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A rocky year for restaurants separated the industry’s biggest chains into winners and losers, as eateries competed for a smaller pool of customers who have grown more discerning about how they spend their dollars.

“I’ve been eating out less this year — it tastes just as good, and it’s way cheaper,” said Jennifer Jennings, who works in sales in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Prices for food away from home had risen 3.6% over the last 12 months as of November, according to the Labor Department’s consumer price index. Grocery prices climbed just 1.6% during the same time, making cooking at home more attractive than dining out.

In response, many consumers have cut their restaurant spending, leading to slower sales and greater competition. The value wars reignited this summer. Chains took aim at their rivals in marketing and social media posts. And restaurants ramped up innovation, hoping that new menu items could boost sluggish traffic trends.

“I think the common thread behind everything right now is that the chains that are winning aren’t standing still. They’re doing something innovative, whether that’s new menu items … maybe that’s a marketing innovation … maybe it’s just hyper-emphasizing value,” said RJ Hottovy, head of analytical research for Placer.ai.

The year started off slow, with declining year-over-year traffic in January and February, before visits picked up again in March, according to industry tracker Black Box Intelligence. But eateries struggled again over the summer as consumers tightened their belts. Even a slew of value meals that promised cheap burgers and fries couldn’t stem the tide.

As traffic has fallen, bankruptcy filings have soared. Twenty-six bars and restaurants have filed for Chapter 11 this year, just one shy of tripling 2020′s total during the pandemic, according to the Debtwire Restructuring Database. This year’s filers included big names like Red Lobster and TGI Fridays.

While traffic has improved into the fourth quarter, some industry experts say it’s too early to predict a full recovery. A Numerator survey of more than 2,000 consumers found that the majority — across all income groups — plan to maintain their current spending levels at limited-service restaurants in the coming months.

But the chains that are already winning have seen their gains grow in the fourth quarter, further fueling their success.

Here are the winners and losers of the restaurant industry in 2024:

Value became restaurant CEOs’ new favorite word this year as they sought to reverse falling sales and appeal to inflation-weary consumers.

McDonald’s rang the alarm for the industry in late April, warning that consumers have become more “discriminating.” Three months later, the company’s second-quarter sales missed estimates and foot traffic to its U.S. restaurants shrank. The burger giant responded by rolling out a $5 combo meal, and many of its rivals followed suit with their own discounts and deals.

Traffic tied to value menu deals climbed 9% through October compared with the year-ago period, according to Circana data.

But value meals alone won’t save the industry.

For one, the lift from the deals isn’t enough to offset overall traffic declines, according to David Portalatin, Circana senior vice president and industry advisor for food and food service.

Plus, “value” has come to mean more than just the price tag. It also includes the experience and quality.

“For the low-income consumer, it’s the dollar amount that matters. For everybody else, it’s value. Even if you have money, you’re noticing things are more expensive, and you’re going to be more selective,” Michael Zuccaro, Moody’s Ratings vice president of corporate finance, told CNBC.

Fast-food restaurants have been losing customers this year, as customers pull back their spending.

Despite a proliferation of $5 combo meals, traffic to quick-service restaurants fell almost 2% this year through October, according to Circana data. That’s bad news for the industry because fast food accounts for nearly two-thirds of overall restaurant visits.

Industry experts attribute the decline in fast-food traffic largely to low-income customers. Diners who make less than $40,000 account for more than a quarter of both McDonald’s and Taco Bell’s customer bases, based on Numerator data.

Many of those consumers have chosen to spend less at fast-food restaurants, whether it’s skipping the order of French fries or forgoing a visit altogether to cook at home.

“There’s a lot more competition with grocery and other food retailers,” Hottovy said. “That’s where most of the competition is, particularly for that lower- to middle-income consumer.”

The fast-food chains performing the best right now, like Yum Brands’ Taco Bell, have high value perception.

Typically, when consumers tighten their belts in an economic downturn or recession, fast-food restaurants benefit. Even as low-income consumers cut back, higher-income consumers trade down to fast-food combo meals. But that hasn’t happened this time as consumers who make more money have instead embraced a more holistic definition of value to decide where to spend their money. Those diners want a high-quality, satisfying meal more than they care about a deal.

The fast-food chains that performed the best in 2024 tended to focus on chicken: Chick-fil-A, Raising Cane’s and Wingstop.

Chicken prices have stayed relatively stable this year, while beef prices have climbed. Poultry also benefits because some consumers consider it a more healthy option than red meat, even when the chicken is breaded and fried.

Chicken has been gaining market share from beef since the chicken sandwich wars of 2019, and restaurants have been leaning into the shift in consumer behavior. McDonald’s, for example, recently added the Chicken Big Mac to its U.S. menu permanently.

Upstarts like Raising Cane’s have also been making a splash. The privately held chain, known for its chicken tenders, is the fourth-largest chicken chain in the U.S., with a market share of 7.8%, according to Barclays. The chain could soon overtake KFC, the rare chicken chain that’s struggled to resonate with U.S. consumers this year.

KFC, which is owned by Yum Brands, has fallen behind in recent years as competition has intensified. Rivals like Chick-fil-A and Popeyes have stolen market share with buzzy menu items and the consumer shift toward boneless chicken.

Those chicken chains are stealing market share from burgers. McDonald’s, Wendy’s and Restaurant Brands International’s Burger King all had lackluster years.

McDonald’s has long dominated the burger category, with 48.8% market share, according to Barclays. But the chain saw its grip slip earlier this year as it scared off low-income consumers with its menu prices. However, by October, things were looking up for the Golden Arches: its $5 value meal was winning back customers, and its pricier Chicken Big Mac was boosting traffic.

Then came a fatal E. Coli outbreak linked to the slivered onions used in its Quarter Pounders. While the company acted quickly to contain the fallout, sales tumbled, especially in the affected states. McDonald’s plans to chip in $165 million to help out franchisees and boost marketing efforts. The chain has also revived its popular McRib for a limited time and unveiled a new value menu that will launch in January.

Analysts are optimistic that McDonald’s will be able to put the incident behind it. Traffic turned positive in the week ended Dec. 8 for the first time since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced the outbreak on Oct. 22, according to a note from Gordon Haskett Research Advisors.

For rivals Burger King and Wendy’s, that’s bad news.

Like McDonald’s, Burger King launched a $5 value meal over the summer to appeal to thrifty consumers. Its same-store sales fell in the third quarter, although Restaurant Brands CEO Josh Kobza said the business is much healthier than it was in September 2022, when the parent company formally launched Burger King’s U.S. turnaround strategy.

