{"id":32773,"date":"2026-05-18T14:16:26","date_gmt":"2026-05-18T14:16:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/2026\/05\/18\/sound-smart-4-observations-after-the-2026-nfl-schedule-release\/"},"modified":"2026-05-18T14:16:26","modified_gmt":"2026-05-18T14:16:26","slug":"sound-smart-4-observations-after-the-2026-nfl-schedule-release","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/2026\/05\/18\/sound-smart-4-observations-after-the-2026-nfl-schedule-release\/","title":{"rendered":"Sound Smart: 4 Observations After The 2026 NFL Schedule Release"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>The NFL\u2019s regular-season schedule is official. And it\u2019s a behemoth, with 18 weeks of games \u2014 not including the postseason, or the three weeks of preseason, or the Hall of Fame Game. This season will feature games on every day of the week except Tuesday. It\u2019s football all day and all night and at basically any moment you might want it. So let\u2019s get into the nitty-gritty of this week\u2019s activity \u2014 with some thoughts on the schedule and other NFL happenings. This is &#8220;Sound Smart,&#8221; where I try to spin forward, dive deeper and think outside the box. If I do\u00a0my job, you\u2019ll have a better understanding of what really happened over the past week of the NFL offseason. 1. IF THERE\u2019S ONE THING YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT THE SCHEDULE, IT\u2019S THAT \u2026. You will have ample excuses to avoid your family during the holidays. Let the record show that I\u2019m a big fan of hanging with the family during the months when you can build a fire, enjoy a warm drink, dim the lights and do your best (but inevitably fail) to avoid discussing politics. That said, I know the holidays aren\u2019t everyone\u2019s favorite time of year. And the NFL seems to know that, too. Because the league has made this year\u2019s holiday slate impossible to avoid. The NFL has replaced small talk with ball talk. I have been as vocal as anyone that the NFL is in danger of oversaturation. But the only way the league could have delivered on this type of schedule \u2014 one with a game at all times over the holiday weekends \u2014 is if those games were appointment TV. And for the most part, that\u2019s what the NFL plans to deliver. There\u2019s no clearer example than the decision to put the Kansas City Chiefs vs. the Buffalo Bills on Thanksgiving night. That\u2019s the type of game that the NFL usually places into a random Week 12 slate to give it some life. The Chiefs and Bills deliver incredible drama, time after time. By scheduling it at a time when everyone would have been watching anyway, the league delivered what is often the best game of the year \u2014 and in a window that\u2019s likely to maximize viewership. This is all to say that I\u2019m excited to enjoy (and enjoy covering) these games during the holidays. I\u2019d be remiss not to mention that \u2014 with the NFL tossing all its logs on the fire during these holiday games \u2014 I also can\u2019t help but wonder whether the slower parts of the season will feel\u00a0especially slow this year. The NFL decided that there\u2019s only one way to find out. 2. MONDAY MORNING CONTROVERSY As exceptional as Patrick Mahomes is, his ACL injury could keep the Chiefs out of the playoffs. I get that folks in Kansas City are saying that the three-time Super Bowl MVP is accelerating through his timeline in his recovery from the torn ACL he suffered in mid-December. I get that Mahomes is special, physically. I get that the Chiefs signed running back Kenneth Walker III, the reigning Super Bowl MVP, to take some of the offensive burden off Mahomes. That&#8217;s why many folks see the Chiefs making the playoffs. This is all good, in theory. But historically, it\u2019s been hard for quarterbacks to make an immediate comeback from an ACL injury. And the left side of the Chiefs\u2019 offensive line remains a question, with youngsters Josh Simmons (tackle) and Kingsley Suamataia (guard) yet to make the developmental leap. If the line can\u2019t make the expected leap, then that\u2019ll negatively impact Walker and Mahomes \u2014 which is to say that, like last year, that left side of the line could tank the whole offense. For the past few years, Mahomes was the No. 1, 2 and 3 reasons to believe in the Chiefs. But there\u2019s a real chance he can&#8217;t be the same explosive playmaker until 2027. And in that case, the offense, which was 12th-worst in scoring last season, might not take the step forward that everyone expects. That\u2019s why I don&#8217;t anticipate that the Chiefs will make the 2026 playoffs. Not right now. That could change if they dominate their first four games. They host the Denver Broncos in Week 1, then they have three fairly easy games: home against the Indianapolis Colts and on the road against the Miami Dolphins and Las Vegas Raiders. If Mahomes can\u2019t play in those first four weeks, then the Chiefs might be 2-2. Remember: They didn&#8217;t win a game without Mahomes last year \u2014 suffering losses to the Los Angeles Chargers, Tennessee Titans, Broncos and Raiders. The Chiefs will go into their Week 5 bye primed to make a push for the playoffs \u2014 and they\u2019ll need to be ready, because their schedule is grueling after that early bye. I\u2019ll admit that Mahomes has a knack for remarkable achievements, which is why I understand why people are hesitant to doubt the Chiefs\u2019 playoff chances. But it\u2019s not coming from a logical place. This isn\u2019t a come-from-behind victory where Mahomes can manage the clock and eke out the four points he needs for victory. This is an injury where doctors have as much control as Mahomes does. The healing process takes time. And if he can\u2019t make it all the way back at a speed that few have accomplished, then the Chiefs won&#8217;t have the bounce-back season that everyone seems to assume is coming. 