Making Sense of the NFC South Win Totals Isn’t Easy

Hunter Tierney
By Hunter Tierney
April 13, 2026
Making Sense of the NFC South Win Totals Isn’t Easy

Every year there’s a division that makes you feel like you’re talking yourself in circles, and the NFC South is right back in that spot.

Nobody ran away with this thing last season. Carolina won the division at 8-9. Tampa Bay finished 8-9. Atlanta finished 8-9. New Orleans went 6-11. That alone tells you all you need to know. There’s some talent here. There's a few quarterbacks people still want to believe in, and a couple of these teams can absolutely look dangerous for a month at a time. But there still isn’t that one team you look at and say, yeah, that’s clearly the class of the division.

That makes betting win totals... interesting, to say the least. 

DraftKings opened the Panthers at 6.5, the Buccaneers at 8.5, the Falcons at 6.5, and the Saints at 7.5. On paper, those numbers make sense. None of these teams are coming off some huge breakthrough year. At the same time, Vegas is telling you they think nine wins will win you this division and are hoping you'll start convincing yourself the upside is more real than the floor.

Carolina Panthers: Over 6.5

Nov 26, 2023; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Carolina Panthers quarterback Bryce Young (9) celebrates after running for a first down during the first half against the Tennessee Titans at Nissan Stadium.
Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images

This is the easiest pick in the division for me, and it didn’t take long to get there.

I get why the number is where it is. Carolina may have made the playoffs, but they were still an 8-9 team with a negative point differential and a bottom-third offense. They scored 18.3 a game. A lot of this season was surviving close games and figuring things out late, not controlling games from start to finish.

But 6.5 still feels a little light.

Bryce Young is the whole bet. The raw line — 3,011 yards, 23 TDs, 11 INTs — is solid, but the real story was the swing from early-season chaos to late-season control. He led multiple game-winning drives and kept them alive in one-score games. That’s the good.

The other side is consistency. There were still too many stretches where the offense stalled, protection broke down, or they couldn’t finish drives. Carolina didn’t suddenly become efficient — they just became functional, and then dangerous late.

So this number really comes down to one question: does that late-season version of Bryce show up more often, or was that a heater?

I’m betting it shows up more.

And the situation around him is finally somewhat competnt. Dowdle gave them a real run game (1,000+ yards), McMillan stepped in as a legit No. 1 option right away (over 1,000 yards as a rookie), and Horn made plays on the back end. For the first time, this wasn’t a roster asking Bryce to fix everything by himself.

What the Line Might Be Missing

You can make the case against it, but you have to work to get all the way down to six wins.

The biggest concern is the schedule. First-place schedule means Eagles, Seahawks, Broncos on top of the usual rotation, and this team isn’t sneaking up on anyone anymore.

There’s also a real underlying argument: this was still a low-scoring team that didn’t generate consistent pressure, and teams like that can swing back quickly if the breaks don’t go their way.

But even with that, 6.5 still feels like it’s pricing in too much regression.

I’m not calling Carolina a playoff lock. I’m not even saying they’re clearly better than the rest of the division. But getting to seven or eight wins? That’s very reasonable if Bryce just holds last year’s level and smooths out the week-to-week dips.

The offseason lines up with that idea too. They didn’t sit on it — they attacked the defense. Jaelan Phillips and Devin Lloyd were brought in to fix a pass rush that wasn’t good enough, and they added Pickett for QB depth. That’s a team trying to raise the floor, not just chase a ceiling.

If they go under, it’ll be because the consistency never comes — Bryce stays streaky, the offense still struggles to get to 20 points, and the tougher schedule punishes them for it.

But if he’s just a little steadier week to week, it’s hard for me to picture this being a six-win team.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Over 8.5

Sep 28, 2025; Tampa, Florida, USA; Tampa Bay Buccaneers wide receiver Emeka Egbuka (2) looks on during the fourth quarter against Philadelphia Eagles at Raymond James Stadium.
Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

This one got a lot trickier once the offseason started moving.

If you asked me right after the season, I probably would’ve felt stronger about the over. Tampa went 8-9 and got steady production out of Baker when his weapons were there. It felt like a team that was one cleaner stretch away from turning that into nine or ten wins.

Then the offseason hit.

Mike Evans is gone. Lavonte David retired. That’s not just production — that’s identity. Those are two of the guys you point to when you’re explaining what this team is about. Losing both in one swing is going to show up more than people think, especially early.

So yeah, I’m still over… but it’s a lean. Not a conviction play.

At the core of it, I’m still trusting the same thing: Tampa usually knows what they want to be.

Baker is part of that. He’s not elite, but he’s steady. 3,693 yards, 26 touchdowns, 11 picks — you can win with that, especially in this division. He doesn’t have to carry them. He just has to keep the floor intact week to week.

And there’s still enough around him to function. Egbuka looked legit as a rookie. Otton is back. The run game isn’t scary, but it’s usable — they brought in Kenneth Gainwell to help with that, not leaning on one guy to carry everything. It’s not pretty, but it works.

This Is Where It Gets Risky

The defense gave up 411 points last year, and it still doesn’t look fixed. Bowles has already said they need help at corner, and they didn't get any in free agency. The additions like Anzalone help, but it doesn't seem like that'll be enough.

And if this turns into a team that has to score 30+ to win against good teams, that’s where this number gets dangerous.

