Sports
The 50 best women’s soccer players in the world for 2025, ranked!
It’s that time of year again: Let’s look at the past 12 months in women’s soccer and pick the best of the best. It’s now our fifth year of polling experts and putting together a list of the top 50 players in the world for ESPN FC Women’s Rank, and it only gets more competitive each year.
The list this year reflects how much the landscape in the sport keeps changing. Fourteen players made their debuts on our top 50, seven have landed back on the list after missing out last year, and the race for the top spot was probably closer than you think.
The marquee event of the past year was the UEFA Women’s Euro in Switzerland, which set new attendance records and the most goals ever scored for the tournament. It served up a thrilling rematch of the 2023 World Cup final between England and Spain, only this time it was England who came out on top after going to penalty kicks.
The UEFA Champions League trophy earlier this year was finally wrestled from powerhouses Barcelona and Lyonnes, who have combined to win the nine prior European titles. Instead, Arsenal were the surprise winners, marking the first Champions League win for an English team since 2007. (The 2025-26 UWCL season is underway in the league phase, and again Barcelona and Lyonnes are being chased.)
In the U.S., Gotham FC repeated as NWSL champions as the landscape around the American league expanded. The USL Super League completed its inaugural season with Tampa Bay Sun FC becoming the league’s first champion, and north of the border the Northern Super League made its debut.
The women’s game is rapidly growing, which made narrowing down ESPN FC Women’s Rank to 50 names harder than ever before, even after absences of players from last year’s ranking cleared some space. Notably absent this year: Naomi Girma (No. 2 last year; injured most of this year), Sophia Wilson (No. 5 last year; pregnant this year), Lauren James (No. 10 last year; injured much of this year); and Mallory Swanson (No. 15 last year, pregnant this year).
Twenty-five current and former coaches for top-tier clubs or national teams, general managers, analysts and journalists were asked to anonymously pick their top 50 players of 2025. In all, 198 different players earned votes, and this is the final top 50.
Presenting ESPN FC Women’s Rank: The final top 50
Written by Emily Keogh, Jeff Kassouf, Yash Thakur, Tom Hamilton and Sam Marsden. All stats provided by ESPN Global Research.

Country: Canada
Club: Arsenal
Age: 21
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: N/A (★ debut)
What best reflects Smith’s inclusion is the extraordinary effort Arsenal made to secure her signature for a then-world record fee of £1 million last summer. You have to be a rare talent to justify such a transfer fee and the Gunners’ determination to bring in the Canada international stemmed from her seven goals and impressive performances during her first breakout year in the WSL, where she not only led Liverpool in scoring, but also swept both the Player of the Year and Young Player of the Year awards.
Smith is a fine dribbler and can create goals out of nothing, while she ranks fifth in the WSL for shot-creating actions per 90 minutes (4.95). Her impact is impossible to ignore, and her rapid rise made her one of the most sought-after talents in the league. — Keogh
Stat to know: Her eight goals and 42 shots (14 on target) this calendar year in the Women’s Super League leads these offensive categories among all players 21 years old or younger.

Country: Brazil
Club: Kansas City Current
Age: 34
Position: Midfielder
2024 Rank: 26 (▼ 23 spots)
Peak Debinha returned in 2025, and she was a major reason why the Kansas City Current smashed NWSL records. Now 34, Debinha was one of the focal points of the Current’s attack even while dealing with some minor injuries.
She continues to reinvent herself weekly as she shifts from a forward role to attacking midfield and wider areas. The Brazilian is precise on free kicks, clinical on the counterattack and has the vision to do the unthinkable. — Kassouf
Stat to know: Debinha has 2.03 goals above expected, the seventh highest mark in the NWSL this season. Of the six players with a higher GAE than her, only Esther Gonzales (0.15) had a higher xG per shot than Debinha (0.14).

Country: Australia
Club: Arsenal
Age: 31
Position: Center back/fullback
2024 Rank: N/A (★ reentry)
Catley played a vital role in Arsenal’s defensive resilience last season and ranked in the club’s top four for total passes completed (1,118). Although not her preferred position, she transitioned to center back from left back early in the season, where her composure under pressure, precision in tackles and clearances, and her ability to read the game, elevated Arsenal’s back line throughout their European run.
That consistency and adaptability ultimately earned her a Ballon d’Or nomination, a spot on our list and widespread global recognition for outstanding defensive performances. — Keogh
Stat to know: She is the only player in this calendar year with zero errors leading to shot and goals in the Women’s Super League.

Country: Malawi
Club: Lyonnes
Age: 29
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: 12 (▼ 35 spots)
Chawinga has continued to impress after moving to OL Lyonnes from Wuhan Jianghan University, after a series of loan spells, in the summer of 2024. And she now leads the goal contributions chart for OL Lyonnes in the league, with four goals and three assists this season.
The Malawi winger is excellent in transitions — she ranked second for progressive carries in the French top division last season, with 56 — and in 1-v-1 situations, often beating her opponents with her pace and skill. She will be a key figure for her country’s first-ever Women’s AFCON next year. — Thakur
Stat to know: She is second in the Première Ligue season in goal contributions with nine (six goals and three assists).

Country: Scotland
Club: Chelsea
Age: 27
Position: Midfielder/forward
2024 Rank: 38 (▼ 8 spots)
Big-spending Chelsea boast one of the most stacked squads in Europe, but while Cuthbert doesn’t take many headlines, she has shown time and again that she is the heartbeat of the club’s midfield. Her level of commitment and work rate is incredible; few players show such unwavering loyalty, and even fewer are willing to hurl themselves into tackles and duels to ensure their side emerges on top.
Even on days when Chelsea underperform, Cuthbert often remains one of the highest-rated players on the pitch, with her consistency and resilience rarely shaken. Having played a pivotal role in the treble-winning season — as well as in every title-winning campaign that preceded it — the Scotland international is undeniably one of the best midfielders in the WSL. — Keogh
Stat to know: Her 6.6 recoveries per game is the third most among midfielders in this Women’s Super League. She also created 15 chances and 1.99 expected assists this season — both are the second most among midfielders.

Country: Scotland
Club: Arsenal
Age: 35
Position: Midfielder
2024 Rank: N/A (★ reentry)
One of the most valuable and underrated players in the game, the 35-year-old has been a stalwart for Arsenal and helped guide the club to their first UEFA Women’s Champions League triumph in 18 years.
As captain, she is the central cog in the Gunners’ engine room in midfield, able to dictate tempo, shape transitions and ensure tactical cohesion. Although often described as a quiet, understated leader, her influence is visible in both her composure — she ranks second this season for pass completion, 89.5% — and work rate. Without Little’s consistency, intelligence and unwavering presence, Arsenal would not have progressed as far as they did last season. — Keogh
Stat to know: Her 64.9% duel success percentage and her 90.4% pass success percentage were both the highest among midfielders with at least 20 games played in the 2024-25 Women’s Super League.

Country: Denmark
Club: Bayern Munich
Age: 33
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: 43 (▼ 1 spot)
Harder is back to her best after a series of injury worries. The 33-year-old is key in the final third and led Bayern for goals (14) last season, helping them clinch back-to-back league titles, while she hit double digits in the league for the first time since the 2020-21 season.
The Denmark captain also works hard off the ball — she ranked in the top five for touches in the opposition penalty box (113) and tackles in the final third (14) in the Frauen-Bundesliga last season — has an innate understanding of space, and can progress up field quickly when possession is regained. Her strong performances earned her a deserved Ballon d’Or nomination this year. — Thakur
Stat to know: She is tied for most UEFA Women’s Champions League goals this season with five. She has 45 goals in the last 10 UWCL seasons, the second most in that span.

Country: USA
Club: Chelsea
Age: 21
Position: Winger
2024 Rank: N/A (★ debut)
Thompson was arguably the best American player in the NWSL before Chelsea pulled her away from her hometown by paying Angel City a $1.4 million transfer fee. The fee from one of the world’s best teams speaks to Thompson’s unique ability as a dynamic winger, one who craves running at defenders in the open field and on the edge of the box.
Since not earning the call for last year’s Olympics, the 21-year-old Thompson has matured rapidly, and her finishing has grown more clinical. — Kassouf
Stat to know: Her 38.15 touches in the attacking third per 90 minutes played is the fourth best in Women’s Super League this season among players with at least nine matches.

Country: France
Club: Lyonnes
Age: 30
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: 16 (▼ 26 spots)
While Diani wasn’t quite as productive as last season, she continued to impress in the UWCL with 10 goal contributions (six goals and four assists), including strong showings against Arsenal, Bayern Munich, Wolfsburg and AS Roma. She also scored a crucial goal in the league playoff final against her former side Paris Saint-Germain to help secure OL Lyonnes’ 18th league title.
The 30-year-old is effective in 1-v-1 situations on the flanks and although she can be a hit and miss in front of goal, she remains essential for Jonatan Giráldez’s side. — Thakur
Stat to know: 64% of her shots in Première Ligue this season have been on target, the sixth highest in the league.

Country: USA
Club: Manchester United
Age: 29
Position: Goalkeeper
2024 Rank: N/A (★ debut)
Could Tullis-Joyce be the next great American goalkeeper? She now has a WSL Golden Glove to her name and guided Manchester United to a spot in the UEFA Women’s Champions League.
She also might be the favorite for the USWNT’s No. 1 job as the 2027 World Cup approaches. Tullis-Joyce already had the shot-stopping ability. Now, she is adding confidence on the ball and finding her voice as a leader in pressure-packed settings. — Kassouf
Stat to know: Her 65.5% save percentage (19 saves from 29 shots on goal against) is the third best among goalkeepers with at least 10 games in the Women’s Super League this season.

Country: Italy
Club: Juventus
Age: 35
Position: Striker
2024 Rank: N/A (★ reentry)
The 35-year-old, who hasn’t made ESPN’s top 50 since we debuted Women’s Rank in 2021, returns after leading Italy to a shock place in the Euro 2025 semifinals this summer. She scored 50% of her country’s goals, including a brace against Norway to put them into the final four, and no player won more aerial duels (19) at the tournament.
Girelli also won the Serie A Golden Boot last season, with 19 goals (11 coming this calendar year) and helped Juventus reclaim their title for the first time since 2022. Her world-class aerial ability and linkup play makes her indispensable for club and country. — Thakur
Stat to know: She became the first Italian to score multiple goals in a UEFA Women’s Euro knockout stage match this summer. She had three goals in the Euro (only Spain’s Esther González had more with four), the most by any Italy player in a single edition of the competition.

Country: England
Club: Chelsea
Age: 28
Position: Midfielder
2024 Rank: 9 (▼ 30 spots)
She’s the heartbeat of England’s team, and a double Euros winner. Widely regarded as being one of the best players in the world in her position, Walsh sits just in front of England’s back four and dictates tempo.
It’s credit to her that teams have been working so hard to shut her down — they know that if they can get to Walsh, it will go a long way toward stopping the Lionesses from playing. While she helped Chelsea win their domestic treble last season, Walsh is looking to improve her efforts in one area: goals. Both Sarina Wiegman and Chelsea’s Sonia Bompastor are encouraging her to shoot more, and with her club side, they’re playing her farther forward to increase her threat in and around the box.
“The way I play defensive midfield it is more about breaking lines and trying to break presses, and contributing a little bit more in attack. I’m not known for my big tackles, although I am working on that,” Walsh said. “When it opens up, Sonia’s encouraged me to take the ball forward, and if I feel like a shot is on, then it’s being free to do that.” — Hamilton
Stat to know: She’s the only player to start all 10 of Chelsea’s matches this season in Women’s Super League.

Country: Spain
Club: Barcelona
Age: 19
Position: Midifelder/winger
2024 Rank: N/A (★ debut)
López is established as a regular for club and country, but she is still battling to be considered an undisputed starter for both. At 19, time is on her side, but having made her Barcelona debut at 16, it feels like she is ready for more responsibility.
Technically gifted, with close dribbling skills and an eye for a defense-splitting pass, she is being slightly held back by two things. The first obstacle is that she is vying for a starting berth with the best players in the world. The second is she still doesn’t have her best position nailed down. Speaking at Euro 2025, where she scored once for Spain, she said she prefers to play from the left. For Barça, though, she is more commonly used on the right or as a central midfielder. — Marsden
Stat to know: She had 58 progressive carries this season in Liga F (the most in the competition) and 116 penalty area touches (also the most in Liga F).

Country: USA
Club: Washington Spirit
Age: 23
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: 8 (▼ 29 spots)
Yes, Rodman has battled injuries over the past year. They have limited, but not stopped the U.S. women’s national team star.
She needed a mere few minutes in her return in August to remind the world of her greatness when she scored a game-winning goal on a volley at the back post. Then came the pure emotion, which is also part of why Rodman is such a star. She’s great 1-v-1 and on the wings, she’s clinical in front of goal, she’s entertaining, and she just gets stuff done in a way that few others can. — Kassouf
0:54
Has injury cost Trinity Rodman her top 10 Women’s Rank spot?
Futbol W’s Cristina Alexander and Ali Krieger, along with Natalia Astrain, discuss Trinity Rodman’s slide from 8th to 37th in ESPN FC Women’s Rank.
Stat to know: Rodman averaged a 77.8% of aerial duels won this season per 90 minutes in NWSL (including playoffs), which ranks third by a Spirit player (among all positions).

