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Rep. Jared Moskowitz, D-Fla., announced on Tuesday that he would be joining the House of Representatives’ DOGE Caucus, becoming the first Democrat in the now-biparisan group.

He advocated for removing the U.S. Secret Service (USSS) from the purview of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), something floated by several Republican lawmakers months ago.

‘Today I will join the Congressional DOGE Caucus, because I believe that streamlining government processes and reducing ineffective government spending should not be a partisan issue,’ Moskowitz said in a statement. 

The DOGE Caucus, standing for Delivering Outstanding Government Efficiency, was launched by Reps. Pete Sessions, R-Texas, and Aaron Bean, R-Fla., soon after President-elect Donald Trump announced a DOGE advisory panel to be led by Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy.

‘I’ve been clear that there are ways we can reorganize our government to make it work better for the American people. Specifically, the Department of Homeland Security, while very necessary, has gotten too big,’ Moskowitz said.

He suggested USSS, along with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), should become ‘independent federal agencies with a direct report to the White House.’

‘It’s not practical to have 22 agencies under this one department. I look forward to working in a bipartisan manner with my colleagues to remove FEMA and Secret Service from DHS,’ Moskowitz said.

It is a particularly notable position for the Florida Democrat to take, considering his deep familiarity with both agencies.

Before coming to Congress, Moskowitz served as Florida’s director of Emergency Management under Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis. He has also previously pushed to decouple FEMA from DHS alongside Rep. Garret Graves, R-La.

As a lawmaker, he is also a member of the bipartisan House task force investigating the assassination attempts against Trump.

The DOGE Caucus is one of several overtures by House Republicans to get in step with Musk and Ramaswamy’s new mission. 

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., recently announced the next Congress would see a special subcommittee on government efficiency led by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga.

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An intriguing aspect of President Biden’s pardon of his son Hunter – which was utterly predictable, and predicted, notwithstanding the president’s repeated, indignant insistence that it would never happen – is the sweep of the clemency order.

Biden didn’t limit his son’s insurance against future prosecution to the two cases – criminal gun and tax prosecutions – on which he’s been found guilty (by a jury in the former and a judge who took his guilty plea in the latter). The pardon covers all potential federal crimes in which he may have culpability from January 1, 2014, through Sunday night (December 1, 2024).

Why 2014?

Well, the most damning evidence of the Biden family influence-peddling business occurred in the last years of Joe Biden’s term as vice president – specifically, 2014 through 2016. That, of course, is when the Burisma hijinks began. Indeed, Hunter’s board seat on the corrupt energy company’s board was so manifestly tied to his father’s political influence that, as soon as Biden left office in 2017, Burisma slashed Hunter’s compensation in half. 

Not only that. The two lucrative schemes tied to the Chinese Communist Party – the Bohai Harvest RST investment enterprise and CEFC through which the Bidens netted several million dollars – also began in that 2014-16 time frame. So did the scheme in which Hunter collected a cool million from Romanian businessman Gabriel Popoviciu. 

The Joe Biden vice-presidency phase also included the big Café Milano dinner in Washington, at which the then-VP rubbed elbows with a number of Hunter’s foreign business partners (the ones Joe Biden, when not making no-pardon vows, told us again and again he had nothing to do with because he never discussed business with Hunter). The guest list for that dinner included Eleana Baturina, the billionaire widow of Putin crony Yuri Luzhkov (the former mayor of Moscow) who also had a multi-million dollar transaction with Hunter.

As I’ve detailed, the Romanian scheme mirrors the Burisma scheme: As the VP anchoring Obama administration foreign policy, Joe Biden publicly harangued governments in Bucharest and Kyiv to intensify their anti-corruption efforts; that paved the way for his enterprising son to earn millions from those governments’ corruption targets (such as Popoviciu and Burisma’s Mykola ‘Nicolay’ Zlochevsky) by using the specter of the then-VP’s political influence in seeking favorable treatment from those governments. And who can forget then-Vice President Biden’s threat to the fledgling Ukrainian regime that a billion dollars in desperately needed U.S. funding would be withheld unless Kyiv fired the prosecutor who just happened to be investigating Zlochevsky and Burisma. 

Naturally, among the questions raised by all this is why Hunter and those in cahoots with him were not prosecuted for failing to register as foreign agents – the FARA law about which the Biden Justice Department touts its enforcement efforts. 

Moreover, if we had a one-tiered justice system in which everyone was treated equally, we couldn’t help but notice that the facts of the Biden foreign business arrangements are remarkable similar to those arising from the Ukrainian business activities of Paul Manafort, President Trump’s one-time 2016 campaign chairman. 

Special counsel Robert Mueller and his staff, which included several activist Democrats, threw the book at Manafort – not only tax and FARA charges but bank fraud, money laundering, etc. By the time he was convicted, Manafort was 69; and the charges against him had nothing to do with the focus of Mueller’s probe, the bogus claim of Trump ‘collusion’ with Russia; the prosecutors were squeezing him in hopes that they’d give him something – anything – on the then-president.

Because of that and many other examples of our two-tiered system, there have been some aggressive statements from the Trump camp that his election means the tables have turned. I suspect that this is hot rhetoric that will blow over, at least with respect to the Biden family. The period from 2014 to 2016 was a long time ago. Even if the Trump Justice Department were interested in pursuing new charges – again, I doubt that – the relevant statutes of limitations (five years for most federal crimes, six for some relevant tax crimes) have already expired. 

Still, President Biden is taking no chances. After all, an aggressive, creative prosecutor (perhaps in the mold of Jack Smith, but this time a zealous Republican) could cobble together a theory that Hunter and his cohorts – perhaps including the president and his brother Jim – were in a conspiracy that continued after 2016, perhaps even into 2020 and beyond. The proof for that might not be strong, it might even be non-existent. But in light of the evidence – including the evidence developed by the House Oversight Committee, which found that the Bidens reeled in over $27 million from foreign persons and entities from 2014 to 2019 – there would certainly be a sufficient basis for a criminal investigation. 

And as people in the Trump orbit who’ve been hounded by Democratic prosecutors and committees can tell you, investigations are ruinous. They cost a fortune in legal fees, they dry up business opportunities, and they impose tremendous anxiety on suspects and their families.

The breathtaking expanse of Hunter’s pardon – nearly 11 years for someone the president repeatedly told us had done nothing wrong – is clearly an effort to foreclose any further investigation of the president’ son over the 2014-16 period from which the Biden Justice Department quite intentionally averted its eyes.

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Israel issued a direct warning to Lebanon on Tuesday and said it will no longer distinguish between Hezbollah and the country should the tenuous cease-fire with the terrorist group collapse.

‘There will no longer be an exemption for the state of Lebanon,’ Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said, according to the Times of Israel, adding that Jerusalem will ‘show maximum response and zero tolerance.’

