OK, I am just using the numbers. To be honest, the bye week thing is a little subjective as I don't know how those teams play after bye weeks.
Actually, I just looked it up and here are the four teams that SD played after their bye week: Pittsburgh, Oakland, Philly and the Jets. Other than Pittsburgh, that doesn't seem real tough and if it weren't for the blocked kick they would have been 3-1 in those games.
As for miles, when do you think San Diego will ever not log more miles than most teams? Even the games against Oakland in their own state are farther than Washington's trips to Philly and New York.
I don't know, but I think there has just been a lot of sympathy for the Chargers on this board, and I think that the Redskins had a tougher schedule. Don't forget that the Redskins played Seattle, Denver, KC (after KC's bye), San Diego, Chicago, Tampa Bay, Dallas twice, and NY Giants twice. That is 7 games against playoff teams and 3 games against teams that are still alive as of Week 16. Not until after this week, will the Chargers have played 7 games against playoff teams and 3 games against teams that are still alive as of Week 17.
Edit to Add: While I still think the Redskins schedule is tougher, we are talking about splitting hairs as they both played almost identical schedules since the AFC West played the NFC East.
There's an independent website that charts the results of every single play in every single game and compares them to league averages, adjusting for down, distance, and opponant (meaning 2 yards on 3rd-and-2 against the Bears = fantastic, while 2 yards on 1st-and-10 against the Texans = horrible). They then add up the totals of every play and use that to rank all the teams. They then release "Strength of Schedule" rankings. It's a pretty objective measure of teams and their schedules. You can agree with their methodology or disagree with it, but it *IS* objective. According to them, San Diego has had the #1 hardest schedule in the entire NFL this season, and Washington's was 11th. And they didn't even factor in considerations such as "teams coming off of a bye week" or "trips to the east coast", they went solely on opponent strength. In fact, the entire AFC West wound up with one of the 10 hardest schedules in the NFL. Only the AFC North had even TWO teams with top-10 schedules (AFC North, with Baltimore and Cleveland). No other division had more than 1 team in the top 10.The link is www.footballoutsiders.com if you want to check it out. If you're interested in statistical analysis of football, or ever have thought that ranking teams' offenses and defenses strictly by the number of yards they ring up is stupid, then it's the site for you.
Call me crazy but I guess I don't agree with their methodology. I couldn't find their SOS because the Search always went to a page not found, but I found it interesting that SD could be #1 and Washington could be #11.Here are their common opponents:
Dallas (Washington played them twice)
NY Giants (Washington played them twice)
Oakland (SD played them twice)
KC (SD played them twice)
Denver (SD will play them twice)
Philly (Washington will play them twice)
So 9 games are against common opponents. They also played each other in the 10th "common" game and since the game went to OT and they are both 9-6, I would call that a wash. It seems weird that with so many common games (10 out of 16) and the fact that Washington also played 3 other playoff teams (Seattle, Chicago and Tampa Bay), that Washington could be considered 10 spots below. SD only played 3 other playoff teams (NE, Pitt and Indy). Right now, I would say that group is better than Seattle, Chicago and TB, but at the time SD played NE and Pitt they opened the season with a combined 7-6 record. SD is getting the benefit of NE and Pitt playing much better now.
The NFC East played the AFC West this year so there was a lot of crossover. In fact, if the Giants beat Oakland this week then the intra-division games will end up as 8 wins for the NFC East and 8 wins for the AFC West, so I would call those divisions pretty even.
Oh well, I am officially done on this one.
Just a footnote, Maurile mentioned that .540 against the AFC is better than .560 against the NFC. After this weekend, it looks like the conference head to head will end up at 34 wins for AFC and 30 for NFC. I would call that almost even just based on my knowledge of the Redskins who at 0-4 against the AFC, could have easily swung that into a winning record for the NFC since they lost to Denver by missing a game tying 2 point conversion with 1 minute left, lost to SD in overtime with a 10 point lead in the 4th quarter, lost to Oakland on a FG with 1 minute left with a 3 point lead in the 4th quarter and lost to KC by 7 on a 60 yard TD pass when it was tied to start the 4th quarter.