December 8, 2011 – 10:00 am
NBC’s Sunday Night Football package gives it flexible scheduling. For Weeks 10-15, the games are determined on 12-day notice, 6-day notice for Week 17.
The first year, no game was listed in the Sunday Night slot, only a notation that one game could move there. Now, NBC lists the game it “tentatively” schedules for each night. However, the NFL is in charge of moving games to prime time.
Here are the rules from the NFL web site (note that this was written with the 2007 season in mind, hence why it contradicts the above – and the page it comes from, for that matter):
- Begins Sunday of Week 11
- In effect during Weeks 11-17
- Only Sunday afternoon games are subject to being moved into the Sunday night window.
- The game that has been tentatively scheduled for Sunday night during flex weeks will be listed at 8:15 p.m. ET.
- The majority of games on Sundays will be listed at 1:00 p.m. ET during flex weeks except for games played in Pacific or Mountain Time zones which will be listed at 4:05 or 4:15 p.m. ET.
- No impact on Thursday, Saturday or Monday night games.
- The NFL will decide (after consultation with CBS, FOX, NBC) and announce as early as possible the game being played at 8:15 p.m. ET. The announcement will come no later than 12 days prior to the game. The NFL may also announce games moving to 4:05 p.m. ET and 4:15 p.m. ET.
- Week 17 start time changes could be decided on 6 days notice to ensure a game with playoff implications.
- The NBC Sunday night time slot in “flex” weeks will list the game that has been tentatively scheduled for Sunday night.
- Fans and ticket holders must be aware that NFL games in flex weeks are subject to change 12 days in advance (6 days in Week 17) and should plan accordingly.
- NFL schedules all games.
- Teams will be informed as soon as they are no longer under consideration or eligible for a move to Sunday night.
- Rules NOT listed on NFL web site but pertinent to flex schedule selection: CBS and Fox each protect games in five out of six weeks, and cannot protect any games Week 17. Games were protected after Week 4 the first year of flexible scheduling, but are now protected after Week 5; however, they are back to Week 4 this year, probably for the same reason as that first year: NBC hosting a Christmas night game and the other games being moved to Saturday.
- Three teams can appear a maximum of six games in primetime on NBC, ESPN or NFL Network (everyone else gets five) and no team may appear more than four times on NBC. At this writing, no team is completely tapped out at any measure; five teams have five primetime appearances each, but all of them have at least one game that can be flexed out. A list of all teams’ primetime appearances is in my first two posts for Weeks 4 and 5.
- Last year’s selection of primetime games was weighted rather heavily towards Fox games. This year, the selection currently leans CBS 22, FOX 20 (though if I miscounted one game it may be even). My guess is that the balance will continue to lean towards the AFC. Weeks 10, 12, 13, and 15 are all CBS games, while Weeks 11 and 14 are FOX.
Here are the current tentatively-scheduled games and my predictions:
Week 10 (November 13):
- Selected game: New England @ NY Jets.
Week 11 (November 20):
- Selected game: Philadelphia @ NY Giants.
Week 12 (November 27):
- Selected game: Pittsburgh @ Kansas City.
Week 13 (December 4):
- Selected game: Detroit @ New Orleans.
Week 14 (December 11):
- Selected game: NY Giants @ Dallas.
Week 15 (December 18):
- Selected game: Baltimore @ San Diego. This one was announced substantially later than normal, indeed later than the 12-day window the rules allow, thanks to CBS actually fighting to keep Pats-Broncos, with Robert Kraft (who’s a landlord for a CBS-owned restaurant) taking their side. Why CBS’s opinions should have any relevance whatsoever when the NFL is supposed to make the decisions to support NBC’s package is beyond me. This is why we have the protection system; CBS doesn’t get to decide after Week 13 “oh, we’d like to keep this game too.” While there are extenuating circumstances here (the NFL moved a normally-CBS Broncos-Vikings game to Fox this past week, and all involved networks are in the midst of contract renegotiations), this may presage a tweak of the flex schedule rules in the next contract. I fully expected the game to keep its spot anyway once the Chargers won, because it meant the Chargers weren’t so godawful as to overrule the tentative game bias (that’s why Lions-Raiders didn’t get flexed in either), so it also shows how desperate for Tebow NBC is. Everyone looks bad all the way around.
