Wild-card round gets going as drive to Super Bowl begins
NEW YORK — The drive to the Super Bowl begins this weekend as the NFL postseason gets going.
A dozen teams still have hopes to play for the Lombardi Trophy in Houston on Feb. 5.
On Saturday, the playoffs open as Oakland travels to Houston and Detroit heads to Seattle.
This is the fourth time the Texans have opened the playoffs as the early game on Saturday. And the Raiders have returned to the postseason after a lengthy absence, but are starting a rookie at quarterback.
Despite making the postseason for the second time in three seasons, Detroit is looking for its first playoff win since 1992. And the Seahawks are in the playoffs for the fifth straight season.
And the wild-card round finishes with Pittsburgh playing at home against Miami and Green Bay hosting the New York Giants.
The Steelers enter the playoffs on a seven-game winning streak and are the heaviest favorite of the weekend against the Dolphins, who are also short-handed at QB.
And the Giants’ top-10 defense will face a significant test at Lambeau Field against Aaron Rodgers and the surging Packers.
The Patriots, Chiefs, Cowboys and Falcons all earned first-round byes and will watch and see whom they play in the divisional round.
Oakland (12-4) at Houston (9-7), Saturday at 4:35 p.m.(ESPN)
Largely considered to be the most underwhelming of the wild-card games because of the matchup at quarterback. Because of injuries, rookie Connor Cook will start for the Raiders, becoming the first QB in NFL history to make his first start in a playoff game. And he will face the league’s top-ranked defense.
“You do the best you can regardless of the circumstances,” Raiders coach Jack Del Rio said. “To me it’s a great opportunity. You have these great opportunities in life to be at your best, and you get these great challenges.”
The teams met on Nov. 21 in Mexico City and the Raiders won 27-20.
Detroit (9-7) at Seattle (10-5-1), Saturday at 8:15 p.m. (NBC)
Both teams enter the playoffs in a slump.
Detroit lost its final three games of the regular season to miss out on the NFC North title and the chance to host a playoff game. Detroit hasn’t won a road playoff game since 1957.
“History kind of shows you that it’s a true restart,” Detroit QB Matthew Stafford said. “We’re looking at data and who’s won it and how, and all that kind of stuff.
“I’m sure there’s been teams that have gotten hot and gone and won it, but there are teams that have not had the finish that they wanted and still gone on to be really successful.”
Before that late-season slide, the Lions made the key plays when it mattered as they won an NFL-record eight times when trailing in the fourth quarter or overtime.
Miami (10-6) at Pittsburgh (11-5), Sunday at 1:05 p.m. (CBS)
Miami is making its first playoff appearance since 2008 and is looking for its first postseason win since the wild-card round in 2000. Quarterback Matt Moore will make his first postseason start for the Dolphins with Ryan Tannehill out because of an injury.
With the game-time forecast of around 20 degrees, the Dolphins put footballs used by the team’s place-kicker and punter in a freezer before practice to simulate conditions for Sunday’s game.
Miami beat Pittsburgh 30-15 in October as Jay Ajayi ran for 204 yards and two touchdowns.
“One of those weird days in football,” Steelers guard David DeCastro said of his team’s struggles in that game. “Sometimes you’re going to have one of those weeks.”
New York Giants (11-5) at Green Bay (10-6), Sunday at 4:40 p.m. (Fox)
The teams have a rich playoff history going against each other. The Packers have a 4-3 edge in playoff games. The Giants won the first one and the NFL title in 1938, beating the Packers 23-17. The Packers won the next four games and NFL championships in 1939, `44, 61 and `62.
And the teams have met twice in the past decade in the postseason. Both games were at Lambeau Field and both times the Giants won en route to taking the Super Bowl after the 2007 and 2011 seasons. Temperatures are forecast in the mid-to-low teens for this matchup.
The Giants are back in the playoffs for the first time since that 2011 run under first-year head coach Ben McAdoo, who replaced Tom Coughlin. McAdoo was a Packers assistant under Green Bay’s Mike McCarthy from 2006-13.
