The Contender’s Checklist: Which Teams Pass the DNA Test?
Every season, we convince ourselves football’s been reinvented. There’s always a shiny new trend, a catchy stat, or a buzzword that supposedly rewrites the rulebook. But once the weather turns and the games actually matter, the sport humbles everyone.
The truth? The same stuff that worked ten years ago still wins now. Protect the football. Move it efficiently. Avoid the boneheaded drive‑killers. And when it’s time to score, do it through the air. The teams that master those boring, beautiful basics are the ones celebrating when the confetti starts falling.
That’s the whole idea behind the Pillars of a Champion we walked through previously. I’m not reinventing the wheel here. I’m just trying to separate the flash from the stuff that actually travels:
Pillar 1 — The Ball is the Program (Turnovers & Ball Security). It sounds simple, but this is the heartbeat of every contender. The teams that are still playing in late January always sit near the top in turnover margin. It’s about protecting the rock.
Pillar 2 — QB Efficiency > Volume. It’s not about throwing it 45 times; it’s about throwing it right. Accuracy, timing, and smart decision-making beat gaudy yardage totals every time. The great ones hit their layups, find the shot plays when they get the coverage they want, and finish drives without the back-breaking pick.
Pillar 3 — Stay on Schedule (Avoid Sacks/Negatives). It's much easier for an offense to look smart at 2nd-and-5. Staying on schedule means limiting sacks and negative plays. The teams that protect their quarterbacks and avoid wasted downs are the ones who hang around the longest.
Pillar 4 — Score Through the Air (Run Complements). You can ground-and-pound your way to relevance, but you throw to win. Championship teams close games with the run, sure — but they build leads by trusting the arm. The pass game separates contenders from pretenders because when the box loads up, you still have to be able to rip one over the top and make it count.
With those in mind, I put together what I call the Contender Score — basically a weighted mix of the stats that best tell the story behind each pillar. It’s not meant to be some fancy algorithm that knows everything, but more of a common-sense scoreboard for habits that win football games. Think of it as a way to strip away the noise and see which teams actually play winning football on a snap‑to‑snap basis.
The Top Ten by Contender Score
Indianapolis Colts (0.8159)
Los Angeles Rams (0.7661)
Pittsburgh Steelers (0.7582)
Detroit Lions (0.7377)
Kansas City Chiefs (0.7354)
Tampa Bay Buccaneers (0.7201)
Chicago Bears (0.7010)
Buffalo Bills (0.6739)
Houston Texans (0.6344)
Denver Broncos (0.6309)
1. Indianapolis Colts — Quietly Complete, and the Math Loves Them
This year’s Colts actually feel different. You can see it in the rhythm of their drives, the poise from Danny Dimes at quarterback, and the overall vibe that this team knows exactly who it is. They’re not winning with smoke and mirrors or getting lucky bounces — they’re winning because they do the little things right, over and over again.
Shane Steichen’s system looks completely in sync, and it shows: they sit near the top in turnover margin, their sack numbers are among the lowest in the league, and they rarely have those chaotic, panic-filled possessions that used to define this team.
A big part of that comes from the balance. Jonathan Taylor has looked like his old self again, chewing up tough yards and setting up easy throws. The line — anchored by Quenton Nelson and Bernhard Raimann — has kept things clean enough for Jones to be patient. And when the ball does go up, Michael Pittman Jr. and Josh Downs are finding windows.
Pillars check:
P1 (A+): They’re winning the turnover battle most weeks, and it’s not luck. The offense plays smart, the ball’s protected, and you don’t see those ugly, drive-ending strip-sacks that used to show up. The timing’s cleaner, the edges are steady, and every snap feels like it’s run with purpose.
P2 (A): Quarterback play has hit that perfect balance between taking shots and knowing when to check it down. They’re not trying to win every throw — just the right ones. Inside the red zone, they trust the system, not hero ball, and it shows in how efficient they’ve been finishing drives.
P3 (A-): The Colts rarely beat themselves with negative plays. When the shot’s not there, they dump it off or live to fight another down.
P4 (B): The passing game is clicking, but Jonathan Taylor’s resurgence has turned their run game into a real weapon again. He’s back to being that every-down problem defenses hate seeing, and right now, he’s the reason this offense feels complete instead of one-dimensional.
The way they're playing right now, this is the kind of team built for those ugly, grind-it-out playoff games — the ones where it’s cold, muddy, and every yard feels like pulling teeth. They don’t get rattled by two-high shells or fancy disguises. They’re fine playing patient football, taking what’s there, and slowly breaking defenses down.
