Baltimore Ravens
(8-9 record, but gritty and talented core)
The Ravens had a frustratingly inconsistent year, finishing 8-9 and missing the playoffs for the first time in years, with home struggles (3-6) and injuries hitting Lamar Jackson hard. Still, when healthy, they showed elite potential — Jackson threw for over 2,500 yards with 21 TDs and a 103.8 passer rating, plus a strong run game. You’d trust them in a high-stakes moment because of that proven talent and toughness, even if the season didn’t fully click.
Green Bay Packers
(9-7-1, made playoffs as wild card)
The Packers grinded to a 9-7-1 record and sneaked into the playoffs, showing flashes of their young core’s upside but hampered by late-season skids (lost 4 of their final stretch). Solid in key areas like balanced offense, but inconsistency in big games keeps it at “kinda” — you’d hand them the ball if needed, but with some nerves.
New Orleans Saints
(6-11)
A rough transition year under new coaching, finishing 6-11 with a sputtering offense early (started 1-7-ish before rookie QB Tyler Shough helped salvage some wins at 5-4 down the stretch). Defense had moments, but overall too many lows — somewhat trustworthy in spurts, but you’d hesitate when it really counts.
Pittsburgh Steelers
(10-7, won AFC North)
They surprised with a 10-7 record and division title despite a modest point differential, leaning on tough defense and timely plays. Not flashy, but gritty enough that you’d reluctantly trust them in a must-win — better than nothing, but far from a sure thing.
San Francisco 49ers
(12-5, made playoffs)
Despite a strong 12-5 record and overcoming a brutal schedule, they had late fades and didn’t live up to elite expectations (lost in playoffs). High talent but too many self-inflicted issues and collapses — classic “would never” for trust, as they tease greatness but often disappoint when it matters most.


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