Let's get to Part 2 of the Wild Card Games, Tiers IV-VII (The Good Games through the Epics)
Tier IV – The Good Games (no need for fancy titles now)
Tier IV – The Good Games (no need for fancy titles now)
20.) 2012 NFC Wild Card - (N5) Seahawks 24 @ (N4) Redskins 14
The game of two games. The Redskins started the game like so: The Redskins ran 20 plays for 129 yards and two TDs, while the Seahawks ran three for -2 yards. The rest of the game: The Redskins gained just 74 more yards and didn't score, while the Seahawks gained 382 and scored 24 points. Of course, this glosses over the real story of the game, RGIII's knee, which looked gimpy as early as his TD run that made it 14-0. He finally tore it retreating to try to recover a bad snap, twisting it on the terrible FedEx Field Turf. The story of the Seahawks was mainly Marshawn Lynch's second Wild Card clinching run in three years, a TD that finished the game off. The atmosphere until the Griffin injury was electric, as it was the first playoff game in Washington since the 1999 season, but the dismay and emptiness in the building after the injury ended any hope of this being anything but an 'infamous' game.
Interesting/Memorable Play: That Lynch run had one other similarity to the incredible Lynch run to clinch the win over the Saints two years earlier: downfield blocking by unconventional people. The first one was unconventional since it was lineman 60 yards downfield throwing blocks. This was unconventional because Lynch's lead blocker near the end of the run was none other than Russell Wilson. It wasn't a great block, but still a cool sight.
19.) 2010 NFC Wild Card – (N6) Packers 21 @ (N3) Eagles 16
Review:
 In a total reversal of what was expected, the Eagles had 100 more yards
 net of passing (Vick threw for 292 to Rodgers 180) but the Packers and 
their maligned run game outrushed the Eagles by 57. On the day, Rodgers 
had one of the quiter good statistical games you will see (18-27 for 180
 and 3 tds with no picks and a fumble), but the Eagles could have still 
easily won if Nick Collins doesn’t make a game-saving tackle on DeSean 
Jackson, or if Michael Vick doesn’t throw a desperation heave to Riley 
Cooper of all people with time left, or if David Akers doesn’t miss two 
relatively normal field goals. In a game where the Packers never trailed
 and led 14-3, they were really pushed more than in any other game in 
their run.
Interesting/Memorable Fact:
 This was one of the rare games where the losing team had more yards and
 fewer turnovers. As is normal, Special Teams is generally the reason, 
and here it was with Akers. The Eagles are one out of just two to 
achieve such infamy at home, as the other is a little team I like to 
call to 2005 Colts.
Review: In what will unthinkably be marked down as Peyton Manning’s last played game as a Colt, the Colts became just the 2nd team
 in NFL history to lose a playoff game where they scored to take the 
lead with less than a minute remaining. Somehow, despite airmailing 
throws all night, Mark Sanchez was able to pull it off, aided with a 
nice KO return by Antonio Cromartie, and of course that spectacular Jim 
Caldwell timeout for no reason. It should not be forgotten that LT had a
 really nice playoff game for once, and Adam Vinatieri was Adam 
Vinatieri, hitting what should have been the game winning kick from 50 
yards.
Interesting/Memorable Play: Manning’s
 last throw as a Colt (again, can’t believe that that is the case) was 
an incomplete to Blair White, where Manning threw just low (if it was a 
better receiver, it probably gets caught). Had Manning completed it, the
 Colts could have run out the clock before the field goal.
Interesting/Memorable Play 2: Oh
 yeah, who was the guy on the kick coverage team that didn’t stay in his
 lane and cut down Cromartie earlier you ask? Why, it was bust 
extraordinaire Jerry Hughes.