Week 17 (January 1):
AFC Playoff Picture
DIVISION LEADERS |
WILD CARD |
WAITING IN THE WINGS (5-7) |
WEST
4 7-5 |
5 9-3 |
 |
7-5 |
 |
NORTH
3 9-3 |
6 7-5 |
9-3 |
EAST
2 9-3 |
7-5 |
7-5 |
7-5 |
SOUTH
1 9-3 |
7-5 |
7-5 |
NFC Playoff Picture
DIVISION LEADERS |
WILD CARD |
WAITING IN THE WINGS (5-7) |
EAST
4 7-5 |
5 7-5 |
 |
6-6 |
 |
SOUTH
3 9-3 |
6 7-5 |
7-5 |
WEST
2 10-2 |
7-5 |
| CLINCHED |
6-6 |
NORTH
1 12-0 |
|
| CLINCHED |
- Tentative game: None (NBC will show game with guaranteed playoff implications).
- Possible games: Cowboys-Giants, Titans-Texans, Lions-Packers, Ravens-Bengals. The AFC West, AFC East, and NFC South just don’t pair up right.
December 7, 2011 – 9:25 pm
Thanks to Tebow-Kraftgate, the Flex Schedule Watch is coming sometime Thursday. This week isn’t a particularly attractive slate of games either (just look at all the huge point spreads), and I’m rushing to get something important done. And that’s on top of the bad taste the way the college football season ended left in my mouth. Bad vibes all the way around.
What is the Median Expected Score?
| Away |
MXS |
Home |
Time (ET) |
TV |
DTV |
Announcers |
NTR |
SIRIUS |
Notes |
| Away |
Home |
#28 (4-8) |
12½-26½ |
#4 (9-3) |
Thu 8:20 PM |
 |
Brad Nessler, Mike Mayock, Alex Flanagan |
WW1 |
92 |
93 |
Not a good sign when your struggling team goes Ravens-Steelers back-to-back. |
#26 (4-8) |
19¼-18¼ |
#30 (3-9) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
712 |
Sam Rosen, Chad Pennington |
|
136 |
117 |
Can you believe the Bucs were playoff contenders not that long ago? |
#24 (5-7) |
13¾-22¾ |
#11 (7-5) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
706 |
Ian Eagle, Dan Fouts |
CMP |
137 |
93 |
Can Kyle Orton repeat his Soldier Field magic at the Met? |
#7 (9-3) |
17½-20½ |
#15 (7-5) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
707 |
Marv Albert, Rich Gannon |
USA |
86 |
104 |
The Texans seem to be doing okay with T.J. Yates. Will that continue against the Bengals? |
#6 (9-3) |
28-20 |
#27 (4-8) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
704 |
Greg Gumbel, Dan Dierdorf |
|
91 |
134 |
Will getting scared by the worst team in the league cause the Patriots to play with fire against the Skins? |
#T9 (7-5) |
25¼-22¾ |
#25 (4-8) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
710 |
Ron Pitts, Jim Mora |
|
112 |
125 |
Hey, Cam Newton has a winning streak! But can it continue against a potential playoff team? |
#23 (4-8) |
21-24 |
#18 (4-8) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
711 |
Chris Myers, Tim Ryan |
|
132 |
113 |
Two teams going in very opposite directions. |
#5 (9-3) |
26-22½ |
#14 (7-5) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
713 |
Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Pam Oliver |
WW1 |
94 |
128 |
The Titans are scratching and clawing for a playoff spot… good luck getting it against the Saints. |
#32 (0-12) |
12½-28½ |
#2 (9-3) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
708 |
Bill Macatee, Steve Tasker |
|
106 |
85 |
The Colts showed signs of life against the Patriots, but the Ravens defense won’t be any easier. |
#29 (2-10) |
20¾-28¾ |
#12 (7-5) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
