The 2026 NFL schedule will be released this week, finally crystallizing the path each team will have to take for the upcoming season. There’s no point in finger-wagging about the hype surrounding the schedule release — it’s real and ultimately just excitement for the most popular sport in the country.
Instead, here’s what to focus on and what’s fluff surrounding the NFL annual schedule release.
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What matters and what doesn’t: Rookie minicamps
What does matter for the NFL schedule release?
Rest times for each team
This is probably the most actionable thing that fans can immediately take away. International games and where teams play after. Opponents’ rest coming off Sunday night and Monday night games. Stretches when teams will be playing three games in 11 days in the later portions of the season. The placement of bye weeks, especially since in recent years teams are not always guaranteed to have a bye week after playing overseas. That stuff all matters.
For example, last season the Browns had a game at Pittsburgh following a game in London while the Vikings, their opponent in that game, were fortunate enough to have a bye. The Browns ended up losing the following week 23-9 to the Steelers. That isn’t to say that the Browns would have won that game if they had a bye week in between, but it certainly couldn’t have helped to be on the road right after a long international trip.
Not all schedules are made equal and while Cleveland’s was probably on the extreme end, it can still happen. Sketching out rest time can give fans a more level-headed approach on what to expect from their teams (if they choose to be rational).
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Teams to take note of are the ones that combine multiple tough aspects. Early bye weeks, heavy travel without real recovery time, and late season division games are almost always going to be tough schedules automatically.
When divisional games happen
This is partially related to the rest point, because rest (or the lack of it) prior to divisional matchups only puts an extra spin onto games that are already incredibly important over the course of a season. What’s also important here is when these games happen, because they affect playoff seeding late in the season. Teams who get most of their divisional games packed into November and December have an increased importance placed on them, especially if they got off to a sluggish start in the early portion of the season.
What doesn’t matter for the NFL schedule release?
Prime time games and standalone
Look, it’s easy to overreact to prime time games because they’re the most easily watchable over the course of an NFL week, but they count just the same as every other game. They don’t necessarily matter more just because they’re on “Sunday Night Football” or “Monday Night Football,” the context of the game itself supersedes what time the broadcast starts.
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Even though it’s kind of funny when a streak like Kirk Cousins’ Monday night drought happens, they don’t count more than a game that gets buried underneath a 1 p.m. ET start time.
Using last year’s win percentage as a tell of schedule strength
Don’t get me wrong, this can be helpful in a general sense to see how a team’s schedule played last season, but so much changes over the course of each offseason that it’s not the most accurate way to view the strength of a schedule. The Patriots went from 4-13 to 14-3 and a Super Bowl appearance as Drake Maye immediately established himself as an MVP-level quarterback. Things can change in the blink of an eye. Sometimes what happened last year is just what happened last year.
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Social media schedule release videos
While these can be a good deal of fun, they don’t necessarily “matter.” As in, don’t find yourself in a spot where you’re passionately upset at something a team releases or someone’s reaction to a release video. They’re (almost!) always inoffensive and even when they push the limit, they usually don’t cross any serious boundaries. Just have fun and keep it light with those.