There’s also a very real version of this season where the Evans/David losses show up in ways that aren’t obvious on paper. Third downs. Red zone. Communication. Locker room leadership. Those little moments where veteran teams usually don’t mess it up. That’s where you feel guys like that being gone.

I think this is a nine-win team. I really do. And nine wins probably wins this division.

But that’s the whole thing — I’m basically threading the needle here. If I’m off by one game, it’s under. And when it's that close, it’s hard to feel overly confident.

The schedule doesn't do them any favors. They don’t have the first-place bump Carolina does, so instead they get Cowboys, Rams, Chargers — not much better. And inside the division, there’s no team you look at and say Tampa can’t win that matchup.

That’s the path. Be the most stable team. Let everyone else deal with their issues. Win the games you’re supposed to win, split the tougher ones, and you land right around nine.

Atlanta Falcons: Under 6.5

Sep 28, 2025; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Falcons running back Bijan Robinson (7) celebrates after scoring a touchdown during the first half against the Washington Commanders at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

This is bound to be the team that ends up driving me crazy all year. Because when you just look at the roster, Atlanta should be better than this number. Bijan Robinson is a legit star. Drake London has turned into a real No. 1. Kyle Pitts finally looked like himself again last year — 88 catches, 928 yards, five touchdowns — and the defense actually got after people, finishing with 57 sacks.

There’s a lot to like here.

And I’m still going with the under.

It All Comes Back to Quarterback

At some point, all of it still comes back to the same thing — quarterback.

That’s not breaking news, but with Atlanta, it’s more than just ā€œthey need good QB play.ā€ It’s that they still don’t even have a clear answer yet, and that tends to bleed into everything else.

Last year was the perfect example. They started 4-9, shuffled between Kirk Cousins and Michael Penix Jr., and even when the numbers looked fine on the surface, it never really felt settled week to week. They closed strong, sure, but that late push doesn’t erase how much of the season felt like they were still searching for direction at the most important spot.

And if you were hoping the offseason would clean that up, it kind of did the opposite.

Cousins is gone, Tua Tagovailoa is in on a short-term deal, and Penix is still the long-term piece — except he’s coming off a torn ACL. On top of that, you’ve got a new head coach in Kevin Stefanski, a new offensive coordinator in Tommy Rees, and a new GM in Ian Cunningham. That’s a full reset with no real answer in sight at the most important position.

Could it work? Yeah, there’s a version where it does. This roster has so much talent, particularly on offense, that it's certainly on the board that they win this entire division.

But this is where I keep getting stuck — every positive argument about Atlanta eventually circles back to something you hope happens, not something you actually know.

You like the talent? So do I. Bijan is a legit engine, London is a real No. 1, and Pitts finally looked like himself again. The pass rush even showed real life last year. But none of that really answers the question that matters late in games. Who are you trusting when things get tight?

Right now, that answer still feels like ā€œwe’ll see.ā€

The schedule only adds to it. Commanders, 49ers, Chiefs as your extra games isn't exactly forgiving, especially for a team that already has some built-in volatility.

So this isn’t me saying Atlanta has no chance. There’s real talent here, and you can absolutely sketch out a version of this team getting to eight or nine wins if things click.

It’s just that you’re betting on a lot of things clicking at once.

And this league usually punishes that.

New Orleans Saints: Under 7.5

Oct 27, 2024; Inglewood, California, USA; Los Angeles Chargers linebacker Khalil Mack (52) forces New Orleans Saints quarterback Jake Haener (3) to throw an incomplete pass in the second half at SoFi Stadium.
Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

I get why someone would talk themselves into the over here.

They went 6-11 last year, so 7.5 isn’t asking for some massive leap. Tyler Shough gave them a little life once he took over — 2,384 yards, 10 touchdowns, six picks — and more importantly, the offense at least looked functional. Chris Olave was back to looking like a true No. 1 with 100 catches, 1,163 yards, and nine touchdowns. Then you look at the offseason: Travis Etienne to fix a run game that wasn’t good enough, David Edwards to help up front, Noah Fant as another pass-catching option, and Kaden Elliss to help patch the defense.

And because they finished last in the division, the extra games are about as manageable as you’ll find — Cardinals, Raiders, Giants.

The Schedule Isn't Easy Enough

They still have to play the AFC and NFC North, and there's not a ton of easy games in those eight. That alone makes this a hard number to get to.

The Saints weren’t just unlucky last year — they were limited. Bottom-ten in yards per game, bottom-five in points per game, and one of the least effective run games in the league. Even when Shough steadied things a bit, it still felt like they were grinding through games rather than actually controlling them. That’s a tough way to live over a full season.

The cap situation is another piece people gloss over. No, they’re not still sitting $43 million over — they never were going to be. They restructured, pushed money around, and got compliant like they always do. But that doesn’t mean it’s not still a factor. This team has been playing that game for years, and it shows up in the margins — depth, flexibility, the ability to deal with a handful of injuries without everything falling apart.

And that’s really what this comes back to. This roster still feels thin. Not terrible, just… tight.

Shough is the swing piece, obviously. I actually liked what I saw more than I expected to. He looked capable, and capable matters. If he settles in quicker than expected, this team can absolutely hang around. Olave gives him a real target, and Etienne at least gives them a chance to be more explosive than they were last year.

But even with that, you’re still projecting a lot. You’re betting on growth, on cleaner structure, on a few key fixes all hitting at once. This feels like a team that’s heading in a better direction, but not one that’s ready to win eight games yet.

All stats courtesy of NFL Pro.


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