We can still go into week 17 down a game and still win the division correct?
"CaliforniaCheez" wrote:
That could be true but isn't now. Right now in common games Chicago beat Miami while the Packers lost. The Bears have to lose to an opponent the Packers have beaten (Jets, Vikings) or the Packers have to beat the Giants to make the common games even before the final showdown. Both have to play the Patriots and Lions so a Packer win and a Bears loss against one of them could be the make up game.
After common games Strength of Victory and Strength of Schedule favor the Packers. One of the Bears wins was against Carolina and the Packers lost to AFC South Atlanta. The Bears lost to Seattle so a Packer victory over NFC West 49'ers will ensure the Packers win the division
if everything else in tied.
So it will not get to lower priority tiebreakers like points differential and Net Touchdowns where the Packers are way ahead.
No need to worry yet.
"cheeseheads123" wrote:
If Green Bay beats San Francisco next week and beats Chicago to tie the division next week the tiebreaking run-down will go like this:
1.) Head-to-head: tied
2.) Division record: tied unless Green Bay or Chicago lose a remaining game against Lions or Vikings
3.) Common games: tied in this scenario. When tied with a division rival you have two head-to-head games that have now been split, 2 non-common games which a win over San Fran means Green Bay and Chicago both went 1-1 (Chicago beat Carolina, lost to Seattle) leaving 12 common games. Those have to be tied if their overall record is the same. They would both be 1-1 against each other, 1-1 in non-common games and be x-y overall. They would both have to be (x-2) and (y-2) in common games.
If Green Bay loses to San Francisco (knock on wood) and still ties Chicago having the same head-to-head and division, we win this tiebreaker. There is no way that we can lose this in the event of a tie.
4.) Conference record: Both teams currently have the same amount of loses (3) within the conference and Green Bay beating Chicago in this scenario gives them a fourth. This would depend on who each team beats but considering we would beat them in this scenario we have to lose two out of San Francisco, Detroit, and New York to lose this tiebreaker. I don't see that happening and us being in a tie for the division. Furthermore, to even get to this tiebreaker we have to beat San Francisco so that means we have to lose both against Detroit and New York, again not likely.
5.) Strength of Victory: again depends on who we beat the rest of the year but considering one of their wins is against Carolina we'll have an advantage with a win over San Francisco (we have to beat them to even get this far down the tiebreaker list). We've also already beaten the Jets which currently helps us out enormously.
6.) Strength of Schedule: if it somehow came to this we win. Hands down. We have the same schedule except for Atlanta and San Francisco compared to Seattle and Carolina. It is not even close and with 5 games to go Seattle is 4 behind Atlanta and Carolina is 3 behind San Francisco. This tiebreaker will be clinched for us within two weeks.
Long story short, every single one of those tiebreakers are more likely to go our way than Chicago's. If we go into the last week a game behind Chicago and win we will far more than likely win the division.
http://www.nfl.com/standings/tiebreakingprocedures
Born and bred a cheesehead