But the real question — the one that always seems to come up in January — is what happens when they’re the ones chasing. If they fall behind by a couple scores to an elite pass rush, can they hit that next gear without turning the ball over or forcing something stupid? That’s the next step for this team: proving they can find that explosive spark when they absolutely have to, without losing the discipline that’s made them so good in the first place.
2. Los Angeles Rams — Precision Passing With Real Teeth
The Rams’ passing attack just looks confident this year — like a group that’s finally found its groove again. It’s explosive when it needs to be but doesn’t live and die on the highlight reel stuff. They’re sitting near the top of the league in completion air yards, but it’s not because the quarterback’s forcing deep shots; it’s coming from a great scheme and a quarterback who can run it perfectly.
What’s made it even more fun is watching guys like Puka Nacua and Davante Adams work off each other. Defenses can’t double both, and that gives the Rams constant answers against every look they get. Nacua’s energy sets the tone, while Adams' route running is still surgical. And when Kyren Williams gets going out of the backfield, the offense becomes unpredictable again — it’s the balance that Sean McVay has been trying to get back to since their Super Bowl run.
Pillars check:
P1 (A-): The Rams have been clean in the giveaway department all season. They’re not throwing away possessions, and when turnovers do happen, it’s usually on fluky deflections — not boneheaded throws or blindside sacks. Matthew Stafford’s been sharp about living to fight another down, despite not being able to move around much back there.
P2 (A): Stafford’s been playing some of his best, most composed football in years. He’s pushing the ball downfield when it’s there, but most of the Rams’ big plays have come from trusting the structure — those layered crossing routes, quick outs, and perfectly timed seams that open because the defense has been softened underneath.
P3 (A-): The sack numbers are down, and that’s no accident. The offensive line’s done a 180 from last year. You can see Stafford and the line communicating pre-snap, pointing out blitz looks, and adjusting on the fly. That kind of chemistry is the difference between second-and-six and third-and-fifteen.
P4 (A): They’re controlling games through the air this year. Whether it’s a back-shoulder fade to Davante Adams or a timing route to Puka Nacua, they’re cashing in when it matters. The red-zone efficiency has jumped, and defenses are finding out the hard way that you can’t leave both Adams and Nacua in single coverage.
They’re built to pick apart zone coverage and make defenses stay honest down the field. Against man, they’ve got the firepower to win one-on-ones, and Matthew Stafford’s seen too much to get rattled by a little pressure. He’ll hang in, take the hit, and still drop one in a bucket — that veteran calm is a big reason this offense works.
The real test will come when defenses start mixing coverages late in the season, throwing disguised looks and forcing Stafford to drive the ball between the numbers when the wind’s whipping in December. That’s when we’ll see if this Rams offense can keep that same patience and ball security when the conditions — and the opponents — get tougher.
3. Pittsburgh Steelers — The Offense Is Driving the Bus?
The defense still has the star power, but let’s be real — it’s not the calling card this year. Despite spending more money on that side of the ball than anyone else in football, the Steelers’ defense has been inconsistent, giving up chunk plays and struggling to get off the field at times. T.J. Watt is still doing his thing, creating pressure and wrecking drives, but he’s not getting the same level of help around him.
The pass rush can’t always mask the coverage lapses, and the run defense has looked surprisingly vulnerable for a team built on toughness. For once, it’s the offense keeping Pittsburgh in games — and that’s a sentence we haven’t been able to say in a long time.
This version of the Steelers’ offense runs through Aaron Rodgers. The difference shows up in the little things — cadence to steal free plays (when they call them), checks that get them out of bad looks, and a quick‑game rhythm that keeps them ahead of the sticks. The line looks more connected, too, which means fewer drive‑killing sacks and more second‑and‑manageable snaps.
Pillars check:
P1 (A): Rodgers’ poise has rubbed off on everyone; he rarely puts the ball in harm’s way, and the running backs are finishing plays without coughing it up. The defense hasn’t been forcing takeaways at its usual elite clip, but the offense’s composure keeps them in it.
P2 (B-): Rodgers’ rhythm depends heavily on how often the offense leans into play-action and tempo. When the script helps him stay ahead of schedule, the ball comes out quick and decisively. The deep game, though, has been almost nonexistent — a mix of conservative play-calling and Rodgers not quite trusting his protection long enough to push it.
P3 (A): Pittsburgh’s offensive line finally looks like it belongs. The sacks that used to derail entire quarters have been cut down drastically thanks to quicker reads and better communication up front.
P4 (B): The passing attack won’t blow anyone away statistically, but it’s functional. If they can start turning those steady drives into touchdowns instead of field goals, this offense could actually become the reason they win games — not just survive them.