Review: In
 what was a really fun game, a drop by Bobby Engram in the end zone kept
 this out of overtime (and probably a ranking in the top-10). Hasselbeck
 and Bulger both threw for over 300 yards (Bulger on only 18-32 
passing). The game was memorable as it was the last moment of glory for 
the St. Louis Rams Greatest Show on Turf era. Torry Holt and Kevin 
Curtis each had 100 yard days, as did Darrell Jackson (who of course, 
had a pass bounce off of his hands for a pick) while Itula Mili came up 
two yards short. As usual Shaun Alexander did nothing, but in the end, 
two average at best teams combined for a darn exciting game.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: This is the only playoff game in NFL History where both teams
 were outscored for the season. The Seahawks were just a -2, but the 
Rams were a -73. Yes, that is how bad the NFC was in those days, that an
 8-8 team outscored by -73 points was not only in the playoffs, but 
wasn’t even the 6th seed. The Rams also became the first 8-8 team to win a playoff game.
Review: This
 game was overshadowed by what happened right after that day, but Kurt 
Warner’s first playoff game in Arizona did not disappoint. Somehow, 
despite outgaining the Falcons by 100 and committing two fewer 
turnovers, the game was in doubt late, which made it all the more 
exciting. Larry Fitzgerald started his epic postseason with a leaping TD grab,
 while Anquan Boldin injured himself during a 71-yard catch-and-run 
touchdown. Antrel Rolle also returned a fumble for a TD. The game also 
featured a safety and the Cardinals being ballsy enough to throw for a 
game-clinching 1st down up just 6 on 3rd and 9. Basically, everything you want from a solid, if unspectacular game.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: The
 game would be known for the Falcons allegedly having just one snap 
count for the entire game. This was used, I guess, to help comfort 
rookie Matt Ryan, but it led to the Cardinalsgetting epic pressure, which directly resulted in the fumble that was returned for the TD and the safety.
Review: In
 the only chapter of an underrated playoff trilogy that the Titans won, 
the two teams battled it out gladiator style in a defensive game in the 
Cathedral of defense. The Titans held 2,000 yard rusher Jamal Lewis to 
35 yards on 14 carries (somehow, Billick felt it pertinent to let 
Anthony Wright throw 39 times instead of running Lewis more), while Ed 
Reed and Will Demps picked off Steve McNair, who like McNair does, was 
playing with a broken thumb. Ancient kicker Gary Anderson won the game 
with a 46 yard field goal with a minute left, which was a great capper 
to a hard-hitting night.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: Since
 I couldn’t think of anything better and because it started with this 
game, Ed Reed has played three home playoff games (with this being the 
first) and has at least one interception in all three of them.
Review: In
 what was an interesting game played by a Jeff Garcia led Eagles team 
and a Giants team that tried very hard to not make the playoffs, David 
Akers hit a last second field goal to win the game. A game that is oddly
 forgotten over time given how close it was and the fact that it was 
between two big market teams, it featured Plaxico Burress catching two 
TDs, Brian Westbrook running for 141 yards on just 20 carries, and 
somehow just one combined turnover, which is odd given the fact that Eli
 Manning and rain were prominently involved (man, that was a very 
Simmons-esque joke). Overall, it was a nice way to cap what was the 
first weekend of an epic postseason.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: The
 game marked a lot of lasts: It was Tiki Barber’s last game. It was also
 Donovan McNabb’s last home playoff game, and Andy Reid’s last home 
playoff win. This was also the most recent wild-card game decided by 
exactly 3 points.
Review: In a rainstorm (who says, San Diego is always sunny?), Drew Brees, who threw for 319 yards on 31-42 passing, led a comeback from 17-7 down in the 2nd half to send the game to OT after a clutch TD catch by Gates. Pennington, who despite his lack of arm had thrown a perfect rainbow TD to Santana Moss for 47 yards, was allowed to keep his OT drive going, while Marty told Brees to shut it down. Nate Kaeding, as Nate Kaeding is known to do, missed to 40+ yarder, and Doug Brien hit his 28 yarder. Overall, it was a slog of a game that was, in a word, wild. Of course, Herman Edwards didn’t learn the one lesson he needed to take away from this game.
