Six 2025 NFL Predictions With Varying Degrees Of Boldness

Six 2025 NFL Predictions With Varying Degrees Of Boldness
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This is the seventh year I’ve been covering the NFL, and usually by this point in the calendar on the eve of the season I have some hot takes bubbling up — gut feelings sparked by months of following the news cycle, offseason movement and training camp reports.

Having a platform like this means I can pull receipts when I’m right (a career resurgence for Sam Darnold, Bill Belichick getting fired). However, it’s also a double-edged sword, keeping a record of when I went out on a limb and crashed (the 2023 Panthers winning the division, among other flops).

But this year, for whatever reason, the takes don’t feel quite as hot. There are a few things I feel strongly about, and we’ll dig into those momentarily, but overall there’s a sense of lukewarm when it comes to evaluating the pre-2025 consensus. I don’t think the NFL world of fans and analysts is that far off the mark when projecting the upcoming season, for the most part.

So here’s a list of six predictions, some bolder than others, some made with more confidence than others, as we get ready for the season to kick off tomorrow night.

The Commanders take a step back

The Commanders went from the No. 2 pick in the draft to the No. 2 team in the NFC last year thanks to an overhaul of all of their most important leadership positions — owner, general manager, head coach and quarterback — that supercharged their 2024 season. The brightest star of the bunch is QB Jayden Daniels, who scored 31 total touchdowns, ran for nearly 900 yards and generally did not play like a rookie en route to a 12-5 season. He seems like the real deal and reason to believe the long-term future in Washington is bright.

But Daniels could be better and the Commanders could still end up worse in 2025 than in 2024 because there’s so many elements of last year that will be hard to repeat. The 2024 Commanders caught lightning in a bottle. They had great health across the board. It seemed like every position group either lived up to or dramatically exceeded expectations, even ones the team was concerned about like the offensive line. A lot of credit belongs to OC Kliff Kingsbury who might have had one of the best coaching efforts of his career, however it’s worth noting even Kingsbury was regarded as an unknown going into last year after how his time with the Cardinals fizzled out. He has to prove he can stay ahead of the curve with more teams gunning for him now.

Washington also got just plain lucky in some ways. The Commanders were 8-2 in one-score games, including the famous Hail Mary win against the Bears, and historically those tend to play out much closer to 50-50 over time. Washington went an incredible 20 for 23 on fourth down attempts (87 percent), and that’s another area in which some regression feels inevitable.

While...