The NFC North is currently the only division in the NFL where all four of its teams are above .500 after the Chicago Bears beat the Washington Commanders 25-24 on Monday Night Football.
Use whatever word you want: grind, gauntlet. Bloodbath, even. They all mean the same thing: this division is tough.
The Detroit Lions won’t need any reminder of that, after having to go 6-0 in the division and win 15 games just to avoid a wild card spot. The NFC North was so tight last year that the Week 18 showdown between Detroit and the Minnesota Vikings featured the most wins between two teams in a regular-season matchup in NFL history.
Detroit literally had no room to drop any more games than they did last year, and it looks like they’re in for more of the same in 2025.
After their loss to Kansas City on Sunday night, the Lions find themselves tied with Minnesota for second in the division at 4-2, and a half-game behind the Green Bay Packers who are 3-1-1.
NFC North remains stacked amidst Lions' injury woes
Usually 4-2 has you feeling pretty good about yourself. In this division, that just means you’re barely treading water.
Green Bay might not look like the absolute cream of the NFL crop right now, but they are without a doubt still Super Bowl contenders and dominated the Lions in Week 1. Minnesota has a havoc-wreaking defense and arguably the best receiver in the game, and they’re about to get their young quarterback back from injury.
Chicago, left for dead by many after a Week 2 dismantling at the hands of the Lions, has since won three straight.
All that to say, this division is just as difficult— if not even more— than it was last year.
“It's not going to get any easier,” head coach Dan Campbell said following the Lions’ loss to the Chiefs. “These only get harder and harder as you go, and they're more meaningful every game that we go..Maybe we needed this. Maybe we needed to get kicked around a little bit, ‘cause that's what happened.”
Maybe a Sunday night humbling will indeed prove to be a necessary dose of reality for Campbell’s Lions. Their next four games are about as tough as it gets: hosting Tampa Bay on Monday night, hosting Minnesota, at Washington and at Philadelphia.
Campbell’s Lions cannot afford to post a losing record in that stretch if they want to remain in the division race. They might not even be able to afford to go 2-2.
Detroit going 6-0 in the division last year was an incredible feat that’s already off the table this season after Week 1. If Chicago keeps on winning and the division proves to have four good teams, then the North is even harder than it was last season, when it had a 14-win wild card team and an 11-win third place finisher.
The Lions know that. They pride themselves on being built for stuff like this. But they’ve still got to go out and prove it. And with injuries piling on and other division rivals heating up once again, they risk getting left behind in the race if they end up going through a losing skid.
This looks like a division that could come down to the final week of the regular season once again. And if Detroit can pull off a third straight NFC North title, that achievement would rank among the most impressive in the NFL this decade.
It should be a wild December up north.