There has never been more disparity across the NFL than this season.
A league built on parity has 15 teams with at least six wins and 12 others with three or fewer, the most ever in both categories through 10 weeks.
New England (4-5) is the only team in between those two extremes in the AFC, with Chicago (5-5), Minnesota (4-5), Detroit (4-5) and San Francisco (4-6) all residing in the mediocre range in the NFC.
The divisions leading the way are the AFC North with the undefeated Pittsburgh Steelers and the NFC West, which both have three teams that have won at least six of their first nine games thanks in part to cross-division matchups with the meek NFC East.
There had been only seven instances since the start of the eight-division era in 2002 when three teams in the same division started 6-3 or better, and it never happened twice in the same year before 2020.
The AFC has nine of the 15 teams with at least six wins, the first time any conference had that many teams win at least six of their first nine games. The previous high was eight AFC teams in 2004.
Even with the playoffs expanding to seven teams in each conference, that means at least two of those fast-starting teams will be home when the postseason starts.
On the opposite end of the spectrum is the NFC East, where no team has won more than three games through the first 10 weeks. The four teams in the NFC East are just 2-18-1 against opponents from outside the division, with Philadelphia's win at San Francisco in Week 4 and Dallas' Week 2 win at Atlanta accounting for the only wins. The Eagles also tied Cincinnati in Week 3.