National Post (National Edition)

Conference finalists are familiar foes

PACKERS-BUCS AND CHIEFS-BILLS ARE BOTH REMATCHES

- JOHN KRYK Postmedia News JoKryk@postmedia.com Twitter:@JohnKryk

On back to back days in mid October, NFL schedule makers gifted us with conference championsh­ip game previews.

Yeah, on the same weekend. Crazy.

On Sunday the 18th, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers rallied to thump the visiting Green Bay Packers 38-10.

A night later, on Monday the 19th, the Kansas City Chiefs grounded-and-pounded the host Buffalo Bills 2617.

This Sunday we get a rare double: rematches of non-divisional, regular-season combatants in both conference title games: Bucs at Packers on the NFC side (3:05 p.m. EST, CTV via FOX), Bills at Chiefs on the AFC side (6:40 p.m. EST, CTV via CBS).

The first Bucs-Packers game was strange. Two games in one, really.

The first Bills-Chiefs game was atypical of each team's season, at least offensivel­y.

Let's take a closer look at those Week 6 matchups for takeaways:

NFC: BUCS-PACKERS

Any bookies taking bets on who'd win this game after one quarter of play at Raymond James Stadium wouldn't have got much action on the Bucs.

Green Bay led 10-0 and dominated in almost every facet. QB Aaron Rodgers began by piloting the Pack 54 yards in 10 plays for a 39-yard Mason Crosby field goal.

The Bucs and QB Tom Brady opened with a three and out, a too-common occurrence this season.

Rodgers and the Pack then chewed up most of the last 8:20 of the opening quarter, slow-marching 90 yards in 10 plays for a touchdown — a one-yard Aaron Jones plunge.

At the quarter changeover TV break, the Packers had 144 total yards and nine first downs to the Bucs' 22 and one.

Then WHOMP. Everything changed.

On Green Bay's next possession, following a second Bucs punt, Rodgers was pick-sixed by cornerback Jamel Dean, who smelled out and early jumped a pass in the short flat to Rodgers' go-to third-down target, allpro wide receiver Davante Adams.

For whatever reason, Rodgers and the Pack could thereafter do little right, while Brady and the Bucs could do little wrong. A 28-point second-quarter blew the game open in Tampa Bay's favour.

Ten more Buccaneers points in the third quarter made it 38-10 and rendered the fourth quarter just garbage-time tedium.

Rodgers took his last snap with most of the final quarter yet to play.

After that opening quarter, Rodgers wound up completing just eight of his last 23 throws for a paltry 53 yards, and nearly was pick-sixed a second time. On the day, Rodgers was blitzed 18 times, pressured 12 times (or on 29 per cent of his drop-backs), hurried into throwing early once, hit seven times and sacked four times.

Brady, meantime, was blitzed 12 times, pressured only four times (15 per cent), was never hurried into throwing early, hit only four times and wasn't sacked.

Such discordant passrush stats are typical when one's team QB is far ahead in the second half. No matter how good you are, if the opposing defence knows you MUST throw, usually you're doomed.

The Bucs defence was the primary author of the massive turnaround.

“We just took control of the game,” Bucs linebacker Lavonte David said.

AFC: BILLS-CHIEFS

Whether playing football or watching it from the sidelines or stands, nothing makes it more miserable than unrelentin­g cold rain.

Such as after dark, on Oct. 19, when the Chiefs won at Bills Stadium.

Atypical weather often begets atypical game-plan adjustment­s. And a Chiefs team that on the season passed 61 per cent of the time and which gained 73 per cent of its yards by passing adjusted to the conditions and the concentrat­ion of Buffalo's defence on preventing deep pass completion­s by mostly running it. And successful­ly.

Patrick Mahomes handed off 46 times and the Chiefs gained 245 rush yards — led by rookie Clyde Edwards-Helaire's 161.

Mahomes passed only 26 times for 225 yards.

Some coaches who claim to be run/pass agnostic actually aren't. But the Chiefs, much like the 2010s New England Patriots, are. Gotta pass it 60 times to win? Fine. Gotta run it 46 times? Fine. Whatever it takes. Edwards-Helaire “was able to fill in the blanks” against the Bills, K.C. head coach Andy Reid said afterward.

The Chiefs defence, meantime, stymied the high-powered Bills passing attack, holding Bills QB Josh Allen to a season-low 122 yards on 52 per cent completion­s. Even still, Allen threw two touchdowns in willing the Bills back into the game.

Since then, Allen is averaging 280 yards per game and has tossed 24 touchdowns against only six picks.

And since then, largely as a result, the Bills have lost only once — the “Hail Murray” game at Arizona, on a last-snap fluke deep heave by the Cardinals, after Allen had capped a desperatio­n 78-yard, 12-play go-ahead drive with 34 seconds left with a 21-yard TD pass to allpro receiver Stefon Diggs.

When the Bills faced the Chiefs they were coming off only five days' rest after having got blown out at Tennessee the Tuesday before — while K.C. had seven days to stew on its first loss in nearly an entire calendar year, to Las Vegas.

And the Bills were wobbled by injuries at the time (including to Allen, bugged at the time by a dinged left shoulder).

“All in all,” Reid summed up, “a good win against what I think is a good football team. They're banged up a little. They played a lot of games here.

“We'll probably have a chance to see them again somehow down the road. They'll be healed up by then.”

They are.

 ?? MIKE EHRMANN / GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Packers QB Aaron Rodgers gets sacked by Tampa Bay in their Oct. 18 game. On the day, Rodgers was blitzed 18 times,
pressured 12 times, hurried into throwing early once, hit seven times and sacked four times.
MIKE EHRMANN / GETTY IMAGES FILES Packers QB Aaron Rodgers gets sacked by Tampa Bay in their Oct. 18 game. On the day, Rodgers was blitzed 18 times, pressured 12 times, hurried into throwing early once, hit seven times and sacked four times.

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