If the Buffalo Bills discard the Denver Broncos from the playoffs on Sunday, they'll likely get a chance at revenge in the divisional round. Buffalo could welcome three different teams to Highmark Stadium in the second round: the Baltimore Ravens, Houston Texans or Los Angeles Chargers.
The final meeting of the season between the Buffalo Bills and New England Patriots doesn’t have any playoff implications. But both teams have plenty to play for.
Coach Jim Harbaugh returns to Houston on Saturday with the Los Angeles Chargers for a wild-card playoff game against the Texans, a little more than a year after leading the Michigan Wolverines to a national championship at NRG Stadium.
Kickoff is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. CT on CBS and Parmount+. Ian Eagle (play-by-play) and Charles Davis (analyst) will serve as the crew in the booth. On the field, Evan Washburn (field reporter) will conduct interviews and provide injury updates from the sidelines.
Coordinator Joe Brady's coaching trajectory is back on the rise after year-and-a-half of overseeing the Buffalo Bills' dynamic, Josh Allen-led offense.
The Tennessee Titans have requested permission to interview Terrance Gray for their open general manager position.
Justin Herbert and the Chargers will take what the Texans give them on offense, which should be enough as L.A.'s stop unit strangles Houston's offense on Saturday.
The NFL playoffs are here! With all due respect to Christmas, it's the most wonderful time of the year. And what better way to celebrate than by projecting out the full playoff field through the Super Bowl,
FanDuel and its key rival DraftKings have both showed investors that the house can indeed lose, or at least lose more than anticipated.
Five former Boise State standouts are expected to be active when the NFL playoffs begin Saturday.  Fullback Scott Matlock (Los Angeles Chargers), wide receiver
The Chiefs (15-2) rested their regulars in their season finale at Denver and the Broncos ended an eight-year playoff drought with an emphatic 38-0 win, delivering Andy Reid’s first shutout in his 12 seasons as Chiefs head coach and handing him just the fourth overall of his 26-year NFL head coaching career.