709 |
Thom Brennaman, Brian Billick, Laura Okmin |
|
138 |
92 |
Maybe the Vikings won’t solve the Lions’ penalty problem, but they will make it matter less. |
#16 (7-5) |
16¼-19¾ |
#8 (7-5) |
Sun 4:05 PM |
 |
715 |
Kenny Albert, Daryl Johnston, Tony Siragusa |
CMP |
135 |
93 |
Tebowmania is reaching a fever pitch, but will it continue against a hungry Bears defense? |
#3 (10-2) |
21¾-17¾ |
#21 (5-7) |
Sun 4:05 PM |
 |
714 |
Dick Stockton, John Lynch |
USA |
92 |
139 |
The Cardinals might be a long shot for the playoffs, but it’ll be difficult getting past the Niners. |
#22 (5-7) |
20¼-27¼ |
#20 (5-7) |
Sun 4:15 PM |
 |
716 |
Kevin Harlan, Solomon Wilcots |
WW1 |
91 |
85 |
The Chargers are going on their late-season charge, while the Bills’ season is entering a tailspin. |
#13 (7-5) |
20½-31½ |
#1 (12-0) |
Sun 4:15 PM |
 |
705 |
Jim Nantz, Phil Simms |
|
94 |
86 |
Good luck defending your division lead against the Tebow onslaught playing the Packers. |
#17 (6-6) |
22¾-26¼ |
#T9 (7-5) |
Sun 8:20 PM |
 |
Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth, Michele Tafoya |
WW1 |
92 |
93 |
First of two for NFC East supremacy. |
#31 (2-10) |
17½-22 |
#19 (5-7) |
Mon 8:30 PM |
 |
Mike Tirico, Jon Gruden, Ron Jaworski, Suzy Kolber |
WW1 |
92 |
93 |
Rematch of last year’s NFC West title game with substantially less importance this time around. |
December 2, 2011 – 7:02 pm
A day late, entirely my fault, though NFL.com’s schedule page STILL not having the Sunday Ticket channel for Colts-Pats didn’t help.
What is the Median Expected Score?
| Away |
MXS |
Home |
Time (ET) |
TV |
DTV |
Announcers |
NTR |
SIRIUS |
Notes |
| Away |
Home |
#18 (4-7) |
23¼-20¼ |
#22 (4-7) |
Thu 8:20 PM |
 |
Brad Nessler, Mike Mayock, Alex Flanagan |
WW1 |
92 |
93 |
Betcha you didn’t realize these two teams were this close. |
#14 (6-5) |
20½-17½ |
#25 (4-7) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
704 |
Ian Eagle, Dan Fouts |
|
91 |
106 |
The Jets hope to continue building their playoff case against an iffy Skins team. |
#24 (4-7) |
15¼-22¼ |
#10 (7-4) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
705 |
Kevin Harlan, Solomon Wilcots |
CMP |
135 |
94 |
Welcome to Kansas City, Kyle Orton! Say hello to the Bears defense. |
#13 (7-4) |
18-24½ |
#6 (8-3) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
709 |
Jim Nantz, Phil Simms |
WW1 |
113 |
86 |
The two current AFC Wild Card teams face off not only for their spots, but divisional positioning as well. |
#9 (7-4) |
20¼-17¾ |
#7 (8-3) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
712 |
Kenny Albert, Daryl Johnston, Tony Siragusa |
|
134 |
92 |
The Texans try desperately to find a quarterback that can stay standing against a Falcons team fighting for the playoffs. |
#15 (6-5) |
18-19½ |
#T29 (2-9) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
713 |
Thom Brennaman, Brian Billick, Laura Okmin |
|
112 |
125 |
A rare network swap means it’ll be Fox (and Church of Tebow pastor Brennaman) bringing you Tebow’s latest heroics. |
#27 (3-8) |
22-25 |
#20 (4-7) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
711 |
Ron Pitts, Jim Mora |
|
136 |
117 |
