NFL 2024 Season - Week 16
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Week 16
Vintage 2018
Penix Debut
Dog Day
Playoff Position
Rest of the Story
Different Sundays
Run Some Tests
Without and With
Week 15
Two Tonight
Playoff Chances
Wild Card Challenge
Best of the Best
Next
Dire Straits
And It's Good
Bloated Lines
Week 14
Running up the Score
Challenge Me
Finding Reasons to Win
Crab Feed
Week Off
Good Enough
Buyers Regret
Pulled the Rug
Week 13
Mile High Hopes
Top and Bottom
Fourth Time the Charm
Bounce Back
Engage Spark
Line Up
Out in the Cold
Thanksgiving Visitors
Good Enough
Motivation on Steroids
Week 12
Second Best
Heavyweight Bout
QB's Ins and Outs
Everybody In
Too Easy
Walk the Plank
Hot to Trot
Try, Try, Try, Try, Try Again
Week 11
Mouse Trap
Must Game
Malfunction
Easy Does It
Old Foes
Falcons Fly into Mile High
Matter of Time
Improv
To the Brink
Week 10
Odd Man Out
Lions come Calling
Rookie versus Veteran
Call to Action
Full Reverse
When 8-0 is 4-4
Game of Contradictions
NFC West Bunch
Early Boarding
Week 9
Not Enough, Too Much
Real or Imposters
Groin Shot
Best Show
Saddle Up
Dull Edges
Telling Actions
Annihilation Formula
Week 8
No and No
Old Glory
Rookie Face Off
Adding it Up
Holding On
Jets Down
Unload and Reload
No Surprise
Career Paths
It Hurts
Week 7
Harbaugh Monday
Kids Camp
Barkley Back
Bird Battle
Mouse Time
Too Many?
Gone Shopping
Not Bad
40 for 3
Week 6
Try New
Night Vision
Trap Door
Looking Up
Wake Up Call
All Good Things
Bad Idea
Unexpected
Fire One
Week 5
Yes & Yes
Old Rivals
Rookie Sensation
So Close
Lunch in Seattle
Wake the Roosters
No Respect
Too Sweet
Turtle Flip
Week 4
Landmine
Bottoms Up
Winners and Losers
Call Me
Short Line
Reality Bites
Like Tonight
Uptick
Challenge Generates Performance
Week 3
Two Times
Reduced Value
Stars Down
The Other 21
Opportunity Knocks
Lots of Questions
Move Along People
Times Up
Week 2
Confidence Game
First and Second Picked QB's
Avoiding the Donut
Do or Die
One for the Road
Likewise
Adjustment Bureau
Down ... Not Out
Week 1
Time Marches On
Cashing the Trade
Start Here
Say What
Quick Up, Quick Down
Brazil Play Date
Top Two Open
Super Bowl Pick
Season Win Totals
Moving on Up
Breakout to Breakdown
Preseason 4
Preseason Wrap
Rookie Playoff Run
Preseason 3
Short Memory
Two In, One Up
Eagles Hunt
Winning Formula
Preseason 2
Quarterback Shuffle
One Two, or Two One
Starters Sit
Remote Control
Money be Damned
Preseason 1
One Season to the Next
Public Shift
Comets in the Night
Offseason
Mahomes Chasing History
All's Well that Ends Well
Ups and Downs
     
 
Top Two Open
by Dennis Ranahan

It’s like coming down the stairs as a kid and finding a new bike in front of the tree on Christmas morning. That is the feeling I get with the start of a National Football league season.

It starts tonight, when the two-time Super Bowl Champion Kansas City Chiefs open at home against the Baltimore Ravens in a season they hope ends with them being the first team in history to win three straight Super Bowls.

Since 2004, the NFL has opened their regular season on Thursday night with the defending champion hosting a quality opponent. Twice since that tradition began this game has not featured the defending champ opening at home. In 2013, the Baltimore Ravens had earned the honor of hosting this game but had to relinquish that right because the Baltimore Orioles were slated to play baseball and wouldn’t reschedule their game. The professional baseball and football teams in Baltimore do not share the same stadium, but their stadiums do use the same parking lot.

To add a bitter pill to the Ravens having to open on the road was that the schedule makers put them in Denver against Peyton Manning, the team they had upset the season before enroute to their Super Bowl XLVII win over the San Francisco 49ers. At home, and looking to avenge that playoff loss, Manning and company buried the Ravens in the opener, 49-27.

The other time the defending Super Bowl winner didn’t host the Thursday night opener was in 2019, that year, in honor of their 100th season, the league opened with the oldest rivalry in the league, the Green Bay Packers versus Chicago Bears.

The first dozen Super Bowl winners at home won the opener 11 times and had a point spread record of 7-2-3.

The public caught on to this trend and the smart guys setting the lines and the schedule makers colluded to shift the advantage from the home team to the visitor in recent years. A defending Super Bowl winner has not beaten the point spread on opening night since 2020 and have lost the past two years straight-up. In 2022, the Los Angeles got blown out by the Buffalo Bills and the Chiefs dropped a one-point decision to the Detroit Lions last season.

Tonight, the schedule makers have again given the home team a really tough opponent with the Baltimore Ravens, who lost to the Kansas City Chiefs in last season’s AFC Championship Game. The Ravens are a slight underdog, a spread that has bounced back-and-forth over the week between the Chiefs giving 2½ or 3 points.

The Ravens are the team picked only behind the Chiefs on the odds to win the American Football Conference this year and with the motivation of coming off last season’s tough home postseason loss there is a real good chance Patrick Mahomes and company could lose a second straight opener.

Last year, Kansas City became only the second team in NFL history to win a Super Bowl after losing at home in the season’s first week.

In other words, the Chiefs are rulebreakers … on the good side.

A great matchup from a football fans perspective, as exciting as finding a new bike in front of the Christmas tree for an eight-year-old. But, from a wagering standpoint, I am not inclined to see Kansas City lose a second straight opener and not interested in betting against Baltimore when they are getting points on the spread.