Pregame: Divisional Round
AI summary, sourced from 1 period article (Pro-Football-Reference)
Divisional Round: Tennessee Titans at New England Patriots, with a Conference Championship spot at stake. Kickoff: Sat January 10, 2004. Winner advances to the Conference Championship. The losing team's season is over.[1][2]
Columnist
AI summary, sourced from 1 period article (Pro-Football-Reference)
The divisional round is where the bracket is supposed to take its real shape. Tennessee Titans traveling to New England Patriots, with the league watching to see whether the better team or the better matchup wins. Bye-week home favorites carry the weight of expectation; the visiting wild-card winner walks in with no one expecting them and nothing to lose.
Around the league
AI summary, sourced from 1 period article (Pro-Football-Reference)
The bracket has narrowed to the teams that survived the regular season. Tennessee Titans and New England Patriots are two of them; the rest of the league is in scouting mode for the offseason. What happens in this round shifts the rest of the tree: a road favorite winning rearranges seeding expectations; a home upset shows the bracket math underweights heart.
Trend analyst
AI summary, sourced from 1 period article (Pro-Football-Reference)
Tennessee Titans versus New England Patriots in the Divisional Round. The teams who reach this round have already proven they survive a long schedule; the stats that matter most now are the ones that compress: scoring differential, red-zone efficiency, turnover margin. At this stage of the year, the simple math is that defenses tighten and the team that protects the ball wins more often than the team that scores the most. Whichever side of Tennessee Titans-New England Patriots cleans up the careless plays first usually walks out with the result. Conservative-game expectations should not surprise the reader; both staffs know exactly what worked all season and will lean hard on what travels. The early answer is the kicking game, where any swing of field position compounds.