The UFL Playoffs Are About More Than A Trophy
The UFL playoffs donât need another pity piece.
Weâve done that version of spring football a thousand times already. Is the league stable? Can it survive? Are enough people watching? Will fans care? Those are fair questions, but at some point, they also turn the whole thing into a weekly business obituary. Nobody wants to watch football with a calculator in one hand and a candlelight vigil in the other.
The better question is a lot more interesting: what if the UFL playoffs actually work because theyâre two things at once?
Theyâre a real championship chase for the league, and theyâre also a live audition for players, coaches, staffers, specialists, officials, and everyone else trying to get back into the NFL ecosystem.
That sounds like it should make the product feel smaller. In reality, it gives the games an extra layer of pressure.
The UFL didnât need the semifinal weekend to look like the NFL. They needed the games to feel like they mattered. And honestly, they did.
This Isnât Just Some Tryout Story
There's a tendency to talk about spring football like it's just a waiting room. Like everybody's sitting around killing time until an NFL team finally calls. Sure, that's part of the story. A lot of these guys want another shot. But reducing the whole league to that misses whatâs actually happening.
After the 2024 season, more than 250 of the leagueâs 400 players got NFL workouts, 78 ended up in training camps, and 21 were on NFL rosters by September. Thatâs not some feel-good story. Thatâs a working pipeline. Itâs not flashy, and not everyone who gets a shot is sticking around for years, but the point is the opportunity is real.
The thing I like about it is that nobody has to pretend otherwise. The UFL isn't trying to convince people they're competing with the NFL. They're offering something different. Giving players a chance to keep playing meaningful football while proving they still belong in the conversation.
And you can feel it when you watch these playoff games. A big throw isn't just helping a team reach a championship game. A sack isn't just moving a defense off the field. A kicker drilling one from 60-plus isn't just creating a highlight. Those moments can genuinely change what happens next for somebody's career.
That adds something to the product instead of taking away from it. The pressure is real. The stakes are real. Everybody has something to play for, even beyond the scoreboard. That's hard to fake, and viewers can usually tell the difference.
Then The Games Proved It
The semifinals were about as clean of a snapshot as you can get of what this league is when itâs actually clicking.
DC beating Orlando 28-22 had everything youâd want. The Defenders were the defending champs, but they walked in as a No. 4 seed against the top-seeded Storm. Orlando had just beaten them twice to close the regular season, so this turned into a weird little three-game run between the same two teams. Itâs hard to beat a good team once. Asking for three straight when the last one ends your season? Thatâs different. DC wasnât letting that happen.
Jason Bean was right in the middle of all of it. And yeah, heâs playing for a title shotâbut letâs not pretend heâs not also playing for his next opportunity. Both things can be true. He threw for 233 yards and a touchdown, the offense put up 405 total yards, and they went 10-for-16 on third down. Thatâs not empty production. Thatâs a quarterback keeping drives alive when the game starts tightening up.
Then you get a moment like Derick Robersonâs. Orlando gets down to the goal line, fourth down, real chance to swing the gameâand Roberson buries Jack Plummer to end it. Thatâs the whole idea in one play. Big spot, good opponent, playoff setting⊠and you win your rep. Thatâs the clip people remember.
Matt McCrane added his own version of that, drilling a 61-yard four-point field goal late. The four-point rule sounds gimmicky until someone actually hits one in a playoff game. Then it just feels like a weapon. And the NFL has already shown itâll take a long look at kickers coming out of these leagues. Itâs pretty simpleâyou either have that kind of leg or you donât. McCrane clearly does.
Orlando didnât go away quietly either. Plummer hit Chris Rowland for a 40-yard score late, and both of them probably did enough this season to stay on NFL radars. But DC made the last play that mattered. Bean moved the chains one more time, and that was it.
Thatâs not fake football. Thatâs a real playoff game where every big moment doubles as a rĂ©sumĂ© line.
The second game felt the same, just a different style. Louisville beat St. Louis 29-20, and if youâre circling names from the weekend, Tanner Brown is right there at the top. Two four-point field goalsâone from 60, one from 63âand suddenly itâs not even subtle anymore. Thatâs just putting it on tape and daring someone not to notice.
But Louisville wasnât just a kicker story. James Robinson ripped off a 53-yard touchdown to open things up, and Ian Wheeler answered with a 51-yarder in the fourth. They finished with 168 rushing yards against a defense that usually holds up pretty well. It wasnât complicated. They knew what they were, leaned into it, and it worked.
St. Louis had their chances. Luis Perez moved them, Jarveon Howard gave them something on the ground, and Steven McBride made plays outside. But 4-for-15 on third down will catch up to you, especially in a game like this. Late in the fourth, needing something to keep the season alive, they ran out of answers. Cam Gill and Lonnie Phelps got home, and Steele Chambers finished it with a red-zone pick.
And again, it all lines up. Gill already looked like one of the better pass rushers in the leagueâthen he shows up late in a playoff game. Brown already had the legâthen he proves it from 60 and 63 when it matters most. Louisville already had the turnaround storyâthen they go into St. Louis and finish it.
Thatâs what this is. A team chasing a title, and a bunch of guys putting real moments on tape at the same time. It doesnât have to pick one. Thatâs the whole point.
The Tension Actually Helps The Product
The usual criticism is simple: if everyoneâs trying to get back to the NFL, why should anyone care about the UFL?
Sounds good until you realize football has always worked like that. College guys are chasing the draft. Preseason guys are fighting for spots. Practice squad guys are trying to stick around. The sportâs built on steps â the trick is making each one feel real while youâre in it.
Thatâs where the UFL actually works.
Theyâre not pretending stars are staying forever or that NFL teams arenât watching. A lot of the best stories end with someone leaving, and thatâs a part of the pitch.
You see it with guys like Brandon Aubrey, Jake Bates, KaVontae Turpin. Them moving on didnât make the league look small â it made it look useful. It gave the next guy a reason to believe thereâs a path.
Itâs not just players either. The NFLâs already talked about using the UFL as a space for coaches, staff, and officials too. Itâs a smaller ecosystem, sure, but itâs still real football people getting real reps.
And people will watch that. They want football all year round, and the numbers back that up. ESPNâs coverage this season averaged 686,000 viewers, up eight percent, while ABCâs slate was up to 941,000, a 14 percent jump. Thatâs not massive, but itâs real inventory â especially with playoff games getting major network windows.
Thereâs still work to do. Some markets feel alive, some donât. St. Louis has a great atmosphere, but nobodyâs building their weekend around the UFL. And thatâs fine.
The games showed why it works anyway. DC kept their title run alive against a team that had just beaten them twice. Louisville flipped an 0-3 start into a United Bowl trip. Tanner Brown kicked like someone trying to force an NFL call.
Thatâs the sweet spot.
Itâs not the biggest stage, and itâs not supposed to be. But itâs a stage where winning matters and careers can change fast.
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