Breaking Down the 2012 NFL Schedule
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EASIEST AFC SCHEDULE: New England.
Last year's conference champions made out like
bandits thanks to the rotation, with the AFC East
taking on the entire AFC South and NFC West,
arguably the two weakest divisions going. The Pats
have only four games against 2011 playoff
qualifiers, plus one of their road efforts comes
against St. Louis in London, where the Rams won't
have any home- field advantage as the designated
host. Buffalo's schedule also looks pretty favorable, with only four postseason combatants from last year on tap and a No. 29 ranking in overall strength. The Bills still have to play a home game in Toronto once more, but having it come against a Seattle squad that'll be traveling over 2,500 miles and crossing two time zones could end up as a plus. TOUGHEST NFC SCHEDULE: New York Giants. And that's how it should be, right? The current Lombardi Trophy owners' opponents were a combined 140-116 last season, giving Big Blue the highest strength of schedule in the league, and the slate is especially rough in the second half. Five of the last six games following a Week 11 bye come against heavyweights Green Bay, New Orleans, Atlanta, Baltimore and Philadelphia, so the Giants may not be able to afford any stumbles out of the gate. The Eagles, one of New York's chief competitors in the NFC East, don't exactly have a cakewalk, either. Philadelphia takes on eight foes that advanced to the playoffs last season, the highest number of any conference member. Five of those come at home, but remember the Eagles went just 3-5 at Lincoln Financial Field in 2011. Arizona looks to have the bumpiest road in the West, with road stops at New England, Green Bay, Atlanta and the Jets and three trips to the Eastern Time Zone for early kickoffs. EASIEST NFC SCHEDULE: Atlanta. Though the Falcons won't have the benefit of meeting a depleted New Orleans team in its quest to reclaim the NFC South, as the two division powers don't tangle until mid-November, only four of Atlanta's 2012 foes posted winning records last year. Getting the Giants, Broncos and Cowboys all at home is also a positive. St. Louis could be this year's NFC member that's set up for better results. After being victimized by a murderous first-half sequence last season, the Rams should have it a bit softer this time around, as the initial three home dates (Washington, Seattle, Arizona) and a Week 6 visit to Miami that comes off a 10-day layoff all seem winnable. Coach Jeff Fisher's troops do lose a true home game because of the London trip and will have three of their last four on the road, but travels to Buffalo, Tampa Bay and Seattle aren't exactly terrifying. TOUGHEST OPENING STRETCH: Tennessee. The Titans open up at home against New England before visiting San Diego and hosting rising Detroit, then have to go to Houston to battle AFC South favorite Houston. Tennessee also must go up against annual conference contender Pittsburgh on a short week in mid-October and doesn't have its bye until Week 11. Ouch. EASIEST OPENING STRETCH: Cincinnati. The Bengals begin with a tall task, a Monday night visit to Baltimore, but then face Cleveland twice, Washington, Jacksonville and Miami over the next five weeks. Those teams were a combined 24-56 last season, which could enable Cincy to get an early leg up on the Ravens and Steelers in the treacherous AFC North. A SHOW OF MERCY?: There's little question that the penalties Roger Goodell handed down to the Saints for their "Bountygate" crimes were awfully steep, but the commissioner and league office could have been a lot harder on the team from a scheduling standpoint. Of the six games acting head coach Joe Vitt will miss for his role in the cover-up, only one (a Week 4 trip to Green Bay) comes against an opponent that made last year's playoffs. New Orleans could be at or close to full strength for its two pivotal meetings with rival Atlanta in November, as well as important conference bouts with Philadelphia, San Francisco, the Giants and Dallas. Maybe the guy does have a heart after all. REVENGE GAMES The following are rematches from last season's playoffs: Steelers at Broncos (Week 1) Patriots at Ravens (Week 3) Broncos at Patriots (Week 5) Giants at 49ers (Week 6) Ravens at Texans (Week 7) 49ers at Saints (Week 12) Packers at Giants (Week 12) Giants at Falcons (Week 15) Three of those contests will take place at the gold-standard Sunday night time slot, with the Pittsburgh-Denver opener, the New England-Baltimore AFC Championship sequel and the Green Bay-New York battle all set to be covered nationally by NBC. Of course, the 2012 season lid-lifter between Dallas and the Giants on Sept. 5 also could fall into this category, with New York having knocked the Cowboys out of the NFC playoffs with a pair of head-to-head victories in the final four weeks of last year's campaign. "IT'S