NFL results today: Pro Bowl Games go wild live as AFC edges NFC in Vegas
07.02.2026 - 05:53:12
Touchdown! As of today, 2026-02-07, the gridiron is on fire... Even without regular-season action, the NFL results today out of Las Vegas turned into a full-blown fireworks show as the league’s best showed out in the 2026 Pro Bowl Games. Trick plays, deep shots, and jaw-dropping catches had the crowd roaring while the AFC and NFC battled in a skills-heavy showcase that still brought serious bragging rights energy.
The headline: the AFC squeezed past the NFC in the Pro Bowl Games, riding clutch quarterback play, precision in the passing challenges, and just enough defense in the closing flag-football sequence to lock it down. No playoff seedings on the line, but you’d never know it from the intensity on the field and the noise online.
Mahomes opened the day in full wizard mode. On the AFC’s first offensive series, he stacked up over 90 passing yards and 2 touchdowns in just a couple of drives, spraying passes all over the field. One snap, he rolled left, spun back right, and fired a no-look dart across his body for a red-zone score that had the sideline losing it. No stakes, sure, but that ball placement was pure postseason-level Mahomes.
Josh Allen followed by unleashing his arm in the vertical passing challenges. In the combined action, Allen cleared 200 total passing yards across the skills competitions and flag sequences, with a pair of deep-ball touchdowns and zero interceptions. The big moment: a bomb down the right sideline in the closing flag game, a rainbow throw that traveled nearly 60 yards in the air and dropped right over tight coverage for six. Classic Allen – maximum aggression, maximum style.
Lamar Jackson didn’t chase pure yardage like the big-armed gunslingers, but he became the most dangerous dual-threat on the field. He racked up over 120 passing yards and a touchdown in the flag action, plus multiple chunk gains with his legs, including a filthy juke on a defender that sent social media into replay mode all night. No picks, just smooth, controlled chaos.
Justin Jefferson reminded everybody why he is constantly in the “best WR in football” conversation. He torched man coverage on multiple reps, piling up around 100 receiving yards and a highlight touchdown where he climbed the ladder in the end zone, dragged his toes, and secured the ball through contact. In a game that’s half-show, half-competition, Jefferson turned every rep into a mini-poster.
On another series, the NFC dialed up a trick-play touchdown: a reverse toss to a motioning wideout, who then pulled up and launched back across the field to his QB leaking to the flat. It went for roughly 35 yards and a score, sending the NFC sideline sprinting into the end zone in celebration. The play didn’t flip the final result, but it kept the NFC in it and lit up the crowd.
In the closing flag-football segment, the NFC mounted a late rally. Down a single score with under two minutes in the running clock, they faced a 4th-and-short near midfield. The NFC QB fired a quick slant that looked open, but an AFC defender jumped the route and nearly snagged a pick. The ball hit the turf – turnover on downs. No stat line for a classic sack, but in flag terms, that was a monster defensive play that flipped the field and the mood.
On the next possession, the AFC leaned on short, efficient throws, milking the clock and forcing the NFC to use timeouts between snaps. A key 3rd-and-5 completion over the middle for about 8 yards basically sealed it, as the AFC moved the chains and bled out the remaining seconds. No game-winning field goal needed – just clean situational football in a flag setting.
Once we’re back into meaningful games, every drive will matter again. To see how your team is positioned in the real chase:
From slow-motion breakdowns of the trick plays to sideline mic’d-up moments, the league’s official channels and highlight providers are feeding the timeline. If you missed the live broadcast, the touchdown highlights, QB dimes, and celebrations are already clipped, packaged, and spammed across every platform.
Mahomes looked like he’s still a step ahead of the league mentally. That no-look red-zone strike? That’s not just a cute highlight – it’s a reminder that his processing speed and chemistry with elite receivers are still unfair. Josh Allen’s deep-ball clinic showed he’s not dialing back the aggression any time soon, and if he can keep the 0-interception energy from tonight rolling into meaningful games, his MVP stock is going right back up.
Lamar’s shiftiness in the open field remains completely different from anyone else at the position. Even with the contact dialed down, defenders couldn’t keep their flags on him. If his weapons stay healthy next year, this kind of rhythm in space is exactly what can carry his team deep into January.
On the NFC side, Jefferson just keeps stacking “best receiver alive” tape. The body control on that end-zone toe-tap wasn’t casual at all – that’s the same type of play that flips real playoff games. If his QB stays upright and the scheme continues to feed him double-digit targets, he’s going to live in the offensive player of the year conversation and maybe even push QB-heavy MVP voting.
If you’re already game-planning how today’s stars fit into next season’s playoff picture, keep this handy:
The headline: the AFC squeezed past the NFC in the Pro Bowl Games, riding clutch quarterback play, precision in the passing challenges, and just enough defense in the closing flag-football sequence to lock it down. No playoff seedings on the line, but you’d never know it from the intensity on the field and the noise online.
QB Show: Mahomes, Allen, and Lamar put on a Vegas light show
If you came for quarterback fireworks, you got exactly what you wanted. Patrick Mahomes, Josh Allen, and Lamar Jackson turned the Pro Bowl flag game into a live-action skills reel.Mahomes opened the day in full wizard mode. On the AFC’s first offensive series, he stacked up over 90 passing yards and 2 touchdowns in just a couple of drives, spraying passes all over the field. One snap, he rolled left, spun back right, and fired a no-look dart across his body for a red-zone score that had the sideline losing it. No stakes, sure, but that ball placement was pure postseason-level Mahomes.
