What We Learned From Week 13 in the N.F.L.

Offense, offense, offense. The early goings in the N.F.L.’s Week 13 saw teams post higher than expected scoring totals from unexpected sources, and one rare tie between two teams — the Giants and Commanders — who searched high and low for points but couldn’t find them. The Eagles’ adaptation on offense helped Philadelphia down a tough Titans defense, the Lions put up 40 points, the Browns got three touchdowns from their defense and special teams, and Steelers quarterback Kenny Pickett continued a promising upward trajectory.

Good offenses dictate how the defense has to play. With a 35-10 trouncing of the Titans, the Eagles’ offense looked not just good, but great, at manipulating an N.F.L. defense with its versatility.

Coming off a Week 12 win in which quarterback Jalen Hurts let loose as both a designed runner and a scrambler to rip through the Packers’ defense with running back Miles Sanders, Philadelphia (11-1) opted to almost exclusively throw the ball against the Titans (7-5), whose defense was ranked third-most effective against the run entering the matchup.

In the first half alone, Hurts threw for 268 yards and two touchdowns with one rushing score. The easy scoring was perhaps best exemplified by Hurts’s 41-yard touchdown throw to a wide open A.J. Brown in the second quarter, to put the Eagles up, 14-7.

On Philadelphia’s first series of the second half, Hurts again found Brown, threading a 29-yard toss into one-on-one coverage and letting Brown win the jump ball in the end zone over the 5-foot-11 cornerback Tre Avery.

The approach made sense. Tennessee, led by defensive tackle Jeffery Simmons and linebacker David Long, were allowing the second-fewest yards per carry and third-fewest yards per game in the N.F.L., but the Titans’ talented outside cornerbacks, Kristian Fulton and Roger McCreary, both measure in at 5-11 and lack the length to disrupt the Eagles’ tremendous receiving duo of Brown (eight catches, 119 yards) and DeVonta Smith (five catches for 102 yards and a touchdown).

Hurts was 29 of 39 passing for 380 yards. He had three passing touchdowns and added a score on the ground. Playing with a lead most of the game, Philadelphia’s maligned run defense held Tennessee to 87 total rushing yards, including Derrick Henry’s 30.

The Eagles’ offense, more than any other, finds the one button the defense does not want it to push and smashes it repeatedly. In Week 1, Coach Nick Sirianni went to run-pass options to put the Lions’ subpar linebackers in a bind. Against the Cardinals in Week 5, the Eagles spammed zone-read calls to take advantage of Arizona’s weak edge rushers and poor discipline up front.

The Eagles’ week-to-week adaptability is immensely valuable heading into the postseason, where equally weighted contests are decided by picking apart matchups. The Eagles’ offense has enough talent to find ways to answer any potential opponent.

The more Daniel Jones can get moving and the less he has to be a pocket passer, the better the Giants’ offense usually is. Coach Brian Daboll’s game planning against the Commanders acknowledged as much, allowing Jones to add value in the run game (12 carries for 71 yards) and make a majority of his passing attempts on screens, run-pass option rollouts, in a game that was supposed to decide which N.F.C. East team with a winning record would occupy the division’s last place.

That tactic worked for three quarters against the Commanders’ above-average defense, but stalled in the fourth quarter. Washington tied the game on a 28-yard Taylor Heinicke pass to Jahan Dotson with 1 minute 45 seconds remaining and the Giants (7-4-1) punted on their final four possessions of regulation. The game went to overtime. After the teams traded possessions, Jones completed two passes to get the Giants to the Washington 40-yard line, where kicker Graham Gano missed a 58-yard field-goal attempt as time expired.

The Commanders (7-5-1) have struggled all year against mobile quarterbacks, which is why Daboll leaned into getting Jones involved in the run game early as well as rolling him out of the pocket repeatedly for designed runs and short, easy throws, a formula that helped Jones finish with 25 of 31 passing for 200 yards and a touchdown with no interceptions.

Daboll also did just enough to back the defense off from collapsing on all the underneath throws, most notably cooking up a 55-yard shot to Darius Slayton early in the second quarter, the team’s lone completion of over 15 yards.

But through the end of the fourth quarter and the overtime period, Jones was forced to be more of a drop-back passer to try to capture the win. He missed all three pass attempts on the Giants’ two-minute drive at the end of regulation.

Steelers 19, Falcons 16

Packers 28, Bears 19

Lions 40, Jaguars 14

Vikings 27, Jets 22

Commanders 20, Giants 20 (OT)

Eagles 35, Titans 10

Ravens 10, Broncos 9

Browns 27, Texans 14