Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Improved Bills await rematch with Chiefs

Buffalo has won 11 of its last 12 after regular-season loss to Kansas City

- By John Wawrow

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. » Quarterbac­k Josh Allen spent the regular season leading the Bills to a franchise-record matching 13 wins and their first AFC East title in 25 years. Buffalo’s defense has done its part the past two weeks in getting the team to its first conference championsh­ip game appearance since 1994.

Both units will need to be much sharper than in a 26-17 loss to Kansas City in Week 6 if the secondseed­ed Bills (15-3) stand a chance of upending the top-seeded and defending Super Bowl champion

Chiefs (15-2) in the AFC championsh­ip game on Sunday.

The outcome three months ago left Bills coach Sean McDermott taking a sobering approach to correcting what went wrong.

“Two good opponents, I know. But the minute losing gets easy, that’s not a good deal,” McDermott said following the loss, which came on the heels of a 42-16 defeat at Tennessee.

“We take it hard. There’s no moral victories,” he added. “We’ve got to really take a good look at our football team and be truthful with ourselves and say, ‘What do we have to get corrected?’”

Buffalo’s offense finished with a season-low 206 yards, with Allen managing 122 yards passing — the third-year player’s second-lowest total in a game he starts and finishes.

As for the defense, Buffalo successful­ly limited Patrick Mahomes to 225 yards passing, his third-lowest total of the season, and two touchdowns. The Bills were instead trampled by rookie Clyde EdwardsHel­aire, who finished with a seasonbest 161 yards rushing.

McDermott defended his team’s defensive approach by calling it a “pick your poison” choice between selling out to stop Mahomes or Edwards-Helaire.

He might have to make the same choice this weekend with the running back expected to return after missing three games with an ankle injury. Mahomes’ status, however, remains uncertain after he sustained a concussion in a 22-17 win over the Browns on Sunday.

If there is a bright side, the Bills have grown progressiv­ely better, particular­ly on defense, in having won 11 of 12 since the loss and eight straight to match the team’s longest run since 1990.

Though Allen led the way with a three-touchdown outing in a playoff-opening 27-24 win over Indianapol­is, the defense was the star in a 17-3 win over Baltimore on Saturday.

Aside from holding the Ravens to their lowest scoring output in 12 years, including playoffs, the Bills sealed the victory on cornerback Taron Johnson’s NFL playoff-record matching 101-yard intercepti­on return in the final minute of the third quarter.

Most important, the Ravens’ dynamic QB Lamar Jackson was held in check, going 14 of 24 for 162 yards with just 34 yards rushing before being knocked out of the game with a concussion on the final play of the third quarter.

The outing continued a trend: Buffalo’s defense peaking over the final stretch of the season. After allowing 273 points through a 32-30 loss at Arizona in Week 10, Buffalo has given up just 137 over the past eight games. Johnson’s touchdown was the fifth scored on a return in Buffalo’s past six games.

The Bills’ defense might have finished 14th in the NFL in yards allowed, after ranking among the top three the previous two seasons, but it remains a prideful unit.

Defensive end Jerry Hughes was thankful Buffalo had the late playoff game on Saturday. That way, he got an opportunit­y to spend the early afternoon hearing TV analysts dismiss Buffalo’s chances of containing Jackson and the Ravens’ NFL-best running attack.

“We took it as a challenge,” said Hughes, who sacked Jackson twice. “When we see the guys on TV talking about how they don’t play defense in Buffalo, we’re going to give up 30 points ... I think we went out there and we played like we had something to prove.”

Bring on the Chiefs.

What’s Working

The Bills’ red-zone defense has clamped down, allowing just four touchdowns and three field goals in opponents’ last 11 trips inside Buffalo’s 20 over the past three outings.

What Needs Help

Any semblance of a running attack after Buffalo called one running play in the first half against Baltimore and finished with one first down rushing. Buffalo’s 32 yards rushing were the fewest in a win since gaining 31 in a 4539 OT victory at Minnesota on Sept. 15, 2002.

Stock Up

Johnson’s intercepti­on return for a touchdown was his second in five weeks, after his 51-yard return put Buffalo ahead for good in a 26-15 win against Pittsburgh. Allen referred to Johnson’s TD on Saturday as being “a potentiall­y franchise-altering play.”

 ?? JEFFREY T. BARNES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Buffalo Bills quarterbac­k Josh Allen celebrates after the team’s 17-3 win over the Baltimore Ravens on Saturday, Jan. 16, in Orchard Park, N.Y.
JEFFREY T. BARNES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Buffalo Bills quarterbac­k Josh Allen celebrates after the team’s 17-3 win over the Baltimore Ravens on Saturday, Jan. 16, in Orchard Park, N.Y.

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