Schedule strength means a lot when it comes to deciding who earns a postseason berth in the NFL. An easy schedule didn't hand Tennessee a playoff spot last season, but it was a big reason the Titans went 9-7 despite rating as a below-average team by Football Outsiders' DVOA ratings. On the other hand, difficult schedules helped keep Green Bay and Washington at 7-9 instead of making them wild-card contenders. So it's important to know which teams will get a schedule boost in 2018.
Of course, it's tough to project schedules when we don't know how good teams will be in the future. We've done it here using our projections of Football Outsiders' DVOA ratings, which account for general statistical trends and specific personnel changes. The numbers here come from an updated set of projections as of Sept. 5 that account for preseason injuries and suspensions, plus that big Oakland-Chicago trade involving Khalil Mack.
These schedule projections may not agree with conventional wisdom because the Football Outsiders projections don't necessarily agree with conventional wisdom. For example, Jacksonville is expected to decline this year, while Indianapolis is expected to be stronger than in 2017. (For more on Football Outsiders' specific team projections, check out our book Football Outsiders Almanac 2018, available online, before the season begins.)
Of course, the strongest projected schedule for 2018 is only about half as strong as the hardest schedule from 2017, because our team projections are naturally conservative. Going into a new season, no team is guaranteed to be as good as last year's best team or as bad as last year's worst team. No, not even if that team is starting Nathan Peterman at quarterback.
Here are all 32 teams ranked in order from the hardest projected schedule to the easiest. Scroll through in order, or click a logo below to skip ahead to your team:
1. Carolina Panthers
Average projected DVOA of 2018 opponents: 3.1 percent
Hardest schedule stretch: Weeks 7-10 (at Eagles, vs. Ravens, vs. Bucs, at Steelers on short rest)
The four hardest projected schedules in the league belong to the four teams of the NFC South. Some of that is because their own division is strong, but they also play outside their division against the NFC East (where Philadelphia is the defending champion and the rest of the division should all be improved) and the AFC North (where our projections love Pittsburgh and even the bad teams should be closer to "mediocre" than "bad.")
The good news for the Panthers is that the difficulty of their schedule is fairly evenly distributed. An early trip to Atlanta is followed by a home game against Cincinnati. They have four road games out of five in Weeks 10-14, but as of now, those seem like their weaker opponents (including Tampa Bay and Cleveland). And they finish up by going Saints-Falcons-Saints, but two of those three games are at home.