Likewise, Wendy’s has been struggling to gain a foothold in the value wars. The company recently announced that it would close 140 underperforming restaurants in the fourth quarter, in the hopes that culling its footprint would boost the overall business.

But a promotion tied to the 25th anniversary of Spongebob Squarepants has been a green shoot for the burger chain. Some locations even sold out of key ingredients for the “Krabby Patty” meal, according to an October note from Wolfe Research.

Taco Bell in Gastonia, N.C.Jeff Greenberg / Universal Images via Getty Images file

Taco Bell is another rare fast-food winner.

The Mexican-inspired chain was the only one of Yum Brands’ three holdings to report same-store sales growth every quarter so far this year. (Pizza Hut and KFC actually reported three straight quarters of same-store sales declines.)

Yum executives have attributed Taco Bell’s success to consumers’ perception of its value. It was the top limited-service chain that diners across all income groups considered to be more affordable than groceries, according to a Numerator survey of more than 2,000 consumers.

Yum has also credited Taco Bell’s “brand buzz.” Look no further than actress Selena Gomez’s Instagram post sharing her recent engagement, with Taco Bell’s Mexican Pizza prominently displayed on a picnic blanket; the brand’s PR chief said in a LinkedIn post that Taco Bell didn’t sponsor the post.

And the chain keeps moving. It’s rolling out artificial intelligence software to take drive-thru orders in hundreds of locations. And in early December, it unveiled a new drink-focused concept, called the Live Mas Café. The first location is being tested in San Diego.

As Taco Bell continues to stand out, Yum plans to highlight the brand in late January with an investor presentation outlining its strategy for next year.

Fast-casual restaurants are the only restaurant segment to report traffic growth this year.

Cava’s stock has skyrocketed 192% this year. Wingstop’s quarterly same-store sales have climbed more than 20% in every report it’s released this year. And traffic to Chipotle’s restaurants keeps growing, despite online backlash over its portion sizes and the departure of longtime CEO Brian Niccol in September.

But it isn’t just those chains. Broadly, the fast-casual restaurant segment has seen traffic rise 3% through October compared with the year-ago period, according to Circana data. And dollar sales have increased 8% for the category.

“You spend more money by going out rather than staying in, and fast casual seems to strike the right balance of the value equation,” said Circana’s Portalatin.

Chipotle and its fellow fast-casual chains also benefit from a customer base that skews higher-income. Chipotle executives have previously said that they haven’t seen the same traffic reversals as the rest of the industry because the chain’s customers have more money to spend on eating out.

Of course, there were a few losers even in the fast-casual category. Chains like BurgerFi and Roti filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy as their traffic fell and costs rose.

“Maybe they expanded too quickly and had other issues, and so they got into trouble,” John Bringardner, head of Debtwire.

A woman walks by a Starbucks in New York City, on April 4, 2022.Spencer Platt / Getty Images file

Niccol shocked the restaurant world in August when Starbucks announced he’d be taking over as chief executive, following his predecessor’s ouster. Chipotle’s stock fell and Starbucks shares soared on the news in a combined market cap swing of $27 billion, showing Wall Street’s belief in Niccol as a leader.

Niccol’s departure from Chipotle came six years into his tenure. He ushered the burrito chain firmly out of its foodborne illness crisis, leaned into online ordering, modernized its locations for the digital age and led the company through the pandemic. Wall Street analysts expect that his replacement, Scott Boatwright, will stay the course set by Niccol.

On the other hand, Niccol’s appointment at Starbucks will likely mean big changes for the coffee giant. The board hired him after two consecutive quarters of same-store sales declines. Customers had become fed up with its high prices and chaotic, unwelcoming stores, and even discounts and new drink launches couldn’t persuade them to return.

As CEO, Niccol has pledged to bring the company “Back to Starbucks.” In late October, he shared early thoughts to reshape the U.S. business, from small tweaks like bringing back Sharpies to much more ambitious plans, like cutting back its extensive drinks menu.

Heading into 2025, Wall Street is excited about his proposals. Piper Sandler ranked Starbucks as its best idea for restaurants that it covers. BTIG also named it as a top pick, alongside Wingstop.

Traffic to casual-dining restaurants has fallen 2% year-to-date through October, according to Circana data.

This year’s decline in visits follows years of waning demand for casual-dining chains. They’ve struggled to compete since the Great Recession, which brought the dawn of fast-casual options that offer high-quality food at cheaper prices with greater convenience.

Some consumers are also skipping casual-dining chains and instead frequenting local independents.

The segment’s biggest losers this year were Red Lobster and TGI Fridays, which both filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Red Lobster, which filed in May, has since exited bankruptcy with a new owner, leadership and strategy to turn around the business.

“You’re seeing some weeding out … of those concepts that are a little tired, a little under pressure,” Circana’s Portalatin said.

Other casual-dining chains that are struggling to win over customers include Applebee’s, owned by Dine Brands.

Still the category has some outliers, like Texas Roadhouse, Chili’s and Olive Garden. Their relative outperformance has boosted the segment’s metrics, hiding some chains’ deeper deterioration. (Olive Garden parent Darden Restaurants reports its latest quarterly results on Thursday.)

While casual restaurants struggle, one bright spot was Chili’s, owned by Brinker International. A table at the chain more associated with families became a hot reservation among Gen Z diners.

The bar and grill’s turnaround finally took hold this year, boosted by sharp advertising and TikTok-viral deals. In its latest quarter, Chili’s reported same-store sales growth of 14.1%, fueled by a 6.5% increase in traffic.

The chain’s “3 for Me” bundle, priced at $10.99, appealed to consumers looking for value. Plus, Chili’s advertised the promotion by taking aim at the prices of its fast-food rivals. And its Triple Dipper combo, which offers three appetizers, took off on TikTok, causing sales of the menu item to soar more than 70% in its latest quarter compared with last year. The Triple Dipper now accounts for 11% of the chain’s business, Brinker CEO Kevin Hochman said on the company’s latest earnings call on Oct. 30.

Chili’s success has spawned copycats. Rival Applebee’s recently picked a fight with Chili’s over its competing $9.99 value meal. And Olive Garden reintroduced its Never Ending Pasta Bowl promotion.

In mid-November, restaurant executives were feeling optimistic about 2025 at the Restaurant Finance and Development Conference in Las Vegas.

Circana’s Portalin echoed that sentiment, predicting that inflation will keep declining next year, bringing some much-needed stability to prices and the overall industry.

