SportsPulse: USA TODAY Sports NFL insider Jarrett Bell attempts to put into words the unbelievable finish in Minnesota, and how important situational football meant in a weekend of classic games. USA TODAY Sports
The 20 things we learned from the NFL playoffs' divisional weekend:
1. Among the NFL's 'Final Four,' the Patriots have five Super Bowl victories, while the Jaguars, Eagles and Vikings have combined for zero.
2. The Vikings, trying to become the first team to play a Super Bowl on its home field, are already the first club in NFL history to reach a conference championship game during the same season its stadium serves as the Super Bowl site.
3. The Eagles want us to buy in heavily — if not literally — to the Vikings. But they really want Vegas to invest. Philadelphia is now 4-0 as a home underdog in the Super Bowl era.
4. Since 2015, the Vikings have held a lead of 10 or more points in 29 games. They are 29-0 in those games ... thanks to Stefon Diggs' 61-yard walkoff TD in Sunday's shocking defeat of New Orleans.
5. The Saints' stunning loss came six years to the day of their divisional playoff collapse in San Francisco, when then-49ers TE Vernon Davis caught the game-winning TD with 9 seconds left in a 36-32 thriller.
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6. The Jaguars' 45 points Sunday matched the most ever surrendered by the Steelers in their long and illustrious playoff history and the most ever allowed in Pittsburgh. The only other team to hang 45 on the Steelers in postseason was Dan Marino's Dolphins in the 1984 AFC Championship Game. Surprisingly, those 45 points represent just the second-best playoff output in Jags history. They exploded for 62 in the 1999 divisional round — ironically, Marino's final NFL game.
7. Jacksonville will be making its third appearance in the AFC Championship Game. The previous two came when Tom Coughlin, who's in his first year as the club's executive vice president of football operations, was the head coach.
8. The Jaguars are one of four franchises to never reach the Super Bowl. They're just one win away from membership revocation in a club that also includes the Browns, Lions and Texans.
9. It's not always pretty — and many pundits and fans are already lining up candidates to replace Blake Bortles next season — but Jacksonville's quarterback now has a 2-0 playoff record. The combined postseason ledger of some notable potential replacements — Alex Smith, AJ McCarron, Kirk Cousins, Teddy Bridgewater and Sam Bradford — is 2-9, with both wins earned by Smith (2-5). Bradford has never taken a team beyond the regular season.
10. The Jags are 1-3 all-time in postseason against the Patriots, including a loss in the 1996 AFC Championship Game at old Foxboro Stadium. The last playoff game New England lost prior to the Bill Belichick era was a 25-10 defeat to the Jags in the 1998 wild-card round. Coughlin was Jacksonville's coach. Pete Carroll was New England's. Jacksonville is now 2-0 all-time against Pittsburgh in postseason. The Jags are the only team to win twice in Heinz Field in the same season and have now done it twice (2007, 2017).