NFC East: Early O/U Win Total Predictions
The Bissett Perspective: Mike Goodwin and Jeremy Bissett provide insights on the NFC East O/U Win Total betting lines. Part 4 of 9 in the series.
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If you’re hoping for an easy read on the NFC East, you won’t find it here. The Vegas win totals this year are a puzzle—every team has its quirks, and none of these lines feel like a lock. With a schedule that pits them against both the NFC North and AFC West, there’s no clear edge for anyone. It’s the kind of setup that makes every over/under bet feel like a coin toss.
Mike Goodwin digs deep on the Cowboys and Giants. For Dallas, the story starts with Dak Prescott’s health—if he can’t stay upright, things could unravel fast. The Cowboys are trying to bounce back from a 7-10 season that ended the Mike McCarthy era. George Pickens brings some hope to the offense, but questions remain about a thin offensive line, an unproven running game, and a defense that struggled to keep teams out of the end zone. Over in New York, Goodwin looks at a Giants team hitting reset after a rough 3-14 run. Russell Wilson has been brought in to help rookie Jaxson Dart adjust to life in the NFL, while Jameis Winston might just be the guy keeping things loose in the locker room, or maybe secretly being hot-wired for his own NFL Mic’ed up series. With young talent abounding on offense and defense, the Giants’ record can only improve, but with the league’s toughest schedule, it won’t come easily.
Jeremy Bissett takes on the Eagles and Commanders. Philadelphia comes in reloaded after last year’s Super Bowl run, mixing a few new faces and coaches with the return of Jalen Hurts and a defense that set the standard. Their challenge will be getting through a brutal schedule and keeping the run game going. In Washington, Bissett tracks Jayden Daniels’ Rookie of the Year chase and the unusual stability of having Kliff Kingsbury return as offensive coordinator. The Commanders are pushing their chips in, but a tougher schedule and the chance of a sophomore setback could make things interesting.
These previews go further than the usual headlines. They dig into roster moves, injury histories, coaching changes, and what drove last year’s results. If you want to make smart picks on the NFC East over/unders—or just understand where each team stands—this is the place to start.
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Snapshot of the O/U Lines for the NFC East:
Team Schedules for NFC East:
*Scroll to the right to see the full schedule:

Dallas Cowboys:
2024 Record 7-10
Vegas Line 7.5
Over -160
Under +135
Home Games: NYG, GB, WSH, ARI, PHI, KC, MIN, LAC
Away Games: PHI, CHI, NYJ, CAR, DEN, LV, DET, WSH, NYG
Analysis:
A 7-10 close to 2024 brought an end to the Mike McCarthy era after a half decade, producing a stellar 49-35 regular season record but a dismal 1-3 postseason showing. The internal promotion of OC Brian Schottenheimer to fill the HC void will keep a level of continuity, but after a season where Dallas finished 25th in PPG and 31st in PPG against, it remains to be seen if that’s a good thing.
It's easy to point to the week 9 game in which Dak Prescott suffered his brutal season ending injury and star WR Cee Dee Lamb’s injured his AC joint, an injury that plagued him all season, as reasons for the terrible season, but let’s not forget both injuries were suffered at the tail end of a disappointing 3-5 start for the team. And while the injuries didn’t help, as Dak was caught on camera venting to a teammate in that very week 9 game just prior to his injury, “We f*cking suck.” Yes, from the horse’s mouth, this was not a good team.
Indeed, it’s tough to make a case that this was just a bad year. This team shows every indication of being in sharp decline from the dominant run they are only one season removed from. Prescott is entering his age 32 season, and while that can still be a very productive age for a QB, the injuries certainly seem to have taken a toll. Even before last season’s Achilles injury, he had missed 17 games combined between 2020 and 2022 to an assortment of injuries, including a fractured and dislocated ankle in 2020. Since that injury, Prescott’s rushing has dropped from 19 yards per game during his first 5 seasons to just a bit over 11 since.
Last year was also notable for a sharp drop in the quality of his supporting cast. Here is Dallas’s league ranking in PFF’s Supporting Cast Ranking, which averages every team’s PFF rush, receiving, and pass and run blocking grades:
2022: 10th
2023: 8th
2024: 29th
The retirement of generational guard Zack Martin this offseason isn’t going to help, and although 12th overall draft pic OG Tyler Booker should aid with the transition, it’s not going to be easy to paper over that hole, especially on a line that PFF had ranked as 25th in the league last year.