3. WHAT EVERYONE ELSE IS AFRAID TO SAY The Saints could be an offensive juggernaut. Coach Kellen Moore and quarterback Tyler Shough kept getting better at the end of last season. After turning to the rookie Shough at midseason, the Saints didn\u2019t exactly look like world-beaters, with a 5-4 record that included two wins against the playoff-bound Carolina Panthers \u2014 but two losses to the Atlanta Falcons. If you watched closely, however, New Orleans had a competence that I didn\u2019t expect after its horrid first half of the season. It was clear the Saints were building something real in those final nine games. And it was also clear that Shough was winning over the building. Now, I\u2019m not here to promise that Shough is going to be the team\u2019s QB1 in 2027. He felt like a flier in the second round last year \u2014 almost a bridge quarterback, given his age, (lack of) upside and lengthy college experience. But I do think the Saints have set him up with every opportunity to succeed this year. And there is some increased urgency because, despite it being his second season, Shough will turn 27 in September. (He was in the same high school recruiting class as Trevor Lawrence!) Between that and Shough\u2019s draft status as a second-rounder, the QB will have to turn things around quickly \u2026 or else. But the Saints have something impressive in place to avoid that &#8220;or else&#8221; outcome. Moore\u2019s offense seems primed to put Shough into a point-guard role, where he can distribute to receivers Chris Olave and rookie Jordyn Tyson and tight ends Juwan Johnson and rookie Oscar Delp. The Saints signed free agent running back Travis Etienne to take over for aging veteran Alvin Kamara. New Orleans&#8217; offensive line is solid and appears to be ascending, particularly at tackle where the Saints have two former first-rounders who went 14th or higher. There\u2019s a lot to like, and normally, they\u2019d be a plucky group of ruffians who enjoy an any-given-Sunday kind of season. But in the NFC South, the Saints can actually compete. The Falcons are talented but are undergoing a quarterback (Tua Tagovailoa?) and coaching change (Kevin Stefanski). The Tampa Bay Buccaneers seem to be retooling after missing the playoffs. And the Panthers are building something compelling, but they have one of the league\u2019s hardest schedules in 2026. The Saints will be fun. And the Saints have an easy schedule. I\u2019m on board with them making the playoffs. 4. PEELING BACK THE CURTAIN The Steelers are doing \u2026 what \u2026 to Drew Allar? After Pittsburgh\u2019s rookie minicamp, there was serious discussion about how the Steelers are handling the former Penn State quarterback&#8217;s development. ESPN\u2019s Brooke Pryor reported that new head coach Mike McCarthy was &#8220;uninstalling everything [Allar has] learned and they&#8217;re re-uploading&#8221; a new system, methodology and set of mechanics. It\u2019s an overhaul. That drew flippant remarks on social media and sports talk radio. The sentiment?\u00a0Allar is doomed. Maybe. But it won\u2019t be because of the comprehensive way McCarthy is approaching the third-round pick&#8217;s development. To the contrary, the overhaul is on par with what Allar appeared to need before the draft. &#8220;We&#8217;re teaching him di\ufb00erent than the way he&#8217;s played before. He hasn&#8217;t spent a lot of time under center,&#8221; McCarthy told reporters during rookie minicamp on May 9. &#8220;He&#8217;s a run-and-shoot guy in high school. He&#8217;s played from nine yards deep. So, there&#8217;s just a lot of newness to him.&#8221; McCarthy added about Allar &#8220;He made a very good first impression.&#8221; Allar was trending toward being a first-round pick when he ended the 2024 college season. But his 2025 season derailed his prospects, in part because the Penn State offense began to demand more of him. He couldn&#8217;t seem to handle that load. That doesn\u2019t bode well for a guy who will have to do even more in the NFL. But it doesn\u2019t make him hopeless. It\u2019s, frankly, common for a player with Allar\u2019s tools to slip into Day 2. Those types of quarterbacks only slip if they have fundamental issues with their footwork, throwing motion and decision-making. They only slip if they\u2019re a major developmental undertaking. Look at Will Levis, Malik Willis, Drew Lock and Colin Kaepernick. Different players. Similar problems. Different careers. That\u2019s why there\u2019s really no reason for concern when listening to McCarthy\u2019s take on Allar. &#8220;Everybody teaches footwork a little di\ufb00erently. Everybody has a system of o\ufb00ense and how you tie your quarterback, particularly in the pass game, to that. There&#8217;s a lot of work there [for Allar],&#8221; McCarthy said. &#8220;We&#8217;re able to adjust some fundamentals that we think will help him.&#8221; When the Steelers drafted Allar, I hoped they would do so with a vision for him playing in 2027 or 2028 \u2014 and\u00a0not in 2026. Now that starting QB Aaron Rodgers has finally decided to return, that might be possible. This is exactly what Allar needs. McCarthy knows what he&#8217;s doing. The Steelers have a plan. And even though it&#8217;ll inevitably involve more Rodgers-created drama, I like the timeline of what they have. At age 42, Rodgers might be trending downward, but he can start for at least one more season. That&#8217;ll give the Steelers a solid year to see if Allar is making the necessary progress behind the scenes. And if Pittsburgh doesn&#8217;t think Allar is ready in 2027, the Steelers can either draft a quarterback in Round 1 or pursue their options in free agency. Would I have preferred they go after Malik Willis in free agency this year? Absolutely. Or Kyler Murray? Also, yes. But once those ships sailed \u2014 Willis signed with the Dolphins and Murray with the Minnesota Vikings \u2014 this plan made enough sense to pursue. And above all, the approach with Allar looks sound.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The NFL\u2019s regular-season schedule is official. And it\u2019s a behemoth, with 18 weeks of games \u2014 not including the postseason, or the three weeks of preseason, or the Hall of Fame Game. This season will feature games on every day of the week except Tuesday. It\u2019s football all day and all night and at basically<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":0,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"om_disable_all_campaigns":false},"categories":[2],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/32773"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=32773"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/32773\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=32773"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=32773"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/onlinebettingnewyork.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=32773"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}