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Admin Steve
12-18-2006, 03:07 PM
From http://www.nfl.com/standings/tiebreakers

TO BREAK A TIE WITHIN A DIVISION
If, at the end of the regular season, two or more clubs in the same division finish with identical won-lost-tied percentages, the following steps will be taken until a champion is determined.

Two Clubs
1. Head-to-head (best won-lost-tied percentage in games between the clubs).
2. Best won-lost-tied percentage in games played within the division.
3. Best won-lost-tied percentage in common games.
4. Best won-lost-tied percentage in games played within the conference.
5. Strength of victory.
6. Strength of schedule.
7. Best combined ranking among conference teams in points scored and points allowed.
8. Best combined ranking among all teams in points scored and points allowed.
9. Best net points in common games.
10. Best net points in all games.
11. Best net touchdowns in all games.

Three or More Clubs
(Note: If two clubs remain tied after third or other clubs are eliminated during any step, tie breaker reverts to step 1 of the two-club format).
1. Head-to-head (best won-lost-tied percentage in games among the clubs).
2. Best won-lost-tied percentage in games played within the division.
3. Best won-lost-tied percentage in common games.
4. Best won-lost-tied percentage in games played within the conference.
5. Strength of victory.
6. Strength of schedule.
7. Best combined ranking among conference teams in points scored and points allowed.
8. Best combined ranking among all teams in points scored and points allowed.
9. Best net points in common games.
10. Best net points in all games.
11. Best net touchdowns in all games.

TO BREAK A TIE FOR THE WILD-CARD TEAM
If it is necessary to break ties to determine the two Wild-Card clubs from each conference, the following steps will be taken.
1. If the tied clubs are from the same division, apply division tie breaker.
2. If the tied clubs are from different divisions, apply the following steps.

Two Clubs
1. Head-to-head, if applicable.
2. Best won-lost-tied percentage in games played within the conference.
3. Best won-lost-tied percentage in common games, minimum of four.
4. Strength of victory.
5. Strength of schedule.
6. Best combined ranking among conference teams in points scored and points allowed.
7. Best combined ranking among all teams in points scored and points allowed.
8. Best net points in conference games.
9. Best net points in all games.
10. Best net touchdowns in all games.
11. Coin toss.

Three or More Clubs
(Note: If two clubs remain tied after third or other clubs are eliminated, tie breaker reverts to step 1 of applicable two-club format.)
1. Apply division tie breaker to eliminate all but the highest ranked club in each division prior to proceeding to step 2. The original seeding within a division upon application of the division tie breaker remains the same for all subsequent applications of the procedure that are necessary to identify the two Wild-Card participants.
2. Head-to-head sweep. (Applicable only if one club has defeated each of the others or if one club has lost to each of the others.)
3. Best won-lost-tied percentage in games played within the conference.
4. Best won-lost-tied percentage in common games, minimum of four.
5. Strength of victory.
6. Strength of schedule.
7. Best combined ranking among conference teams in points scored and points allowed.
8. Best combined ranking among all teams in points scored and points allowed.
9. Best net points in conference games.
10. Best net points in all games.
11. Best net touchdowns in all games.
12. Coin toss

When the first Wild-Card team has been identified, the procedure is repeated to name the second Wild-Card, i.e., eliminate all but the highest-ranked club in each division prior to proceeding to step 2. In situations where three or more teams from the same division are involved in the procedure, the original seeding of the teams remains the same for subsequent applications of the tie breaker if the top-ranked team in that division qualifies for a Wild-Card berth.

OTHER TIE-BREAKING PROCEDURES
1. Only one club advances to the playoffs in any tie-breaking step. Remaining tied clubs revert to the first step of the applicable division or Wild-Card tie breakers. As an example, if two clubs remain tied in any tie-breaker step after all other clubs have been eliminated, the procedure reverts to step one of the two-club format to determine the winner. When one club wins the tie breaker, all other clubs revert to step 1 of the applicable two-club or three-club format.
2. In comparing division and conference records or records against common opponents among tied teams, the best won-lost-tied percentage is the deciding factor since teams may have played an unequal number of games.
3. To determine home-field priority among division titlists, apply Wild-Card tie breakers.
4. To determine home-field priority for Wild-Card qualifiers, apply division tie breakers (if teams are from the same division) or Wild-Card tie breakers (if teams are from different ivisions).

