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šŸˆ One Wild Card Weekend Changed Everything

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The NFL playoffs look entirely different after a handful of stunning upsets. What happens next? In t

The NFL playoffs look entirely different after a handful of stunning upsets. What happens next? [View in browser]( [FOX SPORTS INSIDER WITH MARTIN ROGERS] In todayā€™s FOX Sports Insider: The NFL Wild Card round completely changed the landscape ... Josh McCown can throw it down on the basketball court ... and prepare for a Manchester Derby with increased stakes. It took just one weird and wildly entertaining Wild Card weekend for the National Football Leagueā€™s playoff field to look a whole lot different than most of us expected. If thatā€™s a lot of ā€œWsā€ to cram into a Monday sentence, apologies, but there were a lot of big ā€œWsā€ (wins) to get our heads around. On the flip side, two significant best-laid plans were left in ruins. The New Orleans Saints looked like a Super Bowl contender because they had played, acted and felt every bit like one all season. The New England Patriots were a Super Bowl contender because, well, how can any team that has won three of the last five not be? No matter; both went tumbling down to 6th seeds: the game, spirited, and defensively exceptional Tennessee Titans and Minnesota Vikings, respectively. And so the postseason was shorn of two of its highest-profile quarterbacks, leaving in their place a fascinating collective of men under center to battle it out over the next few weeks. Of course, quarterback play is not the only thing that matters between now and the biggest game of all in Miami on Feb. 2. [STORY IMAGE 1] But even if youā€™re not fond of reality television, sticking these particular eight QBs in a house and watching them interact would make for some pretty intriguing viewing. As it is, weā€™ll have to settle for them duking it out on the gridiron, as the opportunity of a lifetime beckons for each. You can separate the guys upon whose arms and minds the fate of their teams rest during this postseason gauntlet into three distinct groups. Starting off, there are the proven men, the huge earners, both past Super Bowl champions: Russell Wilson and Aaron Rodgers. They rake in a collective $68.5 million per season, but they both feel the weight of history on their shoulders. If youā€™d told Rodgers on Feb. 6, 2011 that, having just clinched his first Super Bowl ring, he and the Green Bay Packers would not get back to the marquee game at any point over the succeeding nine years, he may have struggled to believe you. Wilson may have had the same response after the Seattle Seahawksā€™ attempt to go back-to-back was thwarted at the goal line at Super Bowl XLIX, and a potential dynasty evaporated steadily thereafter. ā€œ(The Seahawks) just love ineffective runs and forcing Russell Wilson to be brilliant, instead of just allowing Russell Wilson to be brilliant (on his own),ā€ [FS1ā€™s Nick Wright said]( on First Things First, lamenting the Seahawks playcalling that inexplicably focused on Seattleā€™s lackluster run game. ā€œRussell Wilson was brilliant every time he touched the ball. So how dangerous are they? I think they could go to Green Bay and upset the Packers ... if they make it a Russell Wilson game.ā€ [STORY IMAGE 2] The Packers and Seahawks go head-to-head on Sunday (FOX, 6:40 p.m. ET), and each team has somewhat of a gauntlet of fire to run through, with the victor due to face the winner of the San Francisco 49ers-Minnesota Vikings matchup. [FOX Bet]( places the Seahawks as +170 underdogs in the divisional round, with the Packers at -200 to win and favored by four points, as of Monday morning. The 49ers are -275 favorites against Minnesota, favored to win by six and a half points and currently at +333 to win the Super Bowl. Which brings us neatly to the next mini-clique in the playoff quarterback field. Kirk Cousins, Jimmy Garoppolo and Ryan Tannehill formulate a group that has been maligned, derided, doubted and occasionally laughed at. Garoppolo has marshaled the best team in the NFC this season, those 49ers, taking them to a 13-3 record and a top seed in his first healthy campaign in the Bay Area. Yet despite his efforts, there have been plenty of dissenting voices, questioning whether he was serving as a mere game manager to the 49ersā€™ multitude of talents elsewhere. Garoppoloā€™s stats have not been eye-popping, with 3,978 passing yards and 27 touchdowns, but his completion rate of 69.1 percent is top drawer, and he held his nerve in countless clutch situations towards