Dayton Daily News

Big offenses, overlooked defenses in AFC title game.

- By Barry Wilner

Two teams so absent from championsh­ip history for so long until recently face off for the AFC championsh­ip.

The Kansas City Chiefs won their first NFL title since 1970 when they beat San Francisco in last year’s Super Bowl. When they host Buffalo, the Chiefs will take on a franchise that went from the 20002016 seasons without even getting to the playoffs.

What we get today is a matchup of dynamic offenses and overlooked defenses, the top two teams in the conference. Kansas City (15-2) has the confidence of a reigning champion and a charisma few NFL teams can match. Buffalo (15-3) has an undying belief that after years in the doldrums,

the formula is on hand for a return to the Super Bowl.

Here’s what we figure to see:

WHEN THE BILLS HAVE THE BALL

Some Bills fans are worried about their team’s ability to run the ball because Buffalo ranked 20th and didn’t do much on the ground in the playoffs. It would be a boost to get Devin Singletary going behind a solid line anchored by center Mitch Morse and right tackle Daryl Williams. Of course, Josh Allen is one of the biggest threats as a runner among all quarterbac­ks, and he will use his feet and bulk to advantage.

Allen isn’t as proven a passer yet as Kansas City’s Patrick Mahomes, but Allen’s third pro season has been superb. He has learned to read the field and make smarter decisions while also utilizing a deeper receiving corps than some recognize.

Sure, All-Pro Stefon Diggs is the primary target and will cause havoc for Chiefs cornerback­s Charvarius Ward, Bashaud Breeland, Rashad Fenton and L’Jarius Sneed. Allen to Diggs is the key offensive combinatio­n and one of the league’s best, but Cole Beasley, John Brown, Isaiah McKenzie and rookie Gabriel Davis can be playmakers.

The Chiefs have All-Pro safety Tyrann Mathieu and underrated Daniel Sorensen at safety and they will play significan­t coverage roles.

WHEN THE CHIEFS HAVE THE BALL

There’s always excitement when KC is on offense, but there’s also the uncertaint­y of how Mahomes will perform — and for how long — coming off the concussion sustained last week. Even as the Chiefs downplay it, there has to be concern. Mahomes is football’s most resourcefu­l QB, a gambler who comes up aces most of the time. The Bills must produce a pass rush and have the players to do it up front with Jerry Hughes, Ed Oliver and Mario Addison among a deep line rotation. The winner of the trench battles with the likes of Chiefs LT Eric Fisher and C Austin Reiter will be impactful.

Unquestion­ably, though, the matchup of outstandin­g Buffalo CB Tre’Davious White and KC All-Pro WR Tyreek Hill will be in the spotlight. The Chiefs find dozens of ways to get Hill the ball, and White is among the top shutdown cornerback­s.

Even if Hill is not a major contributo­r, Mahomes has unanimous All-Pro tight end Travis Kelce, wideouts Sammy Watkins, Demarcus Robinson and Mecole Hardman. Kelce is most dangerous on third downs and near the end zone. Not allowing Kelce to dominate is essential for Buffalo, whether it’s safeties Jordan Poyer and Micah Hyde or one of the linebacker­s in coverage.

Kansas City is eager to have rookie RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire back from a high ankle sprain. Edwards-Helaire had a season-high 161 yards rushing in KC’s 26-17 win at Buffalo in Week 6.

SPECIAL TEAMS

Kansas City placekicke­r Harrison Butker has been a tad inconsiste­nt lately. But he has a big leg and has made dozens of crucial kicks. That could provide an edge over Bills rookie Tyler Bass — except that Bass has been very reliable all season.

Buffalo punter Corey Bojorquez and Kansas City rookie Johnny Townsend were two of the most dependable in the AFC.

Andre Roberts is one of the NFL’s most dangerous kick returners. Hardman has the speed to break any runback for Kansas City, too.

COACHING

Andy Reid might have the most impressive coaching tree among the NFL’s current head men, and Sean McDermott is on one of the branches.

McDermott has done a spectacula­r job in Buffalo, a franchise that last saw the playoffs at the turn of the century until he arrived, changed the culture and upgraded the confidence level.

Buffalo offensive coordinato­r Brian Daboll was a frontrunne­r for head coaching jobs since filled by the Jets and the Chargers, and has decided to stay with the Bills and continue developing Allen. Defensive coordinato­r Leslie Frazier, a former head coach, is never intimidate­d.

Reid simply has been among the NFL’s best coaches for more than two decades, and his innovative, risk-taking nature on offense is a hallmark in KC. The fourth-down gamble that sealed the win over Cleveland last weekend surprised plenty of people. It shouldn’t have.

In DC Steve Spagnuolo and OC Eric Bieniemy, Reid has two of the top assistants around: instinctiv­e and hawkish enough to match Reid’s philosophy.

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