PERSONAL" GAMES Lions at 49ers (Week 2) -- Jim Schwartz and Jim Harbaugh renew acquaintances for the first time since last year's postgame sideline spat on "Sunday Night Football." Jets vs. Dolphins (Week 3, Week 8) -- Ex-Dolphins head coach Tony Sparano, now the Jets' offensive coordinator, gets two chances to pay back Stephen Ross. Eagles at Cardinals (Week 3) -- The teams did meet last season, three months after the Kevin Kolb trade, but Kolb didn't play for Arizona due to a concussion. This one's early enough that the brittle quarterback may actually get on the field. Packers at Seahawks (Week 3) -- Aaron Rodgers' former understudy Matt Flynn tries to take down his old mentor as Seattle's field general in a well-placed Monday night matchup. Redskins at Buccaneers (Week 4) -- After being the fall guy for Tampa's 4-12 disaster last year, Raheem Morris is now the secondary coach in Washington. Packers at Colts (Week 5) -- New Green Bay center Jeff Saturday spent 13 productive seasons as Peyton Manning's trusted bodyguard before becoming one of the casualties of the Colts' offseason purge. Titans at Vikings (Week 5) -- The Vikings released guard Steve Hutchinson in March after an outstanding six-year run, and the seven-time Pro Bowler signed with Tennessee five days later. Patriots at Seahawks (Week 6) -- Pete Carroll finally gets his chance to avenge his grudge against New England, which fired the peppy Seattle head coach all the way back in 1999. Saints vs. Buccaneers (Week 7, Week 15) -- Bucs made ex-Saints stalwart Carl Nicks the highest paid guard in football during their March spending spree. Patriots vs. Rams (Week 8) -- Brandon Lloyd spurned the Rams this offseason to reunite with Pats offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels, who abruptly left St. Louis during the playoffs to rejoin Bill Belichick. Bills at Texans (Week 9) -- Bills reeled in this year's biggest free-agent catch not named Manning by taking pass-rushing terror Mario Williams away from the Texans. Broncos at Panthers (Week 10) -- Denver head coach John Fox takes on the team he directed for nine seasons and was hung out to dry by owner Jerry Richardson in 2010. Chargers at Buccaneers (Week 10) -- Tampa Bay gave Vincent Jackson the long- awaited big pay day that San Diego general manager A.J. Smith denied the big- play wide receiver for two straight years. He'll be motivated to prove he's worth it on this day. Chiefs at Steelers (Week 10) -- This mid-November Monday night encounter wouldn't have much sizzle if not for the Chiefs' abrupt and contentious firing of former head coach Todd Haley, who's now Pittsburgh's offensive coordinator and the proud owner of a new cell phone. Raiders at Bengals (Week 12) -- Lots of subplots here. The Carson Palmer-Mike Brown feud extends to the playing field when the ex-Bengals quarterback visits his old stomping grounds in Cincinnati, while the man responsible for bringing Palmer to Oakland -- Hue Jackson -- now serves as the Bengals' secondary coach after being axed by the new Raiders regime in January. Chiefs at Browns (Week 14) -- Chiefs running back Peyton Hillis returns to the site of his greatest success (2010) and failure (2011) as a professional. Cowboys at Bengals (Week 14) -- Veteran cornerback Terence Newman spent his first nine seasons in Dallas before being cut loose in March and subsequently signing with Cincinnati. Jaguars at Dolphins (Week 15) -- Jaguars brought in ex-Dolphins quarterback Chad Henne to push 2011 rookie disappointment Blaine Gabbert. If Gabbert's struggles continue, Henne may get his chance to prove his former team made a mistake by letting him go. BEST NON-PRIME TIME GAMES 49ers at Packers (Week 1): The NFL's highest scoring team from last year goes up against the league's second-stingiest defense in terms of points allowed. And by the way, these two were a combined 28-4 and held the NFC's top two playoff seeds as well. Saints at Packers (Week 4): If this one comes anything close to last year's meeting at Lambeau -- an unforgettable 42-35 season-opening win by Green Bay -- it'll certainly be worth tuning in. Broncos at Patriots (Week 5): The scenario may be a little different than before, but it's still Manning vs. Brady. Enough said. Panthers at Redskins (Week 9): A potential showdown between the last two Heisman Trophy winners, Carolina quarterback Cam Newton and Washington's presumed new signal-caller, Robert Griffin III. Steelers at Ravens (Week 13): Simply put, the best rivalry in the NFL going right now. Plus there could be plenty at stake between these two AFC North cohorts at this late stage. WORST PRIME-TIME GAMES These three Thursday night duds really don't need a detailed explanation as to why it be may best to explore some alternative programming: Browns at Ravens (Week 4) Buccaneers at Vikings (Week 8) Colts at Jaguars (Week 10) |
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