Country: Scotland
Club: Real Madrid
Age: 30
Position: Midfielder/forward
2024 Rank: N/A (★ reentry)
Weir is back to her decisive best after an ACL injury kept her out for most of 2024. She returned to hit double digits for both goals and assists across the league and UWCL last year, and already has 10 goals and two assists this season.
A versatile forward who can play across the front line, she contributes heavily to Real Madrid’s front-footed defensive approach and her performances saw her become the first Scotland international to earn a nomination for Ballon d’Or. The 30-year-old scored a brace in Real Madrid’s fabulous 3-1 win over Barcelona in March 2025. She recently reached 100 games for her club with 53 goals and 33 assists, which means she averaged 0.86 goal contributions per game. — Thakur
Stat to know: Weir has outperformed her expected goals, or xG, by 3.2 in Liga F this season, which is the second highest goals above expected in the competition.

Country: Italy
Club: Washington Sprit
Age: 26
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: N/A (★ debut)
Cantore’s arrival in the NWSL was perfectly timed. She parlayed Italy’s Euro semifinal run into roaring success in her half-season with the Spirit, eventual NWSL Championship runners-up.
Cantore immediately linked up with Washington’s prominent attack and showed how audacious she is, including multiple backheel goals. Cantore’s game is where technique meets style. — Kassouf
Stat to know: Cantore ranked fifth on the Washington Spirit in possessions won in attacking third (10). She had an average carry distance of 6.7 meters, which ranked fifth on the team this season in NWSL (average meters carrying ball following pass received).

Country: USA
Club: Lyonnes
Age: 31
Position: Midfielder
2024 Rank: 17 (▼ 17 spots)
Heaps became the first American in the women’s game to go straight from high school to the pros as an 18-year-old joining PSG back in 2012, and she remains one of the standard-bearers for Americans abroad as a cerebral midfielder for OL Lyonnes.
Now, with a World Cup title and Olympic gold medal to her name, she’s the captain of the USWNT. Heaps is a pure soccer player, the type who wants the ball at her feet and the license to take risks. She can do that from multiple positions in midfield. — Kassouf
Stat to know: Her 108 passes ending in the opponent’s half is the most among midfielders in UEFA Women’s Champions League this season. Her 163 completed passes in the middle third in UWCL is the third most among midfielders this season.

Country: Sweden
Club: Arsenal
Age: 39
Position: Striker
2024 Rank: N/A (★ reentry)
Had Blackstenius not stepped into the role of Arsenal’s super-sub, the club almost certainly would not be European champions. The Sweden international scored only twice in the Champions League last season, but one of those goals became one of the most iconic moments in Arsenal’s modern history: The decisive winner against Barcelona in the final that ended an 18-year wait for European glory.
Blackstenius carried that clutch mentality into the domestic campaign as well. She scored five league goals, many of which came in crucial moments, and often after being introduced from the bench. Her ability to change the rhythm of a match and create chances out of nothing at exactly the right moment makes her one of Arsenal’s most reliable game changers. — Keogh
Stat to know: She has five goals in the Women’s Super league this season, tied for second most in the league. All 26 of her shots have come from inside the penalty area.

Country: USA
Club: Gotham FC
Age: 30
Position: Midfielder
2024 Rank: 44 (▲ 12 spots)
A healthy Rose Lavelle is arguably the best, most creative player in the U.S. women’s national team pool and in the NWSL — and a healthy Rose Lavelle is what we got in 2025 … eventually.
Lavelle started the year on the sidelines following ankle surgery, but by summer, she was back in peak form, gliding through opponents’ midfields and orchestrating the attack for Gotham FC and the USWNT. She did that in style for the U.S. against Canada, among others this year, and she scored the game-winning goal for Gotham in the NWSL Championship. — Kassouf
Stat to know: Lavelle became the fourth player to score for two different clubs in a NWSL Championship game. (She scored against Gotham in the 2023 final, playing for the Seattle Reign). She was named this year’s NWSL Championship MVP. At 30 years, 192 days, Lavelle is the oldest NWSL Championship MVP since Jess McDonald in 2018 with North Carolina.

Country: Spain
Club: Barcelona
Age: 34
Position: Center back
2024 Rank: 40 (▲ 9 spots)
When Paredes eventually retires, Barcelona and Spain will have a huge hole to fill because she remains essential to both teams’ defenses. She marshalled Barça to a domestic treble last season — and a narrow Champions League final defeat — and helped Spain reach the Euro 2025 final, where they lost to England.
Her authority, leadership and ability on the ball make her a leader in the back line, but her biggest strength is her aerial prowess — in both boxes. She regularly delivers key goals for club and country, including two already in the Champions League this season. Paredes turned 34 earlier this year, and does not look to be slowing down after penning a new contract with Barça until 2027. — Marsden
Stat to know: She is one of five players in Liga F with 100-plus progressive passes this season.

Country: England
Club: Chelsea
Age: 22
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: N/A (★ debut)
Beever-Jones ended last season with nine goals in the WSL, picked up three assists during the Champions League campaign, finished as Chelsea’s top scorer and ranked fifth in the Golden Boot race. She delivered a true breakout season since graduating from the academy.
With star striker Sam Kerr sidelined with a long-term injury, Beever-Jones had a golden opportunity to step into a larger role and prove she could be a regular in Sonia Bompastor’s starting XI. And she seized it with confidence. Her reliability, movement and clinical finishing quickly became essential to Chelsea’s unbeaten run, while she also earned her place in the England setup.
She netted a hat trick within 30 minutes during her first senior start at Wembley Stadium in the UEFA Nations League and was then named in the squad for her first major tournament at Euro 2025. And though she struggled for minutes, she ended the season as England’s top goal scorer with six goals in 10 games. — Keogh
Stat to know: She has nine Women’s Super League goals this calendar year; no other Chelsea player has more than five in that span. Her four game-winning goals in 2025 are tied for the most in the WSL in that span.

Country: England
Club: Brighton (on loan from Arsenal)
Age: 19
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: N/A (★ Debut)
In 2025, Agyemang has experienced just about every soccer emotion possible. The teenage striker scored just 41 seconds into her England debut in April, when she came off the bench against Belgium to score a remarkable volley. She was on loan at Brighton from Arsenal at the time, and her form forced her way onto the England squad for the Euros. There she scored a vital equalizer against Sweden in the quarterfinals, and then slotted another equalizer as a last-gasp 96th minute goal against Italy in the semifinal.
Her status as a Lioness heroine was then secure. “She has something special,” England coach Sarina Wiegman said. “She’s only 19 years old, she’s very mature, she knows exactly what she has to do.”
She was crowned Young Player of the Tournament at Euro 2025, but the year ended in heartbreak, as she picked up an ACL injury while on England duty against Australia in October. — Hamilton
Stat to know: Agyemang finds big scoring chances — she is one of three players in the Women’s Super League this season to average 0.25 xG per shot (minimum of 10 shots).

Country: USA
Club: Portland Thorns
Age: 26
Position: Midfielder
2024 Rank: N/A (★ debut)
Coffey has emerged as the American regista, or deep-lying playmaker, bringing a level of sophistication to the position for the USWNT that we haven’t seen since the late glory days of Lauren Holiday. Even that is a stretch comparison, because Coffey is more of a proper No. 6 defensive midfielder.
She brings playmaking to the wrecking ball defensive prowess that Julie Ertz brought to the position. One executive in ESPN’s annual anonymous NWSL GM survey said Coffey is a top-five player in the world. She hasn’t landed quite so high in her debut on our list, but a higher ranking is there for the taking in the future. — Kassouf
Stat to know: Coffey led the NWSL with 206 recoveries. This was her second season with 200-plus recoveries (she had 202 in 2023). In the last three seasons, only two other players have recorded 200-plus recoveries twice.

Country: Japan
Club: Manchester City
Age: 28
Position: Midfielder
2024 Rank: 14 (▼ 13 spots)
Hasegawa has been one of the best midfielders in women’s soccer for a while. The Japan international was voted in the PFA Team of the Year for the third consecutive year and was also voted Manchester City’s Player of the Season in 2024-25. Her ability to influence games in all phases of play makes her a dream player for any manager.
This season under new Man City manager Andrée Jeglertz, she has been playing in a more advanced role, allowing her to influence play in the attacking third, and she has 15 touches in the opposition penalty box, just six less than her tally from last season. Meanwhile, no player has more through balls (5) or interceptions (17) in the WSL. — Thakur
Stat to know: Hasegawa gets it done on both sides of the pitch: She is one of three players in the Women’s Super League this season with 25-plus tackles, 15-plus interceptions and 50-plus progressive passes.

Country: Jamaica
Club: Manchester City
Age: 28
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: 6 (▼ 20 spots)
Consistently one of the most impressive strikers in the women’s game, Shaw once again underlined her elite status by claiming the WSL Golden Boot last season (alongside Alessia Russo) with an outstanding 12 goals in 14 appearances. Her impact is even more remarkable when you consider that she was sidelined for over a third of the campaign through injury, depriving Manchester City of their most reliable and explosive attacking option.
Comfortable scoring with her left foot, right foot, or head, the Jamaica international is tough to contain. Her physicality inside the penalty area regularly overwhelms defenders, forcing teams into making last-ditch tackles or fouls, cementing her reputation as one of Europe’s most formidable goal scorers. — Keogh
2:00
Is Bunny Shaw underrated because of Manchester City’s lack of success?
Alex Scott is joined by Lianne Sanderson, Nedum Onuoha and Fara Williams to debate whether Manchester City’s Bunny Shaw deserves to be higher in ESPN FC Women’s Rank.
Stat to know: She has the most shots (116), shots on goal (42), expected goals (20.54), game-winning goals (8) and game-result-changing goals (10) in WSL since last season.

Country: Germany
Club: Bayern Munich
Age: 25
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: N/A (★ debut)
The 25-year-old winger has spearheaded the attack for both club and country, consistently driving forward with the ball at her feet, and she helped Germany reach the semifinals of Euro 2025.
Between October and November, she recorded at least one goal contribution in 11 straight games for club and country between October and November this year, and has been clutch in big games, picking up three assists in Bayern’s 3-2 comeback win against Arsenal in the UWCL. The fact that she is the only player across Europe’s top five leagues to have 10-plus assists in the league (11) shows how important she is. — Thakur
Stat to know: She has 17 assists in 35 career UEFA Women’s Champions League, the second most in the tournament since the start of the 2020-21 season — only Barcelona’s Aitana Bonmatí (18 assists in 52 games) has more in this span.

Country: Germany
Club: Lyonnes
Age: 23
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: N/A (★ debut)
Brand exploded onto the international scene this summer when she helped Germany reach the semifinals of Euro 2025. The 23-year-old recorded a goal contribution in all three group stage games, finishing the tournament with two goals and two assists.
Meanwhile, she continued to grow at OL Lyonnes after a big move from VfL Wolfsburg this summer. The electric winger is a threat with her speed and ball carrying, and she has added defensive steel and off-the-ball work rate to her toolbox. — Thakur
Stat to know: No player at Euro 2025 won more fouls (13) or tackles (12) than Brand.

Country: USA
Club: Arsenal
Age: 27
Position: Fullback
2024 Rank: 34 (▲ 11 spots)
The top-ranked American on our list joined elite company earlier this year as a UEFA Champions League winner. Fox became just the sixth American to win a UEFA Women’s Champions League title, and she did it as an integral part of the Arsenal defense that shut out Barcelona in the final.
Even beyond that, it’s safe to say her move abroad has been a smashing success, having earned a spot in the PFA Team of the Year, the UEFA Champions League Team of the Season and her first Ballon d’Or nomination. Fox has a legitimate case to being the top fullback in the world. — Kassouf
1:53
Why did no USWNT players make the top 20 of ESPN FC Women’s Rank?
Futbol W’s Cristina Alexander and Ali Krieger, alongside Natalia Astrain, discuss Emily Fox as the highest-ranked USWNT player in ESPN FC Women’s Rank.
Stat to know: Her 199 completed passes into attacking third is the second most in the Women’s Super League this season (after Mariona Caldentey with 292).

Country: Spain
Club: Barcelona
Age: 26
Position: Fullback
2024 Rank: 20 (▼ 2 spots)
She is a manager’s dream given how she can adapt to different roles. As well as being able to play on the right or left of the back four, she is also able to be the classic overlapping fullback, which is how she is best known, or take on a slightly more defensive role.
For example, after left back Esmee Brugts was given more attacking freedom, Batlle has taken a step back, providing support for the defense and the midfield without losing her offensive edge. Disappointing defeats in the Champions League and Euro 2025 finals will likely spur her on to get even better over the next year, too. — Marsden
Stat to know: She is the defender with the most passes made in the attacking third in UEFA Women’s Champions League since the start of the last season with 225 passes (no other UWCL defender has more than 215 in this span).

Country: Germany
Club: Gotham FC
Age: 35
Position: Goalkeeper
2024 Rank: 25 (▲ 4 spots)
Goalkeepers have the thankless task of being remembered for their mistakes. Berger is the exception as the keeper who both makes thrilling saves, even if she also takes risks on the ball.
There is seemingly no situation that makes Berger uncomfortable, even as she gets closed down by a pressing forward right in front of her own net. A backheel spin-turn? Sure. Follow it up with a fingertip save near the top corner? You bet. — Kassouf
Stat to know: Her 11 shutouts in the 2025 NWSL regular season were the second most by a goalkeeper, trailing only Kansas City’s Lorena, whose 14 shutouts were a league record. Berger kept a clean sheet in two playoff games this year, tying the record for most games without allowing a goal in a single postseason by a goalkeeper.