The Bucs’ season is going into a tailspin. Might gorging on the Panthers defense help? |
#32 (0-11) |
14-34 |
#4 (8-3) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
710? |
Marv Albert, Rich Gannon |
USA |
132 |
93 |
Hey, remember when this was the NFL’s greatest rivalry? Then Manning went down and NBC flexed out a month in advance. |
#17 (6-5) |
21-22½ |
#19 (5-6) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
706 |
Spero Dedes, Steve Beuerlein |
|
137 |
128 |
Two teams with distant playoff hopes slug it out… again. |
#11 (7-4) |
20-23 |
#23 (3-8) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
707 |
Greg Gumbel, Dan Dierdorf |
|
139 |
85 |
It took a last-minute FG for the ‘Boys to finish the Dolphins at home. Should the Raiders be scared heading into SunLife? |
#2 (8-3) |
22¼-15¾ |
#28 (4-7) |
Sun 4:05 PM |
 |
708 |
Bill Macatee, Steve Tasker |
|
104 |
112 |
Hey fantasy nerds, Peyton Hillis is back! Just in time for the end of the fantasy regular season, against the Ravens D. |
#1 (11-0) |
29½-23 |
#16 (6-5) |
Sun 4:15 PM |
 |
715 |
Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Pam Oliver |
WW1 |
94 |
86 |
Could the Pack go 16-0? The Giants probably represent their biggest obstacle left. |
#8 (7-4) |
25-20½ |
#26 (4-7) |
Sun 4:15 PM |
 |
714 |
Dick Stockton, John Lynch |
CMP |
93 |
128 |
Maybe that Sunday Night showdown won’t be for the division lead after all, with this big an opportunity for the Boys. |
#31 (2-9) |
12¼-25¾ |
#3 (9-2) |
Sun 4:15 PM |
 |
716 |
Chris Myers, Tim Ryan |
USA |
138 |
92 |
The woeful Rams should be just what the doctor ordered for a Niners team looking to bounce back from the Ravens loss. |
#12 (7-4) |
22¼-31¼ |
#5 (8-3) |
Sun 8:20 PM |
 |
Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth, Michele Tafoya |
WW1 |
92 |
93 |
No Suh, but still a spotlight game between two teams fighting for the playoffs. |
#21 (4-7) |
21-18 |
#T29 (3-8) |
Mon 8:30 PM |
 |
Mike Tirico, Jon Gruden, Ron Jaworski, Suzy Kolber |
WW1 |
92 |
93 |
Because if it comes down to Mo Jo-Drew or Vincent Jackson for a fantasy playoff spot, you want everyone to watch. |
November 29, 2011 – 1:47 am
NBC’s Sunday Night Football package gives it flexible scheduling. For Weeks 10-15, the games are determined on 12-day notice, 6-day notice for Week 17.
The first year, no game was listed in the Sunday Night slot, only a notation that one game could move there. Now, NBC lists the game it “tentatively” schedules for each night. However, the NFL is in charge of moving games to prime time.
Here are the rules from the NFL web site (note that this was written with the 2007 season in mind, hence why it contradicts the above – and the page it comes from, for that matter):
- Begins Sunday of Week 11
- In effect during Weeks 11-17
- Only Sunday afternoon games are subject to being moved into the Sunday night window.
- The game that has been tentatively scheduled for Sunday night during flex weeks will be listed at 8:15 p.m. ET.
- The majority of games on Sundays will be listed at 1:00 p.m. ET during flex weeks except for games played in Pacific or Mountain Time zones which will be listed at 4:05 or 4:15 p.m. ET.
- No impact on Thursday, Saturday or Monday night games.