Interesting/Memorable Play: The game only went to OT because ex-Raider Eric Barton roughed Drew Brees on what was a 4th down
 incompletion on the drive that ended with the TD to make it 17-17. The 
Jets should have taken over the ball and won 17-10, but you can take the
 Barton out of Oakland, you can’t take the Oakland out of the Barton.
Review: The Colts joined themselves from 2005, and five others on the list of teams that outgained their opponent and committed fewer turnovers yet lost. And all because Gijon Robinson forgot the snap count and Mike Scifres became BatMan for one night. Scifres pinned the Colts inside the 10 four times, including with the Colts up 17-14 looking to ice it, at the one yard line. After running for eight, the Colts, on 3rd and 2, called a pass looking to ice it, but Gijon Robinson forgot the snap count letting a free rusher to sack Manning. The game was also memorable for a play where while Antonio Cromartie and one other Charger d-back were looking at the sideline waiting for instructions, Manning snapped the ball and fired a 72 yard TD to Reggie Wayne he ran by the idle Cromartie. If I wasn’t a Colts fan, I would have enjoyed this game so much more, as it was a good game between two good teams that were really, really even (despite one having a 12-4 record and the other 8-8).
Interesting/Memorable Fact: Just
 to reinforce the ridiculous field position the Colts were saddled with,
 the Colts had three drives that didn’t end in a turnover or a failed 4th down go for more yards than either of San Diego’s two field goal drives.
11.) 2013 NFC Wild Card - (N6) Saints 26 @ (N3) Eagles 24
Review: In a game that could do nothing to avoid underwhelming given it followed a crazy show of a game that is higher up the list, the Saints and Eagles combined to put on a really nice show of good ol' fashioned football. The Saints entered the game having never won a playoff game outside the Superdome (0-3 with Drew Brees), and the Eagles entered off a 7-1 finish a with a QB who's TD to INT ratio was even better than 7-1 (13.5-1 to be exact). Of course, if Foles had a real weakness it 2013, it was his pocket presence, and the Saints repeatedly got to him. Strangely, Chip Kelly slowed the tempo down, ran the ball a little too much to no great success, and the Eagles struggled to move the ball. They made it competitive because for a half the Saints played into that 'can't win outdoors' thing. Brees threw two ugly interceptions and their offense stalled. Over time, the Saints turned to their running game, as no-names combined for 185 yards on the ground. The Saints ended up scoring on 5 of their last 6 drives, including a well designed draining drive to cap the game with a field goal to win. The drive took the last 4:54 off the clock, and we got the Saints celebrating a playoff win away from home for the first time ever.
Interesting/Memorable Play: The game seemed to break the Eagles way when Keenan Lewis was concussed on a seemingly innocuous play. Lewis left the game and immediately the Eagles targeted DeSean Jackson deep. Lewis tried to get back in to no avail, the first real example of the concussion protocol working.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: This was the first time a team kicked a field goal with under 1:00 left to go from trailing to winning since Nick Folk did it with the Jets against Indianapolis in 2010 (right after Jim Caldwell's ridiculous timeout). It came close to happening in Super Bowl XLVI, but Ahmad Bradshaw couldn't stop in time to kneel at the 1.
10.) 2007 AFC Wild Card – (A5) Jaguars 31 @ (A4) Steelers 29
Review: In a game that could do nothing to avoid underwhelming given it followed a crazy show of a game that is higher up the list, the Saints and Eagles combined to put on a really nice show of good ol' fashioned football. The Saints entered the game having never won a playoff game outside the Superdome (0-3 with Drew Brees), and the Eagles entered off a 7-1 finish a with a QB who's TD to INT ratio was even better than 7-1 (13.5-1 to be exact). Of course, if Foles had a real weakness it 2013, it was his pocket presence, and the Saints repeatedly got to him. Strangely, Chip Kelly slowed the tempo down, ran the ball a little too much to no great success, and the Eagles struggled to move the ball. They made it competitive because for a half the Saints played into that 'can't win outdoors' thing. Brees threw two ugly interceptions and their offense stalled. Over time, the Saints turned to their running game, as no-names combined for 185 yards on the ground. The Saints ended up scoring on 5 of their last 6 drives, including a well designed draining drive to cap the game with a field goal to win. The drive took the last 4:54 off the clock, and we got the Saints celebrating a playoff win away from home for the first time ever.