Country: Brazil
Club: Orlando Pride
Age: 39
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: 26 (▲ 6 spots)
This isn’t a name-recognition vote. For as long as Marta is playing, she belongs in the conversation among the world’s elite. At 39, the six-time world player of the year has the individual brilliance and magic that makes her the greatest of all time.
Go watch her dogged performance in November’s NWSL quarterfinal if you have any doubts — she still executes on a vision unlike any other player. There might have been questions about her future a few years ago, but a rejuvenated Marta looks ready to play a role for Brazil on home soil at the 2027 World Cup. — Kassouf
Stat to know: At 39 years old, Marta’s team-leading 39 chances created in the regular season were also tied for fourth most by any NWSL player. Since 2016, the only player 39 years or older to even come close to producing that many chances is Christine Sinclair, who had exactly 23 chances created in back-to-back years (2023, 2024).

Country: England
Club: Arsenal
Age: 27
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: N/A (★ debut)
If you need someone to deliver in a pressure moment, give Kelly a call. Her penalty run-up is iconic: the raised knee, the hop, the skip and then a rocket of a strike. After scoring the winner against Germany in the Euro 2022 final, Kelly was England’s heroine again in the Euros this summer.
Kelly teed up both equalizers against Sweden and then slotted a 119th minute winner against Italy — converting the rebound off her own saved penalty. And then came the moment against Spain, as she went through the familiar routine and hammered home the tournament-clinching penalty. “If that’s a story to tell someone who maybe experiences something the same, tough times don’t last,” Kelly said after the final. “Just around the corner was a Champions League final, won that. Then a Euros final, won that. Thank you to everyone that wrote me off, I’m grateful.”
That’s all that after a roller-coaster 2024-25 season where she spoke about how she was contemplating leaving the sport behind when in a tough spot with Manchester City and ended up winning the Champions League with Arsenal and starring for the Lionesses. — Hamilton
Stat to know: Her game-winning goal (at 118:53) against Italy in 2025 Euro semifinals is the latest game-winning goal in tournament history. She also scored the latest goal in Women’s Euro history, regardless of round or impact on the score.

Country: France
Club: San Diego Wave FC
Age: 28
Position: Winger
2024 Rank: 29 (⇔ ▲ 11 spots)
Cascarino made her name in Lyon, winning six UEFA Champions League crowns, and she brought all that magic to San Diego in her decision to leave France last year. Cascarino was the NWSL co-leader this season with six assists and finished fourth in the league in chances created (45), per TruMedia.
The 28-year-old is an electric winger in her prime who can dice up defenders on the wing and whip in sensational crosses. Cascarino recently showed just how important she is in those small-sided battles when she helped the Wave win the World Sevens title. — Kassouf
Stat to know: She was tied for most goals on her team this season. Though San Diego only played one game in the playoffs, what makes Cascarino’s play impressive is that she was one of two players in the NWSL this season with five-plus goals and five-plus assists in the regular season and playoffs.

Country: England
Club: Arsenal
Age: 28
Position: Center back
2024 Rank: N/A (★ reentry)
Williamson secured a unique place in English sporting history over the past year. Having skippered Arsenal to that incredible Champions League win over Barcelona, spearheading a defense that didn’t commit a single foul in the final, she then led England to their second Euros title in three years, becoming the first England soccer captain to win two major international trophies.
However, Williamson has barely played since, still recovering from a knee injury she picked up during the tournament. She’s been named in FIFPRO’s Women’s World 11 as she proved once again she is the complete defender: great in the air, an ability to split a team with a long-arching pass and a wonderful tackler. — Hamilton
Stat to know: Her 67% duel success percentage in the Women’s Super League was the third highest among English players with at least 15 games played in 2024-25.

Country: France
Club: Chelsea
Age: 25
Position: Fullback/winger
2024 Rank: N/A (★ debut)
Although Baltimore did not make headlines for her goals last season, she was vital to Chelsea’s domestic dominance, with her six assists provided creativity and drive to a team stacked with talent.
Capable of operating anywhere along the left flank as a winger, fullback, wing back, or midfielder, the France international consistently excelled in both attacking and defensive phases, giving Chelsea balance, width and control across the pitch while neutralizing opposition threats. She ranks highly among fullbacks for carries, progressive passes and overall involvement in build-up play. These qualities made her indispensable to the Blues’ record-breaking campaign. — Keogh
Stat to know: Only three more players have more “Big Chances Created” than Baltimore’s four in the Women’s Super League this season.

Country: Norway
Club: Barcelona
Age: 30
Position: Winger
2024 Rank: 4 (▼ 11)
Graham Hansen has been one of the game’s most underrated players over the last decade, but 15th is probably about right this year based on her form. It was always going to be difficult to maintain the numbers she posted in 2023-24 (40 goal contributions in 25 Liga F games), but she remains good for a goal or an assist in nearly every game.
She is still capable of breezing past opponents, reaching the byline and creating something from nothing. Testament to that is the fact she remains an ever-present on the right wing for Spanish champions Barça and Norway, which she helped reach the quarterfinals of Euro 2025. — Marsden
Stat to know: She is one of five players with four-plus goals and four-plus assists in Liga F this season. Of those, Hansen (30) is the only one older than 23.

Country: Colombia
Club: Real Madrid
Age: 20
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: 11 (▼ 3 spots)
Caicedo has been one of the best young players in women’s soccer, finishing behind Barcelona’s Vicky Lopez for the inaugural Kopa Trophy (best U21 player) at the Ballon d’Or ceremony. She was at the forefront of Colombia’s charge to the Copa América final this summer, scoring and assisting in a thrilling final against Brazil, and finished the campaign with four goals.
The 20-year-old recently signed a long-term deal with Real Madrid, keeping her at the club until 2031, and has a knack of stepping up in big games. Indeed, she scored against Arsenal in the UWCL last season and assisted the winner in Madrid’s historic first El Clásico win over Barcelona in March. Caicedo finished the 2024-25 season with 14 goals and nine assists in all competitions, but she had the most completed take-ons (73) and progressive carries (124) in Liga F last season. — Thakur
Stat to know: Caicedo averages 0.63 goal contributions per 90 minutes played this season in all club competitions, the third highest of any Real Madrid player.

Country: England
Club: Chelsea
Age: 34
Position: Fullback
2024 Rank: 27 (▲ 14 spots)
It’s rare that England manager Sarina Wiegman singles out a player for praise. So when she described Bronze as “one of a kind” after England’s nerve-wracking Euro 2025 win over Sweden, we took note. In that match, Bronze scored the first of England’s two goals, strapped up her own thigh in extra time, then untaped it seconds before slamming home a penalty in the shootout.
After England beat Spain in the tournament’s final, Bronze revealed she had played the whole tournament with a fractured tibia. “What defines her is that resilience, that fight,” Wiegman said. Bronze was instrumental as England won the Euros last summer and proved again why she is a modern great defender. — Hamilton
Stat to know: Last season, Bronze had five goal contributions in the Women’s Super League, which was tied for third most among all defenders. Of the five players with five-plus goal contributions, Bronze was the only one older than 29.

Country: Spain
Club: Barcelona
Age: 24
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: N/A (★ debut)
If you see Pina cutting in on her right foot and winding up to shoot, the chances are it’s too late to stop her. There are few better finishers in the game than the Barça forward, especially from distance, and she demonstrated that at Euro 2025 with two long rangers curled into the top corner. “It’s her trademark goal,” teammate Alexia Putellas told ESPN.
Now 24, and after time on loan at Sevilla and in and out of the Barça side, she has established herself on the left of the Catalan side’s attack. As she approaches the peak years of her career, the next challenge is to take her game to the next level by scoring more goals, making an impact in the big games and winning more trophies. — Marsden
Stat to know: She is one of three players with 20+ goals and 10+ assists in Liga F since the start of last season. She’s also the player with most shots (144) in Liga F since 2024-25.

Country: Haiti
Club: Lyonnes
Age: 22
Position: Midfielder
2024 Rank: 21 (▲ 10 spots)
Dumornay has grown in stature after bursting onto the scene as a 19-year-old at the 2023 Women’s World Cup for Haiti. Last season, she finished as OL Lyonnes’ top goal scorer in the French league with 15 goals even though she’s not a striker, helping them to win another title.
Her explosive brand of soccer, flair and ability to generate chances from nothing allows her to shine on the biggest stages. She was voted the UWCL Young Player of the Year and named in the UWCL Team of the Season in the 2024-25 season, while no U21 player had more goals (15) or goal contributions (21) across the top five European leagues last season. — Thakur
Stat to know: Last season, her 21 goal contributions in the French Première Ligue were the second most of any player.

Country: Poland
Club: Barcelona
Age: 29
Position: Striker
2024 Rank: 22 (▲ 12 spots)
Pajor has the killer scoring instinct Barcelona lacked. The Polish striker has a cutting edge in front of goal matched by very few in the game. That was on show in the 4-0 Clásico win over Real Madrid in November when she netted twice — and had two more goals ruled out. She managed an incredible 43 goals in her first season at Barça after joining from Wolfsburg, winning Liga F, the Copa de la Reina and the Supercopa de España, but losing in the Champions League final.
However, it’s her achievements internationally that made her 2025 so special. After leading Poland to their first European Championships, she scored in a 3-2 win over Denmark, marking a historic first win in the Euros for her country. — Marsden
Stat to know: She leads all players in UEFA Women’s Champions League with 20 goals over the last four seasons, and she is Barcelona’s top leading scorer in 2025-26 with 15 goals in 17 games (all competitions).

Country: Zambia
Club: Orlando Pride
Age: 25
Position: Striker
2024 Rank: 3 (▼ spots)
Banda’s 2025 season was cut short in 2025 due to injury, and her absence from the Orlando Pride further illustrated her importance. She has both the ability to be a hold-up forward who can combine with Marta and other playmakers, and a vertical forward who gets behind defenses who dare to play with a high line.
She’s equally capable of resourceful, effective finishes as she is an eye-popping, highlight-reel goal, and she is one of a few players in the NWSL right now whose name on or off the team sheet completely changes how an opponent needs to prepare. — Kassouf
Stat to know: Banda was ruled out for the season after suffering an injury on Aug. 16, but despite missing 10 regular-season games, she still finished as Orlando Pride’s top scorer with eight goals — four more than any other player.

Country: Spain
Club: Gotham FC
Age: 33
Position: Striker
2024 Rank: 50 (▲ 42 spots)
Is there anything Esther doesn’t or can’t do? She’s the forward who drops between her center backs not out of desperation, but by design. She’s the shorter player who somehow rises to finish goals with her head regularly.
The Spanish international dragged Gotham through some tougher stretches this season, helping the squad win both the inaugural Concacaf W Champions Cup and the NWSL Championship. Esther nearly had an NWSL Golden Boot and a Euro title to go along with those honors, too. She’s a forward who is far more than just a goal scorer; Esther is a player who sees the game holistically.
After barely making our list in 2024, Esther earns the distinction of jumping the most places of anyone making back-to-back appearances on ESPN FC Women’s Rank. — Kassouf
Stat to know: González not only led Gotham FC in goals (13) in the 2025 regular season, but she scored in four straight games this year. That is the longest scoring streak by any player on Gotham FC since the team rebranded from Sky Blue FC in 2021. She also had 35.1% of Gotham’s goals, which was the highest goal share by any player in the NWSL this season.

Country: England
Club: Chelsea
Age: 25
Position: Goalkeeper
2024 Rank: N/A (★ debut)
This year, Hampton showed exactly why she deserved to win the inaugural Yashin Trophy at the 2025 Ballon d’Or. She picked up the WSL’s Golden Glove (alongside Man United’s Phallon Tullis-Joyce) during a treble-winning season for Chelsea and then helped England claim Euro 2025 with key performances in two penalty shootout victories — notably denying both Mariona Caldentey and Aitana Bonmatí in the final to secure the trophy.
She lands in our top 50 after undoubtedly her most assertive year yet, which reinforced her reputation as one of the most reliable goalkeepers around. Indeed, her performances were crucial to keeping Chelsea competitive across all fronts, and she produced decisive saves throughout the FA Cup and League Cup campaigns. She also started every game in the league and kept 13 clean sheets, conceding only 13 goals. — Keogh
Stat to know: She leads Women’s Super League this calendar year in clean sheets (11) and save percentage (83.3%).

Country: Spain
Club: Barcelona
Age: 27
Position: Midfielder
2024 Rank: 18 (▲ 12 spots)
Many people would tell you that Guijarro should be higher than sixth. Former Spain coach Montse Tomé says she’s “humble, hardworking and the best in her position in the world.” Teammate Vicky López says she is “underrated,” although that she can also be “complicated” to play with.
“She plays passes that only she sees, so sometimes you’re not even expecting them,” López explained in the summer. “She doesn’t make easy passes. Every pass is forward, with precision and meaning.”
In a world where goals and assists are valued most, Guijarro — who has also scored important goals in her career — sails under the radar as a deeper midfielder, but no one doubts how important she remains to Barcelona and Spain’s continued success. — Marsden
Stat to know: She’s the only player to average more than 100 touches per game in UEFA Women’s Champions League matches in 2025 (104.4).