- The NFL will decide (after consultation with CBS, FOX, NBC) and announce as early as possible the game being played at 8:15 p.m. ET. The announcement will come no later than 12 days prior to the game. The NFL may also announce games moving to 4:05 p.m. ET and 4:15 p.m. ET.
- Week 17 start time changes could be decided on 6 days notice to ensure a game with playoff implications.
- The NBC Sunday night time slot in “flex” weeks will list the game that has been tentatively scheduled for Sunday night.
- Fans and ticket holders must be aware that NFL games in flex weeks are subject to change 12 days in advance (6 days in Week 17) and should plan accordingly.
- NFL schedules all games.
- Teams will be informed as soon as they are no longer under consideration or eligible for a move to Sunday night.
- Rules NOT listed on NFL web site but pertinent to flex schedule selection: CBS and Fox each protect games in five out of six weeks, and cannot protect any games Week 17. Games were protected after Week 4 the first year of flexible scheduling, but are now protected after Week 5; however, they are back to Week 4 this year, probably for the same reason as that first year: NBC hosting a Christmas night game and the other games being moved to Saturday.
- Three teams can appear a maximum of six games in primetime on NBC, ESPN or NFL Network (everyone else gets five) and no team may appear more than four times on NBC. At this writing, no team is completely tapped out at any measure; five teams have five primetime appearances each, but all of them have at least one game that can be flexed out. A list of all teams’ primetime appearances is in my first two posts for Weeks 4 and 5.
- Last year’s selection of primetime games was weighted rather heavily towards Fox games. This year, the selection currently leans CBS 22, FOX 20 (though if I miscounted one game it may be even). My guess is that the balance will continue to lean towards the AFC. Weeks 10, 12, 13, and 15 are all CBS games, while Weeks 11 and 14 are FOX.
Here are the current tentatively-scheduled games and my predictions:
Week 10 (November 13):
- Selected game: New England @ NY Jets.
Week 11 (November 20):
- Selected game: Philadelphia @ NY Giants.
Week 12 (November 27):
- Selected game: Pittsburgh @ Kansas City.
Week 13 (December 4):
- Selected game: Detroit @ New Orleans.
Week 14 (December 11):
- Selected game: NY Giants @ Dallas.
Week 15 (December 18):
- Tentative game: Baltimore @ San Diego
- Prospects: At one point this game was the only one of NBC’s tentatives involving two teams above .500. Might the Chargers’ mid-season swoon be putting this one in flex jeopardy? There aren’t many alternatives, but…
- Protected games: Jets-Eagles (CBS) and Redskins-Giants (FOX).
- Other possible games: Lions-Raiders and Patriots-Broncos are the only remotely good options, unless you consider the unbeaten Packers beating up on the 4-7 Chiefs “remotely good”.
- Analysis: However, we’ve seen an increasing polarization of the league to the extent that “remotely good” pretty much means “good” (there is only one team in the league at 5-6, the Bills). Lions-Raiders is 7-4 v. 7-4, but the real attraction may be Patriots-Broncos, at 8-3 v. 6-5 and the prospect of Tom Brady v. Tim Tebow. Compare that to Ravens-Chargers at 8-3 v. 4-7. None of the teams involved are close to maxing out, so a flex is a very real possibility. If the Broncos beat the Vikings – and why wouldn’t they? – there’s almost no reason not to put Patriots-Broncos on Sunday night, which would have been unthinkable a month and a half ago. Unless the Chargers can salvage something by beating the woebegone Jags Monday night…
Week 17 (January 1):
AFC Playoff Picture
DIVISION LEADERS |
WILD CARD |
WAITING IN THE WINGS (5-6) |
WEST
4 7-4 |
5 8-3 |
 |
6-5 |
NORTH
3 8-3 |
6 7-4 |
8-3 |
EAST
2 8-3 |
6-5 |
6-5 |
6-5 |
SOUTH
1 8-3 |
6-5 |
6-5 |
NFC Playoff Picture
DIVISION LEADERS |
WILD CARD |
ELIMINATED FROM PLAYOFFS |
EAST
4 7-4 |
5 7-4 |
2-9 |
6-5 |
SOUTH
3 8-3 |
6 7-4 |
7-4 |
WEST
2 9-2 |
7-4 |
4-7 |
6-5 |
NORTH
1 11-0 |
|
| 2 tied at 7-4 |
- Tentative game: None (NBC will show game with guaranteed playoff implications).
