Can the No. 2 pick in the draft become the first rookie QB to lead a team to a Super Bowl? Can the Bills’ signal-caller stop the Chiefs’ pursuit of history?
Football is a team game above all else, but specific individual matchups can go a long way in determining game outcomes. That will surely be the case for the NFC Championship Game between the Philadelphia Eagles and the Washington Commanders.
Only five current Commanders were alive the previous time the organization reached the NFC title game 33 years ago: Wagner, LB Nick Bellore, TE Zach Ertz, OL Cornelius Lucas and P Tress Way.
This is the final time this season that you can use a full lineup on DraftKings and FanDuel, and it should be a great Sunday with the AFC and NFC Championship Games. And the matchups are awesome between Buffalo at Kansas City and Washington at Philadelphia.
Washington Commanders standout guard Sam Cosmi will miss the rest of the playoffs with a torn ACL and could miss significant time in 2025.
For only the second time in history, the Washington Commanders and Philadelphia Eagles meet in the playoffs this Sunday. Th
Over in the AFC, it’s up to Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills to stop the threepeat-chasing Kansas City Chiefs from reaching a fifth Super Bowl in six years, while over in the NFC, the Philadelphia Eagles and Washington Commanders will meet for the third time this season.
Today, we cover three NFC championship matchups, yesterday’s Liam Coen chaos in Jacksonville and Mark Andrews breaking his silence. First, some news from the last hour: The Raiders have hired Pete Carroll as head coach,
Washington Commanders starting right guard Sam Cosmi has a torn ACL and is out for the remainder of the NFL playoffs.
The Washington Commanders are en route to its first NFC Championship Game in over 30-years thanks to its dominant win over the Detroit Lions, but the win came at a major cost that can hurt them in the NFC's penultimate game of the season.
Greif: Philadelphia will beat Washington in the NFC because the Commanders’ defense has been leaky (allowing 25.5 points per game in the postseason, 9.5 more than Philadelphia), while the Eagles have ranked among the league’s elite defenses all season; by one metric, they stand tied for the league lead in allowing the lowest success rate.