‘[Beirut must] authorize the Lebanese army to enforce their part, to keep Hezbollah away beyond the Litani [River] and to dismantle all the infrastructure,’ Katz continued in reference to one of the 13-point agreements in the Wednesday cease-fire that said only the Lebanese army will operate in the area south of the landmark river.

‘If they don’t do it and this whole agreement collapses, then the reality will be very clear. First of all, if we return to war we will act strongly, we will go deeper and the most important thing they need to know, that there will be no longer be an exemption for the state of Lebanon,’ he added.

‘Until now we have distinguished between the state of Lebanon and Hezbollah, and between Beirut as a whole and Dahiyeh – which we have struck very hard – this will no longer be,’ Katz warned in reference to the Beirut suburb and previous Hezbollah stronghold.

The defense minister’s comments come after Israel fired a wave of strikes Monday evening that, according to The Associated Press, killed 11 people after Hezbollah launched two mortars at the Mount Dov area in the northern Golan Heights a contested area that is still internationally recognized as part of Syria, though which Israel has occupied since 1967. 

The Trump administration recognized Israel’s sovereignty over the Golan Heights in 2019. The Biden administration continued with that policy, reaffirming it again in the summer following a deadly Hezbollah rocket attack on the town of Majdal Shams that killed 12 children.

The terrorist group said it levied the first strike since the cease-fire was signed less than a week ago in response to Israel’s ‘repeated violations’ involving Lebanese airspace, reported the Times of Israel. 

The U.S. and France – which helped broker the truce – on Sunday and Monday also reportedly warned Israel it was violating the new agreement, including by conducting surveillance drone flights over Beirut.

However, despite the tit-for-tat exchange that has drawn into question the strength of the new cease-fire agreement, White House National Security Council communications adviser John Kirby told reporters on Monday the ‘sporadic’ air strikes were to be ‘expected.’

‘You’re talking about a war that’s been raging now for actually many years,’ he said.  ‘If you think about it, certainly since Oct. 7, we went from hundreds of rocket attacks to basically zero by Hezbollah and dozens of airstrikes by Israel to one or two per day.’ 

‘There’s been a dramatic reduction in the violence,’ Kirby added.

Kirby said that in anticipation of similar strikes like those exchanged on Monday, there are ‘mechanisms’ in place that are working to stop the attacks.

‘That mechanism is in full force, and is working,’ he added without going into additional detail.

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A senior GOP lawmaker is getting creative with his campaign to chair the House Foreign Affairs Committee next year.

Rep. Joe Wilson, R-S.C., is giving fellow lawmakers chips from the Berlin Wall, according to a photo provided by a source to Fox News Digital.

An inscription accompanying the chip suggests Wilson got the pieces himself nearly 35 years ago, an indirect affirmation of his decades of foreign affairs work. ‘This symbolizes the collapse of totalitarian communism and the success of democratic capitalism,’ the elaborate display reads.

It said the chip was ‘secured by State Senator Joe Wilson on June 12, 1990, at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, Germany.’

‘Sen. Wilson was returning from service as a member of the U.S. Observation Delegation of the June 10, 1990, parliamentary elections in the Republic of Bulgaria, that country’s first free elections after 59 years of Nazi and Communist dictatorship,’ it said.

Wilson told Fox News Digital the chips ‘serve as important symbols of Peace through Strength.’ His office also provided a photo of Wilson, then a state lawmaker, chipping portions of the Berlin Wall himself.

‘This is a critical time and as Chair I am best positioned to work with President Trump to present a unified, conservative vision for the House Foreign Affairs Committee and American foreign policy,’ he said of his candidacy.

The race for the House Foreign Affairs Committee gavel is one of the most critical happening ahead of the 119th Congress.

The role will be of particular importance in U.S. relations with the rest of the globe next year, when Republicans are set to control all the main levers of power in Washington, D.C.

Wilson is running against fellow committee members Reps. Ann Wagner, R-Mo., and Darrell Issa, R-Calif. The subcommittee chair for Oversight & Accountability, Rep. Brian Mast, R-Fla., is also in the race.

Wilson is chair of the panel’s subcommittee on the Middle East, North Africa and Central Asia.

Current Chairman Michael McCaul, R-Texas, is stepping aside in order to adhere to House Republicans’ internal conference rules that mandate a lawmaker serve no more than three terms in the top spot on a committee.

‘It has been an honor to serve as your Chairman and leader for the last six years,’ McCaul wrote to colleagues in a message obtained by Fox News Digital. ‘[O]ut of respect for the will of the Conference, I intend to abide by these rules and support new leadership.’

‘Serving as Chairman has truly been the most rewarding highlight of my career in Congress! I would like to thank all of you for your hard work and patriotism in confronting the major challenges we face across the Globe.’

Fox News Digital reached out to Wilson’s office for comment. 

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Wide receiver Jerry Jeudy left Denver with a reputation as an underachiever during his four seasons with the Broncos, but that certainly wasn’t the case when he returned.

Now with the Cleveland Browns, Jeudy caught nine passes Monday night for a career-high 235 yards – the most in NFL history by a player in his first game against his former team, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

The Denver fans weren’t shy about showing their displeasure on many of Jeudy’s receptions.

‘There were a lot of boos, huh? What that mean? A lot of catches, too,’ Jeudy said after a 41-32 loss to the Broncos. ‘They only boo you when they know there’s something great in you.’

Jeudy even threw his own shade back at the fans, cupping his hand to his helmet at the end of a 70-yard touchdown reception from Jameis Winston in the third quarter.

All things Browns: Latest Cleveland Browns news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

The Broncos selected Jeudy with the 15th overall pick in the 2020 draft, but after four inconsistent seasons, they traded him to the Browns for a fifth- and sixth-round draft pick in 2024.

After never reaching the 1,000-yard mark in Denver, Jeudy’s big game now has him on pace for nearly 1,250 in his first season with Cleveland. However, he admitted he’d be happy to trade his outstanding individual performance for a Browns win.

‘Hell yeah, I would,’ Jeudy said. ‘They can have that. I need that W. That was one step closer to get to the playoffs. We need that.’

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The Jameis Winston experience was on full display during the Week 13 ‘Monday Night Football’ matchup between the Cleveland Browns and the Denver Broncos.

The good: Winston broke the Browns’ single-game passing record during the shootout. He distributed the ball to Jerry Jeudy, David Njoku and his other weapons while nearly crossing the rare 500-yard barrier.

The bad: Winston threw multiple pick-sixes that directly contributed to Cleveland’s 41-32 road loss.

Here’s what to know about Winston’s outing and where his passing performance ranks among the most prolific in NFL history.

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Jameis Winston stats today

Winston had one of the best passing performances of his career in the Browns’ 41-32 loss to the Broncos. He set a Browns franchise record with 497 yards, which also represented a career-best for him.

