NEW YORK — The dust has settled on the wildest Week 18 in recent memory, and the NFL playoff picture is officially locked. Buckle up.
The league released the Super Wild Card Weekend schedule Monday night, and it’s dripping with storylines. From a legendary quarterback defending his turf against the league’s brightest young star to the oldest rivalry in football getting a playoff chapter, the road to Super Bowl LX just got treacherous.
Save the best for last. The NFL is putting Aaron Rodgers and the Pittsburgh Steelers in primetime to close out the weekend.
Fresh off clinching the AFC North in heartbreaking fashion against Baltimore, the Steelers (10-7) will host C.J. Stroud and the Houston Texans (11-6) on Monday, Jan. 12 at Acrisure Stadium.
It’s a quarterback junkie’s dream. Rodgers, who threw for 294 yards and the game-winner to eliminate the Ravens Sunday night, looks revitalized at 42. He faces Stroud, the young gunslinger who has kept the Texans in the contender conversation all year. The atmosphere in Pittsburgh—where “Renegade” will be blaring—is going to be electric.
History isn’t just knocking; it’s banging down the door at Soldier Field.
For the third time this season, the Chicago Bears (11-6) and Green Bay Packers (9-7-1) will collide. This isn’t just a game; it’s an exorcism. Caleb Williams led the Bears to the NFC North crown and the No. 2 seed, but to make a run, he has to slay the dragon that has haunted Chicago for three decades.
The Packers, who snuck into the No. 7 seed thanks to a Week 18 tiebreaker miracle, are playing with house money. They split the regular-season series 1-1 with Chicago. Now, they meet with the season on the line.
While the Broncos (14-3) enjoy their well-earned rest as the AFC’s No. 1 seed, the rest of the bracket is a gauntlet.
The stakes couldn’t be higher. For Rodgers, it’s potentially a final ride. For the Bears, it’s a chance to rewrite history. For the Broncos, it’s a week to heal up and watch the chaos unfold.
The regular season was historic—especially in the NFC North—but the real season starts Saturday.