For the first time in the history of the National Football League, a two-time defending champion will head to the Super Bowl with a chance to three-peat as the Kansas City Chiefs defeated the Buffalo Bills in the AFC title game,
While the Chiefs defense racked up eight sacks against the Texans, stopping Bills quarterback Josh Allen, a finalist to win this year's MVP Award is a different beast. Chiefs star defensive tackle Chris Jones, knows it won't be easy to stop the dual-threat quarterback and the Bills No. 1 running back, James Cook.
If the two-time defending champs defeat Buffalo in Sunday's AFC championship and make it to the Super Bowl, it'd be their fifth appearance in the big game since 2020.
The latter stages of January always bring cooler temperatures. Here's the latest on the weather front ahead of Bills vs Chiefs.
Let's take a look at some of the most intriguing stats and milestones within reach for the Chiefs in the AFC championship game. Despite soon wrapping up just his seventh year as Kansas City's full-time starting quarterback,
Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs took down the Buffalo Bills 32-29 in the AFC Championship Game to punch its ticket to the Big Game for the third straight season.
Reid notched his 28th career postseason win after the Chiefs’ AFC championship victory over the Buffalo Bills and is just three away from Belichick’s record of 31 for most ever for an NFL head coach. The Chiefs coach has six total Super Bowl appearances to Belichick’s nine.
Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen (17) reacts as he walks off the field after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs. Shakir is right. An NFL player's life during the season is regimented, but once the season ends, everything stops.
Is it fair to put the onus on Von Miller to be the difference maker? Maybe not entirely. But the Buffalo Bills are paying him to fill that role, a fact that points to the end of his tenure with the team.
Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs have morphed into the NFL's new Evil Empire, but there's no rational reason why.