Below is a full look at Winston’s stats from the Week 13 loss:

Completion rate: 34-of-58 (58.6%)
Passing yards: 497
Passing TDs: 4
INTs: 3
Yards per attempt: 8.6
Passer rating: 88.1

Winston made big plays from the get-go, completing two separate passes of 44 yards to Jeudy and Elijah Moore in the first quarter. He read the field very well and was frequently able to find his receivers wide open, as he did on his first completion of the game to Jeudy.

Winston picked on Broncos cornerback Levi Wallace often during the contest. The veteran defensive back had a speed disadvantage against Jeudy and Moore, but Denver was shorthanded without its normal No. 2 cornerback Riley Moss.

Wallace’s struggles allowed Winston to find Jeudy and Co. open downfield often, much like he did on Jeudy’s 70-yard second-half touchdown.

Jameis Winston interceptions

While Winston was often sharp and enjoyed a strong performance passing down the field, he made a couple of critical errors. He was responsible for two pick-sixes, one during which he telegraphed a throw to Jordan Akins and one where he threw a pass behind Moore.

The cherry on top was Winston’s third interception, which occurred in the game’s final minute. The Browns had the ball at the 2-yard line and Winston threw up a duck that Cody Barton grabbed and nearly brought back for a third pick-six.

Winston’s turnovers cost the Browns 14 points in the nine-point loss. Those picks will serve as a blight on what was otherwise a historic performance for the 30-year-old.

Most passing yards in an NFL game

Winston’s 497-yard performance broke a Browns record, but didn’t quite challenge the NFL record. That belongs to Norm Van Brocklin, who recorded 554 yards during a 1951 game between the Los Angeles Rams and the New York Yanks.

Winston’s 497 yards are tied with former Houston Texans quarterback Matt Schaub for the 27th-most in a single game in NFL history. The Browns starter came up just short of the NFL’s 500-yard club, a feat reached a total of 25 times by 22 quarterbacks in NFL history.

NFL’s 500 yard passing games

Kirk Cousins is the most recent quarterback in NFL history to throw for 500-plus yards. He did so in Week 5 of the 2024 NFL season, his fifth start with the Atlanta Falcons.

Below is the full list of the NFL’s 500-yard passers:

Norm Van Brocklin, Los Angeles Rams: 554 yards (1951)
Matt Schaub, Houston Texans: 527 yards (2012)
Warren Moon, Houston Oilers: 527 yards (1990)
Joe Burrow, Cincinnati Bengals: 525 yards (2021)
Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh Steelers: 522 yards (2014)
Boomer Esiason, Arizona Cardinals: 522 yards (1996)
Dan Marino, Miami Dolphins: 521 yards (1988)
Matthew Stafford, Detroit Lions: 520 yards (2012)
Jared Goff, Los Angeles Rams: 517 yards (2019)
Tom Brady, New England Patriots: 517 yards (2011)
Derek Carr, Oakland Raiders: 513 yards (2016)
Phil Simms, New York Giants: 513 yards (1985)
Eli Manning, New York Giants: 510 yards (2012)
Drew Brees, New Orleans Saints: 510 yards (2006)
Kirk Cousins, Atlanta Falcons: 509 yards (2024)
Vince Ferragamo, Los Angeles Rams: 509 yards (1982)
Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh Steelers: 506 yards (2017)
Tony Romo, Dallas Cowboys: 506 yards (2013)
Drew Brees, New Orleans Saints: 505 yards (2015)
Y.A. Tittle, New York Giants: 505 yards (1962)
Elvis Grbac, Kansas City Chiefs: 504 yards (2000)
Matt Ryan, Atlanta Falcons: 503 yards (2016)
Philip Rivers, San Diego Chargers: 503 yards (2015)
Ben Roethlsiberger, Pittsburgh Steelers: 503 yards (2009)
Dak Prescott, Dallas Cowboys: 502 yards (2020)

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The Denver Broncos continued their unlikely playoff push against the Cleveland Browns in a ‘Monday Night Football’ shootout victory.

Bo Nix and Denver upended the Browns in a thriller on Monday night, defeating Cleveland 41-32 in Empower Field at Mile High. Nix’s recent stretch of decent play slowed in the matchup; the rookie threw one touchdown to two interceptions on 18-of-35 passing and 294 yards in the win.

It was Denver’s defense that showed up with some critical interceptions late in the game. First was a pick-6 courtesy of Ja’Quan McMillan with just under two minutes left from the arm of Jameis Winston. Next was a game-sealing INT that landed in the hands of linebacker Cody Barton.

Barton’s pick was the third of the night for Winston, who was in true Winston form in the matchup. The veteran passer finished the matchup 34 of 58 for 497 yards, four touchdowns and three interceptions.

Jerry Jeudy, returning to Denver after an offseason trade landed him in Cleveland, had a stellar showing as Winston’s No. 1 target in the matchup. The wideout snagged nine passes for 235 yards in the contest. He also scored a touchdown.

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The win pushes the Broncos to 8-5 on the season and still in the hunt in the AFC for a wild card. The Browns fall to 3-9 on the year.

USA TODAY Sports provided live updates, highlights and more from the Week 13 ‘Monday Night Football’ matchup between the Broncos and Browns below.

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Broncos vs. Browns highlights

Winston throws third pick, Broncos ice game

Third time’s more than a charm – it’s a win.

Cody Barton snagged a Jameis Winston pass in the end zone, the third INT of the game for the game for the Browns passer. The Browns would kneel out the clock for the 41-32 win.

Jameis Winston throws second pick-6 of game, Broncos extend lead late

The Jameis Winston experience is on full display on ‘Monday Night Football.’

With a chance to take the lead late versus the Broncos, Winston threw his second pick-6 of the game to Ja’Quan McMillian. A Lutz extra point followed, putting the Broncos up by nine points with 1:40 left in the game.

Wil Lutz puts Broncos ahead with field goal

Sean Payton opted to kick a field goal instead of go for it from the 9-yard line, and Wil Lutz nailed the field goal to put Denver up 34-32 with 2:54 left in the game.

That gives the Browns an opportunity to go ahead with a field goal with just over two minutes left in the affair.

Browns take lead on Nick Chubb touchdown

Let Jameis cook?

The Browns quarterback found Nick Chubb on a short out route to give Cleveland the 32-31 lead with 8:57 left in the game. The Broncos defense seems stunned: A top-five unit entering the matchup, Cleveland and Winston have thoroughly outplayed Denver’s defense.

Jameis Winston contract details

The Browns signed Jameis Winston to a one-year, $4 million contract during the 2024 NFL offseason to serve as the team’s backup behind Deshaun Watson. The deal was worth up to $7.1 million based on incentives included within the contract.

Bo Nix throws second interception on deep ball to Marvin Mims

The Broncos dialed up a downfield shot on their first play following Corey Bojorquez’s punt. It didn’t pay off, as Denzel Ward out-jumped Mims to create a second turnover.