Country: Malawi
Club: Kansas City Current
Age: 27
Position: Striker
2024 Rank: 19 (▲ 14 spots)
Back-to-back MVP honors for the first time in NWSL history and back-to-back Golden Boots rightfully land Chawinga among the top five players globally. No player in the NWSL, or arguably the world, changes games the way that Chawinga does.
In 2025, despite battling injury, she added a layer of consistency and maturity to her 15-goal output. Chawinga is the ultimate cheat code, especially on counterattacks, and she strikes fear in any defender. She’s a humble star, too, the type of forward willing to track back into her own box to defend as much as she is lurking around the opponent’s goal. — Kassouf
Stat to know: Chawinga led the NWSL with six game-winning goals in the regular season in 2025. Since she joined NWSL in 2024, her 35 goals in the regular season are 13 more than any other player.

Country: England
Club: Arsenal
Age: 26
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: N/A (★ reentry)
Russo has cemented her place among the elite soccer players of her generation. Her impact last season was immense, and she played a pivotal role in guiding Arsenal to their first Champions League triumph in 18 years — finishing with the second-highest goal tally in the competition. She repeatedly delivered when it mattered, showcasing a rare blend of technical sharpness and composure.
Russo’s versatility makes her especially valuable. Her ability to operate both as a traditional striker and as an attacking midfielder gave Arsenal crucial tactical flexibility, allowing her to influence build-up play as well as finish chances. This made her arguably the team’s most indispensable player throughout the campaign.
Ranked third in Ballon d’Or voting, Russo completed the season as joint-top goal scorer in the Women’s Super League (WSL) with 12 goals in 21 games. Her influence extended to the international stage as well and she was central to England’s effort in retaining their crown at Euro 2025, further proving how essential she is to every side she represents. — Keogh
1:59
Why Fara Williams believes Alessia Russo deserved the top spot
Fara Williams explains why she thinks Alessia Russo should have been No. 1 in ESPN FC Women’s Rank.
Stat to know: She has the most goals this calendar year by a Women’s Super League player, both in league play and UEFA club competitions (18).

Country: Spain
Club: Arsenal
Age: 29
Position: Forward
2024 Rank: 7 (▲ 4 spots)
Leaving Barcelona for Arsenal was a risky decision, but it’s one that has allowed Caldentey to flourish. At Barça she was a key player despite never really being considered a star, a tag that’s duly been given to her at Arsenal after a stellar first season in England. Not only was she named the best player in the WSL last year, she also scored eight goals to help the Gunners win an improbable Champions League trophy, beating former team Barça in the final.
She took that form into the Euros with Spain, putting La Roja ahead in the final against England, but a penalty shootout defeat against the Lionesses ended her hopes of becoming a European champion for club and country in the same year. — Marsden
Stat to know: Her 57 chances created this calendar year in the Women’s Super League are 17 more than any other player.

Country: Spain
Club: Barcelona
Age: 31
Position: Midfielder
2024 Rank: 13 (▲ 11 spots)
Putellas was No. 1 on the 2022 edition of ESPN FC Women’s Rank before injuries left her off in 2023 entirely, and she came awfully close to reclaiming the top spot this year again.
After tearing her ACL in 2022, she suffered a series of lingering injuries upon her return in 2023, but has refound some of her best form over the last 12 months. She registered 27 goal contributions in 24 Liga F appearances as Barça won the title last season. What’s more, she starred for Spain at Euro 2025. In Switzerland, she scored three goals and had four assists, although the tournament ended in heartbreak for her as Spain lost the final to England on penalties.
In that sense, it was actually a year of disappointments for Putellas, who was also part of the Barça side that lost the Champions League final — a credit to her excellence and high standards. — Marsden
Stat to know: She has the most UEFA Women’s Champions League goal involvements in 2025 with 11 (four goals, seven assists).

Country: Spain
Club: Barcelona
Age: 27
Position: Midfielder
2024 Rank: 1 (⇔ same position)
Bonmatí’s 2025 ended on a low note with a broken leg sustained in Spain training that will rule her out until at least April. However, prior to sustaining the injury, she had already done enough to top ESPN’s list for a third successive year after another 12 months packed with standout performances for club and country.
What is remarkable about Bonmatí is her consistency in big games. She recovered from viral meningitis to play a major role for Spain in the knockout stages of Euro 2025, producing an inspired backheel assist in the quarterfinal and the match-winning goal from the tightest of angles in the semifinal win over Germany. “Most players in that position wouldn’t even think about shooting and automatically cross,” former Barça teammate and England midfielder Keira Walsh said of the goal. “But I’ve played with Aitana a lot and I know that she’s always thinking about things that other players don’t.”
Bonmatí was later named Player of the Tournament despite a penalty shootout defeat in the final to England. Those performances in Switzerland came after another trophy-laden season with Barça, where she won Liga F, the Copa de la Reina and the Supercopa de España, and even the Champions League final defeat to Arsenal came with the consolation of her being named the Player of the Tournament as well.
After breaking her leg last month, she missed Spain’s UEFA Nations League triumph over Germany. By that point, though, she had already helped La Roja reach that final in yet another year when her dependability saw her stand above her peers. For all that she has won, she remains as determined as ever to keep moving forward, often using setbacks as motivation. Defeats in the Champions League and Euro 2025 finals, coupled with a broken leg, then, should serve as a warning to opponents when she returns to the pitch in 2026.
“Honestly, I felt it was time to slow down,” she said after the injury. “I did consider it, but I didn’t do it, and life has brought me to a sudden halt. I am convinced that it will serve as a learning experience. I will be back.” — Marsden
0:55
Krieger: Women’s Rank winner Aitana Bonmati a ‘generational player’
Futbol W’s Ali Krieger explains why Aitanna Bonmati had to be No. 1 for the third year in a row in ESPN FC Women’s Rank.
Stat to know: Bonmatí was the third-highest shot-creating actions per 90 minutes in Liga F last season. The only players that had more than Bonmatí’s 7.5 SCA/90 mins were Clàudia Pina (8.3) and Caroline Graham Hansen (8.6), both of whom are the strikers for Barcelona in charge of scoring the chances Bonmatí creates. In addition, she is one of two players in the last three Liga F seasons with 25-plus goals and 20-plus assists (the other is Graham Hansen).


The ranking methodology and voting panel explained
Although Aitana Bonmatí again repeats as our No. 1, this was one of our most competitive editions of ESPN FC Women’s Rank since we first launched this top-50 list back in 2021.
This year, eight different players received No. 1 votes and, in fact, the player who received the most No. 1 votes was not Bonmatí but her Spanish teammate Mariona Caldentey, who was voted as the top choice on eight of our voting panel’s ballots. Bonmatí received six votes for the top spot. Another Spanish and Barcelona player, Alexia Putellas, received four No. 1 votes.
So why did Caldentey fall to third in our overall ranking despite topping the most ballots? Bonmatí was consistently higher on average across the submitted ballots — even when she wasn’t at No. 1, she was near the top.
Using a ranked ballot, we asked our voting panel of 25 women’s soccer experts from around the world to pick their top 50 players of 2025: a No. 1 vote was worth 50 points, and each No. 50 vote was worth one point. At the end, we tallied up the points from all the ballots to get our list — and Bonmatí again came out on top.
This is Bonmatí’s third consecutive year topping ESPN FC Women’s Rank. You can see our previous lists here: 2024, 2023, 2022 and 2021.
Our voting panel was made up of 25 experts to ensure an accurate final ranking:
• Vlatko Andonovski (Kansas City Current sporting director; former U.S. national team coach)
• Lesle Gallimore (Seattle Reign FC general manager; former University of Washington coach)
• Mark Parsons (sporting director for Angel City FC; former coach of the Dutch national team, the Washington Spirit and the Portland Thorns)
• Denise Reddy (assistant coach of the U.S. women’s national team; former assistant at Chelsea and the Washington Spirit)
• Antonio Contreras (head coach of Chivas; former head coach of Atletico Madiod and Real Betis)
• Jimmy Coenraets (head coach of the Utah Royals; former head coach of Oud-Heverlee Leuven)
• Yael Averbuch West (general manager of Gotham FC; former player for the U.S. national team)
• Natalia Astrain (soccer commentator for ESPN’s UEFA Women’s Champions League coverage; former coach of FC Barcelona and the U17 USWNT)
• Sam Mewis (commentator; former World Cup champion and NWSL champion with the USWNT and North Carolina Courage; No. 1 on ESPN FC Women’s Rank in 2021)
• Emma Byrne (commentator; former UEFA Champions League winner with Arsenal and former member of Ireland national team)
• Janelly Farías (commentator; former player for Mexico national team and Club América)
• Cristina Alexander (commentator and host of Futbol W on ESPN+; former ESPN correspondent covering Mexican soccer)
• Maria Tikas (journalist covering Spanish soccer for Sport)
• Sophie Downey (journalist covering WSL for The Guardian)
• Ameé Ruszkai (journalist covering WSL and UWCL for Goal)
• Suzy Wrack (journalist covering women’s soccer at The Guardian)
• Mayca Jiménez (journalist covering soccer for Dazn; formerly AS and Relevo)
• Samantha Lewis (journalist covering women’s soccer for The Guardian and ABC Australia)
• Yash Thakur (ESPN journalist on women’s soccer in Europe and the UK)
• Angela Christian-Wilkes (co-host of ESPN Australia women’s soccer podcast “The Far Post”)
• Marissa Lordanic (ESPN Australia editor and co-host of “The Far Post”)
• Audrey de Ridder (ESPN Netherlands editor, writer and presenter)
• Emily Keogh (ESPN’s lead journalist for UEFA Women’s Champions League and the WSL)
• Jeff Kassouf (ESPN’s lead journalist for the U.S. women’s national team and NWSL)
• Caitlin Murray (ESPN senior editor; former reporter and book author covering U.S. women’s soccer)
Sports
17 weeks, 255 games and a much clearer NFL playoff picture: Barnwell on what really mattered, week by week
Each week of the NFL campaign is like its own mini season. The league is doing its best to spread its wings from the traditional Thursday/Sunday/Monday schedule, but with the vast majority of games taking place in a Sunday afternoon firehose of football each week, the stories coming out of each weekend’s games seem more meaningful than they do in pro baseball, basketball or hockey, where the next matchup and its takeaways are usually only a day or two away.
But do all of those stories or takeaways hold up over the course of the entire season?
Subscribe: ‘The Bill Barnwell Show’
Let’s examine that very idea. I’m going to run through each week of the NFL season — from Week 1 through Week 17 — and identify three stories that were being told after that slate of games. One will be something that seemed meaningful at the time and turned out to be just that. The second will be a story that flew under the radar before revealing itself to be meaningful by the time we got to the end of December. And the third will be a story that seemed significant when it happened, only to end up being a fluke or something more irrelevant to the broader, seasonlong stories of 2025.
I’ll go in chronological order, so we’ll start with what happened in Week 1 and work all the way to the games we saw over the past few days as part of Week 17. What mattered? What didn’t? And what seems like a bigger deal now than it did in the moment?
Jump to:
Week 1 | Week 2 | Week 3 | Week 4
Week 5 | Week 6 | Week 7 | Week 8
Week 9 | Week 10 | Week 11 | Week 12
Week 13 | Week 14 | Week 15
Week 16 | Week 17