Third-and-medium creativity matters too. When defenses squat on the first read, they need quick-hitting answers — motion crossers, play‑action flats, or Rodgers manipulating a safety with his eyes instead of holding the ball forever. Those are the subtle, veteran plays that keep drives alive and separate a seasoned contender from a team that just looks good on paper.
4. Detroit Lions — Rhythm and Balance, Built on the Line
The Lions keep finding new ways to win, and that’s what makes them dangerous. Some weeks they’ll slice teams up with the quick game and plenty of yards after the catch; other weeks they’ll line up heavy and run play‑action right down your throat.
Either way, they play like a group that knows who it is — steady, physical, and smart. The offense feels balanced, and the tone always starts up front with that loaded line. Jared Goff has time to work through progressions, and when he’s comfortable, he’s one of the best rhythm passers in football. The shared theme is control: they rarely get behind the chains, and they don’t gift possessions away. Every drive feels intentional, like they’re trying to wear you out as much as score on you.
Pillars check:
P1 (A-): Goff’s decision-making has been sharp, and the team’s overall discipline shows in the turnover numbers. You can tell they trust the plan — no panic throws, no blindside strip-sacks that change momentum.
P2 (A): Goff’s efficiency isn’t built on empty numbers. He’s making the right reads, hitting the midrange throws that keep drives alive, and getting the ball to playmakers like Amon-Ra St. Brown in stride.
P3 (A): That offensive line is the soul of this team. With Penei Sewell anchoring one side and toughness that radiates through the room, they rarely lose at the point of attack. They make everything look easier than it should.
P4 (A-): In the red zone, the play-calling still keeps defenses guessing. They’re not afraid to pass on early downs, and having Jahmyr Gibbs as a pass-catching option gives Goff a safety valve that still threatens big plays.
That offensive line dictates the fight every single week, setting the tone for how physical a game’s going to be. It’s the kind of football that works anywhere — in a dome, in freezing Lambeau, wherever.
When defenses try to throw off Goff’s rhythm with disguised looks or simulated pressure, that’s when we’ll really see how tough this offense is. Can they keep him upright for long enough to still hunt those chunk plays downfield? That balance between patience and aggression is what turns a good offense into one that scares teams in January.
5. Kansas City Chiefs — Situational Masters With a Familiar Floor
The baseline is still the baseline — and that’s what makes Kansas City so frustrating for everyone else. Even when the receiver room hits a rough patch with drops or availability issues, Patrick Mahomes keeps the offense humming.
The offensive line, especially with Creed Humphrey anchoring the middle, continues to keep him upright, and his pocket movement is still Houdini-like when things get messy. Sack avoidance has become almost expected, and when it’s crunch time, this team plays like it’s been there a hundred times before — because it has.
Pillars check:
P1 (A-): Kansas City’s built ball security into their DNA. Mahomes almost never forces throws into traffic, and when he does take risks, it’s calculated. Even when weather or crowd noise makes things messy, they don’t panic — they just adjust protections and keep the offense moving.
P2 (A): The Chiefs’ efficiency isn’t just baked in — it’s methodical. They’ll happily take six-yard curls and option routes all day if you’re sitting back in zone. It’s death by a thousand cuts, and they’re fine with it.
P3 (C+): I expect this to change, but the passing game got off to such a poor start, and they only had their speedsters available on the outside. That's a recipe for disaster. This should start trending up.
P4 (A-): The passing touchdowns have been streaky this season, but they always seem to find that one red-zone call when it matters — a Kelce option route, a motion drag, or that vintage Mahomes sidearm to a back leaking out.
They just don’t beat themselves, and Mahomes can diagnose your coverage before you’ve even blinked. He’s out there playing chess while most defenses are still setting up the board. That’s what separates the Chiefs from everyone else — their floor is higher because the QB never gives a defense a freebie.
But when the pass rush starts winning without help and the secondary sticks to routes, that’s where it gets interesting. Can the other guys — Rice, Worthy, even the tight ends beyond Kelce — create on third down when the play design doesn’t spring them open?
6. Tampa Bay Buccaneers — Mistake-Free Football With Quiet Explosives
Baker Mayfield’s been efficient, protecting the ball and leaning into that veteran timing and toughness. The Bucs sit top‑5 in turnover margin and they’ve done it by playing disciplined, steady football. Mike Evans and Chris Godwin have both missed time, but that hasn't stopped them. Rookie Emeka Egbuka has been outstanding, really pulling the full weight of a WR1 in his first year.
The run game’s been hit‑or‑miss, but the offensive line deserves credit for keeping Mayfield clean and on schedule with injuries of their own. Tristan Wirfs has been an absolute wall and the unit’s communication has tightened up, cutting down on those drive‑killing sacks that used to really kill Tampa’s momentum.
