The NFL’s third- and fourth-longest winning streaks belong to the Bills and the Eagles.
Both of those teams have won four straight – not quite as hot for as long as the Chiefs and the Lions.
But, really, how good are the Bills and Eagles?
Both teams have just one win against an opponent with a winning record – and both happened in Week 1, when the Bills outlasted the much-improved-since-then Cardinals and the Eagles beat the Packers in Brazil.
Since then, both teams have been taking care of a lot of dysfunctional foes, which might be all that’s needed in this atypically bottom-heavy NFL season. Real tests are coming in Week 11, however, when the Bills face the Chiefs and the Eagles face the Commanders.
Until then, here are The Post’s power rankings for Week 10:
1. Chiefs 8-0 (1)
Credit the injury-plagued Chiefs for their in-season pick-ups. After recent trade acquisition DeAndre Hopkins scored two touchdowns during regulation, free-agent addition Kareem Hunt scored the walk-off touchdown in a 30-24 overtime win against the Buccaneers. It all was a nice complement to Travis Kelce’s 14 catches. Patrick Mahomes didn’t miss a snap after re-aggravating an ankle injury.
2. Lions 7-1 (2)
Indoors or outdoors, doesn’t matter. Playing in weather for the first time this season, Kerby Joseph returned an interception 27 yards for a touchdown, and the Lions converted two fourth downs into touchdowns in a 24-14 win against the Packers. The Lions scored 24 straight points at one point and have won three straight at Lambeau Field.
3. Ravens 6-3 (5)
Lamar Jackson threw a perfect game, finishing with the highest possible quarterback rating (158.3) in a 41-10 rout of the Broncos. Jackson had 280 yards and three touchdowns through the air, while Derrick Henry scored the 100th and 101st rushing touchdowns of his career and topped 1,000 rushing yards for the sixth time in his nine-year career.
4. Bills 7-2 (6)
Tyler Bass – whose big miss in the playoffs last season has carried over to struggles this season – made a 61-yard field goal to beat the Dolphins, 30-27. The teams combined for seven consecutive scoring drives and the leads changed hands four times in the second half, but Josh Allen and his three touchdown passes got the last laugh.
5. Packers 6-3 (3)
A 411-261 advantage in total offense meant nothing in the loss to the Lions because the Packers drove inside the 35-yard line three times without scoring, including a missed field goal. Jordan Love played after leaving last week’s win with a groin strain, but he did not throw for a touchdown with his 273 yards and an interception.
6. Commanders 7-2 (8)
Even without leading rusher Brian Robinson Jr., the Commanders ran for 149 yards on the ground in a 27-22 win against the Giants. Jayden Daniels threw for two touchdown passes and iced the win with a 42-yard completion to run out the clock as Washington has started 7-2 for the first time since 1996 in Daniels’ rookie season.
7. Vikings 6-2 (7)
The Brian Flores-coordinated blitz-heavy defense turned Joe Flacco into a pumpkin, holding the Colts to six offensive points and zero red-zone trips in a 21-13 victory. Flacco was sacked five times, including three in the last two minutes. Sam Darnold tossed three touchdown passes – none, surprisingly, to Justin Jefferson – and only six incompletions. Jefferson completed a 22-yard pass.
8. Steelers 6-2 (9)
Justin Fields and Russell Wilson have combined to give the Steelers their best quarterback play since Ben Roethlisberger retired. It’s been more than enough to complement a stingy defense, near-perfect special teams and head coach Mike Tomilin’s annual excellence despite putting 15 players on injured reserve. The Steelers come out of their bye with all six AFC North games remaining
9. Texans 6-3 (4)
C.J. Stroud completed just 11 of 30 passes and later described a 21-13 loss to the Jets in prime time as “embarrassing.” Ka’imi Fairbairn missed two field goals, including one after he had converted but the Texans elected to take points off the board and continue a drive. Not having receivers Nico Collins and Stefon Diggs hurts a suddenly one-dimensional offense.
10. Eagles 6-2 (10)
Saquon Barkley had 159 yards rushing, 40 receiving, scored two touchdowns and did a never-before-seen backward hurdle over a tackler. But it still took Nakobe Dean’s end-zone interception to seal a 28-23 win against the Jaguars. Barkley had a fumble returned for a touchdown and the Eagles went 0-for-2 on fourth down, 0-for-3 on two-point conversions and missed a field goal.
11. Falcons 6-3 (11)
12. 49ers 4-4 (13)
13. Cardinals 5-4 (18)
14. Chargers 5-3 (19)
15. Buccaneers 4-5 (14)
16. Broncos 5-4 (12)
17. Rams 4-4 (21)
18. Seahawks 4-5 (15)
19. Colts 4-5 (20)
20. Cowboys 3-5 (17)
21. Bears 4-4 (16)
22. Bengals 4-5 (22)
23. Jets 3-6 (28)
Garrett Wilson made two one-handed catches that he turned into touchdowns, including an all-time great NFL regular-season touchdown grab in the fourth quarter of the upset of the Texans. Davante Adams scored his first touchdown as a Jet, after he was cleared from the concussion protocol. It was Aaron Rodgers’ first three-touchdown-pass game since leaving the Packers.
24. Giants 2-7 (24)
The Giants tripled their combined offensive touchdown output from their previous four games by scoring three (Theo Johnson, Chris Manhertz and Daniel Jones) against the Commanders but still fell to 0-5 at home and lost a fourth straight overall. Jones lost a fumble and Dru Phillips missed a third-and-18 tackle, setting up two Commanders’ touchdowns. A couple of two-point conversion attempts failed.