“Think about everything consumers have dealt with over the last year: natural disasters, global conflict, the polarizing national election,” he said. “If we could get all of that in the rear view mirror, and if we can maintain some of these basic fundamentals around income and labor, we think customer traffic will improve in 2025.”

But not everyone in the industry is so sure that 2025 will bring a restaurant recovery.

“I think we’re going to continue the same mindset that we’re leaving 2024 with, this value-oriented, deal-driven consumer,” Placer.ai’s Hottovy said.

Likewise, Moody’s outlook for the restaurant industry predicts modest sales growth, but Moody’s Zuccaro said companies will all be fighting for their share.

In other words, the value wars won’t slow down — and may even intensify.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

PHILADELPHIA – The plan was simple enough for Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver A.J. Brown and quarterback Jalen Hurts.

Step 1: Score a touchdown. 

Step 2: Dance. 

“That was our moment to tell everyone to shut up,” Brown said after the Eagles won their franchise-record 10th straight game with a 27-13 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday. 

There had certainly been plenty of talk about Hurts and Brown this past week. Not that Brown was completely innocent in calling to attention what was a lackluster, yet mostly efficient, passing attack as the Eagles rode running back Saquon Barkley, a bullying offensive line and burgeoning defense to the top of the NFC. 

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Brown caught eight passes for 110 yards and a touchdown, while fellow receiver DeVonta Smith had 11 catches for 109 yards and a score. Hurts, who revealed after the game he’s playing with a broken finger on his non-throwing hand, finished 25-for-32 with 290 passing yards, his second-highest total of the season. 

Asked what the Eagles’ offense needed to improve upon following last week’s close win over the Carolina Panthers, Brown tersely replied: “Passing.” 

Brandon Graham, out for the season with a triceps injury in what he said was his final campaign, poured kerosene on those flames by discussing the supposed discord during a weekly media appearance and mentioning the longstanding relationship between Hurts and the receiver that dates back to their high-school days. 

“We have guys that are very close, that can have those conversations, it only makes everybody around us better,” Smith said. 

Brown said he “absolutely” thought his words from last Sunday helped.

“I said it for a reason,” he said. “I only had good intentions behind it. It wasn’t for me to get the ball. It was for us to all be on the same page and put our best foot forward. We know what we’re capable of. I knew it wasn’t the standard.” 

His teammates agreed with him, Brown said. What he said didn’t take them by surprise. 

“I kind of got crucified for it, but it’s cool,” he said.

Having those types of conversations is “very uncomfortable,” Brown said, but he maintained that he didn’t call anybody out. 

“Behind closed doors, we talk about that (stuff),” he said. “We call each other out. That’s very uncomfortable. Because you don’t want to feel like you’re being attacked. 

“I think we’re moving in the right direction. We did what we needed to do today in the pass game.” 

What a difference a week makes. The detente was reached Wednesday, but officially, it came with 1:13 left in the first quarter. Hurts threw off-balance from the pocket to Brown, who broke open in the middle of the end zone, for the game’s first touchdown. The Eagles entered as the league’s lowest-scoring team in the first quarter and left with 10 points. 

“We knew getting on the ball fast was going to be hard for them, so we did that,” Smith said of the Eagles’ fast start. 

Philadelphia threw on the first three plays of the game and four of the first five. Hurts, sounding like a carpenter and gardener after the game, used one of his favorite analogies: sharpening all tools at one’s disposal “so when it’s time to use them, you can go.” Going to Smith and Brown consistently was intentional. 

“I don’t think there’s a doubt in that. I think, frankly, there’s an effort there,” Hurts said. “The approach was a little different this week. The grass will be green where you water it. We decided to water it and saw the fruits of our labor in that. 

“Obviously we’ve been watering the running game a good bit. It’s natural to put emphasis on one thing and take emphasis off of another and see what you guys have seen. We want to continue to be well-rounded, push to be well-rounded, and water all areas of our yard.” 

During the week, asked about the latest WIP drama-dream, left tackle Jordan Mailata said that the game against the Steelers wasn’t going to be the ‘A.J. Brown and Jalen show.’ He was glad to add an addendum after the win.

‘It ended up being the Jalen Hurts and A.J. Brown and (DeVonta Smith) show,’ he said. ‘That was pretty cool.’

A point of emphasis from the coaching staff and wideouts, Brown said, was to overcommunicate – “we even exaggerated,” he said – during meetings, which they also simply extended. 

“You talk about something 10 times it’s like, ‘OK, I got it.’ It’s needed though,” Brown said.  

The receivers and Hurts were more on the same page throughout the week because of it, Brown said, and he thinks it’s something that will last the rest of the year. 

Head coach Nick Sirianni said the dust-up may have been perceived as chaos from the outside. The Eagles saw it as an opportunity to elevate.

“It was just something that we used as something to kind of galvanize us and get better from, and they did that,” the fourth-year coach said. 

Hurts carries himself as a laser-focused leader who hopes that his mentality can seep throughout the locker room. But there are too many bodies for everybody to tune everything out. Social media is invasive. The Philadelphia media seek accountability on behalf of a public that demands it from its sports teams.

“Scrutiny is never-ending. It’s nothing new,” Hurts said. “That’s something that I find a thrill in. I appreciate being told I can’t and that we can’t. I know that I lead this team, and it takes a lot out of it. It demands a lot out of you. And I just want to show up and be the best teammate, quarterback, and be the best I can be for the guys on the team.”

This team, however, has not let anything infiltrate its walls. Not an offseason ESPN report indicating that Sirianni and Hurts had feuded and not mended the wounds from the disastrous end to the 2023 season. Not the arrival of new coordinators on both sides of the ball for the second straight season. Not the recent alleged spat between Brown and Hurts. 

Last year, the noise consumed them. They are impenetrable to outside narratives, it appears, so far in 2024. 

With tight end Dallas Goedert (knee) on injured reserve, the target shares for both Brown and Smith have understandably increased. 

The presence of Barkley has also placed less importance on the Eagles’ passing game. But the league’s leading rusher was also absent for part of the game due to an undisclosed injury. Hurts’ 32 pass attempts were his most since a Week 4 loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. 

At that point, the Eagles found themselves at 2-2, and Sirianni faced questions about his job security. He’s more than answered those. And once those within the locker room stirred the pot – on purpose or not – they wasted no time wasting that worry, too.  

“We know what the end goal is,” said Brown, adding that winning 10 games in a row means little when the goal is to win the Super Bowl.  