The Browns still trail by 6 points with just over 12 minutes left in the fourth quarter.

Browns drive stalls after controversial roughing the passer non-call

Jameis Winston was sacked for a loss of 14 yards on second down after the Browns converted the fourth-and-1, but it appeared that the Broncos got away with a roughing the passer call. Jonathan Cooper came in and hit Winston helmet-to-helmet as he was going to the ground, and Winston’s helmet shook loose on the play.

The officials did not call a penalty on the play, and the Browns were forced to punt after a 13-yard gain on third-and-23. Corey Bojorquez’s kick traveled 60 yards and resulted in a touchback.

The roughing the passer penalty wasn’t the only one the officials missed on the drive. They also appeared to miss a potential false start on Browns guard Wyatt Teller during Cleveland’s fourth-and-1 conversion

Jameis Winston converts fourth-and-1 to end third quarter

The Browns took a risk with just seconds remaining before the fourth quarter. They lined up for a fourth-and-1 quarterback sneak from their own 39-yard line and snapped the ball before the quarter ended.

The play looked a bit off-kilter, but Winston managed to bull ahead and get the necessary yard needed to keep the drive moving.

Through three quarters, the Browns and Broncos have combined for 766 yards and 56 points. Jameis Winston isn’t too far off the pace for a 500-yard game while Bo Nix threw a 93-yard touchdown in the third quarter.

Wil Lutz makes 36-yard field goal

The Broncos were nearly tackled for a safety on the first play of their drive, but from there, they moved the ball well. Denver ran for 51 yards on the drive, after having 39 for the entire rest of the game, and 43 of those yards belonged to Jaleel McLaughlin.

Still, the Broncos stalled in the red-zone and had to kick. Lutz made the 36-yarder with ease to extend Denver’s lead to 31-25.

Who is Aaliyah Jeudy?

Only 10% of babies diagnosed with trisomy 18 live to see age 1. Aaliyah Jeudy lived much longer and developed a quality relationship with her older brother, who called her ‘Lulu.’ He credited her with ‘changing his life a lot’ in 2020.

‘She taught me how to fight through adversity,’ Jeudy told ESPN.

Aaliyah Jeudy died in 2016 at the age of 7 due to complications of trisomy 18. Her brother now wears cleats to honor her, and raise awareness about the condition, during the NFL’s My Cause, My Cleats weekend.

Browns pin Broncos deep after Corey Bojorquez punt

The bad news for Cleveland fans: The Browns had to punt. The good news: Bojorquez managed to land the punt inside the Broncos’ 5-yard line, backing up Bo Nix and Co. to start their next drive.

Last time Denver was backed up, Nix threw a 93-yard touchdown. Cleveland will be looking for a much better result this time.

Broncos go three-and-out after holding penalty

Denver started its drive following Cleveland’s score with a nice run by Jaleel McLaughlin, but the Broncos were whistled for holding on the play. That put them behind the sticks and the team couldn’t get much going before being forced to punt.

Jaelon Darden made the return interesting, as he fielded it off a bounce in a crowd, as he wasn’t sure whether it had hit any of his teammates. He managed to hang onto it and set the Browns up at their own 29-yard line.

What is an octopus in the NFL?

An octopus occurs when a player scores a touchdown and then also accounts for a two-point conversion after the score. Scoring all eight points is what creates the so-called ‘octopus.’

Jerry Jeudy achieved the rare feat during the Broncos vs. Browns ‘Monday Night Football’ contest.

Why did the Broncos trade Jerry Jeudy?

The Broncos traded Jerry Jeudy to recoup a draft asset for the 2021 first-round pick and give him a change of scenery. He struggled with consistency and drops during his time with the Broncos, so the team decided to move on from him and reset its receiver room.

Courtland Sutton has continued to be the team’s No. 1 receiver while DeVaughn Vele, Marvin Mims and Lil’Jordan Humphrey have worked to help replace Jeudy.

Jerry Jeudy responds to Marvin Mims’ 93-yard TD with 70-yard TD catch

Jameis Winston didn’t wait long before answering Bo Nix’s big touchdown throw. On the Browns’ first offensive play after the touchdown, Winston found Jeudy breaking wide open down the middle of the field.

Levi Wallace had no chance to catch Jeudy, who celebrated on his way to the end-zone against his former team. He also caught the ensuing two-point conversion which cut Denver’s lead to 28-25.

Bo Nix hits Marvin Mims for 93-yard touchdown

The Browns had Nix and the Broncos backed up on a third-and-11 from their own 7-yard line. Nix saw his receiver break open down the middle of the field between the two safeties and hit him in stride. Mims did the rest, galloping into the end-zone with ease for the 93-yard score.

Wil Lutz made the extra point and the Broncos now have an 11-point lead.

Delay of game penalty railroads Cleveland drive, forces three-and-out

The Broncos have now stopped the Browns on consecutive drives to start the second half. Cleveland was called for a critical delay of game that turned a third-and-3 into a third-and-8, and a short completion to Jabari Thrash wasn’t enough to move the chains.

Corey Bojorquez hit his best punt of the day, landing it on the Denver 8-yard line to back up Bo Nix and Co. for their second drive of the second half.

Russell Wilson trade details

As Joe Buck astutely pointed out, Browns defensive tackle Shelby Harris was traded by the Broncos to the Seahawks as part of the Wilson deal. Here’s a full look at the details of that trade:

Broncos get:

QB Russell Wilson
2022 fourth-round pick (DL Eyioma Uwazurike, Iowa State)

Seahawks get:

QB Drew Lock
DT Shelby Harris
TE Noah Fant
2022 first-round pick (OT Charles Cross, Mississippi State)
2022 second-round pick (OLB Boye Mafe, Minnesota)
2022 fifth-round pick (OLB Tyreke Smith, Ohio State)
2023 first-round pick (CB Devon Witherspoon, Illinois)
2023 second-round pick (EDGE Derick Hall, Auburn)

Greg Newsome forces punt by breaking up Bo Nix pass

The Broncos had a second-and-1 on their first drive of the second half, but they couldn’t turn it into a first down. Jaleel McLaughlin ran for negative yardage on second down while Nix failed to convert with Devaughn Vele on third down.

Riley Dixon punted the ball away for the Broncos but failed to get it inside the 20-yard line. Jameis Winston and the Browns have another chance to take back the lead.

Jameis Winston, David Njoku can’t connect on third-and-3, Browns punt

The Browns could not double dip after scoring just before the half. They gained 19 yards on their first three plays but Njoku couldn’t hold onto the third-and-3 toss just short of the sticks. That led the Browns to punt, and Marvin Mims fair caught the kick at his own 11-yard line.

Is Nick Chubb hurt?

