San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

FORMER BILLS HAVE A SUPER FEELING

With Bengals on tap, Buffalo wants to get back to the big game

- BY SAM FARMER Farmer writes for the Los Angeles Times.

It doesn’t feel like 30 years. Not to Jim Kelly, Steve Tasker, Marv Levy or other members of the Buffalo Bills who three decades ago made it to four Super Bowls in a row yet didn’t win one.

To them, the years have whistled past with the screaming velocity of a Josh Allen spiral.

But they are fans now, revered members of the Bills Mafia, cheering on a team that has a good chance of completing what their forefather­s did not.

The Bills play host to Cincinnati today in the AFC divisional round of the NFL playoffs. It was at this stage last season when Buffalo lost to Kansas City in an epic 42-36 overtime thriller, a game so breathtaki­ng — yet ultimately unsatisfyi­ng because the Bills didn’t touch the ball in the extra period — that it prompted the league to change its postseason overtime rules.

For the Bills of yesteryear, this finally could be the team.

“The electricit­y in the city is amazing,” Hall of Fame quarterbac­k Kelly said. “More than anything, they just want a team that can win and hopefully get them that Lombardi Trophy.”

Kelly stayed in western New York after retiring and raised his family there, as did several of his former teammates, among them Hall of Fame running back Thurman Thomas, safety Mark Kelso, special teamer Tasker and others.

“People don’t treat you like football royalty here, it’s better than that,” Tasker said. “They treat you like family. It’s not ‘Mr. Kelly’ to fans here, it’s Jim. It’s not ‘Mr. Smith,’ it’s Bruce. They call you by your first name and walk right up to you like you’re a family member. It’s always been that way.”

In Buffalo, old guys rule. “People will come up to you and tell you that you were their mom’s favorite player, or their grandma’s or uncle’s,” said Tasker, now a CBS analyst. “That’s kind of the way it is here. It’s a unique environmen­t.”

Recent tragedies have further forged the Buffalo community, from the supermarke­t shooting in May, to two crippling snowstorms, to Bills safety Damar Hamlin nearly dying on the field of cardiac arrest earlier this month.

The Bills have been more than a welcome distractio­n. For many people, they’re the embodiment of hope.

“I think there’s a feeling around Buffalo that, yeah, we can win one,” Tasker said. “Some fans are famous for hyperbole and overreacti­on, like, ‘Oh, we’re never going to win one,’ ” Tasker said. “But I don’t think Bills fans are like that. Bills fans are like, ‘Yeah, we have it in our destiny to win one in the future. Maybe it’s in our destiny to win it this year.’ None of that doomsday stuff.”

Buffalo is 13-1 at home in the postseason, and 4-0 under current coach Sean Mcdermott. The Bills have won eight games in a row, matching their longest streak since 2020, and Allen has rounded into one of the NFL’S best quarterbac­ks. In seven playoff appearance­s, he has 2,070 yards passing and 17 touchdowns. But the Bengals are no pushovers. They are 2-0 against the Bills in the postseason, with both of those games being played in Cincinnati. They have not lost since Halloween — a nine-game winning streak — and, led by quarterbac­k Joe Burrow, have reached the divisional round in consecutiv­e years for the first time in franchise history.

Allen said the challenges and attention surroundin­g the Hamlin situation have brought the Bills even closer.

“I think it gives you a more sturdy foundation. The more struggle, the more adversity that you can see over the course of the year, it just makes you stronger,” the quarterbac­k said. “We’ve been in some really weird situations this year that not a lot of teams maybe have ever gone through. Being able to have that under our belts, understand those emotions in those situations, and just try to use it to our advantage.”

James Lofton noticed maturity in the Bills players when he was invited to speak to the receivers on a video call in 2020.

“You kind of want guys to overlook personal statistics and play for each other,” said Lofton, an analyst for CBS and Westwood One. “I think that as I watch this team, that’s what I see them doing.”

 ?? JOSHUA BESSEX AP ?? Former Bills quarterbac­k Jim Kelly wants a Super Bowl for the current team.
JOSHUA BESSEX AP Former Bills quarterbac­k Jim Kelly wants a Super Bowl for the current team.

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