- Possible games: Cowboys-Giants, Titans-Texans, Lions-Packers, Ravens-Bengals. Bills-Patriots is looking like a dark horse more than anything, and the AFC West and NFC South just don’t pair up right.
November 24, 2011 – 1:32 am
We’re finally out of the byes, and this week we’re getting a Thanksgiving feast featuring two matchups between top-ten teams and… the Cowboys game?
What is the Median Expected Score?
| Away |
MXS |
Home |
Time (ET) |
TV |
DTV |
Announcers |
NTR |
SIRIUS |
Notes |
| Away |
Home |
#1 (10-0) |
31¼-24¾ |
#9 (7-3) |
Thu 12:30 PM |
 |
Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Pam Oliver |
WW1 |
92 |
86 |
They’re not undefeated, but whoda thought the Lions wouldn’t be putting people to sleep Thanksgiving… |
#23 (3-7) |
18¾-25¾ |
#10 (6-4) |
Thu 4:15 PM |
 |
Jim Nantz, Phil Simms |
WW1 |
92 |
86 |
…or that their game would be more attractive than the Cowboys’ (or that the Lions might be better than the Cowboys)? |
#2 (9-1) |
18¼-21¾ |
#5 (7-3) |
Thu 8:20 PM |
 |
Brad Nessler, Mike Mayock, Alex Flanagan |
WW1 |
92 |
86 |
And whoda thought the Harbaugh Bowl would include one of the two best teams in the league… and it’s not the Ravens? |
#19 (5-5) |
16¾-25¼ |
#15 (5-5) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
705 |
Marv Albert, Rich Gannon |
CMP |
134 |
86 |
Two teams trying to keep pace in the wild card and divisional races. |
#T27 (2-8) |
17½-27 |
#11 (6-4) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
707 |
Thom Brennaman, Brian Billick, Laura Okmin |
USA |
112 |
93 |
Adrian Peterson, Michael Turner, and others put up the fantasy stats! |
#30 (2-8) |
24-21 |
#32 (0-10) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
709 |
Chris Myers, Tim Ryan |
|
91 |
104 |
The Colts need two wins to tie only three teams, so this is what passes for a Luck Sweepstakes clash: two teams who don’t need QBs. |
#20 (4-6) |
20-23 |
#18 (5-5) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
710 |
Dick Stockton, John Lynch |
WW1 |
136 |
92 |
Two teams with distant playoff hopes slug it out. |
#29 (3-7) |
18¾-21¾ |
#31 (2-8) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
708 |
Sam Rosen, Chad Pennington |
|
117 |
138 |
Got Larry Fitzgerald or Steven Jackson in fantasy? This is the game for you! |
#25 (4-6) |
15-22½ |
#13 (6-4) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
706 |
Bill Macatee, Steve Tasker |
|
113 |
85 |
The Browns should be just what the doctor ordered for the Bengals to recover from the Ravens loss. |
#7 (7-3) |
20½-17 |
#T27 (3-7) |
Sun 1:00 PM |
 |
704 |
Kevin Harlan, Solomon Wilcots |
|
128 |
137 |
Matt Leinart starts his run at the helm against a Jags defense that’s become fantasy stars recently. |
#26 (3-7) |
16½-20½ |
#22 (4-6) |
Sun 4:05 PM |
 |
712 |
Ron Pitts, Jim Mora |
|
94 |
139 |
The Hawks hope to continue gorging on iffy teams to climb back into playoff contention. |
#8 (7-3) |
18½-23 |
#15 (6-4) |
Sun 4:05 PM |
 |
711 |
Kenny Albert, Daryl Johnston, Tony Siragusa |
CMP |
135 |
86 |
Caleb Hanie starts his run at the helm against a hungry Raiders defense. |
#6 (7-3) |
26¾-23¾ |
#17 (4-6) |
Sun 4:15 PM |
 |
713 |
Greg Gumbel, Dan Dierdorf |
WW1 |
93 |
132 |
Could Vince Young bring the Eagles up to his own “dream team” rhetoric? Good luck against the Pats. |
#16 (5-5) |
17¾-24¼ |
#21 (4-6) |
Sun 4:15 PM |
 |
714 |
Ian Eagle, Dan Fouts |
USA |