Interesting/Memorable Play: The game seemed to break the Eagles way when Keenan Lewis was concussed on a seemingly innocuous play. Lewis left the game and immediately the Eagles targeted DeSean Jackson deep. Lewis tried to get back in to no avail, the first real example of the concussion protocol working.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: This was the first time a team kicked a field goal with under 1:00 left to go from trailing to winning since Nick Folk did it with the Jets against Indianapolis in 2010 (right after Jim Caldwell's ridiculous timeout). It came close to happening in Super Bowl XLVI, but Ahmad Bradshaw couldn't stop in time to kneel at the 1.
10.) 2007 AFC Wild Card – (A5) Jaguars 31 @ (A4) Steelers 29
Review: In the regular season, the Jags beat the Steelers 29-22 in a game they outgained them in 421-217. Here, they win a game 31-29 in a game they were outgained 340-239. David Garrard was mostly awful, going 9-21 with 140 yards and 1 td and 2 picks, but Roethlisberger started off worse, throwing a pick-6 to Rashean Mathis and two more interceptions. He regained form, and turned a 28-10 deficit into a 29-28 lead in less than 12 minutes. The game ended with a series of interesting plays. Up 29-28, with a 3rd and 6 with 2:50 left, the Steelers called a QB sweep run for Roethlisberger that didn’t come close to working. Then, up 4th and 2 for the Jagsat the Steelers 42, Garrard ran a beautifully called QB draw for 32 yards(there was a much disputed blatant uncalled hold by the Jags on the play), and Josh Scobee ended it. All in all, it was a sloppy but wild game between two teams that were quite good.
Interesting/Memorable Play: After
 scoring to make it 28-23, the Steelers understandably went for 2. 
However, on the ensuing play the Steelers were called for 
offensive-holding, which made the 2-point conversion have to be 
attempted from the 12 yard line. Tomlin still decided to go for two. 
Mind you, there was 10:30 left in the game at this point.
Review: Was
 there anything more inevitable than the Seahawks winning a playoff game
 when they were a 7-9 team that had been outscored by 92 points? Please,
 let me know if there was. The Seahawks didn’t win by any fluke, either.
 Matt Hasselbeck played one final last tremendous game for the Seahawks,
 with 4 tds on 22-35 passing, and while Brees threw for another 400+ 
yards, the Seahawks managed to make enough stops. The odd part of the 
game is it started out like it should in that the Seahawks seemed 
overmatched. The Saints got a field goal, picked off Hasselbeck and 
answered with a TD. They were up 17-7 at one point. Of course, the 
Seahawks proceed to score 27 of the next 30 points to go up 34-20. All 
in all, there were 14 scores in this bizarre, unlikely shootout, none 
more memorable than Marshawn Lynch’s BeastMode run, where he stiff-armed
 the shit out of Super Bowl XLIV hero Tracy Porter, and ran his way into
 NFL lore.
Interesting/Memorable Play: On
 said Marshawn Lynch TD, what was almost as good as the stiff-arm, was 
the fact that lineman Sean Locklear and Tyler Polumbus, and Matt 
Hasselbeck were running and blocking for Lynch at basically the same 
speed. They crossed the end zone with him. Truly just an incredible 
play.
Review: The
 first half of maybe the best single day in Wild Card Round history, the
 Browns, in their only playoff game in their new era, and the Steelers, 
in that weird Tommy Maddox pass-heavy year, staged an classic. On the 
Browns 2nd play, Kelly Holcomb hit Kevin Johnson for 80 
yards. That was a sign that this would be the exact opposite of every 
Steelers playoff game ever played in Heinz Field. There was no defense. 