And the 2024 Cowboys didn’t have the talent in the RB room to mask those deficiencies. Last year Dallas was one of the few teams in the league with less than $10 million dollars invested in the position and it showed, amassing 5 rushing TDs and less than 1400 combined yards on the year. And while one can say they upgraded the position this offseason, that is a low, low bar to hurdle. As of the time of this writing, camp reports have Miles Sanders and Javonte Williams splitting carries for the lead position in camp. And while I’m sure it’s a relief to Cowboy Nation that Jerry has finally moved on from the corpse of Ezekiel Elliott, this can’t be a camp report that any fan is going to be excited to read.
Javonte Williams looked like he could be the next great thing before his brutal 2022 knee injury, and at just 25 perhaps he could still rebound, but last year’s 2.4 yards after contact (35th in the league) and yards over expected per carry of -6 (also 35th) do not inspire confidence. And Miles Sanders is, well, Miles Sanders. 5th round pick Jaydon Blue does look to have the potential to be an electric pass catcher and a threat to take it to the house at any point, but at just 196 lbs. and with only 214 career carries in college it’s unlikely he will ever be more than a Justice Hill-type role player.
Dallas did make one big addition on offense with the trade for Steeler WR George Pickens. Pickens has been a true wild card during his run in the league, and what his impact both on the field and in the locker room will be a well monitored and discussed subject this season. On paper, this seems like an ideal fit. This offense desperately needs another viable target besides CeeDee Lamb, and Pickens certainly fits the bill. Since entering the league he’s been dynamic and durable, averaging 16.3 YPC despite dealing with some pretty terrible QB play, and has only missed 3 games in 3 seasons. Pickens routinely makes ridiculous highlight reel catches and when focused can be one of the best WRs in the game.
Unfortunately, that lack of focus has been the issue, and there is no doubt that’s why he’s a Cowboy this year. His career up until now has been defined by immaturity issues. Fights with teammates, fights with opponents, obvious lack of effort on the field, committing penalties that are beyond stupid, tardiness to meetings and practices, etc., etc., etc. This was the one guy who Steelers coach Mike Tomlin, renowned for keeping knucklehead WRs in line, finally couldn’t deal with anymore. However, it turns out, it’s sure to make for fun TV.
Defensively, despite finishing 3rd in sacks and 2nd in QB hurries last year, Dallas was one of the worst defenses in the league where it mattered, giving up 31.5 PPG, which was 31st in the league, and allowing 355.2 YPG, which was 27th. Basically, Dallas was consistently being killed by explosive plays and collapses in the red zone. This offseason they parted ways with coordinator Mike Zimmer and brought in former Bears HC Matt Eberflus to fill the vacancy.
Eberflus, despite being a catastrophe of a HC in Chicago, has always shown himself to be a superior defensive mind, and his first step in addressing last season’s vulnerabilities to explosive plays completely overhauled the LB room and the secondary. Additionally, the Cowboys are hoping that a healthy Trevon Diggs, now fully recovered from a 2023 ACL tear, will be able to return to his 2021 All Pro form, and that star CB DaRon Bland can regain even half the production he had in 2023 after a down 2024 season.
Reading through this, it sounds like I’m pretty down on this team, and to the extent that this is a team with three straight 12-5 finishes from 2021-2023, I am. They’ve fallen from among the elite of the league to the middle of the pack and are going to be pretty universally picked to finish third in their own division behind Philly and Washington.
However, I believe there is enough blue-chip talent on this team to win some games, and even if Pickens doesn’t end up being the perfect teammate that Cowboy Nation is hoping for, he’ll certainly be an upgrade over Jonathan fricking Mingo. Last year they managed 7 wins with a half season of Cooper Rush throwing to a hobbled CeeDee Lamb, this year I feel pretty good about picking them to go over that.
Goodwin’s Prediction: OVER 7.5

New York Giants:
2024 Record: 3-14
Vegas Line: 5.5
Over +125
Under -155
Home Games: KC, LAR, PHI, SF, GB, WASH, MIN, DAL
Away Games: WASH, DAL, NO, DEN, PHI, CHI, DET, NE, LV
Analysis:
“I’ll have a tough time sleeping if Saquon goes to Philadelphia,” Giants owner John Mara admitted on episode three of last season’s Hard Knocks. Little did he know that Saquon’s Super Bowl run with the Eagles would be just one of the many reasons he’d lose sleep over the next several months.
