An unlikely result involving the NFL’s worst team ended up playing a decisive role in where the AFC Championship Game is being played.
What looked like an early-season footnote has now spared the Broncos and Patriots from battling extreme winter conditions.
The chain reaction can be traced back months, but its impact is being felt at the most important point of the season.

Las Vegas Raiders’ result swung the AFC title game away from snowbound New England
NFL insider Adam Schefter explained how one Week 1 result changed everything.
“The Raiders, who have the No. 1 overall pick, beating the Patriots in Week 1 is one of the main reasons today’s AFC Championship Game vs. the Broncos is in Denver and not New England.
“If the game were in New England, a snowstorm with 10+ inches of snow would be expected. Both the Broncos and Patriots finished the season 14–3, but Denver earned the No. 1 seed based on a better record against common opponents,” Schefter stated.
The loss proved costly for New England months later. With both teams finishing the regular season tied at 14–3, tiebreakers came into play, and Denver’s stronger record against common opponents ultimately secured home-field advantage.
Why the location shift matters for the Broncos and the Patriots
The difference between playing in Denver and New England could not be more dramatic. Forecasts for Foxborough indicated a major snowstorm, with more than 10 inches expected, conditions that would have significantly affected gameplay, visibility, and preparation.
Instead, the AFC Championship is being played at Empower Field, where conditions are cold but manageable, allowing both teams to execute game plans without weather dominating the narrative.
The irony is hard to miss. The Raiders, owners of the league’s worst record and the No. 1 overall draft pick, inadvertently influenced the playoff picture by winning a single early-season game that later became a critical tiebreaker.
In the end, that September upset helped shape January’s stage, turning what could have been a snow-filled spectacle in New England into a clearer, cleaner championship showdown in Denver.
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