The Browns raced to a 24-7 lead in large part because of Holcomb (who 
threw for 429 yards on 26 completions!) and an unholy performance from 
Dennis Northcutt. The Steelers under Maddox who himself threw for 367 
yards (on 30-48 passing) started flinging it to get back in the game. 
Plaxico Burress and Hines Ward both had 100+ yards, and little by little
 the Steelers got back in it. The game ended with a dramatic one-yard TD
 plunge by Chris Fuamatu-Ma’afala of all people, capping the first of 
two ridiculous comebacks on the same day.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: There
 were a lot of odd stat-lines in this game, but none more so than Browns
 running back William Green, who had just 30 yards on 25 carries. Who 
lets their running back run that much if he isn’t getting anything? 
Butch Davis, that's who.
Review: What is rightfully the more famous of the two comebacks, the game featured a whole lot before the infamous botched snap by Trey Junkin and missed pass-interference. Kerry Collins and Jeff Garcia each had over 300 yards (Collins had 4 tds to Garcia’s 3, both threw a pick), but it was Kerry early and Jeff late. The Giants took a 38-14 lead mostly on the arm of Collins and three receiving TDs by Amani Toomer (Jeremy Shockey had the other one, after which he reportedly threw something into the crowd). Then the 49ers, in the last playoff game of the West Coast era (although they had missed the playoffs in 1999-2000), started using the Candlestick Magic. Terrell Owens caught his 2nd long touchdown. Jeff Garcia ran for another. Tai Streets caught the game winner. Of course that set up the infamous ending, but forget that. It overshadows what a fabulous display of resilience by the 49ers and offense by both.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: Despite
 their brilliance in these games, Kerry Collins and Jeff Garcia would 
both be gone from their teams by 2004: Collins in Oakland, replaced by 
Manning/Warner, while Garcia flocked to Detroit to join Mooch, leaving 
Ken Dorsey and Tim Rattay to guide the 49ers to a 2-14 year.
6.) 2013 NFC Wild Card - (N5) 49ers 23 @ (N4) Packers 20
Review: In blisteringly cold temperatures in Lambeau Field, the 49ers and Packers played a beautiful game that featured a little bit of everything. It had a receiver going wild (Crabtree had 8 for 125), a great defensive performance (5 sacks for the 49ers), some great individual plays, like Kaepernick's three great scrambles or Rodgers' houdini on 4th-down that was reminiscent of one Eli Manning in Super Bowl XLII. The game ended in great fashion too with a field goal at the gun in frigid temperatures to win it. The setting of the game definitely helps its legacy, as does the two teams participating in it. It really felt more than a Wild Card game. It really was just a great football game. No team led by more than 6 the entire game, and no team looked too comfortable. The game was everything any die-hard football fan could have hoped for a playoff game.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: This loss marked the 5th time the Packers lost a home playoff game in their last 8 games. This after starting 23-0 at home in the playoffs. Nothing really shows just how much the NFL playoffs have changed than that.
Interesting/Memorable Fact II: This game had some eerie parallels to the 2007 NFC Championship Game. First, both games were played in sub-zero temperatures (still, the '07 game was about 15 degrees colder by wind chill). Then, both games ended 23-20 with a field goal on the last play. Even the score progression was exactly the same except this game going 7-6 to 13-7 to 13-10 instead of 7-6 to 10-6 to 13-10.