On a personal note, I was shocked at the access the Giants allowed during that season. If you haven’t seen it, I recommend watching it—even at this late date—just for the intimate look at the machinations of an NFL team during the offseason. It’s a shame it all blew up in their faces so badly, because there isn’t a chance in hell that any franchise will ever allow that kind of exposure again.
Anyway, back to the 2024 Giants. Thanks, Jeremy, I really got the gems in this division.
Coming off an injury-riddled 6-11 season in 2023, last year was supposed to be a return to form for the 2022 playoff team that took down the Vikings and won Brian Daboll Coach of the Year honors. Instead, they finished 3-15, putting up a miserable 31st in points per game at 15.3, and 21st in points allowed per game at 24.4.
So, with the entire front office inexplicably retaining their jobs—but on the hottest of hot seats—they bid farewell to the short-lived Daniel Jones era and welcomed 37-year-old QB Russell Wilson, along with first-round pick Jaxson Dart (and, of course, Jameis Winston, who will hopefully be mic’d up at all times). Many think Dart will take over the team at some point this year, and I certainly wouldn’t be surprised. But Russ is the man tasked with the job in Week 1, so that’s where we’ll turn our attention.
At 37, I think it’s safe to say Wilson’s best years are behind him, but it’s likely he’ll still provide the Giants with the best QB play they’ve seen in some time. Not a high bar, given that this is an offense that has finished 30th or worse in four of the past five years. Although Wilson’s days of menacing teams with his athleticism in the pocket are gone, one thing that hasn’t changed is that beautiful, beautiful deep ball. No QB in the league last year averaged more yards per attempt or had a higher passer rating on passes thrown more than 20 yards downfield than Wilson. And that deep pass is an exciting prospect, because one very bright spot for the Giants last year was their first-round draft pick, Malik Nabers.
Given the state of the QB play and the lack of other weapons to draw defensive attention away, it would be easy to argue Nabers had one of the greatest rookie WR seasons of all time. Showing elite route running, YAC ability, and insane contested catch ability, the 109-1204-7 line he posted doesn’t do his season justice. Daniel Jones, the Giants’ starter before being benched, had an air yards per attempt average of 6.0—the lowest of anyone in the league with at least 200 completions. Backup QB Drew Lock posted an even worse line at 5.9 yards per attempt after taking over for Jones. And despite the short passing game, they still managed only a 61.9% completion percentage, well under the 65.3% league-wide average.
Besides Nabers, the Giants will return WRs Darius Slayton and Wan’Dale Robinson. Slayton is a bit of a body catcher, but he certainly knows how to win deep and may well be the biggest beneficiary of Wilson’s aforementioned elite moon balls. Robinson is a solid possession receiver coming off a 2024 season where he posted the … unique … stat line of 93 catches for a mere 699 yards. Fun fact: In NFL history, there have been 270 receivers who have caught at least 90 passes in a season. Robinson is not only the first to do it averaging under 50 yards a game, he did it averaging only 41.1 yards per game.
There’s that Daniel Jones magic.
Another bright spot from 2024 was converted WR and fifth-round draft pick Tyrone Tracy. After a quiet start to the season, Tracy played at least 60% of the team’s snaps in the last six games, lining up all over the field and finishing with 1,123 combined yards from scrimmage and six TDs. Unfortunately, ball security was an issue with four fumbles, and he finished as one of only two RBs in the league credited with more than 10 combined fumbles and drops.
This year, the Giants also added to the backfield by drafting battering ram RB Cam Skattebo with a fourth-round pick. He not only brings elite tackle-breaking ability—finishing second behind Jeanty in this year’s draft class—but is a value-add in the passing game, finishing second on Arizona State in receptions.
On the other side of the ball, the Giants may actually have the ability to cause serious chaos in opposing teams’ backfields this year. According to Over The Cap, the Giants are one of only four teams to have north of $80 million sunk into their interior defensive linemen and edge defenders ahead of the 2025 season. Plus, they went ahead and added future LB stud Abdul Carter with the third overall pick in the draft and DT Darius Alexander with the first pick in the third round.
