The Buffalo Bills are gearing up for their massive AFC Championship matchup with the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday, but head coach Sean McDermott took a moment during Wednesday’s press conference to shine a spotlight on something bigger than football: the people of Buffalo.
A common joke is that the NFL stands for “Not For Long.” Players have relatively short careers, and head coaches have very little job security. Which coaches have developed a program consistent enough to be perennial contenders?
Buffalo is in trouble. Despite the Bills scoring an upset win over the Chiefs in Week 11, the AFC Championship Game might be a very different story, thanks to the return of several
Unfortunately, the Buffalo Bills have a few names to watch on their injury report this week ahead of facing the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game.
Kansas City and Buffalo have faced off six times since colliding in the 2021 AFC Championship Game, with two of those meetings in the postseason. The Chiefs won both of the divisional-round matchups, most recently taking out the Bills with a 27-24 victory in last season's playoffs.
The Buffalo Bills will go head-to-head with the Kansas City Chiefs and the winner punches their ticket to Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans.
The Kansas City Chiefs head into the AFC Championship game with an X-Factor who is part of a positional group that needs to be great on Sunday
Buffalo Bills head coach Sean McDermott said Buffalo is a "City of Winners" after a Baltimore reporter called the city "losers'."
Milano is dealing with hamstring soreness, which kept him out of the final few defensive plays in their victory over the Baltimore Ravens. He made his season debut on Dec. 1 and after shaking off the rust, has been one of the Bills' better performers through two playoff games.
The Buffalo Bills head into Arrowhead with a player who has the potential to absolutely turn this game on its head
Buffalo Bills coach Sean McDermott followed his team's win over the Baltimore Ravens with a response on Buffalo being called "City of Losers" by a Baltimore radio host.