Pillars check:
P1 (A): Not only are they not giving the ball away, but the defense usually gives them one short field per game. Antoine Winfield Jr. continues to show why he’s one of the league’s best safeties, forcing key turnovers and keeping them in control of momentum.
P2 (A-): Efficient, not thirsty. Mayfield’s been smart with the ball, hitting his layups, trusting play‑action, and letting the weapons win downfield when the opportunity’s there.
P3 (B+): Protection has been solid, and you don’t see those hopeless 2nd‑and‑17s anymore. The offensive line’s chemistry shows up in how rarely they lose the leverage battle early in drives.
P4 (A-): The passing game closes. When they hit the red zone, Mayfield’s confidence shines.
They win field‑position games and don’t hand away cheap points, which is half the battle in January. But the lingering question is what happens if they have to climb out of a two‑score hole. When defenses go man‑heavy and take away the underneath routes, can they hit the counterpunches consistently enough — those explosives that flip a game back in their favor?
7. Chicago Bears — The Numbers Like the Discipline
This is where you throw out all the preseason noise and just look at what’s happening on the field. The Bears aren’t a fluke — they’re a team that’s been playing real, tough football but hasn’t had the luck to show for it in the win column. They’re cleaner, sharper, and a lot more composed than people realize. Protecting the ball? Check. Fewer drive-killing sacks? Check. And for once, the offense actually looks like a group that trusts what it’s running.
Caleb Williams deserves a ton of credit for that. He’s not a rookie anymore, and it shows in the command he has at the line and the way he works through progressions. The offensive line has been night-and-day better, giving Williams time to find his guys. Rome Odunze is growing fast on the outside, giving this offense that vertical threat it’s been missing.
Pillars check:
P1 (B+): Turnover discipline has been one of the biggest changes. Williams isn’t trying to play superhero ball on every snap, and the backs are finishing runs clean.
P2 (A-): Efficiency has jumped thanks to the quick‑game rhythm — designed rollouts, easy reads, and timing throws to Moore and Kmet. When they stick to that plan, the offense hums.
P3 (B-): The sack picture has flipped. They’re not perfect, but the days of living in third‑and-15 are fading. The line’s communication has been sharper, and Williams’ mobility buys just enough time to make things work.
P4 (B): They’re learning to finish drives through the air, and you can see the confidence building, but there's work to be done.
If they keep the ball and keep Williams clean, this version of the Bears can play grown‑man football in the postseason. The big question is whether they can avoid those negative plays against elite fronts like Detroit — defenses that don’t need to blitz to wreck your protections.
8. Buffalo Bills — Turnover Discipline Slipping
Last season, the Bills looked like they’d finally exorcised their turnover demons. Josh Allen played controlled, the offense was rolling, and for once, they weren’t shooting themselves in the foot at the worst times. This year, though, some of those habits have crept back in. Allen’s still playing elite football — make no mistake — but the occasional reckless throw or fumbled snap has cost them in spots.
The difference is, they don’t have the same defense to bail them out anymore. Losing key veterans and dealing with injuries has turned what was once a top-tier unit into one that bends a bit more than Buffalo fans are used to.
The bright side? The offense has evolved. James Cook has become one of the most reliable backs in football, keeping the Bills near the top of the league in rushing efficiency. That balance has helped take pressure off Allen and opened up play-action opportunities for guys like Dalton Kincaid and Khalil Shakir, while Keon Coleman adds that big, physical element they needed after moving on from Stefon Diggs. When it’s clicking, this offense looks like one of the most balanced in the league.
Pillars check:
P1 (C+): This has been their biggest issue this season. If they can clean up the simple mistakes, this team will be right back where they were last year.
P2 (A): Efficiency has ticked up with a steadier quick game. Allen’s taking the layups, using Cook and Dalton Kincaid as safety valves, and not forcing throws that aren’t there.
P3 (B+): The O‑line isn’t elite, but it’s held up well enough for the offense to stay balanced.
P4 (B+): They’re finding answers in the red zone again — whether it’s a rollout throw to Kincaid or Allen keeping it himself, they’re closing possessions with touchdowns instead of settling for three more often than not.
They’ve shown they can win shootouts and grind out field‑position games, but the next step is consistency.