85 |
92 |
A month ago, whoda thunk the Broncos would be a better team, in the standings and the rankings, than the Chargers? |
#3 (7-3) |
25¼-14¾ |
#24 (4-6) |
Sun 8:20 PM |
 |
Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth, Michele Tafoya |
WW1 |
92 |
93 |
Welcome to Kansas City, Kyle Orton! Say hello to the Steelers defense. |
#12 (6-4) |
22-29 |
#4 (7-3) |
Mon 8:30 PM |
 |
Mike Tirico, Jon Gruden, Ron Jaworski, Suzy Kolber |
WW1 |
92 |
93 |
The best non-Thanksgiving game of the weekend has two of the league’s best quarterbacks fighting for playoff position. |
November 22, 2011 – 1:13 pm
NBC’s Sunday Night Football package gives it flexible scheduling. For Weeks 10-15, the games are determined on 12-day notice, 6-day notice for Week 17.
The first year, no game was listed in the Sunday Night slot, only a notation that one game could move there. Now, NBC lists the game it “tentatively” schedules for each night. However, the NFL is in charge of moving games to prime time.
Here are the rules from the NFL web site (note that this was written with the 2007 season in mind, hence why it contradicts the above – and the page it comes from, for that matter):
- Begins Sunday of Week 11
- In effect during Weeks 11-17
- Only Sunday afternoon games are subject to being moved into the Sunday night window.
- The game that has been tentatively scheduled for Sunday night during flex weeks will be listed at 8:15 p.m. ET.
- The majority of games on Sundays will be listed at 1:00 p.m. ET during flex weeks except for games played in Pacific or Mountain Time zones which will be listed at 4:05 or 4:15 p.m. ET.
- No impact on Thursday, Saturday or Monday night games.
- The NFL will decide (after consultation with CBS, FOX, NBC) and announce as early as possible the game being played at 8:15 p.m. ET. The announcement will come no later than 12 days prior to the game. The NFL may also announce games moving to 4:05 p.m. ET and 4:15 p.m. ET.
- Week 17 start time changes could be decided on 6 days notice to ensure a game with playoff implications.
- The NBC Sunday night time slot in “flex” weeks will list the game that has been tentatively scheduled for Sunday night.
- Fans and ticket holders must be aware that NFL games in flex weeks are subject to change 12 days in advance (6 days in Week 17) and should plan accordingly.
- NFL schedules all games.
- Teams will be informed as soon as they are no longer under consideration or eligible for a move to Sunday night.
- Rules NOT listed on NFL web site but pertinent to flex schedule selection: CBS and Fox each protect games in five out of six weeks, and cannot protect any games Week 17. Games were protected after Week 4 the first year of flexible scheduling, but are now protected after Week 5; however, they are back to Week 4 this year, probably for the same reason as that first year: NBC hosting a Christmas night game and the other games being moved to Saturday.
- Three teams can appear a maximum of six games in primetime on NBC, ESPN or NFL Network (everyone else gets five) and no team may appear more than four times on NBC. At this writing, no team is completely tapped out at any measure; five teams have five primetime appearances each, but all of them have at least one game that can be flexed out. A list of all teams’ primetime appearances is in my first two posts for Weeks 4 and 5.