Chubb is not hurt, according to Kevin Stefanski. The veteran running back was out a majority of the second quarter, but the Browns head coach said that was simply because the team liked how its offense was operating with Jerome Ford.

Chubb missed 25 snaps before returning for the first play of the second half. He was then promptly replaced by Ford.

When did the Browns sign Kadarius Toney?

The Browns signed Toney to their practice squad on Sept. 9, just a couple of weeks after the Kansas City Chiefs released him.

Toney entered Monday night’s game with just a single carry for the Browns on the season. It went for negative-7 yards against the New Orleans Saints in Week 11.

Broncos halftime stats

Denver’s offense hasn’t been as strong as Cleveland’s, but it posted a respectable 141 yards in the first half. Bo Nix was up-and-down in the first 30 minutes, but he hit some downfield shots to Courtland Sutton and Devaughn Vele throughout the first two quarters.

Below are the team’s statistical leaders at the half:

Nix: 9-of-18 passing, 110 yards, 1 INT
Jaleel McLaughlin: 5 carries, 20 yards
Michael Burton: 1 carry, 1 TD
Javonte Williams: 4 carries, 1 yard, 1 TD
Courtland Sutton: 3 catches, 43 yards
Nik Bonitto: 1 QB hit, 1 INT, 1 TD

Browns halftime stats

Jameis Winston threw an awful pick-six in the first half, but aside from that, he had a great showing. He led the Browns to 298 total yards and 16 first downs in the first 30 minutes.

Below are the team’s statistical leaders at the half:

Winston: 18-of-31 passing, 245 yards, 2 touchdowns, 1 INT
Jerome Ford: 6 carries, 39 yards
Jerry Jeudy: 5 catches, 97 yards
David Njoku: 5 catches, 32 yards, 2 touchdowns

David Njoku scores second touchdown with 13 seconds left in first half

Jameis Winston made up for his 70-yard pick-six by orchestrating an 11-play, 70-yard touchdown drive to close the first half. He lofted a third-and-goal touch pass to his tight end Njoku, who caught his second score of the game.

The Browns decided to kick the extra point to cut Denver’s lead to 21-17. The Broncos will likely run the clock out after the kickoff and take a 4-point lead into halftime.

Jameis Winston throws pick-six to Nik Bonitto

Just when it looked like the Browns were going to score before halftime, Winston made a critical mistake. He stared down tight end Jordan Akins and Bonitto had a beat on it. He jumped in front of Akins and brought it all the way back for a 70-yard touchdown.

Bonitto now has 10 sacks and a pick-six on the season while the Broncos have a 21-10 lead with 1:38 left in the first half.

Michael Burton scores on 1-yard fullback dive to give Broncos lead

Sean Payton went old school on Denver’s second touchdown of the game. He put 10-year veteran Burton into the game and gave him a handoff from inside the 1-yard line. Burton had a clear path into the end-zone behind the right tackle and powered through for the score.

Wil Lutz connected on the extra point to make it 14-10, Broncos. Bo Nix earned completions of 19 and 16 yards to Courtland Sutton and Nate Adkins respectively on the drive.

What do Broncos fans chant?

Broncos fans have a tradition of mocking opposing quarterbacks after they throw incomplete passes. They chant ‘IN-COM-PLETE’ whenever the passer fails to connect with his receiver.

Corey Bojorquez uncorks 63-yard punt after Browns 3-and-out

Cleveland nearly had a one-play, touchdown drive when Jameis Winston launched a downfield pass to Jerry Jeudy, but the veteran quarterback overthrew his receiver by a couple of steps. From there, the Browns only gained three yards and were forced to punt.

After sending his first kick 39 yards, Bojorquez managed to send his second 63 yards. The Broncos will get the ball on their own 33-yard line with 7:07 remaining in the first half.

Rodney McLeod nearly picks of Bo Nix, forces three-and-out

Nix took a deep shot downfield on third-and-10 and appeared to have Courtland Sutton streaking over momentarily. However, McLeod was able to get over from the hash mark and undercut the ball. He nearly intercepted the pass but couldn’t quite hold onto it through contact.

The Broncos punted once again, marking their third, three-and-out of their first five drives.

Dustin Hopkins makes 45-yard field goal to give Browns lead

After missing a 47-yard field goal on the first drive of the game, Hopkins was able to make one from 45 yards away. That kick capped off a 9-play, 42-yard drive and gave Cleveland its first lead of the game, 10-7.

Bo Nix interception: Denzel Ward deflects ball to teammate Greg Newsome

The Browns come up with the first turnover of Monday night’s game, and it came in bizarre fashion. 

Ward was covering Troy Franklin and managed to get his hand in front of Bo Nix’s pass. Somehow, Ward’s deflection ricocheted into the air pop-fly style, and Newsome was able to get under it to create the turnover.

Ja’Quan McMillian breaks up pass intended for Elijah Moore, forces punt

The Broncos forced the Browns to punt for the first time on Cleveland’s third drive of the game. The Browns picked up an initial first down on a connection between Jameis Winston and Moore, but the two couldn’t rekindle their magic on a deeper pass that was broken up by McMillian.

Corey Bojorquez’s punt only went 39 yards in the thin Denver air, so the Broncos will get the ball back in good field position.

Broncos, Browns tied at 7 after first quarter

The Week 13 ‘Monday Night Football’ matchup is off to a fast start, as the first quarter featured 212 total yards of offense.

Jameis Winston has started the game hot, completing 5-of-6 passes for 118 yards and a touchdown while Bo Nix has been streakier. The Broncos rookie has completed just 5-of-11 passes for 52 yards, but he put together a strong second drive to help Denver open the scoring.

Cleveland has been positioned to score on each of its first two drives but failed to do so on its first because of a missed field goal by Dustin Hopkins. His performance will bear watching, as he has made just two of his last six field goal attempts.

What is 5280 on Broncos helmets?

The figure references the city of Denver’s elevation of 5,280 feet. That’s also the origin of the Broncos’ ‘Mile High’ Stadium (which is presently known as Empower Field at Mile High).

Broncos go three-and-out again

Bo Nix attempted three passes on Denver’s third drive of the game. None of them were completed. That forced the Broncos to punt the ball back to the Browns, who will look to score on back-to-back possessions.

David Njoku answers Broncos touchdown with 9-yard score

Jameis Winston got the Browns into the red-zone by connecting with Elijah Moore on a 44-yard pass before following that up with a 9-yard toss to Njoku. Dustin Hopkins atoned for his missed field goal by making the ensuing extra point to tie the game at 7-all.

A fun stat: Winston now has two completions of exactly 44 yards on his first two drives. His first went to Jerry Jeudy on the first drive while his second went to Moore.

Who is Bo Nix’s father?

Bo Nix’s father is Patrick Nix, who played quarterback at Auburn from 1992-95. After his college career, the elder Nix became a coach, starting as a running backs coach at Jacksonville State in 1996.

