Want this question answered?
The Vikings! No contest
Matthew Stafford who is having a tremendous season playing at that spot you better keep an eye on Detroit to win the NFC North and the NFC title ESPNJOHNCLAYTON
The 49ers will play their division rivals (Seattle, St. Louis, Arizona) twice. They will play the NFC South (Carolina, Atlanta, New Orleans, Tampa Bay) They will play the AFC South (Indianapolis, Tennessee, Houston, Jacksonville) They will play the NFC East and NFC North teams that match the Niners finishing position in their division - i.e. if the Niners win the NFC West they play the NFC East and NFC North division champs.
Eagles
cowboys
if you win the championship game for the NFC, you go to the super bowl vs. the AFC champion
For the NFL, yes. The wild cards are the two teams with the best win/loss record that did not win their division. Both can come from the same division. That happened in the 2007 playoffs when the two wild cards from the NFC were the Giants and Redskins, both of whom play in the NFC East.
Prior to the NFL/AFL merger, the first AFL (AFC) coach to win a Super Bowl was Weeb Ewbank, New York Jets in Super Bowl III. Post merger (1970 season and after), the first AFC coach to win a Super Bowl was Don McCafferty of the Baltimore Colts in Super Bowl V. Interestingly enough, The Colts had moved from the NFC to the AFC and the Cowboys from the AFC to the NFC in the AFL/NFL merger.
The Seattle Seahawks will most likely win the NFC west. St. Louis is too young and the other two teams are out of it.
No, the 49ers will win 27-19
When the win the NFC final. That should be a sign.
I believe Triple H will win the 2016 Royal Rumble.