6.) 2013 NFC Wild Card - (N5) 49ers 23 @ (N4) Packers 20
Review: In blisteringly cold temperatures in Lambeau Field, the 49ers and Packers played a beautiful game that featured a little bit of everything. It had a receiver going wild (Crabtree had 8 for 125), a great defensive performance (5 sacks for the 49ers), some great individual plays, like Kaepernick's three great scrambles or Rodgers' houdini on 4th-down that was reminiscent of one Eli Manning in Super Bowl XLII. The game ended in great fashion too with a field goal at the gun in frigid temperatures to win it. The setting of the game definitely helps its legacy, as does the two teams participating in it. It really felt more than a Wild Card game. It really was just a great football game. No team led by more than 6 the entire game, and no team looked too comfortable. The game was everything any die-hard football fan could have hoped for a playoff game.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: This loss marked the 5th time the Packers lost a home playoff game in their last 8 games. This after starting 23-0 at home in the playoffs. Nothing really shows just how much the NFL playoffs have changed than that.
Interesting/Memorable Fact II: This game had some eerie parallels to the 2007 NFC Championship Game. First, both games were played in sub-zero temperatures (still, the '07 game was about 15 degrees colder by wind chill). Then, both games ended 23-20 with a field goal on the last play. Even the score progression was exactly the same except this game going 7-6 to 13-7 to 13-10 instead of 7-6 to 10-6 to 13-10.
Review: “We want the ball and we’re gonna score.” Another great game that has become dominated by one singular play, or in this case, sentence. Matt Hasselbeck’s guarantee heard around the world was just the coda to what already was a good football game between two good, pretty equal teams. There were a lot of storylines heading into the game, what with this being the return of Mike Holmgren to Lambeau Field, and with Matt Hasselbeck being one of the Favre backups to find success elsewhere. The game itself was well-played, with both QBs throwing for over 300 yards, and that walk-off pick-six by Al Harris being the only turnover in the game. The Packers fans were so happy when Alex Bannister(?) ran the wrong route in OT. Sad, they were so innocent then. The Lambeau Faithful had no idea that Favre would throw two OT interceptions in the next four years.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: The last five scores in regulation were all TDs (the game went from 13-6 Green Bay to 27-27) and all five were 1-yard runs by either Alexander or Ahman Green. Despite both having pedestrian days (neither ran for 3.0+ yards per carry) they combined for 5 TDs, while the two QBs got just one between them. That’s some quality vulturing.
Review: Because of recency bias, I came close to putting it at number two. Thankfully, I realized that was dumb, and put it at its proper place at. You could not script a better ending to the Tebow Era in Denver. For once, Tim Tebow earned his fairytale ending. Tebow just repeatedly abused a short-sighted game-plan by Dick LeBeau to single-cover everyone and put 8 in the box. It led to little running, but allowed Tim Tebow to throw for 316 yards on just 10(!) completions. Demaryius Thomas did most of the damage with a 4 reception 204 yard day. Roethlisberger started out slow, but reportedly got a shot at halftime and came out firing in the 2nd half. The Steelers were two first downs from winning the game in regulation before an airmailed snap (the 2nd of the game) ended that drive. It was, in a way, destiny. In the first playoff game with the new rules, the Broncos made that little fact irrelevant, scoring an 80-yard TD on the first play. It led to a harrowing divisional round game the next week (man, Steelers – Patriots would have been about 100x better), but one of the iconic memories, ironically for a team led by a QB that was jettisoned that offseason.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: The Broncos winning marked the fifth time in nine games time that in a playoff matchup between two teams with a total win differential of four or more,, that the team with the fewer wins won (10-6 Giants over 16-0 Patriots in 2007, 8-8 Chargers over 12-4 Colts in 2008, 9-7 Jets over 13-3 Chargers in 2009, 7-9 Seahawks over 11-5 Saints in 2010 – the four times the team with more wins won was the 12-4 Steelers beating the 8-8 Chargers in 2008, the 14-2 Colts beating the 9-7 Ravens and Jets in 2009 and the 11-5 Bears beating the 7-9 Seahawks). The 9-7 Giants would do it in each of their next three games as well, beating the 15-1 Packers and 13-3 49ers & Patriots, while of course the Patriots at 13-3 would beat Denver as well.