Looking forward to 2025, this is one of the tougher teams to call. The Giants join the Titans, Jets, and Browns as the only teams projected at 5.5 wins, and while I think the Giants are the best of the bunch, I can’t ignore that somehow they ended up with the hardest projected schedule in the NFL. I’m sure there’s a reason a three-win team has that schedule, but damn!
Typically, I’d look at a defense with names like Dexter Lawrence, Abdul Carter, and Brian Burns and expect them to be able to get a few wins on their own, and I don’t see how the offense doesn’t see an uptick this year. On the other hand, that schedule! Look at it! Will they be favored in more than one game this year, if that?
This is as close to a coin flip for me as I’ve had so far, and when it comes to a coin flip, I’m going to subscribe to the idea that defense wins games, that Daboll winning Coach of the Year wasn’t a complete fluke, the NFL is built on variance, take the +125 odds, and hit that over.
Goodwin’s Prediction: OVER 5.5 Wins
Philadelphia Eagles:
2024 Record: 14-3
Vegas Line: 11.5
Over Line: +110
Under Line: -130
Home Games: DAL, LAR, DEN, NYG, DET, CHI, LV, WSH
Away Games: KC, TB, NYG, MIN, GB, DAL, LAC, WSH, BUF
Analysis:
The Philadelphia Eagles are back on the hunt for another deep playoff run—a feeling this city’s been chasing ever since that unforgettable Super Bowl LII win over the Patriots in 2018. They’ve had their moments since: remember 2019, when they clawed their way from 5-7 to win four straight division games and steal the NFC East? Sure, Seattle cut the party short in the Wild Card round, but that run felt like vintage Philly: fearless, scrappy, and just a heartbeat away from something bigger. The years since have been a whirlwind: Wentz to Hurts, Doug Pederson to Nick Sirianni, and last season’s headline-grabbing move to snag Saquon Barkley from the Giants.
Coming off a dominant Super Bowl victory over the Chiefs, the Eagles aren’t interested in playing the role of the City of Brotherly Love when it comes to defending their throne. This team is carrying that “Eye of the Tiger,” all-fight, no-quit Rocky Balboa energy into the new season—they’re here to remind everyone why they’re the champions. And they’ll need every bit of that toughness, because they’re about to take some serious haymakers from the opening bell.
Right out of the gate, they get the revamped Dallas Cowboys—new head coach, a healthy Dak Prescott, and a receiver duo of CeeDee Lamb and George Pickens who will test Philly’s young corners, Quinyon Mitchell and Cooper DeJean, as they step into their second NFL season. Then it’s a Super Bowl rematch at Arrowhead with the Chiefs, where the stakes and spotlight will be sky-high. Week 3 brings a Divisional Round rematch with the Rams, who nearly ended the Eagles’ postseason in last year’s snowstorm. After that, it’s a trip to Tampa Bay—a team that’s found ways to frustrate Philly, winning six of the last seven. And Week 5 isn’t any kinder, with the Broncos rolling in, looking to make a statement of their own.
The middle chunk of the season (Weeks 6-8) brings a glimmer of opportunity. The Eagles will likely face first-year starting quarterbacks three times in a row: the Giants twice—possibly rolling out rookie Dart—and the Vikings with J.J. McCarthy. If Philly can capitalize, they’ll set themselves up nicely heading into a challenging post-bye stretch: three NFC North opponents in four weeks, including another Dallas showdown. Down the home stretch, nothing comes easy—two games against Jayden Daniels and Washington, plus a frigid December trip to Buffalo, will test their mettle.
And it’s not just the schedule that’s different this year. There’s been turnover up and down the roster, and on the coaching staff, too.
Some familiar faces are gone: Bryce Huff headed to San Francisco after a tough season, Josh Sweat landed a big contract with Arizona, Chauncey Gardner-Johnson is now in Houston, and Mekhi Becton is off to the Chargers. But the front office didn’t just stand by. They brought in Kenyon Green from the Texans to shore up the O-line and made it a priority to keep core veterans in Philly. Saquon Barkley and Lane Johnson both signed extensions, and Dallas Goedert is back with a fully guaranteed $10 million deal. The draft was all about building for the future—two late-round tackles (Michigan’s Myles Hinton and Texas’ Cameron Williams) will compete to be Lane Johnson’s heir, while Jihaad Campbell and Smael Mondon add athleticism to the linebacker corps, and Antwuan Powell-Ryland could carve out a role on the edge.