“It’s easy for us to have these tough conversations, to call each other out, because we know what we want.” 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

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 − typically 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 15 of the 2024 season nearly complete:

NFC playoff picture

x – 1. Detroit Lions (12-2), NFC North leaders: After getting stomped by Buffalo on Sunday, they could be in a three-way tie atop the conference and deadlocked for the division lead by the time Monday night is over. A Week 7 win over Minnesota and conference record (8-1) that’s one game better than Philly are the tiebreakers currently serving the Lions. Remaining schedule: at Bears, at 49ers, vs. Vikings

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x – 2. Philadelphia Eagles (12-2), NFC East leaders: Winners of 10 straight, they could not clinch the division Sunday following Washington’s victory in New Orleans but can do so by ousting the Commanders in Week 16. Still, the Iggles did pull even with Detroit, but they’ll need another Lions slip-up to move into the conference’s top spot. Remaining schedule: at Commanders, vs. Cowboys, vs. Giants

3. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (8-6), NFC South leaders: They embarrassed the Chargers on Sunday, which means – regardless of what Atlanta does Monday night – the Bucs will remain atop the division for at least another week. Seattle’s loss pushed them up a spot, Tampa Bay with a better record (6-3) in conference games than the Rams (5-5). Remaining schedule: at Cowboys, vs. Panthers, vs. Saints

4. Los Angeles Rams (8-6), NFC West leaders: Win out, and they are division champs. LA overtook the Seahawks on Sunday night by virtue of their Week 9 victory at Seattle. Remaining schedule: at Jets, vs. Cardinals, vs. Seahawks

x – 5. Minnesota Vikings (11-2), wild card No. 1: They clinched a spot Sunday night thanks to Seattle’s loss. Now it’s about keeping pace with the Eagles and, especially, Lions. Remaining schedule: vs. Bears, at Seahawks, vs. Packers, at Lions

6. Green Bay Packers (10-4), wild card No. 2: Getting swept by Detroit pretty much relegates the Pack to wild-card status, but they’ll have to wait at least another week to clinch despite handling the Seahawks on Sunday night. Remaining schedule: vs. Saints, at Vikings, vs. Bears

7. Washington Commanders (9-5), wild card No. 3: They barely survived the Saints, but it was enough to keep them alive one more week in the division with the NFC East still technically up for grabs. Remaining schedule: vs. Eagles, vs. Falcons, at Cowboys

8. Seattle Seahawks (8-6), in the hunt: Sunday night’s loss to Green Bay dropped them not only out of the NFC West lead but from the projected field entirely. And they may have to move forward without injured QB Geno Smith. Remaining schedule: vs. Vikings, at Bears, at Rams

9. Arizona Cardinals (7-7), in the hunt: They broke a three-game skid by beating the Patriots but, at this point, need the NFC West field to come back to them. Remaining schedule: at Panthers, at Rams, vs. 49ers

10. Atlanta Falcons (6-7), in the hunt: Their margin for error is gone and so is first place in the NFC South after their losing streak extended to four in Week 14. Their season sweep of the Bucs means they only need to pull even with Tampa Bay to reclaim the division lead, but the first-place Buccaneers are not cooperating so far. Remaining schedule: at Raiders, vs. Giants, at Commanders, vs. Panthers

11. San Francisco 49ers (6-8), in the hunt: Thursday’s loss to the Rams was a near-fatal blow to the reigning NFC champs, who have better than a 99% probability of missing postseason, per NFL.com. Remaining schedule: at Dolphins, vs. Lions, at Cardinals

12. Dallas Cowboys (6-8), in the hunt: Like the Niners, whom they lost to in Week 8, their postseason hopes are on life support despite Sunday’s win in Charlotte. Remaining schedule: vs. Buccaneers, at Eagles, vs. Commanders

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AFC playoff picture

y – 1. Kansas City Chiefs (13-1), AFC West champions: A 21-7 win in Cleveland on Sunday keeps them in driver’s seat for home-field advantage … provided QB Patrick Mahomes’ ankle injury isn’t overly serious. Two more wins will lock in home-field advantage and a first-round bye. Remaining schedule: vs. Texans, at Steelers, at Broncos

y – 2. Buffalo Bills (11-3), AFC East champions: Sunday’s win in Detroit probably does more for their collective psyche than it really does for their playoff positioning at the moment. Pittsburgh’s loss makes their second-place standing in the conference more comfortable … as does a very inviting closing stretch. Remaining schedule: vs. Patriots, vs. Jets, at Patriots

x – 3. Pittsburgh Steelers (10-4), AFC North leaders: Decidedly mixed bag Sunday. The Colts’ loss (combined with Miami’s earlier Sunday) clinched a postseason berth for the Steelers. However they’re backing up to the Ravens, next week’s opponent, in the division and probably now out of the running for the No. 1 seed. Still, beat Baltimore on Saturday afternoon, and the Steelers put a bow on the division. Remaining schedule: at Ravens, vs. Chiefs, vs. Bengals

y – 4. Houston Texans (9-5), AFC South champions: Sunday’s win combined with Indianapolis’ loss assured they’ll rule a weak division for the second straight year. Remaining schedule: at Chiefs, vs. Ravens, at Titans

5. Baltimore Ravens (9-5), wild card No. 1: Cruised past sleepwalking Giants and picked up a game on Pittsburgh, the Ravens’ opponent in Week 16. Maybe the AFC North throne isn’t out of sight. One more win secures a berth. Remaining schedule: vs. Steelers, at Texans, vs. Browns

6. Denver Broncos (9-5), wild card No. 2: It’s a near certainty they’ll make their first postseason trip since winning Super Bowl 50 nine years ago. But they’ll drop back down to the seventh seed if they get swept by Bolts on Thursday night. One more win secures a berth. Remaining schedule: at Chargers, at Bengals, vs. Chiefs

7. Los Angeles Chargers (8-6), wild card No. 3: Are they suddenly ‘Charger-ing’? Three losses in the past four weeks have slipped them into the final wild-card spot … though it appears their pursuers are bolting with even more speed. Remaining schedule: vs. Broncos, at Patriots, at Raiders

8. Indianapolis Colts (6-8), in the hunt: After Sunday’s loss at Denver, it’s basically over. Remaining schedule: vs. Titans, at Giants, vs. Jaguars

9. Miami Dolphins (6-8), in the hunt: After Sunday’s loss at Houston, it’s basically over. Remaining schedule: vs. 49ers, at Browns, at Jets

10. Cincinnati Bengals (6-8), in the hunt: They won in Nashville on Sunday, meaning there’s still a faint pulse. A 3-6 conference mark keeps them buried behind Fins and Colts. Remaining schedule: vs. Browns, vs. Broncos, at Steelers

NFL playoff clinching scenarios for Week 16 (incomplete)

Pittsburgh clinches AFC North with:

Win

Baltimore clinches playoff berth with:

Win

Denver clinches playoff berth with:

Win

Los Angeles Chargers clinch playoff berth with:

Win + Miami loss + Indianapolis loss

Philadelphia clinches NFC East with:

Win

Green Bay clinches playoff berth with:

Win

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

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Not only did the Seattle Seahawks get embarrassed at home in Week 15 vs. the Green Bay Packers, they also might have lost their quarterback for an extended period of time.

