SAM FARMER / ON THE NFL It's getting even wilder in the Wild, Wild (AFC and NFC) West

The Chargers make up ground with a rout of the Chiefs, while the 49ers, even with a losing record, close in on the Rams and Seahawks. Meanwhile, the Patriots, Steelers and Falcons move closer to first-round byes.

Things are just as crazy in the NFC West, where Seattle and St. Louis began the day tied for first at 6-6, two games ahead of San Francisco. But the situation got a lot more snug after the Rams lost at New Orleans and the 49ers crushed the Seahawks, 40-21.

"We can't lose, and we know that," said Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers, whose 7-6 team moved to within a game of first place with three weeks remaining. "We can't look to January, because there's no guarantee we're going to get there. But it's playoff football from here on out."

Consider the AFC West: San Diego, fighting for its postseason life, blew out first-place Kansas City, 31-0, and got a big boost from Oakland losing at Jacksonville.

Sure, it was a beautiful day in California. But the playoff picture in these parts is hopelessly murky.

The visibility was so bad on the Left Coast that you couldn't see the handoff in front of your face.

While a brutal snowstorm moved east Sunday, popping the bubble of Minnesota's Metrodome and turning the New England-Chicago game into blizzard ball, it was in the West — the cloudless West, mind you — where things got really nasty.

Suddenly, the 49ers are in the thick of that race, and there's an increased likelihood that the NFC West will be the first division in NFL history to send a losing team to the playoffs. Two 8-8 teams have reached the postseason.

Meanwhile, in places where the skies were considerably less clear, the playoff picture is starting to come into focus. New England, Pittsburgh and Atlanta all won convincingly Sunday, stepping ever closer to first-round playoff byes.

Whereas the Steelers and Falcons beat up on last-place teams — Cincinnati and Carolina, respectively — the Patriots stunned the streaking Bears, 36-7.

Chicago, which had won five in a row, saw its third-ranked defense picked apart by Tom Brady, who continued his march toward a second most-valuable-player award. Brady, coming off consecutive four-touchdown performances, threw for 369 yards and two touchdowns, going without an interception for an eighth straight game.

"We got our butts kicked," Bears linebacker Brian Urlacher said. "They are the best team in the NFL … They came in here on our field, our weather, and just pounded us. We couldn't stop them. They scored 33 points in the first half, and I don't know if they let up in the second half or what, but we just couldn't do much."

There was a bit of solace to be found for the Bears if they looked around the league. Green Bay was stunned by Detroit, 7-3, and lost quarterback Aaron Rodgers to a concussion. And Miami knocked off the New York Jets, 10-6, despite only 131 yards of offense by the Dolphins.

It was an embarrassing performance by the Jets, who were coming off a humiliating 42-point loss at New England. Coach Rex Ryan had even buried a game ball in front of his team in hopes of putting the Patriots pounding behind them.

Now, the Jets have to head to Pittsburgh with quarterback Mark Sanchez struggling and their playoff hopes in trouble.

"I'm very concerned," Ryan said. "You look at our next opponent, and you say, 'You think that this defense is good, just wait 'til next week.' We've got to make sure that we find a way to get better. We have to get better."

Sanchez had an interception and a fumble, and at one point Jets Hall of Fame quarterback Joe Namath tweeted: "Mark is beginning to scare me."

But Ryan defended his quarterback, saying: "It was not on one man. [The Jets have] to look in the mirror. There's a heck of a lot more to blame than Mark Sanchez."