Eh, I don’t know about this. You could make the argument they’re the best (Barkley is great, Hurts has had a very good year with many weapons, Fangio has been around forever for a reason, stingy defense, etc) but it would be debatable, for sure. To wit:
- Their strength of schedule is very suspect (among the NFC playoff field, only Washington had an easier path to the playoffs this year). Their division was pretty trashy this year, offering no real resistance. Their marquee wins are a beat down of the Buccs in week 4 before they got going, a one-score win over Baltimore, and solid wins over LA and Pittsburgh when both of those opponents were really scuffling and losing to lesser teams.
- By comparison, we complain about Green Bay’s inability to beat good teams, but Philly’s strength of victory was barely better (.424 vs .412), and way behind conference standouts like Detroit (.494 strength of victory).
- Their point differential is 62 points behind Detroit’s, and Detroit has had harder competition down the stretch than Philly has sniffed in over a month.
And I know you said on paper, but adding the intangibles:
- Hurts will play, but hasn’t seen the field in nearly a month. That’s an issue for a guy that always had kind of a suspect arm anyway. He’ll be a bit vulnerable, especially in the wildcard.
- Sirianni is feeling the pressure. He knows where he is and what the stakes are. Nobody in Green Bay is going down if they lose this game. But this Philly team flaming out in the wildcard round would lead to big changes, and that matters. Philly is going to be a little tight, especially early in the playoffs before they get on a little run.
Add that all up, and if I were to bet my own money on who wins the conference, give me Detroit, hands down.