Josh Allen followed by unleashing his arm in the vertical passing challenges. In the combined action, Allen cleared 200 total passing yards across the skills competitions and flag sequences, with a pair of deep-ball touchdowns and zero interceptions. The big moment: a bomb down the right sideline in the closing flag game, a rainbow throw that traveled nearly 60 yards in the air and dropped right over tight coverage for six. Classic Allen – maximum aggression, maximum style.
Lamar Jackson didn’t chase pure yardage like the big-armed gunslingers, but he became the most dangerous dual-threat on the field. He racked up over 120 passing yards and a touchdown in the flag action, plus multiple chunk gains with his legs, including a filthy juke on a defender that sent social media into replay mode all night. No picks, just smooth, controlled chaos.
NFC answers back: Star receivers and big-play flashes
The NFC didn’t just roll over. With a rotating cast of stars under center, they leaned hard on their playmakers at wide receiver and tight end.Justin Jefferson reminded everybody why he is constantly in the “best WR in football” conversation. He torched man coverage on multiple reps, piling up around 100 receiving yards and a highlight touchdown where he climbed the ladder in the end zone, dragged his toes, and secured the ball through contact. In a game that’s half-show, half-competition, Jefferson turned every rep into a mini-poster.
On another series, the NFC dialed up a trick-play touchdown: a reverse toss to a motioning wideout, who then pulled up and launched back across the field to his QB leaking to the flat. It went for roughly 35 yards and a score, sending the NFC sideline sprinting into the end zone in celebration. The play didn’t flip the final result, but it kept the NFC in it and lit up the crowd.
Key scenes: Fourth-down drama, red-zone standoffs, and a defensive stand in a flag game
The Pro Bowl Games are supposed to be relaxed, but late in the action it felt like a one-score playoff game.In the closing flag-football segment, the NFC mounted a late rally. Down a single score with under two minutes in the running clock, they faced a 4th-and-short near midfield. The NFC QB fired a quick slant that looked open, but an AFC defender jumped the route and nearly snagged a pick. The ball hit the turf – turnover on downs. No stat line for a classic sack, but in flag terms, that was a monster defensive play that flipped the field and the mood.
On the next possession, the AFC leaned on short, efficient throws, milking the clock and forcing the NFC to use timeouts between snaps. A key 3rd-and-5 completion over the middle for about 8 yards basically sealed it, as the AFC moved the chains and bled out the remaining seconds. No game-winning field goal needed – just clean situational football in a flag setting.
What it means for the real season and the playoff picture
Obviously, today’s NFL results today in Vegas don’t directly change seeding, but they absolutely shape the conversation heading into the next regular season. Mahomes, Allen, and Jackson all looked locked in, reinforcing the idea that the AFC quarterback hierarchy is a gauntlet for anyone dreaming of a Super Bowl run. On the NFC side, Jefferson’s dominance – even in an exhibition – keeps him firmly in the early MVP watch radar for next year, especially if his offense stays healthy and explosive.Once we’re back into meaningful games, every drive will matter again. To see how your team is positioned in the real chase:
What does this mean for the playoff race? Check the current NFL picture here
That live table will be where today’s stars try to turn this mid-winter showcase into momentum when the standings reset and the grind returns.Social Media Spotlight: Vegas turns into a live reaction party
The internet treated the Pro Bowl Games like a mini-Super Bowl for highlights. The big online storyline? Fans arguing whether that late no-look Mahomes TD or Jefferson’s toe-tap grab was the play of the night – and whether the laid-back defense should have tightened up sooner.The Internet is Exploding: 3 Social Media Highlights
X Discussion: Fans going wild over Mahomes' no-look TD and Jefferson's toe-tap grab in Vegas
Beat writer take: This "exhibition" still told us a lot
You can call it a showcase or a TV event, but watching these stars in the Pro Bowl Games absolutely matters for the narrative going into next season.Mahomes looked like he’s still a step ahead of the league mentally. That no-look red-zone strike? That’s not just a cute highlight – it’s a reminder that his processing speed and chemistry with elite receivers are still unfair. Josh Allen’s deep-ball clinic showed he’s not dialing back the aggression any time soon, and if he can keep the 0-interception energy from tonight rolling into meaningful games, his MVP stock is going right back up.
Lamar’s shiftiness in the open field remains completely different from anyone else at the position. Even with the contact dialed down, defenders couldn’t keep their flags on him. If his weapons stay healthy next year, this kind of rhythm in space is exactly what can carry his team deep into January.
On the NFC side, Jefferson just keeps stacking “best receiver alive” tape. The body control on that end-zone toe-tap wasn’t casual at all – that’s the same type of play that flips real playoff games. If his QB stays upright and the scheme continues to feed him double-digit targets, he’s going to live in the offensive player of the year conversation and maybe even push QB-heavy MVP voting.
Closing whistle: Keep your eye on the standings
The 2026 Pro Bowl Games won’t show up in the official NFL standings, but the players we watched ball out tonight are the same ones who will decide division titles, wild cards, and the next Super Bowl storyline. The vibes from Vegas – precise QB play, explosive receivers, and just enough defense – are exactly what we’ll be tracking once the games start counting again.If you’re already game-planning how today’s stars fit into next season’s playoff picture, keep this handy:
See full NFL stats & standings
Editorial Note: This article is for entertainment and information purposes regarding current sports events. Sports betting and financial investments carry risks. Please gamble responsibly. Always check odds and terms with the provider.