Quarterback Geno Smith missed the final 21 minutes of the Seahawks’ 30-13 loss on “Sunday Night Football” after taking a low hit in the third quarter. Seattle declared him questionable to return with a knee injury, but backup Sam Howell played the remainder of the game in relief of the injured veteran.

Conversely, it was a great night for the Packers, particularly for their young talent.

Green Bay put up 369 yards of total offense, including 229 yards on 20-of-27 passing from quarterback Jordan Love. Third-year wide receiver Romeo Doubs caught two touchdown passes – one that showed off his leg strength and another that displayed his great hands. And rookie linebacker Edgerrin Cooper picked up his first career interception to go along with his third sack of the season.

Josh Jacobs, the Packers’ 26-six-year-old running back, also had 136 yards from scrimmage and a touchdown.

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

Seattle dropped to 8-6 and into a tie with the Los Angeles Rams for first place in the NFC West with the loss. Since the Rams won the first clash between the two contenders, they now hold the first place spot via a head-to-head tiebreaker.

Meanwhile, the Packers’ win was their 10th of the season and keeps the pressure on the two teams ahead of them in the NFC North title race: the Detroit Lions, who have already clinched a playoff spot, and the Minnesota Vikings, who clinched a playoff spot with Green Bay’s win.

Here’s how it all happened in the latest edition of “Sunday Night Football”:

Packers vs. Seahawks highlights

Packers 30, Seahawks 13: Romeo Doubs makes highlight-reel touchdown catch

Romeo Doubs scored his second touchdown of the night with five minutes left in the game. Quarterback Jordan Love launched the pass about 40 air yards to the back line of the end zone, and Doubs snagged the ball mere inches off of the ground to secure the catch.

It’s 30-13 Packers with 4:51 to go.

Edgerrin Cooper snatches first career interception

Edgerrin Cooper, the Packers’ second-round pick in the 2024 NFL draft, dropped back in coverage, read quarterback Sam Howell’s eyes and jumped to high-point the ball. The perfectly executed interception and return gave Green Bay the ball back at Seattle’s 27-yard line.

The interception was the latest notch in Cooper’s belt in what has been an excellent showing for him. With five minutes to play, the rookie is his team’s co-leader with five tackles on the night so far, including a sack. He also has two passes defensed, including the interception.

Packers 23, Seahawks 13: Zach Charbonnet gets the Seahawks back within 10

Seattle capitalized on its good field position after the fumble recovery when Zach Charbonnet rushed for a 24-yard touchdown. Backup center Jalen Sundell, in for the injured Olu Oluwatimi, made a key block, and Chabonnet broke away down the right sideline for the score.

It’s 23-13 Packers with 11:16 left in the game.

Julian Love recovers Josh Jacobs’ fumble

Seahawks linebacker Ernest Jones dove to punch the ball out of Josh Jacobs’ arms, and Julian Love scooped it up near the sideline for a 6-yard fumble return.

Seattle starts a new drive on the Packers’ 45-yard line after the turnover.

Packers 23, Seahawks 6: Green Bay settles for another field goal

A promising drive stalled inside the Seahawks’ 10-yard line as a third-and-5 false start penalty pushed the Packers back. Jordan Love connected with Christian Watson for a 9-yard gain to set up a fourth-and-1 at the Seahawks’ 5-yard line. However, Packers head coach Matt LaFleur opted to kick a field goal rather than gamble on the fourth-and-short situation.

Brandon McManus’ 23-yard field goal attempt was good and for the second time in the game, the Packers answered a Seahawks field goal with a field goal of their own.

Packers 20, Seahawks 6: Jason Myers pulls Seahawks within two scores

After Geno Smith’s injury, Seattle only got two more plays in before its drive stalled on fourth down in Packers territory. Jason Myers converted on his second field goal attempt of the night, this one from 45 yards out, to trim Green Bay’s lead to 14 points.

It’s 20-6 Packers with 6:20 left in the third quarter.

Sam Howell enters for banged-up Geno Smith

Geno Smith took a low hit after throwing away a pass while under pressure. He remained on the ground holding his leg for a few extra moments and received some medical attention before heading to the sideline.

Sam Howell threw two pass attempts and completed one for minus-2 yards before the Seahawks’ drive ended.

End of the first half: Packers 20, Seahawks 3

Green Bay scored on all four of its first-half possessions, following up back-to-back touchdown drives with two straight field goal drives. A 21-yard field goal by kicker Brandon McManus closed out the final seconds of the first half.

Seattle will receive the second half kickoff.

Carrington Valentine intercepts Geno Smith in end zone

One play after he nearly snagged an interception, Carrington Valentine made a play in the end zone to end the Seahawks’ red zone drive.

The Packers will take over at their own 14-yard line with 2:54 left in the first half.

Quay Walker exits with injury

Quay Walker, the Packers’ leading tackler this season, appeared to suffer a non-contact, lower-body injury late in the second quarter. He made his way off of the field under his own power, but was flanked by a couple of trainers.

The third-year linebacker was ruled out during halftime with an ankle injury.

Seahawks center Olu Oluwatimi doubtful to return

Olu Oluwatimi was absent from Seattle’s offensive line to start its second drive of the second quarter, and the team designated him as doubtful with a knee injury.

Undrafted free agent rookie Jalen Sundell is in for the Seahawks at center.

Packers 17, Seahawks 3: Brandon McManus pushes Packers’ lead back to 14

Green Bay was unable to score a touchdown for a third straight drive, so it settles for a 39-yard field goal.

Brandon McManus nailed his first field goal attempt on Sunday night to give the Packers a 17-3 lead with 9:21 left in the half.

Jordan Love connects with Christian Watson for 36 yards

The Packers’ offense continues to dominate on the road. Their latest explosive play was a 36-yard heave from Jordan Love that Christian Watson pulled in with a toe drag to stay in bounds. Green Bay is in the red zone with under 10 minutes to play.

