Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Bills move on to AFC title game

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Taron Johnson could’ve kept running into next week on a 101-yard intercepti­on that carried the Bills to their first AFC championsh­ip game appearance in 26 years.

Johnson’s pick-6 of Lamar Jackson’s pass with 41 seconds remaining in the third quarter secured a 17-3 win over the Ravens in a divisional-round playoff game Saturday night.

The intercepti­on return matched the longest in NFL history and punctuated a stellar defensive outing in which the Bills (15-3) limited the NFL’s top running offense to 150 yards on 32 carries.

Jackson was sacked four times and did not return after being evaluated for a concussion following the final play of the third quarter, and two plays after Johnson scored.

Facing second-and-10 at the Ravens’ 25, center Patrick Mekari snapped the ball over Jackson’s head. The quarterbac­k turned and chased the bouncing ball down inside the 5, turned and quickly threw it away as Tremaine Edmunds had him by the legs and Trent Murphy fell down on top of him.

Jackson’s injury left Tyler Huntley to finish the game after being promoted off the practice squad.

The Bills’ defense took the pressure off of a Josh Allen-led offense that was limited to 223 yards offense, and made up for rookie kicker Tyler Bass missing two of three field goal attempts — a 43-yarder that was wide right in the second quarter and a 44-yarder that sailed wide left with 5:30 remaining.

The game was decided in the third quarter, when the Bills went up 10-3 on Allen’s 3-yard touchdown pass to Stefon Diggs to cap an 11-play, 66-yard opening drive.

Jackson responded by marching the Ravens 66 yards on 15 plays before throwing the intercepti­on while facing thirdand-goal from the 9. Johnson jumped in front of the pass intended for Mark Andrews and took off up the right sideline, following a lead block from Tre’Davious White.

Johnson wasn’t touched until a mob of Bills players jumped on his back and brought him down in the end zone.

The Bills advanced to the AFC championsh­ip game for the first time since 1994 on their way to making — and losing — their four consecutiv­e Super Bowl appearance. The Bills also extended a season in which it has broken numerous droughts by claiming its first AFC East division title in 25 years and, with last week’s victory over the Colts, winning its first postseason game since the same year.

The Bills will play the winner of the AFC’s other divisional playoff between the Browns and Chiefs on Sunday.

The Bills have won eight straight, matching their best streak since 1990.

Clash of titans: Drew Brees periodical­ly discusses his long, extraordin­ary NFL journey in terms of fate and destiny.

The Saints quarterbac­k says, for example, that his career-threatenin­g throwing shoulder injury at the end of the 2005 season was meant to be. It precipitat­ed his departure from the Chargers and move to New Orleans, where he shattered passing records and won a Super Bowl — all while helping rebuild a beloved American city that was reeling from Hurricane Katrina’s devastatio­n.

So when six-time Super Bowl winner Tom Brady decided to leave the Patriots and begin a new chapter with the Buccaneers, in the NFC South, Brees couldn’t escape the sense that he’d see Brady in a high-stakes game in January.

This rare postseason matchup of record-setting quarterbac­ks older than 41 is set for Sunday night, when the Saints (13-4) host the Buccaneers (12-5) in the divisional round of the NFC playoffs.

“Listen, when Tom Brady signed with the Bucs and I knew that he was coming to our division, I envisioned this game,” Brees asserted this week. “I envisioned this game happening because I knew our aspiration­s as a team, to be in the playoffs and beyond. And I certainly knew what he was bringing to the Bucs and that talented roster.”

Similarly, Brady figured that success in Tampa Bay would hinge on how he and Buccaneers handled their encounters with the Saints.

“They’ve been one of the top teams in the league for a long time and they’ve had some tough playoff losses (on) some really fluke plays,” Brady said, referring to a last-second loss to the Vikings on a long passing play two seasons ago, and an admitted officiatin­g blunder that helped the Rams beat the Saints in the NFC title game two seasons ago.

“Other than that, there’s not a lot of bad about” the Saints, Brady said. “They’re pretty spectacula­r.”

Brees and Brady have been doing “spectacula­r” for two decades now. No wonder there’s so much buildup for this game.

“We were texting back and forth on Monday just kind of chuckling at this whole scenario,” Brees, who was turning 42 on Friday, said of an exchange he had with the 43-year-old Brady. “That’s 85 years and a lot of football experience that’s going to be on the field on Sunday.”

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