Explaining why the Bucs need the Saints to avoid a loss to help Tampa Bay make the playoffs
The NFL’s playoff tiebreakers have things down to an exact science.
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers sure picked a helluva time to lose control of their playoff destiny.
They waited all the way until Week 18 to lose their grip on the NFC South, thanks to an awful loss to the Miami Dolphins and an upset win from the Atlanta Falcons in Week 17. Those two developments put the Carolina Panthers at the front of the pack until the Bucs avenged their Week 16 loss with a two-point victory on Saturday.
Now, the Buccaneers are back atop the NFC South, but will remain there only if the New Orleans Saints avoid a loss to the Falcons on Sunday.
A Saints win or tie puts the Bucs in the playoffs, but a Falcons win puts the Panthers into the playoffs. This is due to the NFL’s three-way tiebreaker procedure, which kicks in after a Falcons win.
Therefore, let’s explain how it all breaks down from the NFL’s perspective.
Bucs, Panthers, and Falcons would all finish 8-9 with a Saints loss
The tiebreaker structure differs between teams in the same division and those in the same conference. The same goes for divisional teams involved in a three-way tie.
If the Bucs, Panthers, and Falcons all finish 8-9, then the first tiebreaker is the head-to-head record between all three teams. So, the Bucs are 2-2 since they split with both teams, while the Panthers are 3-1, and the Falcons are 1-3. In this case, the Panthers would win the tiebreaker and the NFC’s final playoff spot, along with the NFC South title.
The Panthers swept the Falcons during the regular season, and that’s what gives them the edge. If all three teams were tied at 2-2, then you’d have to start going down the list of subsequent alternate tiebreakers until a victor emerges.
Bucs have the edge in common opponents over Panthers
Now, if the Saints tie or win, it’ll prevent the Falcons from finishing 8-9, which puts the focus back on the Bucs and Panthers. The Falcons will no longer be in the picture.
So it becomes a two-way tie, and that reverts back to the typical tiebreakers involved with divisional teams. Since the Bucs and Panthers split and finished 3-3 in the division, it comes down to the third tiebreaker: record in common games.
This is where you take the results from each game played that features the same opponent. The Buccaneers and Panthers played 12 such matchups – Tampa Bay’s 6-6 record barely out-edged Carolina’s 5-7 record against the Saints, Falcons, AFC East, and NFC West.
It’s all laid out in front of us. Let’s get the popcorn ready, sit back, and enjoy the show.
Tampa Bay Buccaneers News
Baker Mayfield and Bucs are forced into a situation they definitely won’t like after staying alive in playoff race
Well, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers are still alive in the playoff race after beating the Carolina Panthers on Saturday, but the team still needs the New Orleans Saints to beat the Atlanta Falcons. The idea of the Buccaneers having to root for the Saints is quite ironic when stepping back and looking at how the […]