TIE-BREAKING PROCEDURE FOR SELECTION MEETING
If two or more clubs are tied in the selection order, the strength-of-schedule tie breaker is applied, subject to the following exceptions for playoff clubs:

1. The Super Bowl winner is last and the Super Bowl loser next-to-last.
2. Any non-Super Bowl playoff club involved in a tie shall be assigned priority within its segment below that of non-playoff clubs and in the order that the playoff clubs exited from the playoffs. Thus, within a tied segment a playoff club that loses in the Wild-Card game will have priority over a playoff club that loses in the Divisional playoff game, which in turn will have priority over a club that loses in the Conference Championship game. If two tied clubs exited the playoffs in the same round, the tie is broken by strength of schedule.

If any ties cannot be broken by strength of schedule, the divisional or conference tie breakers, whichever are applicable, are applied. Any ties that still exist are broken by a coin flip.

Mr.Boh
12-19-2006, 07:11 AM
Coin toss???? How do they determine who gets to call it? Has this ever happened, and would it be televised? I cant imagine missing the playoffs because of losing a coin toss!

Rochardrik
12-19-2006, 08:33 AM
If this is true, we win out, and we have the No. 2 seed!!!!!

Gabrosin
12-19-2006, 08:57 AM
So, if I'm understanding this correctly, we hold the tiebreaker against both San Diego (head to head) and Indy (divisional record), and as long as we win out, we're guaranteed a first-round bye. Sounds right?

PARavensJeff
12-19-2006, 09:19 AM
This just proves that all these experts, nationally & locally, don't know what they are talking about. Everyone keeps saying we are currently #3 when we are really #2. Thanks for the info!!!

WxKevin
12-19-2006, 11:54 AM
Those tie breakers are for 2 teams within a DIVISION, not the CONFERERNCE. I can't seem to find the actual tie-breakers but here is supposedly the scenarios for this weekend:


AFC North
Baltimore has clinched the division Baltimore can clinch first-round bye with:
1) BAL win + IND loss or tie, OR
2) BAL tie + IND loss + NE loss or tie.


AFC South
Indianapolis has clinched the division. Indianapolis can clinch first-round bye with:
1) IND win + BAL loss.


AFC West
San Diego has clinched the division.
San Diego can clinch homefield advantage with:
1) SD win + BAL loss or tie, OR
2) SD tie + BAL loss + IND loss or tie. San Diego can clinch first-round bye with:
1) SD win, OR
2) SD tie + IND loss or tie, OR
3) SD tie + BAL loss, OR
4) IND loss.

Courtesy of: http://football.about.com/od/nationalfootballleague/a/playoffscenario.htm

WxKevin
12-19-2006, 12:09 PM
Reading more on the internet, it appears that when trying to determine the tie-breakers within the conference, you use the same criteria as Admin Steve posted except you eliminate the "2. Best won-lost-tied percentage in games played within the division." tie-breaker.

So we didn't play Indy this year so that eliminates #1. Moving to #3, he Ravens and Colts have 4 games common opponents (Titans, Bengals, Broncos). The Colts are 3-1 (Wins: Titans, Bengals, Broncos & Losses: Titans) against those opponents and the Ravens are 2-2 (Wins: Bengals, Titans & Losses: Bengals, Broncos). Hence, Indy has the tie-breaker over the Ravens. We still play the Bills who Indy has already played but Indy won that game. So, I don't believe we can catch Indy with respect to tie-breakers. We would have to beat them by record.

FellsPointRaven
12-19-2006, 02:32 PM
Yes, it really depends on Indy losing once and us winning out. If that happens, we at least get the number 2 seed.

If Indy and SD lose once and we win out, we take the number 1 seed.

If SD lose but Indy do not and we win out, we are stuck at number 3.

Essentially, that's all we need to know.

camdenyard
12-19-2006, 10:58 PM
So, I don't believe we can catch Indy with respect to tie-breakers. We would have to beat them by record.

I agree, so how can we clinch a bye in Week 16 as stated above if BAL wins + IND loses? We could turn around and lose to BUF in Week 17 and IND could beat MIA and we'd be back where we started - tied 12-4 and us losing on common opponents tiebreaker.

WxKevin
12-20-2006, 10:52 AM
I agree, so how can we clinch a bye in Week 16 as stated above if BAL wins + IND loses? We could turn around and lose to BUF in Week 17 and IND could beat MIA and we'd be back where we started - tied 12-4 and us losing on common opponents tiebreaker.

Yeah...I don't know :laugh:

WxKevin
12-20-2006, 05:20 PM
Just looked on www.nfl.com and it appears now that it says we cannot clinch a bye this week.

Greg
12-26-2006, 05:31 PM
Well, we just need to win this weekend for the bye and if AZ can somehow pull off the upset...well, who knows how early Marty might start choking.