Blowouts are on the rise through the NFL's 1st 7 weeks
The NFL has been highlighting the big number of late comebacks, overtimes and last-minute finishes so far this season.
There also has been a increase in blowouts — with last week one of the most lopsided the league has seen in years.
Cincinnati, New England, the Giants, Tennessee, Tampa Bay and Arizona all won by at least 22 points on Sunday as more than half of the games that day were blowouts.
There have been 21 games so far decided by more than 21 points, tied for the second-most since the merger through seven weeks. Only the 2009 season had more with 23. The NFL averaged less than 13 of these blowouts in the first seven weeks in the past six seasons.
The six games decided by at least 22 points on Sunday marked just the third time that has happened on a single day in the past 100 years, with the others coming on Oct. 25, 2009, and Sept. 7, 1986.
The average margin of victory on Sunday was 20 points, marking the third day since the merger when at least four games were played and the average margin of victory was at least 20 points.
When it comes to nail-biters, there have been 24 contests decided by a score in the final minute, 11 OT games and 29 wins by teams that trailed at some point in the fourth quarter.
TURNAROUND TEAMS
Half of the division leaders are teams that didn't make the playoffs in 2020, led by the NFL's sole remaining undefeated team in NFC West-leading Arizona. The Cardinals (7-0) last made the postseason in 2015.
AFC North leading Cincinnati (5-2) also hasn't made the playoffs since 2015, and finished last in the division the previous three years. In 16 of the past 18 seasons, a team has gone from last to first.
The droughts for two other division leaders are slightly shorter, with the AFC West-leading Raiders seeking their first playoff bid since 2016 and the NFC East-leading Cowboys (5-1) looking to get back for the first time since 2018.
At least two teams have won their divisions the season after missing the playoffs in 17 of the last 18 years.
STREAKING
The Cardinals and Green Bay Packers head into their Thursday night game on impressive streaks. The Cardinals have won seven straight, while the Packers have won six in a row since a season-opening loss to New Orleans.
This marks the first time since 2018 when the Rams played the Saints that both teams entered on winning streaks of at least six games. The Saints won that game, but lost the rematch in the NFC title game that season.
The Saints won 10 straight after losing their opener that season. The Packers are chasing that with six straight, becoming the 11th team since the merger to following a season-opening loss with at least six straight wins.
Miami and Houston are going the other direction with six straight losses after winning in Week 1, becoming the 24th and 25th teams to do that since the merger. The only other time in the past 33 seasons that two teams did that came in 2003, with Detroit and Atlanta.
CHASING HISTORY
Rookie receiver Ja'Marr Chase is doing his best to settle the debate about whether the Bengals made the right choice to draft him fifth overall instead of an offensive lineman.
The 21-year-old
Chase did set a record with his 754 yards receiving so far this season, the most ever for a player in his first seven games, 69 yards more than Harlon Hill had in 1954.
Chase, who also had 159 yards receiving and a touchdown catch in Week 5, is the fifth rookie since the merger to have multiple games with at least 150 yards receiving and a TD catch. Randy Moss is the only player with three games in 1998.
Chase isn't the only rookie pass catcher putting up impressive stats.
Pitts also had 119 yards receiving in his previous game before a bye, joining the Raiders' Raymond Chester (1970) as the only rookie tight ends with at least 100 yards receiving in back-to-back games.
Pitts' 471 yards receiving broke Mike Ditka's mark of 444 for the most by a tight end in his first six games.
ON TARGET
Raiders quarterback Derek Carr barely missed on Sunday.
Carr
Carr's 91.2% completion rate is the second-highest by a quarterback in a game with at least 30 attempts, trailing only Drew Brees' 96.7% against the Colts in 2019.
The only other time a QB completed at least 90% of passes with at least 30 attempts was also by Carr, who went 29 for 32 (90.6%) against the Broncos in 2018.
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