Skip to main content

NFL Power Rankings: 49ers Win NFC’s Heavyweight Battle

San Francisco clobbered Philadelphia on the road Sunday to lay its claim as the league’s best team—and take over the top spot in our rankings.

On Sunday, before another slew of bad calls and some sideline chaos marred the on-field product in the afternoon and late-game window, I wrote what I assume has become glaringly obvious to us all: the NFL product is substandard. And it’s not just because of the rash of quarterback injuries, or the fact that defenses have caught up and, while doing all they can to survive, have managed to slow scoring down in the process.

You have reached your limit of 4 premium articles

Register your email to get 1 more

It’s the fact that there is no consistency or rhythm to the officiating of any football games. Forget the reality show bleed into the product. I’m talking about actively managing a football game like officials once could; where we didn’t really notice that the game was being officiated. I imagine the NFL will allow this to blow over just like it does everything else. I imagine officials will disappear in the conference title games and through the Super Bowl so as to avoid a talking point heading into their offseason jubilee and allow some miracle pass that should have clearly been flagged in the grasp.

Really, we’ve been asking these questions for years. Since 2019, after the Saints were knocked out of a Super Bowl by one of the worst missed calls in NFL history. We watch still, but the suspicion and unease surrounding the officiating crisis has certainly changed the conversation. I can’t remember the last time I’ve had a casual chat about football without being asked: what the hell was with that call?

At this point, it’s stunning to me that the NFL remains silent. At worst, this devolves into complete conspiratorial suspicion, completed via the common thread of legalized gambling. At best, it just continues being a substandard product we watch because going outside or painting a picture seems a little less interesting.

So, we will do the Power Rankings this week like we do every week. But as we get into it, I’ll as you this: does it really matter how good a team is, if an officiating crew is so nakedly capable of altering the course of a game? Do the best teams still win? Are we in a spot where that is possible? 

Watch the 49ers with Fubo. Start your free trial today.

49ers tight end George Kittle walks off the field after win against the Philadelphia Eagles

49ers tight end George Kittle ranks third among tight ends with 735 receiving yards and three touchdowns, and had a key play in Sunday’s win over the Eagles.