Week 1
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Mattered then, matters now: Lions get overwhelmed by the Packers. It took a garbage-time touchdown to make the final score look respectable, but a 27-13 shellacking by the Packers seemed to hint that the 2025 version of the Lions might not be quite as dominant as the team that went 15-2 in 2024. The Lions couldn’t run the ball, turning their 22 carries into just 46 yards, and the Packers were able to attack the interior of Detroit’s offensive line for negative plays and pressures of quarterback Jared Goff, who struggled badly under duress.
Those have been consistent problems in the Lions’ losses this season. Every team is going to post gaudier rushing stats in its victories by virtue of running out the clock with a lead, but the Lions were 13th in success rate on the ground in their wins. They were dead last (32.2%) in their losses, even compared to how effective everyone else’s run game was during their respective defeats. Injuries and inconsistent play helped opposing defenses attack the likes of Tate Ratledge and Trystan Colon up front. And Goff’s 12.0 QBR when pressured is 25th in the NFL.
At 8-8, the Lions took a major step back for the first time under coach Dan Campbell and general manager Brad Holmes.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters now: Raiders 20, Patriots 13. This was probably the least representative game of the season in terms of the result and what it suggested about the future — but it made an impact. Geno Smith threw for 362 yards in his first start with the Raiders, Brock Bowers ran off an easy 103-yard game before leaving with a tweaked knee, and a Pete Carroll-led defense held Drake Maye and the Patriots to 13 points. This seemed like a game between teams hoping to surprise with a potential wild-card berth in the AFC, and the Raiders had struck the first blow.
Of course, these teams have gone in drastically different directions since. Bowers spent two months trying to get right, and the offense never recovered. Smith and Carroll are likely to be one-and-done in Las Vegas. The Patriots quickly turned things around, and with the help of one of the easiest schedules in modern NFL history, they’ve gone 13-3 and won the AFC East with a week to spare.
Why this game matters, of course, is something nobody could have expected back in September. If the Patriots win this game against one of the worst teams in the league, they’d be 14-2 and the 1-seed in the AFC right now, in position for a first-round bye. As it stands, they’ll be the second seed in the conference behind the Broncos, who have the same 13-3 mark as the Pats. The difference between the two is their record in common games. The Broncos are 6-0 in games against opponents who went up against the Patriots this season. The Pats are 5-1 in those games, and that lone loss, of course, is to the Raiders.
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Mattered then, didn’t matter in the long run: J.J. McCarthy, NFC Player of the Week. Even at the time, Vikings quarterback McCarthy winning Player of the Week for his performance during a topsy-turvy NFL debut was controversial. McCarthy had thrown a pick-six to Bears cornerback Nahshon Wright and done nothing on offense for the vast majority of the contest, but he was lights out in the fourth quarter, going 6-of-8 for 87 yards with two touchdown passes, plus a 14-yard rushing score.
Vikings fans thought they had landed the latest in a series of successful quarterbacks off the Kevin O’Connell assembly line, but that victory was McCarthy’s peak in 2025. He has looked unplayably bad for stretches, and while there have been some positive games against truly awful NFC East defenses, McCarthy’s 36.2 Total QBR would rank 29th in the league if the 2024 first-round pick had thrown enough passes to qualify. McCarthy has also missed time because of a high ankle sprain, a concussion and most recently a hairline fracture in his hand. If he doesn’t make it back for Week 18, McCarthy will have missed 25 of his first 34 possible starts as a pro.
This game also seemed like just another close win for the Vikings, who had run a gaudy record in one-score games under O’Connell in 2022 (9-0) and 2024 (8-1). They’re a more realistic 4-3 in those same games this season. Minnesota fell all the way to 4-8 before going on a four-game winning streak over the past month, buoyed by three games against NFC East competition and a six-takeaway win over the Lions on Thursday night.
A deliriously excited Bears fan base left Soldier Field dejected that night in Week 1. Caleb Williams and Ben Johnson’s new offense looked great on the opening drive, but the Bears couldn’t move the ball as the game wore on. And while a late score got them within three points, Chicago couldn’t pull out a miracle. Things have improved, and often it has been through late-game performances from Williams and Johnson’s offensive scheme. The Bears are 7-2 in one-score games since the loss in the opener.
Week 2
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Mattered then, matters now: Chiefs lose their second straight close game. After posting the best record in one-score games (10-0) in NFL history in 2024, Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs had earned the right to win games their own way. Even looking past the prior season, the Chiefs and their legendary quarterback seemed inevitable. It took something truly spectacular, such as the Eagles’ pass rush in the prior season’s Super Bowl, to overcome a Chiefs team that seemed like it would always pull out the close ones.
Instead, after losing to the Chargers the prior week in Brazil, the Chiefs weren’t able to pull out another one-score game against the Eagles at home. This one wasn’t as close as it seemed, as it took a Tyquan Thornton score with three minutes to go to bring the Chiefs within three points, at which point Jalen Hurts and the Philly offense ran out the clock with a tush push to end the proceedings.
The Chiefs went on a two-game winning streak after starting 0-2, but the issues they dealt with early in the season lingered. Mahomes turned the ball over too often in key spots. The running game couldn’t produce any explosive plays. The pass rush didn’t get home often enough, and the secondary couldn’t hold up when the blitz failed. And a year after the Chiefs always seemed to find a way to pull out a victory when the game was tight, their opponents seemed to beat them to the punch. Coach Andy Reid’s team is 1-8 in games decided by seven points or fewer after a narrow loss to the Broncos on Christmas Day.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters now: Jayden Daniels suffers a minor knee injury late in a loss to the Packers. Coming off a scintillating rookie season, Daniels and his Commanders were seen as potential Super Bowl contenders after their run to the NFC title game in 2024. Daniels made it through his debut year unscathed, but late in a disappointing loss to the Packers, he suffered what was characterized at the time as a day-to-day knee injury.
It was unclear whether Daniels would miss time, but he sat out the next two games before returning in a win over the Chargers. Injuries ended up ruining his season, as Daniels then missed a game because of a hamstring injury before returning and promptly dislocating his left elbow late in a blowout loss to the Seahawks. Daniels returned again in Week 14, but after suffering another elbow injury in a 31-0 loss to the Vikings, the Commanders shut down their franchise quarterback for the season. Owing to the quarterback concerns and a truly horrific defense, the Commanders have gone from 12-5 to 4-12.
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Mattered then, didn’t matter in the long run: Colts score 29 in a comeback win over the Broncos. Daniel Jones and this Indy offense rolled the Dolphins in Week 1, but when they racked up 473 yards and 29 points in a dramatic victory over a great Broncos defense in Week 2, the Colts were no longer flying under the radar. Jonathan Taylor was dominant, posting 215 yards from scrimmage, and Jones threw for 316 yards and a touchdown. It took a leverage call on Broncos linebacker Dondrea Tillman to wipe a 60-yard missed field goal off the board and give Spencer Shrader a second chance at a game winner, but his 45-yard kick pushed the Colts to 2-0.
Indy’s offense stunned the league for half a season, and through the Week 8 win over the Titans, a 7-1 Colts team averaged a whopping 3.5 points per drive, trailing only the 2007 Patriots for the best mark by any offense in the NFL through the first eight games of a season since 2000. The Colts have been a league-average offense since that week, as the offensive line has battled injuries and a remarkable turnover rate has regressed toward the mean. Jones was already beginning to show signs of cratering before tearing an Achilles in December, which stunningly opened the door for Philip Rivers to take over as quarterback.
The Colts have lost six straight, and unless they upset the Texans in Houston next week, Indy will fail to turn its 7-1 start into a winning record, let alone a playoff berth.
Week 3
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Mattered then, matters now: Rams special teams costs them a win over the Eagles. During a stretch when it seemed like NFL defenses had cracked the code to block field goals on a weekly basis, the Eagles essentially swung a critical NFC game by blocking a pair of Joshua Karty field goals in the fourth quarter, including a 44-yard attempt that would have given the Rams a 29-27 win on the final snap of the game, only for Jordan Davis to return it for a 44-yard touchdown.
The Rams might have the potential to be the league’s most dominant offense and defense, but special teams have ailed coach Sean McVay’s team in its losses. Two weeks after this defeat, Karty had an extra point blocked and missed a field goal in a 26-23 loss to the 49ers. The Seahawks fueled their fourth-quarter comeback win earlier this month with a Rashid Shaheed punt return touchdown and a short field, courtesy of a 32-yard punt by Ethan Evans. Harrison Mevis, who took over for the deposed Karty at midseason, missed a 48-yard kick that would have given the Rams their lead back with 2:11 to go in a game Los Angeles eventually lost in overtime.
McVay responded to that defeat by firing special teams coordinator Chase Blackburn, marking the first time he has resorted to firing one of his coordinators during a season. The Rams have swapped out their kicker and now their coordinator, but it remains to be seen whether their special teams woes will linger into January. Subpar special teams in key moments are the biggest reason the Rams will likely be spending their postseason on the road.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters now: Panthers dominate the Falcons in a 30-0 victory. After turning the ball over five times during an 0-2 start, Bryce Young and the Panthers seemed to have lost whatever optimism they had earned during a solid end to the 2024 campaign. With the Bucs starting 2-0 and about to face the Jets, it seemed like the Panthers could fall out of the NFC South race before the calendar even turned to October.
Instead, while the Bucs beat the Jets and got to 3-0, the Panthers turned their season around with a blowout victory over the Falcons. Chau Smith-Wade chipped in with a pick-six, and while Young wasn’t spectacular, he went 16-of-24 for 121 yards, taking just one sack and protecting the football. The Panthers didn’t turn the ball over, and their defense was good enough to shut down Bijan Robinson throughout the game.
When Carolina has protected the football, good things have followed. The Panthers are 7-2 when they avoid multi-giveaway games. They’re 1-6 when turning the ball over two times or more, a record they added to in Sunday’s loss to the Seahawks, when two short fields from a Chuba Hubbard fumble and a Young interception set a profligate Seattle offense up for a pair of touchdowns.
1:22
Luke Kuechly: Panthers have been very particular in how they’ve built the team
Luke Kuechly joins “The Pat McAfee Show” and breaks down the Carolina Panthers’ improved roster this season.
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Mattered then, didn’t matter in the long run: Texans start 0-3 with a 17-10 loss to the Jaguars. Every year after Week 2, I write a column about how Week 3 is essentially a playoff game for teams that have started 0-2. While it’s a little easier in the 14-playoff team era, the only team since 2002 that had made it to the postseason after starting 0-3 was the 2018 Texans, who went 11-2 from that point forward to win the AFC South.
The 2025 Texans have joined the club, following their 0-3 start by going 11-2 over the ensuing 13 games. They’ll get a chance to make it to 12-2 with a win over Philip Rivers and the Colts next week. Since that 0-3 start, they’ve fielded the league’s best defense by points allowed per drive (1.4) and EPA per play (minus-0.10).
And while the offense hasn’t always been great, it has needed to be impressive for only short stretches to pull out victories. The C.J. Stroud-led offense didn’t have a single drive over 35 yards after the first quarter in Week 17, but two long touchdown passes early in the game and two missed kicks by Los Angeles kicker Cameron Dicker were enough to swing a 20-16 victory over the Chargers.
It’s fair to suggest that the Texans were unlucky to start 0-3; the three losses were by a combined 13 points, and if the Bucs win next week, all three will have come against eventual playoff teams. Most teams that start 0-3 don’t have the juice to turn things around. Even without Stroud for a month in the middle of the season, the Texans had enough on defense to flip their season. They’re going to be a very difficult out come January.
Week 4
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Mattered then, matters now: Joe Alt goes down injured for the Chargers. While the Chargers entered the season without star left tackle Rashawn Slater after the Pro Bowler tore a patellar tendon during training camp, no team was better protected against an injury to a left tackle. Alt played left tackle during his time at Notre Dame, and after a banner rookie season on the right side, the Chargers had a few weeks of practice time to reacclimate the first-round pick as he moved to protect Justin Herbert‘s blind side.
And then, after a 3-0 start, Alt followed Slater to the sideline. The 22-year-old suffered a high ankle sprain in the Week 4 loss to the Giants, and while he returned later in the season, Alt lasted only one and a half more games before another ankle injury ended his sophomore season. The Chargers might have believed they had the best tackle duo in football, but those guys combined to play just 313 offensive snaps in 2025. (Alt still managed to earn a Pro Bowl nod last week, which raises serious questions about whether anyone actually pays attention to offensive linemen.)
The entire offense shifted. A surprisingly pass-happy attack turtled up and leaned back into the run, even without running backs Najee Harris and Omarion Hampton for most of the season. Herbert’s Total QBR fell from 77.0 with Alt on the field to 54.1 without him, which would be the difference between second and 20th in Total QBR over a full season. And Herbert has been smacked around behind Jamaree Salyer, Bobby Hart and Trevor Penning, as he has been hit 206 times, way ahead of any other quarterback in the league. Herbert and the Chargers were still good enough to earn a postseason berth, but their ceiling is capped with replacement-level play at both tackle spots.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters now: Bears pull out a dramatic victory over the Raiders. After getting their season back on track with a 31-14 victory over the Cowboys, the Bears spent most of Week 4 trailing the Raiders. It took a D’Andre Swift rushing touchdown with 1:34 to go to put the Bears up 25-24, and after a failed 2-point try, the Bears had to keep the Raiders out of field goal range to hold on to their lead.
They didn’t, but it didn’t matter. The Raiders quickly got into deep field goal range, at which point Las Vegas coach Pete Carroll decided to chew up the remaining clock and attempt a 54-yard field goal. For the second week in a row, though, a game was decided by a blocked kick at the buzzer, as Josh Blackwell blocked Daniel Carlson‘s attempt to give the Bears a one-point victory.
Does one close victory spur a few others? Maybe, maybe not, but this became the first in a series of dramatic Bears wins late in games. This same team came back from its bye and took advantage of a fumbled Commanders exchange to get the ball back for a winning score. The Bears beat the Bengals on a touchdown with 17 seconds left, put together late comeback wins over the Giants and Vikings, and shocked the Packers with an onside kick and winning touchdown in overtime in Week 16. The win over the Raiders was the first sign that fate seemed to be on Chicago’s side in meaningful moments this season.
