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NFL Power Rankings, Week 8: Lions reclaim top spot, while Colts vault up to No. 2; Chiefs lurking - NFL.com

In this edition of the Power Rankings, Eric Edholm executes a major shakeup in the top three, including a change at No. 1. All in all, 25 teams move up/down in the updated league pecking order.

NFL Power Rankings, Week 8: Lions reclaim top spot, while Colts vault up to No. 2; Chiefs lurking - NFL.com

One week after I elevated the Tampa Bay Buccaneers into the top spot -- hesitantly, I might add -- they let me down by losing at Detroit, and not in the heartbreaking, last-second kind of way. Add in some bad injury news, and I'm sinking the Bucs, cruelly and unmercifully.

On the flip side, the top spot again belongs to the Lions -- and you better believe I double-checked to make sure they are indeed on a bye this week. But even with the humbling loss at Kansas City in Week 6, Detroit has a strong case for No. 1.

Speaking of the Chiefs, if the playoffs started today, they would not be in them. However, ask yourself this: Are they one of the best teams going right now? For me, it's an obvious yes. Seeding, after all, only means so much in mid-October. Right now, New England would be the AFC's No. 2 seed with Denver at No. 3.

As you'll see below, a few teams made jumps (or falls) that might not appear befitting of what simply happened since we last met. Some of this is just cleaning up the rolls a bit and taking a wider-lens look at certain squads. Or, as I like to call it with my kids, redoing last week's homework. There was a fair amount of that this week.

NOTE: Up/down arrows below reflect movement from the Week 7 Power Rankings.

Detroit’s undermanned secondary stepped up in a massive way in Monday’s statement victory over Tampa Bay. The home team entered the night alarmingly shorthanded in the defensive backfield, and then Rock Ya-Sin had to miss some snaps with cramps. The Lions knew Baker Mayfield would keep coming, but they kept answering the bell. Despite dominating play in the first half, Detroit only led 14-3 at the break, having left a ton of points on the field with two turnovers, a turnover on downs and a missed field goal. Jared Goff’s pick before halftime helped gift the Buccaneers points, but the Lions' offense responded with a touchdown on its first drive of the third quarter and the defense played incredibly well all night, especially considering the circumstances. The Lions might have taken the Chiefs’ best punch in Week 6, but they took out their frustrations on a good Bucs team that they might see again in January.

I admit I am out of excuses for not putting Indianapolis higher. The loss to the Rams and a close shave against the Cardinals had me slightly pumping the brakes, but there's no doubt the Colts have a top-three offense right now. It's humming at exceptional levels -- zero turnovers, zero offensive penalties and only three negative-yardage plays at the Chargers. That and another 38 points will do, thank you very much. Any serious MVP list probably needs Daniel Jones and Jonathan Taylor on it right now. Taylor was on another heater Sunday and is now up to 10 rushing TDs, re-approaching his 2021 level of dominance these days, while Jones appears in total command. And a hat tip to Indy's defense, which set a first-half tone and made a big stop late after bending a little. The Colts are still for real.

If the Chiefs' record were a hair better, I'd have considered them for a top-two spot after the 31-0 beatdown of the rival Raiders. This was peak-Chiefs dominance, and even though the blowout win came over a scuffling Las Vegas squad, that's exactly what you want to see from a team that fielded a lineup of Xavier Worthy, Hollywood Brown and Rashee Rice together for the first time. The result was an extremely balanced attack; even the run game showed some signs of vitality. Defensively, it was a masterpiece. The schedule stiffens considerably, and the big showdown in Buffalo is only a couple Sundays away, but the Chiefs are suddenly peaking, and Patrick Mahomes is again an MVP favorite.

The Seahawks gave Seattle something to smile about after the Mariners lost Game 7, but it wasn't as easy as it initially appeared to be. The 'Hawks were dominant early, but they mishandled the final two minutes of the first half, gave up a defensive score in the third quarter on a Sam Darnold strip-sack and turned the ball over two more times in the fourth quarter. The defense looked championship-quality, but the offense and special teams made too many mistakes for my taste. A dominant win might have compelled me to bump the Seahawks up to No. 2, but I wasn’t impressed with how they played with a lead. You’re not going to win too many more games this season turning the ball over four times and committing 12 penalties.

The Packers won the fourth quarter at Arizona, and they did it by winning a few key fourth downs. The defense stepped up late with a fourth-down stuff of Jacoby Brissett, and Micah Parsons also took over with two of his three sacks and several key pressures in the final period. On offense, Jordan Love delivered a big fourth-down completion to Tucker Kraft -- after Matt LaFleur originally had sent out the field-goal unit. Those were the high notes. But it was another harder-than-expected game against a seemingly lesser opponent, a disappointing trend for a team that gave off real Super Bowl vibes during the first two weeks of the season. The Packers are good, but they still must prove to me that they're definitively Tier 1 good.

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