The coaching staff has fresh faces, too. With Kellen Moore off to New Orleans, Kevin Patullo—a steady presence in Philly—steps up as offensive coordinator. On defense, Tyler Yelk gets a well-earned promotion after last year’s dominant campaign, where the Eagles ranked first in total defense, pass defense, points allowed, and forced fumbles. Don’t forget: this team set an NFL rushing record (3,866 yards, including the playoffs) and capped it all off with a Super Bowl LIX win over Kansas City. Parks Frazier joins as Passing Game Coordinator after helping Tua Tagovailoa lead the league in completion percentage, while Scot Loeffler brings nearly 30 years of college wisdom to the quarterback room. There’s a sense of continuity mixed with new ideas—exactly what you want after a championship year.
So what should fans watch for in 2025? Jalen Hurts enters his sixth season—and somehow, he’ll be working with his sixth play-caller. Saquon Barkley’s health will be under the microscope, and Jahan Dotson could become a secret weapon if injuries hit the receiving corps. Last year, the Eagles led the league in time of possession and ran the ball more than anyone—over 56% of the time, a huge jump from 2023. With this schedule, repeating that feat won’t be easy, but don’t bet against them. Circle Week 10 at Lambeau: the Packers led the charge to ban the “Tush Push,” so you know Sirianni and Hurts will have something special cooked up for the goal line.
When the schedule dropped, penciling the Eagles in at 13-4 felt bold—but not unreasonable. Split the tough road games at Kansas City and Buffalo and they should still clear 11.5 wins. Drop both, and the path gets trickier. The margin for error is slim, and the NFC East is as unpredictable as ever. But with this much talent, depth, and the right balance of fresh voices and familiar leadership, the Eagles have every reason to believe they’ll get to 12 wins—and stay right in the thick of the race at the top of the division.
Bissett’s Prediction: OVER 11.5 wins
Washington Commanders:
2024 Record: 12-5
Vegas Line: 9.5
Over Line: -120
Under Line: +100
Home Games: NYG, LV, CHI, SEA, DET, DEN, PHI, DAL
Away Games: GB, ATL, LAC, DAL, KC, MIA, MIN, NYG, PHI
Analysis:
The noise in Washington isn’t just hope—it’s expectation. After a shocking twelve-win campaign in 2024, the Commanders are staring down a possibility they haven’t seen since the glory days of Joe Gibbs: back-to-back double-digit win seasons. This time, the sportsbooks aren’t laughing. The over/under sits at 9.5 wins—second in the NFC East behind only the Eagles, and comfortably ahead of the Cowboys. The question echoing from Capitol Hill to the betting counters is simple: Can Washington do it again, or was last year just another brief spark in a long line of letdowns?
As always in the NFL, it starts at quarterback. Jayden Daniels, fresh off a rookie season that has stat geeks and longtime fans still buzzing, didn’t just steady the ship—he took the wheel. His 3,568 yards, 25 touchdowns, and 100.1 passer rating put him front and center in every conversation about the league’s next wave of stars. The numbers tell one story, but Daniels gave the offense life, breaking Robert Griffin III’s rookie rushing record with 891 yards and delivering in the clutch all year.
Some of his moments are already part of Washington football lore. In Week 3, Daniels went toe-to-toe with Ja’Marr Chase and Joe Burrow, then finished them off with a 27-yard strike to Terry McLaurin that sealed the win and set the tone for his season (YouTube). There was the miracle Hail Mary to beat the Bears—a play that instantly entered the team’s highlight reel (YouTube). And in Week 16, facing the eventual Super Bowl champion Eagles, Daniels threw five touchdowns in a performance that locked up his Offensive Rookie of the Year campaign.
Washington’s resurgence draws inevitable comparisons to the 2023 Houston Texans. Both teams rode the lightning of a rookie quarterback (Daniels for Washington, C.J. Stroud for Houston) and a bold offensive scheme to playoff berths nobody predicted. Houston’s breakout, powered by Bobby Slowik’s aggressive play-calling, became the new blueprint for rapid rebuilds. Now, Commanders fans are left to wonder if the parallels will continue—or if they’re staring down the same sophomore slump that hit Houston.
