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The National Football League playoffs for the 2017 season began with the wild-card round on January 6, 2018, and concluded with Super Bowl LII on February 4, 2018, when the Philadelphia Eagles defeated the New England Patriots at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
This is a complete listing of National Football League (NFL) playoff games, grouped by franchise. Games featuring relocated teams [nb 1] are kept with their ultimate relocation franchises. Bolded years indicate wins. "(Years in italics)" indicate a pending playoff game. Tables are sorted first by the number of games, then the number of wins ...
Wild Card playoffs: Divisional playoffs: Jan 7 – EverBank Field: N1 Philadelphia 41 Jan 14 – Heinz Field: A1 New England 33 6 Buffalo: 3 Super Bowl LII: 3 Jacksonville 45 3 Jacksonville: 10 Jan 21 – Gillette Stadium 2 Pittsburgh: 42 AFC: Jan 6 – Arrowhead Stadium: 3 Jacksonville 20 Jan 13 – Gillette Stadium: 1 New England 24 5 ...
The NFL playoff picture got an shake-up in Week 14, as the Buccaneers overtook the Falcons for the NFC South lead and the Eagles secured a spot. ... Remaining schedule: vs. Bills, at Bears, at ...
Here's the full schedule for the NFL playoffs this year: Super wild-card weekend: Saturday, Jan. 11 to Monday, Jan. 13 Divisional round: Saturday, Jan. 18 and Sunday, Jan. 19
Here's a look at where things stand playoff-wise after Week 13 of the NFL season. NFC playoff picture. As of Dec. 3, here’s what the playoff race looks like in the NFC. 1. Detroit Lions (11-1)
The 2017 NFL season was the 98th season in the history of the National Football League (NFL) and the 52nd of the Super Bowl era. The season began on September 7, 2017, with the Kansas City Chiefs defeating the defending Super Bowl LI champion New England Patriots in the NFL Kickoff Game .
The NFL does not use a fixed bracket system; the outcome of the Wild Card games determine the matchups of the Divisional playoffs games, with the lowest remaining seed in each conference traveling to the first seed, and the second-lowest remaining seed traveling to the second-highest remaining seed.