- Last year’s selection of primetime games was weighted rather heavily towards Fox games. This year, the selection currently leans CBS 22, FOX 20 (though if I miscounted one game it may be even). My guess is that the balance will continue to lean towards the AFC. Weeks 10, 12, 13, and 15 are all CBS games, while Weeks 11 and 14 are FOX.
Here are the current tentatively-scheduled games and my predictions:
Week 10 (November 13):
- Selected game: New England @ NY Jets.
Week 11 (November 20):
- Selected game: Philadelphia @ NY Giants.
Week 12 (November 27):
- Selected game: Pittsburgh @ Kansas City.
Week 13 (December 4):
- Selected game: Detroit @ New Orleans.
Week 14 (December 11):
- Tentative game: NY Giants @ Dallas
- Prospects: NFC East clash, with both teams moderately good and both teams tied for the division lead. For a flex to have ever been in the realm of possibility, one or both teams would have had to completely collapse and the other game would have to sweep the NFL off its feet. Combine that with a paucity of NFC road games, and no wonder Fox left this week unprotected.
- Protected games: Patriots-Redskins (CBS).
- Other possible games: Texans-Bengals and Raiders-Packers are the only games involving two teams over .500; Saints-Titans and Broncos-Bears are also in the mix. Games involving 4-6 teams (Bills-Chargers and Chiefs-Jets) aren’t worth considering.
- Analysis: Probably the Giants and Cowboys would have to both lose to get this game flexed out, and even then it’d still be for the NFC East lead. But that would be an all-6-5 game, three of the other games I mentioned involve teams at 7-3 already, and the fourth is 6-4 v. 10-0. Although Texans-Bengals is potentially the best game overall, in terms of not being lopsided, Raiders-Packers may be the game most able to overcome the Cowboys’ and Giants’ TV-friendliness, and Broncos-Bears is up there is well because of the Bears and the Tebow factor. Given the tentative game bias, the TV-friendliness of the teams, and the stakes, I have a hard time seeing this game flexed out, but I can’t quite bring myself to pull the trigger early.
Week 15 (December 18):
- Tentative game: Baltimore @ San Diego
- Prospects: At one point this game was the only one of NBC’s tentatives involving two teams above .500. Might the Chargers’ mid-season swoon be putting this one in flex jeopardy? Maybe not, given the alternatives.
- Protected games: Jets-Eagles (CBS) and Redskins-Giants (FOX).
- Other possible games: Lions-Raiders, Packers-Chiefs, and Patriots-Broncos are the only remotely good options, with Seahawks-Bears starting to emerge as a dark horse, and Lions-Raiders is the only one involving two teams over .500.
Week 17 (January 1):
AFC Playoff Picture
DIVISION LEADERS |
WILD CARD |
WAITING IN THE WINGS (4-6) |
WEST
4 6-4 |
5 7-3 |
 |
|
| 5-5 |
 |
NORTH
3 7-3 |
6 6-4 |
 |
7-3 |
EAST
2 7-3 |
5-5 |
| 2 tied at 5-5 |
5-5 |
SOUTH
1 7-3 |
5-5 |
5-5 |
5-5 |
NFC Playoff Picture
DIVISION LEADERS |
WILD CARD |
ALSO IN NFC EAST CONTENTION |
EAST
4 6-4 |
5 6-3 |
4-6 |
6-4 |
SOUTH
3 7-3 |
6 6-3 |
6-4 |
WEST
2 9-1 |
6-4 |
4-6 |
6-4 |
NORTH
1 10-0 |
| 2 tied at 7-3 |
- Tentative game: None (NBC will show game with guaranteed playoff implications).
- Possible games: Cowboys-Giants, Titans-Texans, Lions-Packers, Ravens-Bengals, Bucs-Falcons, Bills-Patriots, Chargers-Raiders, Chiefs-Broncos.