NFL

The best NFL previews to read ahead of the new season

The NFL season kicks off this week. As you finally♚ pull the trigger on that 50-inch TV and ponder the beer run, you also might consider grabbing a few f﷽ootball magazines and studying up.

Nꦜo matter what preview you grab off the newsstand, brace yourself for another year of Tom Brady and Bill Belichick flirting with retirement, the Cowboys trying to reclaim their lost glory and Odell Beckham Jr. being, well, Odell.

and have crafted their current issues to get you up to speed inꦗ time for Thursday night’s kickoff b𝓀etween the Falcons and Eagles. But SI’s NFL preview is the only one you need to be the most informed fan at your watch party.

The 71-page Sports Illus𝓰trated preview delivers ev🤪ery morsel of information you could ask for leading into the 2018-19 season.

Looking for an analysis of every team’s rosteౠr and Super Bowl chanꦉces? Check.

How about a feature on Eagles QB Carson Wentz and his banged-up teammates, who are rehabbing from a slew of season-ending injuries that made th🃏em miss their team’s incredible Super Bowl run last year? That, too.

Wonderi🃏ng how the Los Angeles Rams’ head coach, 32-year-old wunderkind Sean McVay, is handling the pressure as his team gets picked as a favorite to win the championship? The magazine sent Greg Bishop to find out.

ESPN’s offerings look meager by comparison. The Time Inc. title appears to have ceded the granular coverage of the league to its rival, leaving many fans stranded with lengthy features about players o✃n teams they don’t care about.

Yes, Seth Wickersham delivers an excellent profile of Giants superstar Odell Beckham Jr. — who, armed with a new $95 million contract, is poised to generate plenty of fireworks despite the team’s iffy prospects. But there’s not much else for the fan who isn’t interested in a deep dive on a꧒ specific player.

The most ESPN does is a two-page spread projecting thܫis year’s standings. Spoiler alert: The Giants and Jets are each forecast to finish last in their divisions, at 7-9 and 6-10, respectively.

Both mags play it saf🎃e with their Super Bowl picks. ESPN’s Football Power Index opts for the New England Patriots, while SI predicts that the 2017 Super Bowl runner-up Atlanta Falcons will win it all.