Tier VII - The Epics
3.) 2013 AFC Wild Card - (A5) Chiefs 44 @ (A4) Colts 45
Peyton Manning's first playoff win was a 41-10 thrashing of Denver where he had a perfect game. Andrew Luck's wasn't nearly as calm, but incredible all the same. Despite a start where the Chiefs could do no wrong, effortlessly moving up and down the field against a lax Colts defense. Alex Smith was awesome, going 30-46 for 378 yards. Too bad for him that Luck put up 65 more. Despite throwing three picks, including one during their 35-6 run to finish the game, Luck was brilliant in hitting his band of receivers, especially TY Hilton, who piled up 224 yards on 13 catches. Luck's highlight was either his perfect throw to Fleener to cut it to 41-31 near the end of the 3rd, or his 64-yard strike to Hilton to win the game. Of course, maybe it was his surreptitious recovery of a Richardson fumble that ended with him diving for a TD. The Chiefs lost despite never really being stopped, but the Colts were only stopped by themselves with the three interceptions. In a game that set a new playoff record for yards (1,049 total), the Colts and Chiefs made sure that 2013 continued being the year when no lead was safe.
Interesting/Memorable Play: The Cheifs nearly drove for a field goal to win 47-45, but with 2:30 remaining and facing a 2nd & 7 from the Colts 39, Smith was called for intentional grounding. They managed to have a manageable 4th and 11, but Smith overshot an open Bowe to end the game.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: This was the 2nd largest playoff comeback in NFL history, passing the 49ers comeback over the Giants and right behind the Bills coming back from 35-3 down.
2.) 2006 NFC Wild Card – (N5) Cowboys 20 @ (N4) Seahawks 21
3.) 2013 AFC Wild Card - (A5) Chiefs 44 @ (A4) Colts 45
Peyton Manning's first playoff win was a 41-10 thrashing of Denver where he had a perfect game. Andrew Luck's wasn't nearly as calm, but incredible all the same. Despite a start where the Chiefs could do no wrong, effortlessly moving up and down the field against a lax Colts defense. Alex Smith was awesome, going 30-46 for 378 yards. Too bad for him that Luck put up 65 more. Despite throwing three picks, including one during their 35-6 run to finish the game, Luck was brilliant in hitting his band of receivers, especially TY Hilton, who piled up 224 yards on 13 catches. Luck's highlight was either his perfect throw to Fleener to cut it to 41-31 near the end of the 3rd, or his 64-yard strike to Hilton to win the game. Of course, maybe it was his surreptitious recovery of a Richardson fumble that ended with him diving for a TD. The Chiefs lost despite never really being stopped, but the Colts were only stopped by themselves with the three interceptions. In a game that set a new playoff record for yards (1,049 total), the Colts and Chiefs made sure that 2013 continued being the year when no lead was safe.
Interesting/Memorable Play: The Cheifs nearly drove for a field goal to win 47-45, but with 2:30 remaining and facing a 2nd & 7 from the Colts 39, Smith was called for intentional grounding. They managed to have a manageable 4th and 11, but Smith overshot an open Bowe to end the game.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: This was the 2nd largest playoff comeback in NFL history, passing the 49ers comeback over the Giants and right behind the Bills coming back from 35-3 down.
2.) 2006 NFC Wild Card – (N5) Cowboys 20 @ (N4) Seahawks 21
Review: Four
 times there have been Saturday Wild Card round playoff games in Qwest 
Field. All four were good, and two were very good. This was the only one
 in primetime, and man was it special. The game is remembered mostly, 
obviously, by Tony Romo’s bobbled snap, but the rest of the game was 
crazy. Against a secondary featuring insurance-salesman Pete Hunter 
playing nickel next to two rookies, Tony Romo threw for just 189 yards 
on 17-29 passing. Hasselbeck wasn’t much better going 18-36 for 240. 