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Mattered then, didn’t matter in the long run: Chiefs drop 37 on the Ravens. The offense is back on track! There were real concerns about what Mahomes would do on offense early in the season with receivers Rashee Rice suspended and Xavier Worthy banged up, and after iffy performances against the Chargers and Eagles and an underwhelming win over the Giants, this performance against the Ravens was the first sign the Chiefs might actually be explosive on offense. Mahomes threw for 270 yards and four touchdowns, and with Rice’s return only a couple of games away, there was a world in which the Chiefs were about to become very fun on offense for the first time since 2022.
While there were moments, that dream never really became a reality. The Chiefs were eighth in EPA per play between Week 5 and Mahomes’ season-ending torn ACL against the Chargers. That’s not bad at all, of course, but it’s not the sort of ceiling we know a Chiefs offense can have with Mahomes in the lineup. Worthy has never really seemed right, the run game never got going, the offensive line cycled through injuries at both tackle spots, and Rice didn’t put together a single 100-yard game in regulation before going on injured reserve earlier this month.
Meanwhile, what looked to be a porous Ravens defense eventually righted the ship. It allowed 44 points to the Texans the following week and was lucky to get away with allowing 17 to the Rams in Week 6, but after its subsequent bye, the defense found a groove. The Ravens are sixth in defensive EPA per play since that Week 7 bye, with Kyle Hamilton moving into the box, trade acquisition Alohi Gilman taking more snaps in centerfield and a healthier front seven doing a better job of tackling and maintaining gap responsibilities.
While acknowledging what Derrick Henry did Saturday against the Packers, it’s the defense — not an inconsistent offense — that has mostly driven the Ravens to within one game of winning the AFC North.
Week 5
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Mattered then, matters now: Patriots topple the Bills 23-20 in Buffalo. This seemed like a statement win for the Patriots, who were looking to usurp their divisional rivals and end Buffalo’s streak of five consecutive AFC East titles. The Bills got their own version of that win in 2020 when they beat the Pats 24-21 in November, and while it was over Cam Newton as opposed to Tom Brady, the Bills never really looked back. The East was theirs, and after dropping 47 on Bill Belichick’s defense in the 2021 playoffs, they hadn’t really felt threatened by the Pats since.
This was the game in which the worm turned. A Bills team that never seemed to turn the football over somehow coughed it up three times, including once in the red zone. Patriots quarterback Drake Maye went drive-for-drive with Bills QB Josh Allen, racking up 273 yards while doing a better job of protecting the football. Special teams — a liability toward the end of the Belichick era in New England — came through when Andy Borregales hit a 53-yard field goal with 15 seconds left to win the game.
The Bills won the rematch on Dec. 14, but this was suddenly a real rivalry. And when the Bills failed on their two-point try against the Eagles on Sunday afternoon, this Patriots win in Western New York was the biggest reason New England clinched its first division title since Brady’s departure after the 2019 season.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters now: Bo Nix leads a comeback win for the Broncos in Philadelphia. Beating the defending champs obviously matters, of course, but it was tough to see this as some sort of trend for Nix and the Broncos’ offense to follow. After scoring just three points across their first eight drives, Denver came to life in the fourth quarter. Nix led 62-yard and 82-yard touchdown drives to get the Broncos back in the game, and with the Eagles’ offense stuck in neutral, he got the ball back and drove Denver 46 more yards for a winning field goal.
Nix has had his ups and downs this season, but this was the first example of him leading the Broncos back into a game against a good defense in obvious dropback situations. He led comeback victories over lesser defenses in the Jets and Giants over the next two games, got the Broncos in position for a winning field goal over the Texans and led a touchdown drive on the opening possession of overtime against the Commanders. The win over the Eagles was the second in what would become an 11-game winning streak, starting with the Broncos at 2-2 and ending with them atop the AFC.
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Mattered then, didn’t matter in the long run: Baker Mayfield drops 38 points on the Seahawks in a shootout win. We already had an idea that the Seahawks were fielding one of the league’s best defenses, so what Mayfield did on the road in Seattle was special. In a game in which he and Sam Darnold seemed to go back and forth with long scoring drives, Mayfield went 29-of-33 for 379 yards and two touchdowns despite playing without his top two wideouts in Mike Evans and Chris Godwin Jr. or his lead back in Bucky Irving. Darnold blinked first with a late interception, setting up the Bucs to get to 4-1 with a 38-35 victory.
Given his late-game performances in September, Mayfield was an MVP candidate at this point of the season. Since then, though, he has struggled for consistency and hasn’t been the same sort of driving force late in contests. Mayfield has averaged just 6.3 yards per attempt since this win over the Seahawks, ahead of only Titans rookie Cam Ward among regular starters. Just 29.2% of Mayfield’s pass attempts are turning into first downs, which ranks 29th out of 33 quarterbacks. And Mayfield has nine interceptions over that span, including two in Sunday’s 20-17 loss to the Dolphins.
Week 6
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Mattered then, matters now: Bills offense can’t find answers in a frustrating loss to the Falcons. The previous week’s loss to the Patriots was going to loom down the line, but Bills fans could write off the defeat as a multi-turnover aberration from an offense that had turned the ball over just twice over its past 13 games. A road trip to face a Falcons team that had allowed 57 points over its previous two games to Bryce Young and Marcus Mariota was going to cure what ailed Josh Allen and the Buffalo offense.
Instead, the Bills mustered only 14 points in a painful loss to a team that they were supposed to beat. Allen went 1-for-6 with two picks on deep throws, as the Falcons played plenty of single-high to slow down the run and weren’t concerned about getting beat by an underwhelming group of Buffalo receivers. The Bills have had better days on offense, and the Falcons’ pass rush turned out to be underrated, but the inability of the receivers to separate has cost the Bills in their losses, including Sunday’s one-point defeat at home against the Eagles.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters now: Titans firing Brian Callahan. I’ll cheat a bit because the Titans didn’t technically fire Callahan until Monday morning, but after a 1-5 start with the sole win coming as a result of a spectacular series of misfortunes to the Cardinals in the second half of a game where Arizona was dominating, there weren’t many reasons to stick with him. The Titans were failing Cam Ward, and their much-ballyhooed investment in their offensive line (including the addition of Bill Callahan, Brian’s dad, as offensive line coach) wasn’t working out.
Ward has been better since Callahan’s departure. Over the second half of the season, he has climbed from 32nd in Total QBR (22.2) to 23rd (45.7), even amid inconsistent offensive line play and while throwing to arguably the league’s worst group of receivers. Most people have understandably stopped watching Tennessee given the 3-13 record, but Ward continues to flash truly tantalizing ability on a weekly basis, even if the plays don’t end in completions. Nobody’s a better candidate to take the sort of second-year leap Drake Maye did between 2024 and 2025 than Ward, but the Titans will need to nail their coaching hires and make the right improvements at receiver. Maybe they can call up Mike Vrabel.
2:10
Lewan on Vrabel: Titans’ ownership ‘punching air’ as Pats look incredible
Taylor Lewan and Will Compton break down how former Titans coach Mike Vrabel and QB Drake Maye have rejuvenated the Patriots’ winning culture.
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Mattered then, didn’t matter in the long run: Giants blow out the Eagles. It felt like a coming-out party. Jaxson Dart and Cam Skattebo had impressed in a win over the Chargers two weeks earlier, but in prime time at home against the hated Eagles, their performances seemed like the dawning of a new era of Giants football. Skattebo turned 19 carries into 98 yards and three touchdowns, threatening to run over everyone from Cooper DeJean to Big Dom along the way. Dart went 17-of-25 for 195 yards, ran for another 58 yards and accounted for two touchdowns. The defense was struggling, but with two wins in three games, could the Giants actually make a run if the Eagles collapsed?
It wasn’t in the cards, as this was Brian Daboll’s final win on a Giants sideline. The Giants followed that emotional win over the Eagles with nine consecutive losses. The defense blew a 26-8 fourth-quarter lead against the Broncos the following week. The Eagles blew the Giants out the following week, with Skattebo fracturing his fibula and dislocating his ankle, ending his rookie season.
Dart missed time with a concussion, and while he’s coming off his best game in weeks, he hasn’t looked as convincing as a passer when the Giants have taken the quarterback run game out of the equation. Even after dominating the Raiders on Sunday, Dart ranks 26th in the NFL in Total QBR this season on plays that don’t involve a scramble or a designed run. They’ll try again with Dart, Skattebo and Malik Nabers back in the fold together in 2026, but the new era is yet to really arrive in New York.
Week 7
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Mattered then, matters now: The Commanders give up 37 points to the Cowboys’ offense. While Dan Quinn’s defense had already shown cracks during the 3-3 start to the season, this was the game where the defensive woes began to compound and destroy Washington’s chances of competing. The Commanders ranked 18th in EPA per play on defense through the first six games of the season. They’re dead last from Week 7 onward while allowing a whopping 3.1 points per possession. No other team in the NFL has allowed three points per drive over that same timeframe.
The Cowboys did whatever they wanted on offense in their victory, with Javonte Williams running for 116 yards and a score, and CeeDee Lamb racking up 110 receiving yards and a touchdown of his own. The only reason George Pickens didn’t get over 100 yards himself was a 37-yard pass interference penalty by embattled Commanders cornerback Marshon Lattimore in the first quarter, setting up the first of Dallas’ seven scores on offense in a 44-22 victory.
Lattimore might be the best symbol of how Washington’s renaissance under Quinn and Adam Peters has fallen by the wayside. Acquired in 2024 for several draft picks to take over a key role on the outside, Lattimore has never lived up to expectations in Washington. He battled hamstring issues after arriving in town, missing his first month of potential action, then never looked right down the stretch. He was then overwhelmed at corner in 2025 before suffering a torn ACL in midseason. He’s one of the many veterans likely to move on this offseason as the Commanders retool after a disappointing year.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters now: The Rams find a way to survive without Puka Nacua. While the Rams were without their star receiver for only one game after he went down injured in the previous week’s win over the Ravens, the absence caused Sean McVay to get creative in an unexpected way. The Rams were set with Davante Adams as their top receiver, and he turned five catches into 35 yards and three touchdowns in a 35-7 victory over the Jaguars, but the story bubbling underneath the surface in Los Angeles was more about how it chose to account for Nacua’s absence.
With a limited depth chart behind Adams, the Rams instead leaned into something McVay had never really used on a regular basis: 13 personnel, getting three tight ends onto the field. The Rams used 13 personnel on a grand total of four snaps between 2023 and 2024, less often than anybody else in the league. They used it 24 times in the win over the Jags alone, and even once Nacua came back, the habit stuck.
The Rams have used 13 personnel on more than 44% of their offensive snaps from Week 7 onward, nearly three times as often as any other offense in the NFL and a stunning stylistic change from a team that was in 11 personnel (three wide receivers) on nearly an every-down basis for most of the McVay era.
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Mattered then, didn’t matter in the long run: The Jaguars get blown out by the Rams in London. The other side of this matchup mattered, too. Two weeks after a dramatic victory over the Chiefs at home on “Monday Night Football,” it looked like the Jags had failed to build on what should have been a statement victory. The Seahawks shut down Trevor Lawrence in a 20-12 Week 6 matchup, and in London, the Rams manhandled the Jaguars’ defense in a 35-7 win. The only bright spot was Travis Hunter, who had his first 100-yard game as a receiver in the loss to Los Angeles.
Hunter wouldn’t be seen again, as the first-round pick suffered a season-ending knee injury in practice before Jacksonville returned from the bye. That injury might have turned out to be an unexpected blessing in disguise, as the Jags traded for Jakobi Meyers, who would eventually help transform their offense. Only the 49ers and Rams have averaged more points per drive since that Jaguars loss in London. And as for Lawrence, well, we’ll get to him later.
Week 8
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Mattered then, matters now: The Cowboys allow the Broncos to score 44 points in a blowout loss. One week after Dallas scored 44 (with a pick-six on defense) with their own dominant offensive display against the Commanders, the Cowboys’ defense responded by letting an inconsistent Broncos offense drop a Juszczyk (or a Riggins or Rathman) in Denver. Bo Nix threw four touchdown passes, the Broncos ran for 179 yards and two scores, and after an interception on the opening drive, Denver scored on seven of its next eight meaningful possessions.
Was this the game that drove Jerry Jones to desperation at the trade deadline? After the loss, Jones said that they weren’t “one player” away on defense, then made a stunning trade at the deadline by packaging most of the draft capital he got for Micah Parsons to add Quinnen Williams. He can point to a technicality given that the Cowboys also traded for benched Bengals linebacker Logan Wilson, but if there was one game that led Jones to abandon his plan of turning the picks from the Parsons deal into multiple players, it was this one.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters now: Tyler Shough plays his first significant snaps in a 23-3 loss to the Buccaneers. I was impressed with what I saw from Spencer Rattler during the first half of the season, but amid a difficult year and after a rough two-plus quarters against the Bucs, Kellen Moore turned to his potential quarterback of the future in Shough. The second-round pick didn’t do much, going 17-of-30 for 128 yards with an interception without leading a scoring drive in an unmemorable road loss.
Shough took over the starting job the next week and has held his own, going 5-3 for a Saints team that has won each of its past four games. The 26-year-old has been a league-average quarterback by QBR (51.5) over that span, which is more impressive than it sounds given that the Saints have both battled injuries and don’t have a ton around their young quarterback beyond star receiver Chris Olave. Shough has found a connection with his top wideout, averaged 7.7 yards per attempt, and is making an impact with his legs.
I’m not sure the Saints can be positive they’ve landed their long-term replacement for Drew Brees, but Shough has certainly done enough to earn another year as the starter in 2026.
0:54
Is Tyler Shough underrated heading into the fantasy playoffs?
Eric Karabell breaks down what impresses him about Tyler Shough, and why the Saints’ rookie is an underrated fantasy quarterback.