Houston’s story holds a warning. After their breakout, the Texans’ offense stalled as Slowik, distracted by head coaching interviews, seemed to lose his creative spark. Reports said the unit became predictable and stopped adjusting, frustrations mounting as they slipped to mediocrity. By season’s end, Houston had tumbled out of the top half in both yards and passing, and Slowik was gone before winter even got started. The takeaway: continuity and steady leadership matter, especially when you’re building around a young quarterback.
This is where Washington’s story might turn. Offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury, who orchestrated the Commanders’ offensive leap in 2024, quietly made a major decision: he’s staying. Unlike Slowik, Kingsbury didn’t chase every head coaching rumor—he didn’t even take the calls. Instead, he doubled down on his work with Daniels, committed to seeing the project through. For a franchise that’s cycled through coordinators and head coaches like clockwork, this kind of stability might be the difference between building something and watching it fall apart.
Kingsbury’s impact is everywhere you look. The Commanders finished fifth in points per game (28.5) and piled up over 6,200 yards, ranking among the league’s most explosive offenses. The run game, once an afterthought, became a battering ram behind a rebuilt line and Daniels’ dual-threat skills. Kingsbury’s playbook—long tagged as “air raid”—proved flexible, mixing creative run designs with perfectly timed deep shots to McLaurin, Samuel, and a receiving corps that finally lived up to its hype.
Still, there’s a reason for caution. The “second-year slump” is real, especially for quarterbacks who take the league by storm as rookies. Some, like Peyton Manning and Lamar Jackson, leveled up in year two. Others fell back as defenses adjusted and the magic wore off. Success depends on factors like coaching continuity, offensive line health, and a willingness to adapt. Kingsbury’s decision to stay, and his track record with quarterbacks, gives hope that Daniels won’t become another cautionary tale.
On paper, the 2025 roster is deeper and more balanced than any in recent memory. The front office added impact players like Deebo Samuel and Laremy Tunsil, giving Daniels more weapons and better protection. The defense, while still developing, has enough talent to keep games close. Most importantly, the supporting cast around Daniels is built to weather the ups and downs of a sophomore season—something C.J. Stroud didn’t get in Houston, where injuries and stagnation set in.
The schedule isn’t doing Washington any favors. The Commanders face the league’s eighth-toughest slate; their opponents combined for a .557 win percentage last year. Divisional games against the Cowboys, Eagles, and Giants will test them, and a tough midseason stretch against playoff contenders could define the season. Home field, always unpredictable in D.C., looms larger than ever, with eight home games that could tip the scales over or under that crucial 9.5 line.
So what will it take to go over? First and foremost, Daniels has to dodge the sophomore wall. That’s partly on him, but mostly on Kingsbury’s ability to stay creative and keep him protected. If the offense keeps evolving, Daniels stays upright, and the team retains the same aggressive mindset, they should remain near the top of the league. The addition of proven veterans on both sides of the ball is meant to guard against injuries and regression in close games—one of the main reasons they outperformed expectations last year.
The biggest wild card, though, is psychological. Washington hasn’t carried expectations like this in decades. The city is hungry; the locker room is confident. But pressure changes everything. The Texans, after their breakout, pressed and stumbled. Will the Commanders stay loose, or tighten up under the weight of what’s possible? Kingsbury’s steady hand might be what keeps them on track.
If the Commanders beat that 9.5-win projection, it won’t be a fluke. The schedule is tougher, the league is paying attention, and there’s no margin for error. But with Daniels’ historic rookie season as a foundation, Kingsbury committed for the long haul, and a front office finally executing a coherent plan, the building blocks are in place. Houston’s rise—and fall—serves as both inspiration and warning.
No one can guarantee the over. But for the first time in a generation, Washington isn’t just hoping to be decent. It’s expecting to be great. And in this town, that’s enough to make headlines.
For the sake of my dynasty league—where I traded Burrow for Daniels halfway through last season—I’m putting the good vibes out there now: no sophomore slump, just another step forward.
Bissett’s Prediction: OVER 9.5 wins
Recap:
Goodwin’s picks: Cowboys OVER 7.5 wins, Giants OVER 5.5
Bissett’s Picks: Eagles OVER 11.5 wins, Commanders OVER 9.5
Release Schedule:
Part 4: NFC East: 7/1
Part 5: NFC South: 7/3
Part 6: AFC West: 7/5
Part 7: AFC East: 7/7
Part 8: AFC North: 7/9
Part 9: AFC South: 7/11
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