the end of the regular season. He deserves better than the game-manager tag, but heā€™ll have to earn it this postseason. [STORY IMAGE 3] Indeed, there is no better place to unseat unfair preconceptions than during this month when the entire NFL world is watching. Thatā€™s what Cousins found on Sunday, making the biggest play of his career at the precise moment when he had to. It is easy for many to mock Cousins. He leaves it all out there, wears his heart on his sleeve, and was the recipient of one of the most famous high-risk, high-reward contracts in NFL history when Minnesota fully guaranteed his three-year, $84 million deal. It is hard to say one throw could ever be worth $84 million, but Cousinsā€™ beautifully-dropped overtime strike into the arms of a diving Adam Thielen surely felt sprinkled with gold dust for the Vikings organization. As for Tannehill, his special moment over the weekend wasnā€™t quite as spectacular, but was just as critical. He didnā€™t have a great game by any stretch against the Patriots, but with Tennessee needing to run out the clock late, he made a third down conversion that CBSā€™ Tony Romo described as the ā€œthrow of his life.ā€ Tannehill was cut loose from the Miami Dolphins after last season and looked destined for a future as a backup. Instead, he led the league in passer rating ā€” and now both he and the Titans go marching on. [STORY IMAGE 4] No one gets to this stage of the campaign without dreaming of winning it all, and each of the teams still alive will find reasons to convince themselves that this is the year. However, the biggest combined stumbling block of all comes in the standard bearers for the NFLā€™s quarterbacking youth movement. According to [FiveThirtyEight]( there is a 66 percent chance that either Lamar Jackson, Patrick Mahomes or Deshaun Watson gets to hoist the Vince Lombardi trophy on the first weekend of February. Jackson, due to the dominance of himself and the Baltimore Ravens, figures to have the best shot at it. The only team that remains a betting favorite over those dominant 49ers are the Ravens, at +200 to win it all. The Ravens are a strong favorite for a reason, embarking upon a 12-game winning streak and with Jackson showing a level of skill, speed and composure for which no team was able to find a suitable answer. [Colin Cowherd explained how Jackson is changing how we look at football]( The Herd in December. ā€œThe game doesnā€™t overwhelm Lamar,ā€ Cowherd said. ā€œIn fact, heā€™s overwhelming the game. Lamar plays at a speed at which heā€™s comfortable and at which nobody else is comfortable. His decision-making is remarkable, considering the speed at which he plays.ā€ The kind of glowing tributes afforded to Jackson are similar to those dropped in the lap of Mahomes a year ago, when the Kansas City Chiefs youngster exploded onto the scene and came within a whisker of getting to the Super Bowl. [STORY IMAGE 5] Mahomes has quickly become part of the NFL furniture, but he is still only 24, and is looking to capitalize on what is a serious window of opportunity for the Chiefs. Watsonā€™s Houston Texans didnā€™t come into the playoffs fancied by many, having emerged from the lightly regarded AFC South. Yet the young QB has established himself as one of the best in the league in short order, then showed exactly why in Houstonā€™s thrilling overtime triumph over the Buffalo Bills. If big plays when your team desperately needs one floats your boat, then Watsonā€™s feat of escapology against the Bills was a thing of beauty and solidified his growing reputation. He will take his team to Arrowhead Stadium as a giant underdog, but with nothing to lose. ā€œNothing to loseā€ ... who are we kidding? Having gotten this close, everyone feels like they have something to lose. The postseason lost arguably its two biggest name quarterbacks in the space of 24 hours, but if anything, that makes the remaining battle that much more intriguing. Eight teams led by eight quarterbacks remain, all with a different journey and a different point to prove, yet with the same ultimate goal. [STORY IMAGE 6] Hereā€™s what others have said ... Terez Paylor, Yahoo Sports: ā€œMost of the time, elite quarterbacks win Super Bowls. But it doesnā€™t always go down like that. Sometimes a good quarterback gets hot. Sometimes, a game manager is buoyed by a strong defense and the momentum that comes with winning against the odds. Nick Foles did it in the 2017 season. Same with Peyton Manning, who might as well have been playing with a gigantic fork sticking out of his back, in Denverā€™s 2015 run. Other notable seasons: Joe Flacco in 2012. Eli Manning in 2007 and 2011. Brad Johnson in 2002. Trent Dilfer in 2000.