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Mattered then, didn’t matter in the long run: The Vikings can’t stop the Chargers in a 37-10 blowout. While most of the headlines went toward Carson Wentz playing through a painful labrum tear in what would be his fifth and final game of the season, the Vikings weren’t able to do anything on defense to stop Justin Herbert and the Chargers’ offense. With Joe Alt back in the fold at tackle, Los Angeles didn’t punt once all game, as its only two failed drives ended in a missed field goal and an interception. Kimani Vidal led a rushing attack that racked up 207 yards in an easy victory.
After a dominant 2024 campaign, this was rock bottom for Brian Flores’ defense, which had struggled to create the same sort of havoc with their pressure packages outside of one game against Jake Browning and the Bengals. Strip out the Bengals game, and the Vikes were 25th in EPA per play allowed on defense through this Chargers loss.
The Bengals game also happened to be Andrew Van Ginkel‘s last game in the lineup before missing more than a month with a neck issue. He returned to the mix in the Week 9 win over the Lions, and the Vikings haven’t looked back. Even with fellow star edge rusher Jonathan Greenard slowed and eventually sidelined by a shoulder injury, they’ve jumped to eighth in EPA per play and fifth in points allowed per possession since Van Ginkel’s return. And while the results weren’t always there in terms of wins, the Vikings have won four straight to restore some respectability to a frustrating 2025 campaign.
Week 9
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Mattered then, matters now: The Chiefs can’t handle the Bills. While the 28-21 final score looked close, a Chiefs team about to hit its bye never really seemed like it was on the same level as the Bills in Buffalo. Patrick Mahomes went 15-of-34 for 250 yards, running the worst single-game completion percentage of his career and leading an offense that struggled to consistently move the ball. And the Bills went 4-for-4 in the red zone on a day where Josh Allen went 7-of-7 for 62 yards against the same Chiefs blitz that had ended Buffalo’s season the year before.
A three-game Chiefs winning streak came to an end, and facing the most difficult part of the season, Andy Reid’s team collapsed. This game started a stretch of seven losses in eight games, with the one win requiring a comeback and an overtime victory over the Colts. Chiefs fans might have written this off as their annual regular-season loss against the Bills before the team gets hot and beats Buffalo in the postseason, but stunningly, the Chiefs will be watching the playoffs from home this January.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters now: The Colts show signs of slowing down for the first time in a 27-20 loss to the Steelers. Six turnovers will do that to you. After a dominant first half of the season, this was the first time that anyone really slowed down Daniel Jones & Co., as the Steelers forced a whopping six takeaways in their victory, five of which came from the Indy offense. The Colts had turned the ball over just four times all season before the defeat.
There were reasons to think that the Colts just had a bad day at the office — they still moved the ball around the takeaways — but this really was the pumpkin game for the offense, which scored 13 of its 20 points in the fourth quarter. Jones turned the ball over twice the following week in an overtime win over the Falcons, with Jonathan Taylor carrying the load, but an offense that had topped 28 points in seven of its first eight games got over that total only once across the subsequent eight contests. Jones’ season and Indianapolis’ future at quarterback was waylaid by his torn Achilles, and after that Falcons victory, the Colts haven’t won since.
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Mattered then, didn’t matter in the long run: The Dolphins get blown out at home by the Ravens. If Mike McDaniel had woken up on Halloween and lost his job, I’m not sure the fourth-year coach could have been surprised. One day before, his Dolphins had fallen to 2-7 with a brutal home loss against the Ravens, who dominated throughout in a 28-6 victory. Ownership must have seen a half-empty stadium for much of the fourth quarter and wondered whether that would become a trend during the second half of what was already a lost season in Miami.
Instead, McDaniel didn’t get fired, and the Dolphins began to turn things around. They unexpectedly beat the Bills in front of those same fans the following week, kicking off a four-game winning streak in the process. They’ve subsequently lost two of three, but the fall guy for those struggles appears to be Tua Tagovailoa, who was benched by the organization in December and appears likely to have played his final game in a Dolphins uniform. McDaniel might even be back in 2026, which seemed difficult to imagine as the clock ticked down in Week 9.
Week 10
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Mattered then, matters now: The Panthers fail to build on their success with a frustrating loss to the Saints. After stunning the Packers at Lambeau Field the prior week, Dave Canales’ team must have felt like it was heading in the right direction. While the Panthers had been blown out by the Bills in Week 8, they had won four of their previous five games, and they were blessed to host Tyler Shough and a 1-8 Saints team as comfortable favorites in Charlotte.
The Saints instead limited the Panthers to seven points and 175 yards of offense in a 17-7 win, eliminating whatever momentum Carolina was hoping to garner from the previous week’s upset win. And when the Panthers pulled off another notable victory by beating the Rams in Week 13, they came back from their bye week and … immediately lost to the Saints again in New Orleans. The Bucs owe their rivals a favor, as the Saints are the only reason that a Tampa Bay team running on fumes in the second half of 2025 will be competing for a potential division title against the Panthers in Week 18.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters now: Davis Mills launches a dramatic comeback win over the Jaguars. It felt like Houston’s season was over. The Texans had battled back from their 0-3 start to approach respectability, but with C.J. Stroud sidelined by a concussion in the previous week’s loss to the Broncos, a 3-5 Texans team had little to look forward to. If Texans fans had known that Mills was going to start the next three games, I suspect there would have been plenty of January vacations booked by season-ticket holders in Houston.
Instead, despite trailing 29-10 at the start of the fourth quarter, Mills saved the season. The backup quarterback led three fourth-quarter touchdown drives to earn Houston a 30-29 lead before a Sheldon Rankins scoop-and-score on the final play of the game gave the Texans a bonus touchdown. The Texans haven’t lost since then, beating the likes of the Bills, Chiefs and Chargers along the way. The loss also seemed like it could be crushing for the Jags, but they’ve also won every one of their subsequent games.
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Mattered then, didn’t matter in the long run: Dan Campbell takes over playcalling before a 44-22 Lions win. There were always questions about whether the Lions would struggle on the sideline without departed offensive coordinator Ben Johnson, and after an uneven first half of the season under new coordinator John Morton, Campbell seemed to agree. Campbell took over the play sheet before this game against the Commanders, and the results were spectacular: The Lions scored on each of their first eight offensive possessions before running out the clock on the ninth.
Campbell’s takeover didn’t cure what ailed the Lions, though, as the offensive burst was more a product of playing a hopeless Commanders defense than improved playcalling. With Morton at the helm, the Lions ranked fifth in points scored per drive and seventh in EPA per play. And if we leave the Commanders game aside, Detroit’s offense ranks 13th in points scored per drive and 14th in EPA per play since Campbell has taken over playcalling. The Lions will surely pursue a new offensive playcaller in 2026.
Week 11
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Mattered then, matters now: Sam Darnold melts down in a 21-19 loss to the Rams. A legitimate MVP candidate heading into his rematch with the team that ended his Vikings career during the previous season’s playoffs, Darnold looked like he was sped up and hoping to avoid sacks after taking nine of them against L.A. last January. Darnold didn’t take any sacks, but he did throw four picks in a rough loss for the Seahawks, who ceded their path to the top of the NFC with the defeat.
The Seahawks reclaimed that spot in their dramatic 38-37 win when these two teams met again in Seattle in Week 16, and Darnold threw two touchdown passes late in the game to help fuel the comeback, but he hasn’t been the same quarterback since that first Rams defeat. Before the four-interception game, Darnold led the league in Total QBR and was averaging 9.9 yards per attempt. Over the ensuing seven games, Darnold has fallen to 27th in Total QBR and is averaging just 7.1 yards per throw.
I can hear Seahawks fans point out that Seattle has gone 6-0 since this loss to Los Angeles, and those wins count. But during the first half of the season, Darnold was playing a significant role in driving Seattle’s victories. And over the past seven weeks, he has been carried by an excellent defense. I would be at least a little concerned about what that means in the postseason.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters now: The Eagles struggle on offense but still pull out another victory. Wins don’t need to come with style points, but I’m not sure there has ever been an unhappier fan base to start 8-2 than this year in Philadelphia. One week after a 10-7 win over the Packers, the Eagles mustered just one touchdown in a 16-9 win over the Lions, leaning on a great defense and a generous pass interference call on the final drive of the game to help run the clock out on Detroit.
Wins are wins, but the fans were right to be worried. Frustrations about Kevin Patullo’s offense boiled over in the weeks to come, when the Eagles went on a three-game losing streak, costing them any shot of competing for the top seed in the NFC. The complete absence of competition in the NFC East helped break one of the league’s weirdest trends and earned the Eagles their second straight division title, but against competent-or-better competition, Philly’s offense continues to underwhelm.
The Eagles did absolutely nothing against the Bills in the second half of Sunday’s game, generating just 17 yards of offense after halftime and winning only after Josh Allen missed an open receiver in the end zone on the game-deciding 2-point try.
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Mattered then, didn’t matter in the long run: The Cowboys dominate on defense with Quinnen Williams in a big win over the Raiders. For one week, Jerry Jones was a genius. Adding Williams, Logan Wilson and a handful of defenders returning from injury to the mix, the Cowboys finally looked like they had a post-Micah Parsons defense. Playing on “Monday Night Football” in front of a national audience, Williams terrorized Geno Smith and the Raiders’ offense, which mustered only 236 yards in a 33-16 defeat.
The win kicked off a three-game winning streak for the Cowboys, but the defensive turnaround didn’t stick, as Williams and Wilson weren’t enough to solve the myriad of issues the Cowboys have at all three levels. Before the controversial decision to trade first- and second-round picks for Williams at the trade deadline, the Cowboys ranked 31st in points allowed per drive, giving up 2.8 points per possession. And even with the Raiders game in the mix, the Cowboys since that trade are … 30th in points allowed per drive, with opposing teams scoring 2.9 points per drive.
Williams is an upgrade and a talented defensive tackle, but Jones was right: The Cowboys weren’t one player away.
Week 12
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Mattered then, matters now: The Bucs allow 34 points in a blowout loss to the Rams. When the Bills scored 44 points on the Buccaneers in a Week 11 shootout, it appeared to be a one-week aberration. But this loss was confirmation that the Bucs’ defense simply wasn’t up to the task this season. Matthew Stafford & Co. scored 31 points in the first half before taking most of the second half off to reflect and film commercials.
Since returning from their Week 10 bye, meanwhile, the Buccaneers rank 28th in both EPA allowed per play and points allowed per drive. They forced three turnovers in the loss to the Bills, but since then, Todd Bowles’ unit has created just four takeaways across the past five games. The division-deciding game against the Panthers in Week 18 — one that could potentially decide Bowles’ future — might come down to whether the Bucs can get back on track and start forcing turnovers with their season on the line.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters now: The Browns beat the Raiders 24-10. Any attention lavished on a game between two of the league’s worst teams would have been directed toward rookie quarterback Shedeur Sanders, who was making his first career start. He went 11-of-20 for 209 yards with a touchdown and an interception, the former coming on a short pass to Dylan Sampson, who did most of the work after the catch on a 66-yard score.
Sanders has had his moments in the second half of the season as a starter, but this game really matters because of what it means for 2026. After Sunday’s loss to the Giants, the 2-14 Raiders are in position to land the top pick in next year’s draft. If they had beaten the Browns in this game, though, the Raiders would be in a group of six teams at 3-13. And while I’m not going to sort through the various tiebreakers between those awful franchises, the Raiders would have been drafting behind the Browns, who are instead in position to pick sixth.
1:06
Will Dante Moore or Fernando Mendoza be QB1 in 2026 draft?
Mel Kiper Jr. gives the cases for both Dante Moore and Fernando Mendoza to be drafted as the top pick in the 2026 NFL draft.
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Mattered then, didn’t matter in the long run: Trevor Lawrence struggles again before leading an overtime win over the Cardinals. While the Jags were in position to make the playoffs after a win over the Cards took them to 7-4, there were real questions about whether Lawrence was ever going to look comfortable in Liam Coen’s offense. Lawrence had struggled with takeaways, and he turned the ball over four times against a woeful Cardinals defense, with Arizona turning those takeaways into 14 points. The Jags prevailed in overtime, but as of Week 12, Lawrence ranked 26th on the season in Total QBR and 30th in interception rate. He simply wasn’t consistent or reliable enough for a Jaguars team with playoff aspirations.
Since then, Lawrence has been brilliant, with his 84.7 Total QBR ranking third behind only Drake Maye and Brock Purdy. He’s averaging 8.3 yards per attempt, has thrown 12 touchdowns against just one pick and has mostly eliminated the negative plays from his game; Lawrence has taken just 10 sacks over that span. He has also run for 138 yards and four scores while looking completely in control of the offense. If Lawrence had been this guy all season, he would be in the thick of the MVP race. As it stands, he has responded to an awful game against the Cardinals by playing the best football of his career over the past five weeks.
Week 13
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Mattered then, matters now: The Broncos stop a Commanders 2-point try to pull out a 27-26 victory. The line between the AFC playoffs running through Denver and another city might come down to one free rusher. Denver’s defense couldn’t stop Marcus Mariota from driving the length of the field for a matching touchdown in overtime, but when Dan Quinn called for a 2-point conversion to end the game, the Broncos stepped up. Jeremy McNichols was going to be free in the flat for the game-winning try, but Nik Bonitto got on Mariota quickly and knocked his pass down at the line, handing the Broncos a one-point win.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters now: The Broncos struggling to keep the Commanders out of the end zone. I’ll stick with this game, because the fact that the Commanders even had a chance to win might be telling, too. This was Denver’s first game coming out of the bye, and quietly, the defense hasn’t been quite as impressive as it was before the week off.
The Broncos were second in points allowed per possession before the bye, but that has fallen to 21st across their five ensuing games, a figure that ranked even lower before Vance Joseph’s team got to face third-stringer Chris Oladokun on Christmas. They’ve forced just three takeaways over the past five weeks, which both explains some of their issues and offers a potential path toward improving on that side of the ball in the weeks to come. I wouldn’t be surprised if a pass rush led by Bonitto and Zach Allen dominated a woeful Chargers offensive line in Week 18.
