Lost in the euphoria of the Patriots' season-saving 24-21 victory Sunday over the Seattle Seahawks - a win that put them in a three-way tie for first place in the AFC East - was the very sobering reality that even if they win their final three games of the season (at Oakland, home against Arizona, and at Buffalo), they still might have their noses pressed to the playoff glass come January.
Since the NFL went to a playoff format of six teams per conference in 1990, no 11-5 team has ever missed the postseason. But the Patriots (8-5) find themselves in the precarious position of needing a little help from their foes to avoid the ignominious honor of becoming the first team to do so. It's not enough for them to win. They need other teams to lose.
"It's always a tough situation when you have to depend on other people, other teams, to beat this team, or 'This team needs to win,' " said defensive end Richard Seymour. "You never want to be in a situation like that, where you have to depend on somebody else. I think we have an opportunity in front of us, and it's up to us to take advantage of it."
It almost seems unfair that a team that has overcome injury after injury after injury could finish 11-5 and get sent home. But it could happen.
The New York Jets and Miami Dolphins, who are tied with the Patriots atop the AFC East, control their own playoff destinies. Win out and win the division. The two meet in the final week of the season at Giants Stadium, so they both can't finish 11-5. However, either would win the division at 11-5 over an 11-5 Patriots team.
The first tiebreaker in any scenario is head-to-head play. The Patriots split with both Miami and the Jets. Within a division, the second tiebreaker is division record. The third is record vs. common opponents and the fourth is conference record.
If the Jets win out, they'll win the AFC East by virtue of division record, which would be 5-1. The Patriots can't finish any better than 4-2 in the division.
If Miami wins out, it would edge the Patriots on the basis of conference record. Both the Patriots and Dolphins would be 4-2 in the division and 10-2 against common opponents, but Miami would end up 8-4 in conference play. The Patriots can't do any better than 7-5.