Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills saw their season come to an end on Sunday night. It was a heartbreaking loss, but a loss nonetheless. Late in the game, what could have been a play that went down in history ended up turning into a major disappointment.
Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs will be playing in their fifth Super Bowl of the last six years this February while their AFC rivals, the Buffalo Bills, will be watching from their homes to see if the back-to-back Super Bowl champs can actually pull off the historic three-peat.
Look, you already knew that the Josh Allen fourth down run was a first down in the Buffalo Bills’ loss to the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday even though officials said it wasn’t, eventually leading to the Chiefs taking the lead and winning the game.
The Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes, will be squaring off against Bills quarterback Josh Allen in this championship game. Mahomes and Allen have developed a rivalry during the years they've led their respective teams—and with each passing season, that competitive dynamic seems increasingly intense.
A pair of MVP candidates won't be participating in this year's Pro Bowl for the AFC. The NFL announced Tuesday that Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback
Josh Allen could take plenty of satisfaction from a season in which he became the betting favorite for MVP and the Buffalo Bills defied the doubters who predicted a down year.
While the Philadelphia Eagles and Kansas City Chiefs are preparing for the Super Bowl, 30 other NFL teams are preparing to get there next season. Several teams have filled their head coaching vacancies and are assembling their staffs while other teams are in the process of improving their coordinators and clearing cap space for a massive salary cap increase.
Josh Allen and Sean McDermott have won a lot of games together in Buffalo, but the biggest wins continue to elude them.
James Cook Over Josh Allen
Buffalo is open to bringing Cooper back in 2025, according to a report by ESPN, and is intrigued about the possibility of what Cooper can do next season with a full offseason working with franchise quarterback Josh Allen.
General Manager Brandon Beane didn’t rule it out during his season-ending press conference. Allen, who will turn 29 in May, had an MVP-caliber year with 3,731 passing yards, 28 touchdowns, and a career-low six interceptions. He rushed for 531 yards with 12 TDs.