ā€ Mike Freeman, Bleacher Report: ā€œThis can't be emphasized enough. There were many people in football who believed Cousins would never, ever have this signature moment. And not only did he have it, but he also had it in overtime, on the road, against one of the best defenses in the league and in one of the most hostile environments in football. In a playoff game. With the game on the line. He did exactly what many thought he'd never do.ā€ Rodger Sherman, The Ringer: ā€œSunday morning brought yet another round of conversation about whether Brady and the Patriots are finished. This is, after all, not a result weā€™re used to from New England. I feel like they should be allowed to lose a playoff game without all the death knells ringing. But I can say this: We are, for the first time in a long time, going to get something new this year. A quarterback named Brady, Manning, or Roethlisberger has represented the AFC in the playoffs in 15 of the last 16 seasons. (The outlier, oddly, was Joe Flacco.) It has been five years since any of the remaining teams were in the Super Bowl. The last time that was true was 2013.ā€ [IN OTHER WORDS] - The Saints have had more than a few postseason disappointments since their Super Bowl win in 2009. James Dator at SB Nation provides [a compendium of New Orleans playoff heartbreak](. - Hunter Felt at The Guardian explains why [the end of the Patriotsā€™ ā€œdeath and taxesā€ era has never looked closer](. - The New York Timesā€™ Victor J. Blue reports on a family that is [keeping the passion and tradition of bareback horse racing alive]( for Native American tribes in the plains states. [THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED] [THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED]( NFL journeyman Josh McCown got some playing time in this weekend, as the 40-year-old QB came in for the injured Carson Wentz in the Eaglesā€™ loss to the Seahawks in the Wild Card round. Although he came up short, he at least completed his first career playoff pass and got people talking and reminiscing once again about the legend of Josh McCown. That, in turn, led people to remember something else about him: the guy can hoop. He was an All-District shooting guard in high school before becoming a full-time football player at SMU, but as of two years ago, the guy had some incredible handles, as the above video shows. Bonus coolness: that alley-oop at the end of the clip was supplied by Anquan Boldin. [VIEWER'S GUIDE] WWE Raw (USA Network, 8 p.m. ET) Andrade will put the United States Championship on the line against former champion Rey Mysterio, plus WWE Champion Brock Lesnar makes his return to Raw. Manchester United vs. Manchester City (ESPN+, Tuesday, 3 p.m. ET) The semifinals of the League Cup will feature a two-legged Manchester Derby between defending champions City and their bitter crosstown rivals. The second leg of this semifinal will be played on January 29. [BET OF THE DAY] [BET OF THE DAY] Odds provided by [FOX Bet]( Any Oklahoma City Thunder player to miss two consecutive free throws (in one trip) in the second half: +300 FOX Bet is offering up a spicy little bet boost on Monday for the Thunder at the 76ers. As a team, the Thunder are shooting 79.4% from the charity stripe this season, which is seventh-best in the league. But someone has to brick a pair sometime, and you could wind up a big winner if they do. (For the record, the worst free throw shooter on the team ā€” with more than two attempts this season ā€” is Steven Adams, who is sinking just 54.3% of his attempts. Hack-a-Steve?) [WHAT THEY SAID] "If it doesn't challenge you, it won't change you." ā€” Fred DeVito [FOLLOW FOX SPORTS] [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [YouTube]( [Instagram]( Download the FOX Sports app for live scores and streaming [App Store]( [Google Play]( Available on: [tvOS] [Roku] [fireTV] [androidtv] [XBOX] [Google chromecast] [tvOS] [Roku] [fireTV] [androidtv] [XBOX] [Google chromecast] Forwarded this message? [Sign up](. Trademark & Copyright Notice: ā„¢ and Ā© 2020 FOX Media LLC and FOX Sports Interactive Media, LLC. All rights reserved. Please do not reply to this message. If you do not wish to receive emails like this in the future, please [unsubscribe](. FOX Sports respects your privacy. Click [here]( to view our Privacy Policy. Fļ»æOļ»æXļ»æ.ļ»æcļ»æoļ»æm Business & Legal Affairs - Manager Digital Media Pļ»æ.ļ»æOļ»æ. Bļ»æoļ»æx 9ļ»æ0ļ»æ0 Bļ»æeļ»ævļ»æeļ»ærļ»ælļ»æy Hļ»æiļ»ælļ»ælļ»æs, Cļ»æA 9ļ»æ0ļ»æ2ļ»æ1ļ»æ3-0ļ»æ9ļ»æ0ļ»æ0

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