Nix eventually became Georgia Tech’s offensive coordinator in 2004, and helped turn Calvin Johnson into one of the NCAA’s most productive receivers. He held that role through the 2006 season before taking on the same role for two seasons at Miami (FL).

Since 2013, Nix has been a head high school football coach in Alabama. He has worked for three different schools, the most recent of which has been Phenix City Central.

Javonte Williams opens scoring with 1-yard TD run

The Broncos capitalized on the good field position provided to them by Dustin Hopkins’ miss. Bo Nix enjoyed a quality drive, finding Courtland Sutton and Devaughn Vele for big downfield gains.

A particularly nice sliding grab by Vele set up the Broncos at the 1-yard line. After a few tries, Denver managed to punch it in with Williams. Wil Lutz made the ensuing extra point to give the Broncos a 7-0 lead.

Dustin Hopkins stats

Hopkins is now 15 of 22 on the season after he missed his first field goal attempt from 47 yards against the Broncos. He has endured a rough patch of late, as he is now just 2-for-6 over his last three-plus games kicking.

Most of Hopkins misses have come from 50-plus yards, as he is just 4-of-8 from that distance. He is now 4-of-6 on kicks between 40 and 49 yards.

Dustin Hopkins misses 47-yard field goal

The Browns got off to a strong start on offense, as Jameis Winston found Jerry Jeudy for a 44-yard gain on the first play of the game. However, after a handful of solid runs, Winston failed to connect on a third-and-4 pass in the direction of David Njoku.

The Browns called upon Hopkins to put them ahead, but Hopkins missed the kick wide left. He is now just 15-of-22 on field goal attempts this season.

Broncos go three-and-out to start game

The Broncos went pass-pass-run on their first drive but were stuffed on a third-and-3 Javonte Williams carry.

Denver punted the ball inside the 5-yard line where return man Jaelon Darden inexplicably decided to return it. Jameis Winston’s first drive will start at his own 10-yard line.

Broncos vs. Browns start time

Start time: 8:15 p.m. ET (5:15 p.m. PT)
Location: Empower Field at Mile High, Denver, Colorado

The Broncos and Browns will kick off at 8:15 p.m. ET.

Broncos vs. Browns TV channel

TV channel: ESPN

ESPN again is the broadcast home of ‘Monday Night Football.’ The longtime team of Joe Buck (play-by-play) and Troy Aikman (color) will be on the call, with Lisa Salters adding reports from the sideline.

There will be no ‘ManningCast’ featuring Peyton and Eli Manning for this matchup.

Broncos vs. Browns picks, predictions

Here’s how the USA TODAY Sports staff feels the Broncos-Browns ‘MNF’ matchup will go:

Lorenzo Reyes: Broncos 28, Browns 13
Tyler Dragon: Broncos 21, Browns 20
Richard Morin: Broncos 29, Browns 22
Jordan Mendoza: Broncos 27, Browns 20

Broncos vs. Browns live stream 

Live stream:  Fubo TV | ESPN+ 

Cord-cutters looking for a live stream of the matchup can turn to Fubo TV. Fubo TV carries NBC, CBS, FOX, NFL Network and the ESPN family of networks, meaning you can catch NFL action through the remainder of the season. 

ESPN+, ESPN’s proprietary streaming service, will also carry the game. 

Jameis Winston gives speech before ‘Monday Night Football’

Winston’s pregame speeches have fascinated NFL fans, especially since he became Cleveland’s starting quarterback in place of the injured Deshaun Watson.

Patrick Surtain rocks Travis Hunter shirt

One of the NFL’s best defensive players is showing some love to the best two-way player in college football.

Surtain, the Broncos star, warmed up for Denver’s home game against the Browns rocking a shirt featuring Hunter, a star receiver/cornerback who plays for Deion Sanders’ Colorado Buffaloes.

Colorado is located in Boulder, which is about 28 miles away from Denver.

Browns inactives vs. Broncos

S Juan Thornhill
WR Cedric Tillman
RB D’Onta Foreman
CB Chigozie Anusiem
OT Jedrick Wills Jr.
DT Sam Kamara
DE James Houston

Broncos inactives vs. Browns

QB Zach Wilson (emergency third QB)
CB Riley Moss
LB Drew Sanders
OG Nick Gargiulo
OT Frank Crum
DL Eyioma Uwazurike

Broncos vs. Browns odds, moneyline, over/under 

The Broncos are favorites to defeat the Browns, according to the BetMGM NFL odds. Not interested in this game? Check out expert picks and best bets for every NFL game this week. 

Spread: Broncos (-6.5) 
Moneyline: Broncos (-300); Browns (+240) 
Over/under: 41.5

Where is Broncos vs. Browns being played?

The Browns vs. Broncos game on ‘Monday Night Football’ is being held at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver. Empower Field at Mile High opened in 2001, replacing the Broncos’ original home, Mile High Stadium.

Empower Field at Mile High has hosted three AFC championship games (2005, 2013 and 2015 seasons). It also has hosted numerous international soccer games, including the U.S. men’s national team’s in over Mexico in the 2021 Concacaf Nations League final.

Browns vs. Broncos weather updates

According to AccuWeather, temperatures around kickoff will be in the mid-40s with no chance for precipitation. Temperatures will drop into the mid- to-high-30s by game’s end at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver.

AFC North standings 

The Browns won’t be able to challenge for the AFC North in 2024, but they can play spoiler down the stretch against teams who are jockeying for playoff position. Here’s how they stand entering “MNF:” 

Pittsburgh Steelers (9-3) 
Baltimore Ravens (8-5) 
Cincinnati Bengals (4-8) 
Cleveland Browns (3-8) 

AFC West standings 

The Chiefs are running away with the division, but the Broncos are still in the playoff hunt. Here’s how they stack up entering “MNF:” 

Kansas City Chiefs (11-1) 
Los Angeles Chargers (8-4) 
Denver Broncos (7-5) 
Las Vegas Raiders (2-10) 

Broncos playoff odds 

FanDuel Sportsbook has set the Broncos’ odds to make the playoffs at -154. The sportsbook also offers odds for Denver to miss the playoffs at +126. 

FanDuel’s odds imply a 60.6% chance of making the postseason. 

Which NFL team has the most Super Bowl wins? 

The New England Patriots and Pittsburgh Steelers are tied for the most Super Bowl wins with six. 

Pittsburgh and Dallas have the unique distinction of playing each other more than any other team combination in Super Bowl history with three matchups. 

The Broncos have three Super Bowl victories in eight appearances, with the most recent Lombardi Trophy captured in Super Bowl 50 during the 2015 season. The Browns are among four NFL teams that have never appeared in a Super Bowl. Cleveland has Denver partially to blame for having no Super Bowl appearances, as the Broncos defeated the Browns three times in AFC championship games during the 1980s, including two famous games with names seared into NFL lore: ‘The Drive’ and ‘The Fumble.’