What made the game legendary, though, was that ending. Starting with 
Miles Austin, a good three years before anyone would hear from him in 
any receiving capacity, answering a Seahawk TD with a kickoff return 
touchdown to make it 17-13 Boys. Then, down 20-13, the Seahawks were 
stoned on 4th and Goal. Later after a fumble/safety/TD 
controversy, the Seahawks, courtesy of Jerramy Stevens (yeah, that 
loudmouth) catching his 2nd touchdown, took a 21-20 lead. On 
the final drive, Lofa Tatupu stoned Witten one inch short of a first 
down where the Cowboys could have iced the game before kicking the field
 goal. As it was they never got the field goal off, but Romo still came 
close to running the bobbled hold in for a TD if not for a desperation 
tackle by Jordan Biabineaux. Wild Card Games are special because they 
are just that: wild. They aren’t the best teams, but they have damn 
dramatic, if not particularly well-played, endings.
Interesting/Memorable Play: So, the Terry Glenn fumble out of his own end zone that was originally thought to be recovered for a Seahawks TD was challenged by the Cowboys. The funny part about the challenge is that it was the rare case where in either outcome the Seahawks were going to score points, be it a safety or a touchdown.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: This
 was Bill Parcells last game as a head coach in the NFL, and it was 10 
years after he and Mike Holmgren coached against each other in Super 
Bowl XXXI. NBC showed a side by side view of Holmgren and Parcells 
during that game and during the current one, and both seemed to have 
aged 20 years and put on 30 pounds.
Review: Could
 it be anything else? The highest scoring game in NFL history featured 
one QB going 28-42 for 423 yards and 4 tds (with a pick) and being 
pretty conclusively the 2nd best QB in that game. Warner, in 
his last great hurrah, put up something close to what Manning did to the
 Broncos in 2003 (he also had a perfect passer rating). 29-33 for 379 
yards and 5 tds, and of course, without Anquan Boldin. Steve Breaston 
and Early Doucet picked up the pace. Larry Fitzgerald did as he does in 
the playoffs (6-82 and 2 scores). The best part of the game was the 
Packers not backing down after falling behind 31-10 and having nothing 
go for them (2 turnovers and a missed field goal). The Packers made just
 one stop in the whole game, but went on a 28-7 run to tie it at 38-38 
with the help of what would become the most forgotten surprise 
onside-kick in playoff history. Jermichael Finley has made a living of 
being an overhyped player with his play as he had 6 catches for 159 
yards. Greg Jennings, Larry Fitzgerald and Steve Breaston all made 
one-handed catches, each as good as the other. No one backed down (other
 than the two defenses, obviously). Rodgers was 95% as good as he was 
the next year in Atlanta in this game, but lost because Warner was 105% 
as good as Rodgers was in that game in Atlanta. The game might be this 
good even if Neil Rackers didn’t Vandershank the game-winning field goal
 and it had ended 48-45, but overtime made it even better, with defense 
winning the game, as a Mike Adams blitz got to Rodgers who fumbled and 
then kicked the ball right into the hands of Karlos Dansby. An 
ironically special way to end the greatest shootout most of us have ever
 seen.
Interesting/Memorable Play 1: The blitz that Mike Adams sacked and stripped Rodgers on was the same blitz called earlier in the game where Adams almost sacked Rodgers. Adams mistimed his leap then and Rodgers escaped. This time, he wasn’t as lucky.
Interesting/Memorable Play 2: There
 is a great NFL Films clip where the camera is perched right behind Mike
 McCarthy during the Rodgers fumble Touchdown, where as the play is 
happening, and McCarthy processes what is happening, he just falls to 
his knees in agony. A great human moment.
Interesting/Memorable Play 3: I
 can’t forget to mention the controversial non-call as Mike Adams 
latched onto Rodgers facemask. The issue is I can’t be too hard on Scott
 Green. He’s supposed to be watching the ball. Either way, the correct 
call would have been the facemask occurred after the fumble, and the 
Cardinals would have kept the ball anyway. That said, like the real 
ending better.





























