If there’s one thing NFL fans wouldn’t mind, it’s more football. This is something that the league has been considering since early this year, and according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, it will likely do so this week. Schefter reported that the league is expected to expand the regular-season schedule to 17 weeks from its usual 16-game schedule.

The NFL’s 16-game schedule has been in place since 1978, marking the longest stretch of the schedule without change in league history.

There have been reports of expanding the regular-season schedule and reducing the number of preseason games from four to three. Before 1978, the NFL’s regular-season schedule consisted of 14 games and six preseason contests. But while the regular-season schedule hasn’t seen a change in many years, the league’s playoff schedule changed last season, as it expanded to include 14 teams instead of the usual 12.

According to NBC Sports’ Peter King, some of the expectations for the league’s new regular-season schedule include pushing back the Super Bowl a week later, teams having no extra bye week, and the AFC and NFC swapping the hosting of Week 17 each year. Here’s a look at possible matchups:

Another expectation from the league’s new schedule is that each team’s 17th game of the season will feature cross-conference opponents based on their record from the previous season. According to Mark Maske of The Washington Post, the NFL owners are expected to vote on the new schedule this Tuesday and Wednesday. In the meantime, fans can look forward to these looming changes on the NFL’s regular-season schedule and seeing their teams play more high-stakes football.