Packers 14, Seahawks 3: Jason Myers gives Seattle its first points

A couple of negative plays well inside Packers territory halted the Seahawks’ drive on Green Bay’s 30. Jason Myers knocked through his first field goal attempt of the night from 48 yards out to put Seattle on the board.

It’s now 14-3 Packers with just under 13 minutes left in the first half.

End of first quarter: Packers 14, Seahawks 0

The first 15 minutes of the game were all Green Bay. More specifically, they were all Josh Jacobs.

Green Bay’s running back has 84 total yards — 46 rushing, 38 receiving — and a touchdown through his team’s first two possessions.

Seattle starts the second quarter with the ball on the Packers’ 32-yard line.

Packers 14, Seahawks 0: Romeo Doubs churns his way into end zone

Romeo Doubs caught a pass from quarterback Jordan Love on the 6-yard line before he was nearly immediately wrapped up. However, the third-year receiver kept his legs moving and pulled two Seahawks defenders with him for the score.

The touchdown was the end of an 80-yard drive that included 40 more yards from scrimmage from running back Josh Jacobs. He’s up to 84 all-purpose yards in the game.

It’s 14-0 Packers with just under two minutes remaining in the first quarter.

Edgerrin Cooper stops Seahawks’ opening drive with sack

Rookie linebacker Edgerrin Cooper limited Seattle’s first offensive drive to four plays when he sacked quarterback Geno Smith for a 9-yard loss on third-and-4.

The Packers take back possession on their own 20-yard line with 6:43 left in the first quarter.

Packers 7, Seahawks 0: Josh Jacobs gives the Packers an early lead

Josh Jacobs’ 1-yard rush put Green Bay on the board to cap off a 63-yard drive to open the game. The running back was responsible for 44 of the Packers’ 48 total yards on the drive — the remaining 15 coming on an unnecessary roughness penalty — on nine touches.

It’s 7-0 Packers with 9:19 to go in the first quarter.

Seahawks vs. Packers start time

Start time: 8:20 p.m. ET (5:20 p.m. PT)

The Packers and Seahawks are scheduled to kick off at 8:20 p.m. ET (5:20 p.m. PT), the customary start time for ‘Sunday Night Football.’

Seahawks vs. Packers TV channel

TV channel: NBC

NBC is the broadcast home to the Seahawks vs. Packers ‘SNF’ matchup. Mike Tirico will be on the play-by-play call, flanked by color commentator Cris Collinsworth. Melissa Stark will provide reports from the sideline.

Seahawks vs. Packers picks, predictions

Here’s how the USA TODAY Sports staff feels the Seahawks-Packers ‘Sunday Night Football’ game will shake out:

Lorenzo Reyes: Packers 27, Seahawks 21
Tyler Dragon: Packers 26, Seahawks 22
Richard Morin: Packers 23, Seahawks 18
Jordan Mendoza: Seahawks 24, Packers 21

Seahawks vs. Packers live stream 

Live stream: Fubo | Peacock 

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

Stream’Sunday Night Football’with a Peacock subscription

Packers inactives vs. Seahawks

Two-time Pro Bowl cornerback Jaire Alexander continues to be sidelined with a knee injury. He has played in just seven games this season.

WR Malik Heath
S Javon Bullard
CB Jaire Alexander
OL Jacob Monk

Seahawks inactives vs. Packers

Running back Kenneth Walker III (calf) continues to be out for the Seahawks, who will once again rely on Zach Charbonnet. Charbonnet had a career-high 134 yards and two touchdowns in last week’s win against the Arizona Cardinals.

RB Kenneth Walker III
CB Tre Brown
TE Brady Russell
LB Trevis Gipson
WR Cody White
QB Jaren Hall
CB Artie Burns

Seahawks vs. Packers odds, moneyline, over/under 

The Packers are favorites to defeat the Seahawks, 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: Packers (-2.5) 
Moneyline: Packers (-145); Seahawks (+120) 
Over/under: 47.5     

Sunday Night Football best bets 

Looking to make “SNF” more interesting? Here are some of the best bets for the matchup: 

Josh Jacobs rushing + receiving yards OVER 89.5 (-120) 
Jordan Love OVER 6.5 rushing yards (-110) 
DK Metcalf anytime TD (+150) 

Where is Packers vs. Seahawks?

The Packers travel west to take on the Seahawks. The matchup will take place at Lumen Field in Seattle, Washington.

Lumen Field — formerly known as Seahawks Stadium, Qwest Field and CenturyLink Field — has hosted three NFC championship games. The stadium also will host six games during the 2026 World Cup.

Lumen Field opened in 2002, and also serves as the home stadium of Major League Soccer’s Seattle Sounders FC and Seattle Reign FC of the NWSL.

Seahawks vs. Packers weather updates

Game time temperatures in Seattle will be in the mid-40s, according to AccuWeather. There is a slight chance of rain at kickoff, with a stronger likelihood of precipitation late in the game.

NFC West standings

Here’s how the NFC West stacks up entering the “SNF” matchup between the Seahawks and Packers:

Seattle Seahawks: 8-5
Los Angeles Rams: 8-6
Arizona Cardinals: 7-7
San Francisco 49ers: 6-8

NFC North standings

Here’s how the NFC North lines up entering the “SNF” game between the Packers and Seahawks:

Detroit Lions: 12-2
Minnesota Vikings: 11-2
Green Bay Packers: 9-4
Chicago Bears: 4-9

When do the NFL playoffs start? 

The NFL playoffs kick off on Jan. 11 with the league’s Super Wild Card Weekend, before concluding Feb. 9 with Super Bowl 59 in New Orleans. 

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. 

The Packers have won four Super Bowls in five appearances, including the first two Super Bowls (then called the AFL–NFL World Championship Game) under legendary coach Vince Lombardi, for whom the Super Bowl championship trophy is named after. The Packers’ most recent Super Bowl win came during the 2010 season in Super Bowl XLV. In all, the Packers boast 13 NFL championships, the most of any franchise.

The Seahawks have one Super Bowl victory in three appearances, having prevailed over the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XLVIII.

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

Sunday Night Football preview 

Both teams will be looking to get their run games going early and often on what could be a rainy Sunday night in Seattle. 

Even if the weather holds up, the Packers’ strong rushing offense – led by running back Josh Jacobs and reinforced by the mobility of quarterback Jordan Love – will likely have a better outlook than its passing offense. 

Through 14 weeks, the Seahawks’ passing defense ranks ninth in EPA per dropback allowed (0.010) and 13th in success rate on dropbacks (45.3%). In contrast, Seattle’s rush defense drops to 16th in the NFL by EPA allowed (-0.085) and 22nd in rush success rate (41.0%). 

