8 takeaways from the Buffalo Bills' 2026 schedule release
Key Takeaways from the Buffalo Bills' 2026 Schedule Release
The Detroit Lions' 2026 schedule presents several challenges, including a tough ending with multiple divisional road games, an early bye week, and a congested game schedule around Thanksgiving. Additionally, the team has a lack of primetime home games and continues to face repetitive Thanksgiving matchups.
The first thing I noticed when looking at the schedule was the BRUTAL ending they are giving the Lions. Not only are three of their final four games of the season on the road, but theyâre divisional games as well. I donât understand why the schedule makers think any team in the NFL deserves to play three divisional road games in four weeks at any point in the season. Two in a four-week window? Sure, that sucks, but not the worst thing, but three is the worst-case scenario. A common theme for not just the Lions, but the city of Detroit when it comes to its sports luck. What sucks for Detroit is they have to play in Chicago and Green Bay in late December and early January, the worst times you could play in those stadiums.
The main challenges include three divisional road games in the final four weeks, an early bye week, and a congested schedule with an international game followed by Thanksgiving.
The Lions have one of the earliest bye weeks in Week 6, which could impact their ability to maintain player health as the season progresses.
The Lions have faced the same NFC North teams in 65% of their Thanksgiving games over the past two decades, leading to a lack of variety and excitement in matchups.
The Lions have four primetime games in 2026, with only one being a home game, which raises concerns about their visibility and popularity.
Key Takeaways from the Buffalo Bills' 2026 Schedule Release
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After getting angry about the season ending, my attention shifted to where the bye week fell. I was disappointed seeing the bye week being at Week 6. Thatâs the second-earliest bye week of any team, and having it weeks before the Germany game seems crazy. I understand the league not wanting to give Detroit an advantage for Thanksgiving but Week 8 was right there. Bye week timing is important, and the earlier they are, the tougher it is to keep your team healthy later in the season. Itâs not the worst placement, but it couldâve been more friendly for the Lions.
Another issue I saw was the timing of the Germany game and Thanksgiving. After playing on the road in Week 8 against the Miami Dolphins, the Lions will only have a couple of days home before they travel to Germany. Thankfully, they play at home when they return against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, but then itâs suddenly Thanksgiving and the team has to play another game. Three football games in 12 days isnât going to be good on playersâ bodies, and with one of those games being international, it means longer travel and challenges on an already challenging schedule. If the Lions didnât have their Thanksgiving game quickly after, this wouldnât be an issue, but once again, the Lionsâ luck of the draw comes up short.
Last year, the Lionsâ record wasnât earth-shattering at 9-8, but they are still growing in popularity. So surely theyâll host multiple primetime games this year. Wrong. The Lions play in four primetime games in 2026. Week 2 against the Buffalo Bills on the road on âThursday Night Footballâ, Week 4 against the Carolina Panthers on the road on âSunday Night Football,â Week 15 at Minnesota for âSunday Night Football,â and Week 16 against the New York Giants at home on âMonday Night Football.â I appreciate the home season finale being in primetime, but we couldnât have the Packers or Bears in primetime at home?
Remember when the Lions had fun Thanksgiving games? I remember. Games against the Philadelphia Eagles, Houston Texans, Buffalo Bills, and New England Patriots were fun Thanksgiving matchups, even if the Lions lost. For some reason the NFL has decided that Thanksgiving for Detroit is turning into a divisional game. Ever since 2007, the Lions have hosted an NFC North team 13 times. 65 percent of Detroitâs Thanksgiving games the past two decades have been against either the Green Bay Packers, Chicago Bears, or Minnesota Vikings. But wait, it gets worse! Of those 13 times, the Lions have played the Vikings TWICE. That means 11 of the past 20, or 55 percent, have been against the Bears or Packers. Sure, those rivalries have more history to them, but letâs mix it up a bit, eh? I am tired of seeing the same game almost every year. Whereâs the fun?