NFL franchises with most Super Bowl wins:

New England Patriots — 6
Pittsburgh Steelers — 6
Dallas Cowboys — 5
San Francisco 49ers — 5
Green Bay Packers — 4
Kansas City Chiefs — 4
New York Giants — 4

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Jameis Winston set a Cleveland Browns record with 497 passing yards in Monday night’s 41-32 loss to the Denver Broncos.

But despite also throwing four touchdown passes, it was his two interceptions returned for touchdowns — and three picks overall — that stuck with the quarterback.

‘I know I’m better than this,’ Winston said of the turnovers in a postgame news conference. ‘Like, I’m just praying for the Lord to deliver me from pick-sixes.’

Winston’s first interception against the Broncos came in the second quarter, when his pass intended for tight end Jordan Akins was nabbed by edge rusher Nik Bonitto and returned 71 yards, giving Denver a 21-10 lead. His second extinguished any hope for a Cleveland comeback from a 34-32 deficit in the final two minutes of the fourth quarter, as Broncos cornerback Ja’Quan McMillian leaped to jump Elijah Moore’s route and took the interception 44 yards after getting back on his feet. On the subsequent drive, Winston was picked off by Broncos linebacker Cody Barton in the end zone after two long passes and a pass interference got the Browns to the 2-yard line.

The turnovers marred a prolific night for Cleveland’s offense, which set a season high in scoring. Wide receiver Jerry Jeudy had 235 receiving yards, setting an all-time high for a player facing his former team.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Winston said he apologized to his teammates for the pick-sixes.

‘It’s tough to win when you have two defensive touchdowns that the quarterback gave (the other team),’ Winston said. ‘Defense played good. Offense played well. I didn’t do a great job.’

Volatile play has been the hallmark of Winston’s 10-year NFL career. The No. 1 pick in the 2015 NFL draft set the single-season record for pick-sixes with seven in 2019. His 30 interceptions that year are tied for seventh most in NFL history and are the only time since 1989 that a quarterback has reached that mark. Yet he also led the league with 5,109 passing yards that season and recorded a career-high 33 touchdown passes.

The Buccaneers brought aboard Tom Brady the following season, and Winston signed with the New Orleans Saints. Winston started just 10 games over four years after a 2021 knee injury derailed his second shot as a first stringer. He joined the Browns as a backup this offseason before taking over after Deshaun Watson was lost for the season to a torn Achilles in October.

Winston, who entered the night with the highest interception rate (3.4%) of any active player, vowed to turn things around.

‘I’m gonna keep working,’ Winston said. ‘I’m gonna fix it. … Nothing is going to change from a mental perspective, but the physical perspective, I’m gonna continue to work, and I’ll be better.’

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A senior GOP lawmaker is getting creative with his campaign to chair the House Foreign Affairs Committee next year.

Rep. Joe Wilson, R-S.C., is giving fellow lawmakers chips from the Berlin Wall, according to a photo provided by a source to Fox News Digital.

An inscription accompanying the chip suggests Wilson got the pieces himself nearly 35 years ago, an indirect affirmation of his decades of foreign affairs work. ‘This symbolizes the collapse of totalitarian communism and the success of democratic capitalism,’ the elaborate display reads.

It said the chip was ‘secured by State Senator Joe Wilson on June 12, 1990, at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, Germany.’

‘Sen. Wilson was returning from service as a member of the U.S. Observation Delegation of the June 10, 1990, parliamentary elections in the Republic of Bulgaria, that country’s first free elections after 59 years of Nazi and Communist dictatorship,’ it said.

The race for the House Foreign Affairs Committee gavel is one of the most critical happening ahead of the 119th Congress.

The role will be of particular importance in U.S. relations with the rest of the globe next year, when Republicans are set to control all the main levers of power in Washington, D.C.

Wilson is running against fellow committee members Reps. Ann Wagner, R-Mo., and Darrell Issa, R-Calif. The subcommittee chair for Oversight & Accountability, Rep. Brian Mast, R-Fla., is also in the race.

Wilson is chair of the panel’s subcommittee on the Middle East, North Africa and Central Asia.

Current Chairman Michael McCaul, R-Texas, is stepping aside in order to adhere to House Republicans’ internal conference rules that mandate a lawmaker serve no more than three terms in the top spot on a committee.

‘It has been an honor to serve as your Chairman and leader for the last six years,’ McCaul wrote to colleagues in a message obtained by Fox News Digital. ‘[O]ut of respect for the will of the Conference, I intend to abide by these rules and support new leadership.’

‘Serving as Chairman has truly been the most rewarding highlight of my career in Congress! I would like to thank all of you for your hard work and patriotism in confronting the major challenges we face across the Globe.’

Fox News Digital reached out to Wilson’s office for comment. 

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Every week for the duration of the 2024 NFL regular season, USA TODAY Sports will provide timely updates to the league’s ever-evolving playoff picture − starting after Sunday afternoon’s late games and then moving forward for the remainder of the week (through Monday’s and Thursday’s games or Saturday’s, if applicable).

What just happened? What does it mean? What are the pertinent factors (and, perhaps, tiebreakers) prominently in play as each conference’s seven-team bracket begins to crystallize? All will be explained and analyzed up to the point when the postseason field is finalized on Sunday, Jan. 5.

Here’s where things stand with Week 13 of the 2024 season complete:

AFC playoff picture

x – 1. Kansas City Chiefs (11-1), AFC West leaders: Yet another close shave as they narrowly escaped the Raiders 19-17 on Black Friday. But that was still sufficient to convey this season’s first clinched playoff berth to the reigning champs, who are pursuing the first-ever Super Bowl three-peat. The Bills’ head-to-head tiebreaker advantage still means K.C. can’t afford to backslide at all – but they can only slip so far at this point. Next up? The Chiefs can win their division for the ninth consecutive time by handling the Bolts on Sunday night. Remaining schedule: vs. Chargers, at Browns, vs. Texans, at Steelers, at Broncos

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

y – 2. Buffalo Bills (10-2), AFC East champions: No better way to win a fifth straight division title, and the league’s first in 2024, than by sparkling in lake effect snow in front of a national television audience – and with QB Josh Allen further bolstering his MVP bona fides amid his club’s seventh consecutive victory and with a memorable performance of his own. And, with that potentially pivotal tiebreaker against the Chiefs in hand, the Bills could soon steer the road to Super Bowl 59 through Western New York – and certainly have an easier path than K.C. Remaining schedule: at Rams, at Lions, vs. Patriots, vs. Jets, at Patriots

3. Pittsburgh Steelers (9-3), AFC North leaders: They didn’t cruise Sunday at Cincinnati but are cruising toward a postseason return. The question in the short term will be whether they can get back into the race for the No. 1 seed and/or if they’ll have to fend off Baltimore for the divisional title given the tough upcoming games the Steelers face. Remaining schedule: vs. Browns, at Eagles, at Ravens, vs. Chiefs, vs. Bengals

