Hey, Stranger.
Hereâs a playoff head-scratcher: accompanying the Patriots and Packers, Steelers and Giants, are the Lions and Texans.
On Saturday, the Texans kick off the NFL playoffs by hosting Cincinnati. Itâs merely their first postseason game in franchise history, a life span of 10 seasons.
At night, the Lions, whose last trip to the playoffs came in 1999 -- and whose last win was eight seasons before thatâ"play at New Orleans.
There they are, Detroit and Houston, both 10-6, in there amongst recent champions and frequent playoff qualifiers.
The lack of familiarity with such surroundings doesnât seem to concern Detroit coach Jim Schwartz, who has 17 players with playoff experience, but only kicker Jason Hanson got it with the Lions.
"We havenât always played our very best, I donât think any team ever does, but I think weâve learned from some of the things that have happened and I think weâre a little bit more battle-tested, a little more seasoned," he said. "Thereâs one thing of learning about something, thereâs another thing experiencing it firsthand and seeing how it affects the team and things like that. I think that every time weâre presented with one of those situations, weâve done a pretty good job of doing it better the second time."
This is their first playoff appearance in more than a decade, but their second go-round with the Saints (13-3) in five weeks. The Lions fell 31-17 at the Superdome on Dec. 4.
Then again, everyone lost at New Orleans this season.
Saints coach Sean Payton dismisses the newcomer factor, saying he doesnât expect to see a wide-eyed, nervous opponent in the prime-time wild-card game.
"I donât think that thereâs really any correlation to new teams or experienced teams, necessarily, in the playoffs," said Payton, whose new playoff qualifier in 2006 went to the NFC championship game. "I think teams have players, typically that are on their team that might have been in the playoffs with another team, but I think itâs the week of preparation. I think it becomes the key thing that wins and loses games each week in the turnover ratio, big plays, the red zone and third-down efficiency, those are the things that matter."
Schwartz is no newbie to the postseason, making several trips while an assistant with the Titansâ"including to the 2000 Super Bowl, which ended with Tennessee near St. Louisâ goal line trying to tie the game.
"I think every game ... you learn something, so I donât know that thereâs anything other than that," said Schwartz, 18-30 in his three seasons as coach. "Other lessonsâ"weâve had some success in the playoffs, also had failures. Iâve been part of a wild-card team that went to the Super Bowl, also been a part of a team that had home-field advantage throughout the playoffs and lost in the first game. So, I think the finality of playoffsâ"win and advance, keep playing; lose and your seasonâs overâ"I think thatâs probably the thing thatâs the most different from a regular-season game."
The Texans wouldnât know.
Born in 2002, they didnât have a winning record until last season. Their AFC South crown seemed destined when Peyton Manning was sidelined in Indianapolis, but they struggled down the stretch and lost their final three games.
Indeed, Houstonâs last win was at Cincinnati 20-19. And itâs the Bengals (9-7) who visit Reliant Stadium on Saturday.
Fourteen Texans have made it to the playoffs with other clubs.
"From that standpoint, as far as our players, maybe thatâs a good thing that they donât have a lot of things to pull from. Itâs just, go play it like any other game," coach Gary Kubiak said. "They know that the resultâ"the biggest factorâ"is you can move on. If you donât play well, youâre not moving on, youâre going home.
"They all understand that, but this is the Houston Texansâ first taste of a playoff game."
This is Cincinnatiâs third playoff appearance in seven seasons, but the Bengals have flopped every time. Their last postseason victory was in January 1991.
"It would be a tremendous feeling for us to get rid of that stigma of not being able to get to the playoffs and win it," offensive tackle Andre Smith said.
On Sunday, Atlanta (10-6) is at the Giants (9-7), followed by Pittsburgh (12-4) at Denver (8-8).
Yes, the wild-card teams in those two games have better records than the division winners.
The Falcons havenât won in the postseason with Matt Ryan at quarterback, not even as the No. 1 seed in the NFC last year. Ryanâs doesnât dwell on blown chances.
"It is the first opportunity that I have and we have as a team this postseason. We are excited about that." he said. "All the stuff that happened in the past doesnât really make a difference. It comes down to preparing this week and doing whatever we can to keep advancing throughout the playoffs."
The Broncosâ last playoff trip was in 2005, when they lost to the Steelers for the AFC title. Pittsburgh, also a wild card then, won the Super Bowl.
"It doesnât matter how you get in," Denver linebacker Mario Haggan said. "We have an opportunity, and when you get in anything can happen. Thatâs what weâre hoping for."
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