There is a surprising amount of parity in the AFC this year (unlike the NFC, where GB and SF are mortal locks for the playoffs). At the moment, there are no 100% playoff locks in the AFC.
Contenders:
- Pats (Leading contender for AFC East)
- Ravens (Leading contender for AFC North, plus easy schedule)
- Texans (Should win a weak division)
- Chargers (Should win an inconsistent division)
- Steelers (Easy schedule plus experience)
- Bills (Up-and-down team, but they lead their division at the moment)
- Bengals (Easy schedule, strong D, promising young QB)
I have 7 teams here, including 3 from the AFC North ... but that's because the North has an easy schedule overall (4 games vs AFC South, 4 vs NFC West). The Texans and Chargers will probably win their weak divisions. Pats/Bills will contend for the AFC East. The 2 WC teams will almost certainly come from the North and the East.
On the bubble:
- Jets (Actually a pretty good team, but will probably just miss out because of a loaded conference, a mediocre start and a fairly strong schedule - remaining games include Bills X 2, Pats, Eagles, Giants, Chiefs). If they can sweep the Bills, they can edge Buffalo for the WC.
Pretenders:
- Chiefs (remaining non-divisional games include Steelers, Pats, Packers, Jets, Bears)
- Raiders (Question mark at QB, plus 4 games left vs NFC North)
- ans (remaining non-divisional games include Bills, Bengals, Falcons, Saints, Bucs)

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The Giants have the team to take out the Packers. The Packers D isn't all that good. They give up A LOT of points and yards. Eli Manning is the best qb in the NFL today. Yes, he is even better than Rodgers. The Giants D has the line and secondary to contain the Packers O. Great D beats Great O in the postseason. That has always been the case.