4. Houston Texans (8-5), AFC South leaders: They were unimpressive in many ways Sunday but did get back into the win column to maintain what’s effectively a three-game lead over Indy in the division due to Houston’s season sweep of the Colts. Remaining schedule: BYE, vs. Dolphins, at Chiefs, vs. Ravens, at Titans

5. Los Angeles Chargers (8-4), wild card No. 1: Beating Atlanta on Sunday doesn’t assure the Bolts a playoff berth yet, even after they overtook Baltimore for the time being. But they’ll have to do a lot of ‘Charger-ing’ to cough up a golden opportunity in Year 1 under HC Jim Harbaugh … though they will face more playoff-caliber squads the next three weeks. Remaining schedule: at Chiefs, vs. Buccaneers, vs. Broncos, at Patriots, at Raiders

6. Baltimore Ravens (8-5), wild card No. 2: Sunday’s loss to Philadelphia further jeopardizes any shot they have at the AFC North crown and a playoff game in Charm City. Remaining schedule: BYE, at Giants, vs. Steelers, at Texans, vs. Browns

7. Denver Broncos (8-5), wild card No. 3: Their hold on the AFC’s final berth continues to harden, though only after surviving the Browns on a wild Monday night – when a Denver loss would have set up a pivotal matchup with Indianapolis in Week 15. Even in victory, the Broncos don’t surpass the Ravens, who trounced Denver in Week 9. Remaining schedule: BYE, vs. Colts, at Chargers, at Bengals, vs. Chiefs

8. Indianapolis Colts (6-7), in the hunt: They get a week off after a gutsy win in New England. Their Week 15 trip to Denver would have been truly massive if Cleveland had cooperated Monday night but should still be a consequential meeting. Remaining schedule: BYE, at Broncos, vs. Titans, at Giants, vs. Jaguars

9. Miami Dolphins (5-7), in the hunt: QB Tua Tagovailoa was excited to ‘kill narratives’ Thursday night … like the one that says the Fins can’t win in cold weather or late in the season. Welp. Miami’s three-game win streak ended in Lambeau Field, and its playoff hopes also took a crippling hit. Remaining schedule: vs. Jets, at Texans, vs. 49ers, at Browns, at Jets

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NFC playoff picture

1. Detroit Lions (11-1), NFC North leaders: They were fortunate to fend off the Bears 23-20 on Thanksgiving for the first 11-1 start in franchise history. The victory keeps the Lions in the conference lead, but subsequent circumstances pushed their ability to clinch anything into Week 14. Remaining schedule: vs. Packers, vs. Bills, at Bears, at 49ers, vs. Vikings

2. Philadelphia Eagles (10-2), NFC East leaders: They’re officially a clear and present danger to Detroit and might run away, a la RB Saquon Barkley, with this division. Philly moves up to the top spot with a win against Carolina and a Lions loss to Green Bay on Thursday by virtue of what would be a superior record in common games. Remaining schedule: vs. Panthers, vs. Steelers, at Commanders, vs. Cowboys, vs. Giants

3. Seattle Seahawks (7-5), NFC West leaders: Sunday’s comeback against the Jets gave them a one-game lead in a hotly contest division likely to send just one team to postseason. Remaining schedule: at Cardinals, vs. Packers, vs. Vikings, at Bears, at Rams

4. Atlanta Falcons (6-6), NFC South leaders: Their margin for error is gone after collapsing at home Sunday to the Chargers. A season sweep of the Bucs is the only reason Atlanta remains in first place. Remaining schedule: at Vikings, at Raiders, vs. Giants, at Commanders, vs. Panthers

5. Minnesota Vikings (10-2), wild card No. 1: They continue to win ugly – including Sunday’s escape from Arizona – yet are also on a five-game heater any team would consider beautiful. It may not seem like Vikes are a threat to win their division, yet they’re only one game back of Detroit in the NFC North. Remaining schedule: vs. Falcons, vs. Bears, at Seahawks, vs. Packers, at Lions

6. Green Bay Packers (9-3), wild card No. 2: After handling the warm-weather Dolphins in Lambeau’s sub-freezing temperatures Thursday, the Pack also remain relevant in the NFC North while further cementing another postseason bid. Huge game in Motown on Thursday night. Remaining schedule: at Lions, at Seahawks, vs. Saints, at Vikings, vs. Bears

7. Washington Commanders (8-5), wild card No. 3: They snapped a three-game losing streak in spectacular style with Sunday’s 23-point blowout of Tennessee while putting a bit of distance between themselves and the conference’s other wild-card hopefuls. However a week off, good as it should be for the roster’s health, may not be kind to Washington’s cushion. Remaining schedule: BYE, at Saints, vs. Eagles, vs. Falcons, at Cowboys

8. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (6-6), in the hunt: Sunday was nearly disastrous … until they finally vanquished the plucky Panthers in overtime. Now, the Bucs are virtually tied with the Falcons atop the NFC South, and their conference record (6-3) pushes them past Arizona (3-5) in the overall NFC standings. Remaining schedule: vs. Raiders, at Chargers, at Cowboys, vs. Panthers, vs. Saints

9. Arizona Cardinals (6-6), in the hunt: They blew a golden opportunity Sunday in Minnesota but must regroup for Week 14, when they’ll face NFC West-leading Seattle for second time in two weeks. Remaining schedule: vs. Seahawks, vs. Patriots, at Panthers, at Rams, vs. 49ers

10. Los Angeles Rams (6-6), in the hunt: They won in New Orleans on Sunday but remain behind the Cards, who buried them in Week 2. Remaining schedule: vs. Bills, at 49ers, at Jets, vs. Cardinals, vs. Seahawks

11. San Francisco 49ers (5-7), in the hunt: What’s quickly become a cursed season continued Sunday night in the Buffalo snow, where RB Christian McCaffrey hurt his knee … and maybe put the Niners’ flickering postseason aspirations on injured reserve. Remaining schedule: vs. Bears, vs. Rams, at Dolphins, vs. Lions, at Cardinals

12. Dallas Cowboys (5-7), in the hunt: Hand it to Mike McCarthy’s crew – they’re not dying easy, when it would be quite easy, at this point, to do exactly that. Their latest win – and first at home this year – over the Giants on Thanksgiving moved them up, yet not past the 49ers, who won the team’s Week 8 matchup. Dallas’ near-term goal? Get back to .500 and see what happens from there. Remaining schedule: vs. Bengals, at Panthers, vs. Buccaneers, at Eagles, vs. Commanders

NFL teams eliminated from playoff contention in 2024

x – clinched playoff berth

y – clinched division

***

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Nate Davis on X, formerly Twitter, @ByNateDavis.

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