NFL Playoff Changes Explained

Andy Reid's path to a title might be the last of its kind
Andy Reid's path to a title might be the last of its kind / Ronald Martinez/Getty Images

The NFL has decided to add a new playoff format into the CBA, and this one will do away with the traditional 12-team, 16-game model in place since the league expanded to 32 teams in 2002.

NFL Playoff Expansion

The new format will add one more playoff team from each conference. With seven teams, only the first overall seed in each conference will get a bye, meaning the No. 2 seed will have to play three games to make it to the Super Bowl. The No. 1 seed will also receive playoff pay despite not having a game that week.

NFL New CBA

Collective bargaining is a process of negotiation between employers and workers as they try to regulate working salaries, conditions, and other aspects of workers' compensation as well as rights for workers. In layman's terms, the NFLPA and the league will negotiate a written agreement that states what is and is not allowed as it pertains to how players' money, working conditions, and benefits are handled.

NFL 14-Team Playoff

Under these proposed rules, the seventh-best team in each conference would make it into the playoffs. That means the Los Angeles Rams and Pittsburgh Steelers, quarterbacked by Jared Goff and one of either Devlin Hodges or Mason Rudolph, would have made the playoffs last season.

Literally no one, not even Steelers or Rams fans, asked for that.

As rough as this new system sounds, it appears that it's coming sooner rather than later. Looks like we'll just have to adjust.