Jacobs enters Week 15 off of two performances among his worst of the season in terms of rush yardage. However, he did score three touchdowns last week, tying a season high. He’ll be looking to return to form against a weaker rush defense. 

In contrast, the Seahawks might try to lean more heavily on their passing game. 

Second-year receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba is having a breakout season and enters Week 15 on a streak of five straight games with more than 70 receiving yards. 

In addition, Green Bay ranks 32nd in the NFL with a 51.3% success rate allowed on opponents’ dropbacks, and Seattle quarterback Geno Smith will try to take advantage of that on Sunday night. 

The Packers’ dropback marks in EPA allowed and success rate are both ranked around No. 10 in the NFL – they’re ninth and 11th, respectively. That suggests they’ll provide a more difficult challenge for Zach Charbonnet , even off of Charbonnet’s 134-yard day against the Cardinals last week. 

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The U.S. Embassy in Syria is urging Americans inside the war-torn country to flee immediately or prepare to ‘shelter in place for extended periods.’ 

The warning comes as the ‘security situation in Syria continues to be volatile and unpredictable with armed conflict and terrorism throughout the country’ following the downfall of Syrian President Bashar Assad, the embassy said in a statement Monday. 

‘U.S. citizens should depart Syria if possible. U.S. citizens who are unable to depart should prepare contingency plans for emergency situations and be prepared to shelter in place for extended periods,’ it added. 

The embassy suspended operations in 2012, ‘and is not open for normal consular services,’ its website says. In its latest advisory, the State Department recommends Americans avoid traveling to Syria ‘due to the risk of terrorism, civil unrest, kidnapping or hostage taking, and armed conflict.’ 

‘The U.S. government is unable to provide any routine or emergency consular services to U.S. citizens in Syria,’ the embassy said Monday. ‘U.S. citizens in Syria who are in need of emergency assistance to depart should contact the U.S. Embassy in the country they plan to enter.’ 

Americans who remain in Syria are also advised by the embassy to keep their cell phones charged in case of emergency and to ‘monitor the news closely for breaking developments that could affect internal security, and factor updated information into your travel plans and activities.’ 

Assad fled to Russia after rebels stormed Syria’s capital of Damascus earlier this month. 

He released a statement Monday saying, in part, ‘I have never sought positions for personal gain but have always considered myself as a custodian of a national project, supported by the faith of the Syrian people, who believed in its vision.’

‘I have carried an unwavering conviction in their will and ability to protect the state, defend its institutions, and uphold their choices to the very last moment,’ Assad added. 

Fox News’ Simon Owen contributed to this report. 

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House GOP allies of President-elect Donald Trump are pushing for him to have greater control over Congress’ annual government spending process next year.

Rep. Andrew Clyde, R-Ga., is introducing a bill on Monday that would repeal a measure that forces the president to direct the federal government to spend the full amount of money allocated by Congress every year.

Clyde told Fox News Digital on Thursday that he also plans to introduce the bill in the next Congress, when Republicans control the House, Senate and White House – and that the issue is already being discussed in Trump’s circle.

‘That was certainly a topic that was brought up’ with Vivek Ramaswamy and Elon Musk when they were on Capitol Hill earlier this month to discuss the Department of Government Efficiency, Clyde said.

‘They’re in favor of it, because how can you be efficient and not have the ability to reduce spending? You simply can’t.’

He also told a small group of reporters earlier this month that incoming Trump Office Of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought ‘is very much in favor of this.’

The Impoundment Control Act of 1974 was passed during the Nixon administration and aimed at stopping the president from having unilateral say over government spending.

Currently, a president must get congressional approval to rescind any funding that has been allocated for a certain year. The funds in question can be held for up to 45 days while the request gets processed.

‘I think the authority is very, very important for the president to exercise,’ Clyde said. ‘Ever since Congress introduced that act, you’ve seen spending literally spiraling upwards. And that’s just not good for our country.’

Clyde’s bill would roll back the Impoundment Control Act. A corresponding bill is being introduced in the Senate by Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah.

Clyde said over a dozen House Republicans are backing his bill as well.

Musk and Ramaswamy advocated for Trump to have greater authority to rescind funding in an op-ed published by the Wall Street Journal last month, after the president-elect tapped them to lead an advisory panel on cutting government waste.

The Georgia Republican acknowledged that the bill has long odds in the current Democrat-controlled Senate and with just one week left in the congressional term, but said he would ‘definitely’ introduce it in the next Congress.

He described Monday’s introduction as ‘putting a flag in the ground, saying ‘Hey, this is an authority that the president should be able to use in an unhindered fashion, and we are going to help.’’

However, the issue is likely to fall along partisan lines. Rep. Brendan Boyle, D-Pa., the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee, responded to Musk and Ramaswamy’s op-ed by calling their ideas ‘as idiotic as they are dangerous.’

‘Unilaterally slashing funds that have been lawfully appropriated by the people’s elected representatives in Congress would be a devastating power grab that undermines our economy and puts families and communities at risk,’ Boyle said in a statement.

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Outgoing Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, said that he thinks Vice President-elect JD Vance will become the GOP’s 2028 presidential nominee, describing Vance as ‘smart’ and ‘well-spoken.’

President-elect Donald Trump tapped Vance to serve as his running mate for the 2024 presidential election, and the two trounced the Democratic ticket, consisting of Vice President Kamala Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.

Romney, who made the comments on CNN’s ‘State of the Union,’ said the GOP ‘has become the party of the working-class, middle-class voter,’ adding that Trump should be given credit.

The senator suggested that movements to defund the police and allow biological males in female sports led to some middle class flight from the Democratic Party, which he said is ‘in trouble.’

‘I don’t know how they recover,’ he said. ‘They’ve lost their base,’ he said, noting that union workers have departed the Democratic Party and voted for the GOP. ‘And the Democratic Party is seen not as rich people, but as college professors and woke scolds,’ he said.

While interviewing Romney, CNN’s Jake Tapper said ‘Trump has made it clear that he wants to go after his political opponents,’ and asked Romney whether he is worried that he or his family could be targeted ‘for retribution.’

Romney indicated that he is not worried and that he thinks Trump will likely seek to ‘focus on the future.’

Romney served as a senator since 2019, but opted not to seek another term.

He was previously the GOP’s 2012 presidential nominee, but lost that election to incumbent Democratic President Barack Obama. 

Romney also previously served as governor of Massachusetts.

