Post by MGB01 on Apr 7, 2024 19:16:03 GMT -5
1. San Francisco(6-1): Being no. 1 again, the Demons will be the first to find out if the bye helped or hurt them.
2. Kansas City(6-2): The four-headed rushing attack might be difficult to pull off (and will get even trickier when Salvon Ahmed comes off his brief IR stint) but if anyone can do it, it's Matt Nagy.
3. Carolina(5-2): The Colonels have won all three in San Francisco since the Demons' return to the league.
4. Columbus(6-2): A win in Chicago will give the Capitols a two-game lead on the Enforcers (plus a sweep), more importantly will help quiet a lot of doubters--their week three win over Chicago is their only one against a team with a winning record.
5. Chicago(5-3): Re-establishing the home dominance after the Seattle debacle is critical to the Enforcers' return to legitimacy. A win over Columbus would give them three home wins over current division leaders.
6. Los Angeles(4-3): Amidst how "badly" this season has gone here the Xtreme are, in the wildcard spot coming out of the bye week. Another streak like last year would cement it.
7. Washington(4-4): In two home games since being bludgeoned by San Francisco, the Glory have taken the Liberty-leading Capitols to the woodshed and shut Colin Kaepernick and Josh Gordon down. Another home win going into the bye allows for a reset ahead of a very favorable schedule.
8. St. Louis(4-4): While the road woes are well-documented and not likely to improve the Stallions not only swept all four games at home but they also held all their opponents under 20.
9. San Antonio(4-4): With David Montgomery having missed three games already would be good idea for Joe Lombardi to work in reinforcements over the fianl eight games. One of those, Tyler Goodson, already has a 100-yard game in the bank.
10. Orlando(3-5): Minus a trip to Carolina in week 11 the schedule lightens up in the next few games but what will we really know about this team?
11. New York(3-5): A season that began with legitimate promise is spiraling towards five/six-win dreck.
12. Seattle(2-5): Was Brian Hoyer's "resurgence" too late?
13. Tampa Bay(3-5): While running back last year's seven-gamer to end the season is highly unlikely, if they can get out of their next four (two with the Glory, as well as visits from the Xtreme and Capitols) in fairly good shape they can close it out just as well, they seem to be team that just won't die.
14. San Diego(3-5): In year where teams are averaging 29 points a game the Mission are pulling up the rear at a lowly 17.6.
15. Dallas(3-5): Bob Stoops deserved better.
16. Birmingham(1-7): The long-overdue firing of DC Paul Spicer (the Bolts' last six losses have seen the opponent score 30) might be too late to prevent Ken Dorsey from joining him.
2. Kansas City(6-2): The four-headed rushing attack might be difficult to pull off (and will get even trickier when Salvon Ahmed comes off his brief IR stint) but if anyone can do it, it's Matt Nagy.
3. Carolina(5-2): The Colonels have won all three in San Francisco since the Demons' return to the league.
4. Columbus(6-2): A win in Chicago will give the Capitols a two-game lead on the Enforcers (plus a sweep), more importantly will help quiet a lot of doubters--their week three win over Chicago is their only one against a team with a winning record.
5. Chicago(5-3): Re-establishing the home dominance after the Seattle debacle is critical to the Enforcers' return to legitimacy. A win over Columbus would give them three home wins over current division leaders.
6. Los Angeles(4-3): Amidst how "badly" this season has gone here the Xtreme are, in the wildcard spot coming out of the bye week. Another streak like last year would cement it.
7. Washington(4-4): In two home games since being bludgeoned by San Francisco, the Glory have taken the Liberty-leading Capitols to the woodshed and shut Colin Kaepernick and Josh Gordon down. Another home win going into the bye allows for a reset ahead of a very favorable schedule.
8. St. Louis(4-4): While the road woes are well-documented and not likely to improve the Stallions not only swept all four games at home but they also held all their opponents under 20.
9. San Antonio(4-4): With David Montgomery having missed three games already would be good idea for Joe Lombardi to work in reinforcements over the fianl eight games. One of those, Tyler Goodson, already has a 100-yard game in the bank.
10. Orlando(3-5): Minus a trip to Carolina in week 11 the schedule lightens up in the next few games but what will we really know about this team?
11. New York(3-5): A season that began with legitimate promise is spiraling towards five/six-win dreck.
12. Seattle(2-5): Was Brian Hoyer's "resurgence" too late?
13. Tampa Bay(3-5): While running back last year's seven-gamer to end the season is highly unlikely, if they can get out of their next four (two with the Glory, as well as visits from the Xtreme and Capitols) in fairly good shape they can close it out just as well, they seem to be team that just won't die.
14. San Diego(3-5): In year where teams are averaging 29 points a game the Mission are pulling up the rear at a lowly 17.6.
15. Dallas(3-5): Bob Stoops deserved better.
16. Birmingham(1-7): The long-overdue firing of DC Paul Spicer (the Bolts' last six losses have seen the opponent score 30) might be too late to prevent Ken Dorsey from joining him.