizona (3-8-1): The Cardinals have allowed at least 30 points in three consecutive games (all losses). :vs. Pittsburgh.
28. Washington (3-9): The Redskins hurt their draft stock by winning at Carolina. Next: at Green Bay.
29. Detroit (3-8-1): Like the Broncos, the Lions have started three quarterbacks this year. :at Minnesota.
30. Miami (3-9): Young players continue to play hard even when the record is bad. Thatap why the Dolphins beat Philadelphia. :at N.Y. Jets.
31. Cincinnati (1-11): Good for coach Zac Taylor in getting his first win. :at Cleveland.
32. New York Giants (2-10): Hapless, hopeless and rudderless. :at Philadelphia (Monday).