9. Houston Texans — A Terrorizing Defense and a Leader Under Center
The Texans are a strange mix right now — one of the league’s best defenses paired with an offense that just can’t seem to find its rhythm. C.J. Stroud has looked better and better as the season’s gone on, showing the poise and accuracy that made him burst onto the scene as a rookie, but he’s doing it behind a line that’s struggled to give him time. The run game has been a mess, and that’s forced Houston to live in obvious passing situations far too often. Stroud’s doing everything he can — manipulating safeties, buying time, hitting tight windows — but when he finally gets a clean pocket, his receivers aren’t creating the kind of separation that makes life easier.
Still, there’s a toughness about this team that makes them dangerous. The defense is elite — flat out. Will Anderson Jr. has become a one-man wrecking crew off the edge, Derek Stingley Jr. looks every bit the shutdown corner Houston hoped he’d be, and the linebackers fly to the football.
Pillars check:
P1 (B+): They protect the football and play smart. Especially with that defense, turnover margin isn't the issue here.
P2 (C+): Stroud’s accuracy is the real deal, and that should be leading to good efficiency. But for one reason or another, we just haven't seen that happen.
P3 (C): This needs to start trending up fast. This offense struggles to stay on schedule. When the defense sets you up with a short field, those have got to be converted into seven points, not three
P4 (A‑): They throw to lead and close drives through the air. Not sure if that's by design or necessity because their running game has disappeared, but that’s the modern blueprint, and it’s working.
Precision beats panic, and Houston’s learning that every week. The only looming question is playoff pressure — can the line hold up when elite pass rushers pin their ears back in January, and can the young stars keep their cool when the team looks to them for answers?
10. Denver Broncos — From Messy to Measured
The Broncos are finally starting to resemble a real football team again. After a rocky stretch, the roster has found its identity around a tough, defense-first blueprint and an offense that’s learning to be steady instead of spectacular.
Bo Nix has settled into the job and shown week-to-week growth; he’s not perfect, but he’s trending the right way and making the kind of throws that keep drives alive. What’s really carried Denver this year, though, is the defense — a unit that creates negative plays, forces turnovers, and gives the offense short fields to work with. That structural identity has masked a lot of the offense’s growing pains and kept this team in contention.
Pillars check:
P1 (B+): Ball security has improved. They aren’t gifting games away, and the defense’s short-field plays have helped erase a few ugly drives.
P2 (B): Efficiency is growing. The offense is taking smarter, higher-probability throws and relying less on desperation heaves. Nix needs to start putting more full four-quarter games together, though, rather than relying on last-second heroics.
P3 (A): The sacks have really cooled down. Better protection calls and quicker reads have reduced game-killing negatives, even if the line can still be tested by elite rushes.
P4 (B): The passing game finishes more often than it used to, but the explosion plays are still somewhat limited — they can win by grinding drives and letting the defense flip the field, but they haven’t shown a consistently high ceiling for chunk plays.
This version of the Broncos isn’t fragile in the way they used to be. They’ve learned how to win messy games, leaning on defensive strength and a developing offense that makes fewer mistakes. It’s not all solved — the offense still needs a bigger playmaker or two and steadier line play — but the blueprint is real. If Bo Nix keeps growing and the supporting cast finds a little more burst, Denver could be tougher to dismiss in January.
Underrated Teams Looking to Crack the Top-10
Philadelphia Eagles
The Eagles looked shaky early, but the last few weeks have started to feel like the real thing again. Jalen Hurts has found his groove, and the offense finally looks like it’s operating on time instead of grinding gears. A.J. Brown’s still doing superstar stuff when he's in the lineup, and DeVonta Smith’s been money on third down.
Defensively, they’ve cleaned up some of the communication issues that made them look mortal early. The secondary has tightened, the pass rush is hitting home again, and the sack differential has swung back in their favor. This looks like a team rounding into playoff form — not perfect, but familiar.
Green Bay Packers
Green Bay’s season has been a reminder that growth doesn’t always come in a straight line. They’ve taken their lumps — some tipped picks, a few chaotic finishes — but it’s all part of a team learning how to win consistently with a young core. Jordan Love has taken a clear step forward; he’s been calmer in the pocket, processing faster, and making better decisions late in games. The numbers show the inconsistency, but the film shows a quarterback who’s starting to own the offense.
The Packers’ skill group has quietly become one of the league’s more balanced units — Jayden Reed and Christian Watson have developed real chemistry with Love, while Josh Jacobs is still a threat to put up 100 yards on any given Sunday.
Defensively, the addition of Micah Parsons changed the entire tone. That front seven’s playing with energy. They’re young, they make mistakes, but the effort and physicality pop every week. If they keep avoiding sacks and protecting the ball like they have lately, this team’s ceiling is as high as Packers' fans think it is — maybe not ready to run the table yet, but definitely built to make noise down the stretch.
All stats courtesy of nflverse.
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