If you've been reading the previews of the teams I've been writing all week, you have some idea of my thought process on these games. As usually happens when there are a tiny number of games left, it becomes easier to run out of things to say.

But there are only two more Sundays of actual football (setting aside the Pro Bowl, which seems best), so I'm gonna write a snapshot preview of the games anyway. Starting, as things will come Sunday, on the AFC side.

Tennessee at Kansas City:So I think the game plan for Tennessee will involve running it with Derrick Henry and seeing if Kansas City can stop it. I know, crazy. They'll have to mix in some passing, of course, and I believe Ryan Tannehill should be up to the task, mixing in some runs of his own. Entirely possible that Tennessee can control the clock, punch in some rushing scores, mix in a few big pass plays, and win a 27-24 type barn burner.

Because there is no doubt in my mind that Kansas City, with its chances, will put up plenty of yards and points of its own. So key for the Titans will be limiting those chances. Can they do it? Sure. Pick up some key third downs. Wear down the defensive front with Henry. Maybe force some field goals rather than touchdowns.

But the bottom line is I don't think Tennessee has the personnel to harass Patrick Mahomes, or cover all his different weapons. And if they commit extra defenders to that task, there will be a lot of Damien Williams runs and short catches, and big plays that way. I think it will be a good game. But I'm going with Kansas City 31, Titans 24.

Green Bay at San Francisco: The Packers were humiliated in the regular season meeting at San Francisco. And I saw a stat yesterday that teams meeting in the playoffs, where one team lost by 20-plus points, has lost 13 straight postseason meetings. So not a great history there. The other interesting thing I saw yesterday, not meaningful but amusing, is that Green Bay's head coach was the best man at the San Francisco defensive coordinator's wedding. Crazy!

But Green Bay has a balanced offense, impressive in that it can win with the running game (which San Francisco was vulnerable against at times) and also has a likely Hall of Fame quarterback on its side. Aaron Rodgers didn't do it much this year, at least not much against quality defenses, but he certainly can; it's possible. Maybe he comes out with a great game, spreading it around and peppering different receivers (he knows he has guys besides Davante Adams, right?), and it's a back and forth game.

The key to this game is Jimmy Garoppolo. Let's not underestimate the fact that this is uncharted territory for an inexperienced guy who's started all of one playoff game, and one where his running game did most of the work. No doubt Green Bay makes Garoppolo try to beat them. That's the critical question: can he?

San Francisco will have some success running it. I think Raheem Mostert will be the lead back, with Tevin Coleman the No. 2, but expect a 60-40 type of split, as my projections earlier this week indicate. I like Deebo Samuel and George Kittle, though, on the idea that San Francisco will be required to pass a little more than it might prefer. Green Bay's offense should be better this time around than in the regular season.

For that reason, while most believe Tennessee is the likelier upset this week, I think it's Green Bay. Don't underestimate the inexperience of a young San Francisco team, and young (experience-wise) quarterback.

I'm picking 49ers 27, Packers 24, but I'm not as confident in San Francisco as I am in Kansas City. A Super Bowl I rematch looks possible.

Enjoy the games.

--Andy Richardson