When Tapper asked Romney how he would like to be remembered in history, the senator said he does not ‘think history will remember Mitt Romney.’ 

‘What I want is my family to remember me,’ he noted. 

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McKinsey & Company agreed to pay $650 million in a deferred prosecution agreement that will resolve a federal criminal probe into the company’s consulting work advising Purdue Pharma on how to increase sales of its opioid painkiller OxyContin, a court filing said Friday.

A former top partner at McKinsey, Martin Elling, also agreed to plead guilty to obstruction of justice next month in the probe by the U.S. Department of Justice, according to a filing in U.S. District Court in Abingdon, Virginia.

The criminal charging document that McKinsey agreed to have filed by prosecutors alleges the consulting giant “knowingly and intentionally” conspired with Purdue Pharma “and others to aid and abet the misbranding of prescription drugs.”

The document also said McKinsey is accused, through the acts of its then-partner Elling, of “knowingly destroying and concealing records and documents with the intent” to impede the investigation by the Department of Justice.

McKinsey, which previously agreed to pay almost $1 billion to settle lawsuits by states, local governments and others related to its opioid consulting, accepted responsibility for the conduct alleged by federal prosecutors, according to the deferred prosecution agreement.

As part of the deal, McKinsey will not work on any marketing, sale, promotion or distribution of controlled substances.

In a statement to CNBC, McKinsey said, “We are deeply sorry for our past client service to Purdue Pharma and the actions of a former partner who deleted documents related to his work for that client.”

“We should have appreciated the harm opioids were causing in our society and we should not have undertaken sales and marketing work for Purdue Pharma,” the firm said. “This terrible public health crisis and our past work for opioid manufacturers will always be a source of profound regret for our firm has requested comment from McKinsey.”

The company said that in addition to its deferred prosecution agreement with the DOJ, it “has agreed to settle a related civil False Claims Act investigation and to enter into a Corporate Integrity Agreement with the Office of Inspector General at the Department of Health and Human Services.”

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INGLEWOOD, Calif. — The Los Angeles Chargers must turn the page quickly after an ugly Week 15 performance that left members of the defense pissed off.

“This (expletive) can’t happen again. It’s unacceptable,” Chargers linebacker Daiyan Henley said to USA TODAY Sports. “We just wasn’t at our standard. So, what went wrong is that we just wasn’t at our standard, whether it was a mindset, a feeling of energy, or whatever it was, we just didn’t hold up our standard. And that’s really what it was.”

Behind a dominant second-half surge, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers steamrolled the Chargers, 40-17. Tampa Bay scored 27 unanswered points in the second half after trailing 17-13 at halftime. The 40 points are the most the Chargers’ top-ranked scoring defense has given up all season.

Bucs quarterback Baker Mayfield passed for 288 yards, four touchdowns and one interception. Mayfield’s four touchdowns tied a season-high. Two of Mayfield’s touchdown passes were caught by star wide receiver Mike Evans who compiled a season-high nine catches, 159 receiving yards and two touchdowns. Bucs running back Bucky Irving produced 117 of Tampa Bay’s 222 yards on the ground.

“Games like this pisses you off a little bit,” Chargers outside linebacker Khalil Mack said. “Just understand what we want to do as a group. This wasn’t close to it. But kudos to them, kudos to the Bucs.”

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

The Chargers’ four-point halftime advantage quickly sank into the Pacific Ocean in what turned out to be a lopsided second half. Mayfield and the Bucs offense scored on five straight possessions in the second half. Conversely, the Chargers offense struggled to extend drives and get first downs. Tampa Bay outgained Los Angeles 304 to 64 in total yards in the second half. The Chargers finished the entire contest 0-6 on third downs.

“We didn’t play well enough (and) we didn’t coach well enough,” Chargers coach Jim Harbaugh said. “It was pretty thorough, very thorough. Now we’re staring at that adversity. It’s how we respond.”

Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert completed 21 of 33 passes for 195 yards to go with two touchdowns, and he threw his first interception since Week 2, snapping his 11-game streak without a pick.

“It’s tough,” Herbert said. “We got beat (Sunday). We got beat badly. We have to do everything we can to learn from it, and not let this one affect our next one.”

Los Angeles will have to rebound quickly from their blowout loss. The team is set to host the Denver Broncos on Thursday night in an AFC battle with big playoff implications.

The Broncos, who beat the Indianapolis Colts 31-13 on Sunday, are currently in the AFC’s sixth seed, and the Chargers occupy the seventh and final seed in the AFC playoffs race. The winner of Week 16’s tilt will control the tiebreaker, plus own possession of the sixth spot with only two regular-season games remaining.

Los Angeles still controls its own playoff destiny. They have an 87% chance to reach the postseason, according to NFL Next Gen Stats. But the Chargers must get back to the drawing board and respond quickly if they want to clinch a postseason berth in Harbaugh’s first year as head coach.

“What do we want this season to be? It’s quote, unquote, a rebuild. But we ain’t never settle for that. For us, this is we want to make a playoff stance, and so we have to do that right now. We have the opportunity,” Henley said. “We have three winnable games, and we have a conference opponent coming up.”

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The Kansas City Chiefs got a scare after Patrick Mahomes came up limping following a fourth-and-3 incompletion in the fourth quarter of their Week 15 game against the Cleveland Browns.

Mahomes took the snap and tried to move around the pocket to create more time during the play. Ultimately, his protection collapsed in on him, and he had to jump while he threw the ball.

The pass skipped in front of his intended receiver, but more importantly, Mahomes was very slow to get up on the play. He took a long time to get to his feet before heavily favoring his leg while going to the sideline.

The broadcast later showed Mahomes having his right ankle taped while sitting on the bench.

Here’s what to know about Mahomes’ injury.

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

Patrick Mahomes injury update

X-rays on Mahomes’ injured ankle were negative, per NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport. He is expected to be week-to-week because of the injury.

Andy Reid confirmed in a postgame news conference that Mahomes had suffered a right ankle injury.

‘It’s not broken, but it’s sore,’ Reid told reporters. ‘He’ll get started on the rehab part of it as we go, and then we’ll just have to see how he does.’

The good news for Chiefs fans? Reid classified Mahomes as ‘day-to-day’ and said that his quarterback ‘probably could’ve gone back in’ had the Chiefs not been leading.

“He wanted to go back in,’ Reid said. ‘There was no need for that.”

Mahomes went 19-of-38 passing for 159 yards and two touchdowns before exiting the game. He was seen after the game walking out of the locker room without assistance but left on a cart.

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