Post columnist Steve Serby looks into his crystal ball and reveals his playoff and Super Bowl 2020 predictions as part of our 2019 NFL preview:

AFC Playoffs

Wild Card

Browns 28, Chargers 21: The Dawg Pound is foaming at the mouth. This is the Browns’ first playoff game in 17 years. Baker Mayfield creates a firestorm when he tells the media it blew his mind when the Chargers traded away Eli Manning on draft day. Odell Beckham Jr. drops a first-quarter TD pass and punches a hole in the wall outside the halftime locker room. Beckham turns a slant against Casey Hayward into an 88-yard TD, spikes the ball in the end zone and in a postgame interview with Erin Andrews screams into the camera: “That was for you, Gettleman!”

Jets 24, Jaguars 20: A touching on-field reunion unfolds before the game between Jets GM Joe Douglas and former Eagles Super Bowl MVP Nick Foles. Sam Darnold, dissed all week by outspoken cornerback Jalen Ramsey, finds the best way to ease his playoff jitters is to hand off to a rested and fresh Le’Veon Bell, and in an image dating back to Jan. 12, 1969, Darnold jogs off the field with a finger on his right hand waving high over his head.

Divisional Round

Chiefs 37, Jets 17: If ever Gregg Williams needed the young Darrelle Revis, it was here. Patrick Mahomes abuses the Jets cornerbacks at will. A pick-six of Darnold by Darron Lee is the final ignominy.

Patriots 31, Browns 20: Bill Belichick spends the week lavishing so much praise on Kitchens you would think he was preparing to face Lombardi. Kitchens is immediately disoriented for two days and Tom Brady takes care of the rest.

AFC Championship Game

Chiefs 30, Patriots 27: A rematch of the 2018 AFC title game. No Dee Ford to line up in the neutral zone and negate a game-cinching interception. Chris Jones and Frank Clark put enough heat on Brady to interrupt his rhythm. The Honey Badger slows an unretired Gronk. Andy Reid, aka Big Red, cheered by a euphoric sea of red at Arrowhead, is going back to the Super Bowl.

NFC Playoffs

Wild Card

Seahawks 27, Rams 24: Jared Goff, with Todd Gurley limited, is inundated with questions about a Super Bowl hangover after Jadeveon Clowney and Ziggy Ansah force interceptions by Shaquill Griffin and Bradley McDougald.

Cowboys 27, Vikings 23: Ezekiel Elliott, rested after missing training camp, rushes for 210 yards, second-most in playoff history to Eric Dickerson’s 248, and carries Jerry Jones from the sidelines to the visiting locker room on his shoulders. Kirk Cousins fails to win The Big One and is booed by the U.S. Bank Stadium faithful.

Divisional Round

Saints 30, Seahawks 23: Sean Payton and Drew Brees return to the scene of the Nickell Robey-Coleman crime, and this time, a booth review following a fourth-down interference call against Eli Apple on Tyler Lockett is reversed. Justice.

Cowboys 27, Eagles 24: Of course the Cowboys bus is egged on the way to the Linc, and kids wearing Wentz No. 11 jerseys flip it the bird. But the place is hushed when Dak Prescott bootlegs right and finds Jason Witten with the 15-yard TD with 82 seconds remaining.

NFC Championship Game

Saints 34, Cowboys 21: Rumors persist before the game that Jones continues to eye Payton as his next head coach, even though Jason Garrett has gotten the ‘Boys back to this game for the first time in 24 years. Payton throws the kitchen sink at Dallas. With Leighton Vander Esch and Jaylon Smith containing Alvin Kamara, and Demarcus Lawrence hounding Brees and making him look every bit of 40 years old, Payton summons Taysom Hill for a 25-yard TD run that precedes an onsides kick on the ensuing kickoff that is recovered by Justin Hardee, and following a three-and-out, Hill executes the fake punt that breaks the Cowboys’ backs. Mardi Gras inside the Dome.

Super Bowl LIV

Chiefs 34, Saints 31: The media frenzy begins with Mahomes versus Brees, The Kid Gunslinger against the wily old HOF legend, before the Alex Okafor revenge angle takes center stage. Okafor was a Saint in 2017 and ‘18 before the club voided the final year of his contract and allowed him to be a free agent. A month later, he signed a three-year, $18 million deal with the Chiefs. So there was that. More importantly, the Chiefs were driven to get the beloved Reid (left) his first Lombardi Trophy. And so Mahomes electrifies the nation with downfield missiles to his Legion of Zoom past Apple and Marshon Lattimore to withstand Brees’ fourth-quarter TD passes to Michael Thomas and Jared Cook.