If they don’t, though, the Broncos won’t be hitting the postseason playing their best ball on defense.
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Mattered then, didn’t matter in the long run: The Bengals show signs of life in a 32-14 victory over the Ravens. This was Joe Burrow‘s return after missing two months with a toe injury, but the big story for the Bengals was an unexpectedly productive game from their defense. An embattled group forced five takeaways to help secure a comfortable victory on Thanksgiving night.
With the win taking them to 4-8, it seemed like the same Bengals team that got hot late in the 2021 and 2022 seasons could run the table and claim an as-yet-undecided AFC North. Instead, the Bengals lost their next two games, ending their season in the process. The Ravens haven’t exactly been great since then, but after going 2-2 and coming up with an impressive win on the ground over the Packers on Saturday, Baltimore will be the one playing for a division title in Week 18. It’s just unclear whether Lamar Jackson, battling a back injury, will be in the lineup.
Week 14
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Mattered then, matters now: The Texans beat the Chiefs in Kansas City. This was supposed to be a must-win game for the Chiefs, who had lost to the Cowboys on Thanksgiving the week before. Beating the Texans would have pushed Kansas City to 7-6 as the league’s banner franchise tried to put together a late-season run to the postseason. Having beaten Houston twice in 2024, the Chiefs were supposed to test an overmatched Texans offensive line with pass pressure.
Instead, the Texans pushed the Chiefs to the brink. The Texans’ defense forced three turnovers and came up with a pair of fourth-down stops in the fourth quarter, including a stuff on fourth-and-1 to set up the game-winning touchdown by Dare Ogunbowale. Houston’s winning streak continued here by beating the team that ended its 2024 season, with its playoff odds taking a major leap forward in the process. And while the Chiefs technically still had some postseason life left, those hopes ended when Mahomes tore an ACL late in a loss to the Chargers the following week.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters now: The Titans stop a 2-point try with 1:03 to go to seal a 31-29 victory over the Browns. We’ll hit another game involving the Browns and draft seeding here. Heading into Week 14, the 1-11 Titans were heavy favorites to finish with the top pick in the 2026 draft, with ESPN’s Football Power Index giving them a 47.1% chance of landing the first selection. They wouldn’t use that pick on a quarterback, but as they did in 2016, trading that selection could have earned the Titans multiple first-rounders for moving back.
Instead, the Titans ran all over the Browns, with Tony Pollard turning 25 carries into 161 yards and two touchdowns. Cam Ward and the offense managed just eight first downs across their final 13 possessions of the game, but the Titans converted two Browns turnovers and a blocked punt into 17 points. With Tennessee then beating a Mahomes-less Chiefs team in Week 16, they’re out of the race for the first pick.
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Mattered then, didn’t matter in the long run: Keisean Nixon‘s interception decides a back-and-forth battle between the Packers and Bears. When Nixon picked off Caleb Williams on fourth-and-1 to seal a 28-21 Packers victory, it looked like the hot-and-cold cornerback had given his team the inside track to claiming the NFC North. At 9-3-1, the Packers jumped ahead of the 9-4 Bears and 8-5 Lions for first place in the division. Having won four straight — including back-to-back wins over those very Bears and Lions — Matt LaFleur’s team was well-positioned to make a deep playoff run in the NFC.
Nothing has gone right since then. Micah Parsons tore an ACL the following week in a loss to the Broncos, depriving the Packers of their top defensive player. Jordan Love left the subsequent rematch against the Bears with a concussion, and the Packers failed to recover an onside kick that would have all but ended the game, opening the door up for a frantic Chicago comeback and a 22-16 defeat. Josh Jacobs is clearly banged up and has barely played the past two weeks. And Derrick Henry then ran all over a Parsons-less defense for 216 yards and four touchdowns on Saturday.
Green Bay is limping into the postseason, and it has fallen from the No. 2 seed all the way to the seventh spot for the third consecutive campaign.
Week 15
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Mattered then, matters now: Micah Parsons tears an ACL in a loss to the Broncos. The Parsons injury dramatically shifted the balance of power in the NFC away from Green Bay. Not having their star pass rusher in the lineup — in the weeks since his departure as well as earlier in the season, when the Packers were using him in a part-time role — has been a massive issue for Jeff Hafley’s unit. The Packers are 30th in EPA per play allowed without Parsons on the field across 328 snaps this season, down from 15th with him.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters now: The Lions lose 41-34 to the Rams. Since we’re in mid-December now, it’s tougher for something to really change dramatically between what happened then and how it looks now. This Lions loss might qualify, though. There’s no shame in losing to one of the league’s best teams, so while it would be wrong to say that this loss didn’t matter, it’s realistic to suggest the Lions could have still seen a path to the postseason. The Lions were 8-6 after this loss, and with the Steelers and Vikings to come, a pair of wins would have likely pushed Dan Campbell’s team into the postseason, even if it came as a wild card.
Well, those wins didn’t happen. The Lions couldn’t run the ball or stop the run against the Steelers, who left Detroit with a 29-24 victory. Then, with their season on the line against Max Brosmer on Christmas Day, a frustrating season descended into parody. The Lions turned the ball over six times and lost despite allowing just 3 net yards to a hopeless Vikings offense, extinguishing their playoff chances in the process. Since their Week 8 bye, the Lions have gone 3-1 against the NFC East and 0-6 against everybody else.
0:40
Why Jeff Saturday believes Lions’ Super Bowl window is closing
Jeff Saturday explains why the Lions’ Super Bowl window is starting to close, pointing to Ben Johnson’s departure as a key loss.
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Mattered then, didn’t matter in the long run: The Bengals meekly bow out of the postseason race with a 24-0 loss at home. Two weeks after it appeared the Bengals might be able to ride a late-season swing back into the AFC North race, their season ended in embarrassing fashion. Joe Burrow was shut out by the Ravens, and coach Zac Taylor essentially gave up after a pick-six with 7:32 to go put them in a 24-0 hole, running the ball and chewing up most of the remaining clock left. With Burrow seemingly pondering his future, it was fair to wonder whether Taylor might be back in 2026.
With nothing to play for and a pair of bad defenses on the schedule, though, Taylor’s offense has probably done enough to convince the organization to stick with him. After their loss to the Ravens, the Bengals dropped 45 points on the Dolphins and 37 more on the Cardinals, with Burrow topping 300 yards in each contest. I’m not sure those wins against overmatched competition with backup quarterbacks should mean much in the grand scheme of things, but I’m also not a member of the Brown family that owns the team.
Week 16
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Mattered then, matters now: The Seahawks launch a massive comeback to beat the Rams in overtime. I expressed my reservations about what we’ve seen from Darnold since that first Rams game earlier, but the well-traveled quarterback did just enough to help his team beat the Rams in an essential rematch. If the Seahawks can hold off the 49ers next week, the NFC playoffs will run through Seattle.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters now: The 49ers drop 48 on the Colts. We’re obviously getting to the point of absurdity with the idea that something could have dramatically shifted between Week 16 and Week 17, but have the 49ers found something truly explosive after their late-season bye? As recently as late November, Brock Purdy was struggling badly, as the 49ers limped to lackluster wins over the Panthers and Browns.
Since returning from the bye, though, the 49ers have scored 37 points against the Titans, 48 against the Colts and 42 against the Bears on Sunday night in a roller-coaster victory. It was easier to write those offensive performances off when the 49ers were playing AFC South teams with nothing to play for, but beating the Bears in a meaningful contest might qualify this as more of a trend.
Purdy started the game with a pick-six, but even without injured tight end George Kittle and star left tackle Trent Williams (who left the game after the interception with a hamstring injury), the fourth-year QB was excellent the rest of the way. He went 24-of-33 for 303 yards with three touchdowns, while Christian McCaffrey turned his 27 touches into 181 yards and a score. There were real questions about whether the 49ers were better off with Mac Jones at quarterback during that ugly win over the Panthers; now, Purdy and the entire offense look like they’re finding their form in advance of next week’s game against Seattle with the conference’s top seed on the line.
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Mattered then, didn’t matter in the long run: The Panthers top the Buccaneers 23-20. With the Buccaneers losing to the Dolphins in Week 17, a Panthers victory against the Seahawks would have sealed up the NFC South for Carolina. Instead, after offering some early resistance, the Panthers couldn’t do anything on offense and lost 27-10, and the division will now be decided by the rematch between these two teams in Tampa Bay on Saturday, mostly rendering the result of their Week 16 game moot.
Week 17
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Mattered then, matters now: Steelers upset by the Browns 13-6. And now we’ve come all the way through the looking glass. The most important outcome on Sunday might have been what happened in Pittsburgh, where the Steelers were unable to clinch the AFC North title with a win over the Browns. Without suspended wideout DK Metcalf, Aaron Rodgers went 3-for-18 on third and fourth down and scored just three points on two trips to the red zone. The Steelers’ most important goal-to-go sequence of the season ended with a pass to Adam Thielen and three incompletions targeted to Marquez Valdes-Scantling, neither of whom were on the Steelers’ roster before December.
Metcalf will be suspended for the Steelers’ Week 18 division decider against the Ravens. Pittsburgh is also expected to be without tight end Darnell Washington, who broke an arm in the loss and whose absence will limit the formational flexibility of the Steelers, who love to use Washington as part of their 13 personnel packages. A loss next week would keep the Steelers home for the postseason and raise real questions about whether something meaningful needs to change in Pittsburgh.
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Didn’t seem to matter then, matters in the future: Bears struggle badly on defense in a 42-38 defeat. I’ll reframe this as something that might matter more in the weeks to come. The headlines will understandably go toward the quarterback play between Brock Purdy and Caleb Williams and what they each did on Sunday night, but this should be another warning sign for Bears fans as they approach the postseason. Chicago’s run game is for real, and Williams has improved this season, but this defense is almost entirely propped up by turnovers.
The Bears did force a pick-six on the opening drive, but they then allowed a 49ers offense that’s down two of its top receivers and lost its Hall of Fame left tackle early to score touchdowns on six of its eight ensuing possessions. This defense continues to be takeaway-or-bust, and with turnovers historically coming less often as better offenses make it to the postseason, I’m not sure Chicago’s defense can continue to survive by stealing the football.
0:30
Purdy’s remarkable scramble ends in 49ers TD
Brock Purdy miraculously evades the defense and finds Kyle Juszczyk in the end zone for the 49ers vs. the Bears.
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Mattered then, won’t matter in the future: The Ravens run all over the Packers. While I was wildly impressed by what I saw from the Ravens on the ground against Green Bay, I’m not sure you can expect that sort of performance from Derrick Henry in Week 18 and beyond.
The Ravens ranked 17th in the league in success rate on designed runs heading into the Packers game, and while that’s up from where they were earlier in the season, it’s a reminder that they’ve been way more dependent on explosive plays than they were in past years. They posted a league-best 55.1% success rate on designed runs against the Packers in Week 17, with Henry registering two 25-yard runs and a 30-yard score for good measure.
Can the Ravens keep that up into January? It would be easier with Lamar Jackson, who has a meaningful effect on defensive gravity and the attention paid toward Henry on the ground, but it’s unclear when Baltimore will have its two-time MVP back in the lineup. If it’s Tyler Huntley at quarterback, the Ravens will need another big game from King Henry to top the Steelers and claim the AFC North. We all know Henry’s capable of that sort of performance, but counting on it might be a little too presumptuous.
Sports
Colorado names New Mexico’s Lovo as next AD
Colorado has named New Mexico’s Fernando Lovo as its next athletic director, awarding him with a five-year contract that will pay $1.2 million annually.
The school’s board of regents approved the contract Monday for Lovo, who spent the past year at New Mexico after completing his second stint as a Texas administrator. At New Mexico, he hired football coach Jason Eck, who led the Lobos to their first nine-win season since 2016 in his debut.
Lovo will replace Rick George, Colorado’s athletic director since 2013, who will take on an athletic director emeritus role with the school. George hired football coach Deion Sanders, the Pro and College Football Hall of Famer, who is set to enter his fourth season with the Buffaloes next fall. Lovo will begin his role Jan. 1.
“Fernando is a dynamic leader who is perfect for these dynamic times and embodies CU’s high standards and values,” Colorado chancellor Justin Schwartz said in a statement. “He has a proven track record of leading student-athletes to success both in competition and in the classroom, and I’m confident that he is the perfect steward to lead CU Athletics into this new era of college athletics.”
Lovo began his career in football operations at Florida, his alma mater, and served as Texas’ chief of staff for football from 2016 until taking the same role with the Jacksonville Jaguars in 2021. He then returned to Texas as a senior associate athletic director.
Sports
Cristiano Ronaldo reiterates desire to reach 1,000 goals before retiring
Portugal captain Cristiano Ronaldo has reiterated his desire to reach 1,000 career goals before he calls time on his playing career.
The Al Nassr forward scored the 956th goal of his career in his side’s 3-0 win over Al Okhdood on Saturday and holds the title for the most goals in international football with 141 in 223 games for Portugal.
The 40-year old has two years left on his deal at Al Nassr and will lead Portugal into the 2026 World Cup and has once again made clear he has no intentions of stopping there.
“It’s hard to continue playing, but I am motivated. My passion is high and I want to continue,” Ronaldo said after being named the Best Middle East Player at the Globe Soccer Awards in Dubai on Sunday.
“My passion is high and I want to continue. It doesn’t matter where I play, whether in the Middle East or Europe. I always enjoy playing football and I want to keep going.
– Cristiano Ronaldo goal tracker: Road to 1,000 career goals
– Stats: Ronaldo hits 40 for 14th time
– Ronaldo equals his Juventus goal record – but misses a personal best
“You know what my goal is. I want to win trophies and I want to reach that number [1,000 goals] that you all know. I will reach the number for sure, if no injuries.”
After his strike against Al Okhdood, Ronaldo reached 40 goals for the calendar year for the third consecutive year and for the 14th time in his career.
He has scored 12 in 10 Saudi Pro League games so far this term, equaling a personal record from his time at Juventus, and will be in action as Al Nassr travel to Al Ettifaq on Tuesday.
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