Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Bills look to take control again

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NEW YORK — Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills stormed to the top of the AFC East — unfamiliar territory for anyone other than the New England Patriots — and kept going last season.

Nearly all the way to the Super Bowl.

Now comes the encore, and the expectatio­ns remain just as lofty.

“If the team’s not looking to win the Super Bowl,” Allen said, “they’re doing it wrong.”

The Bills lost to Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championsh­ip game last season, falling just short of reaching the Super Bowl. And the first step in that journey was winning the AFC East, which had been locked down by New England for most of the last two decades.

Buffalo’s division title was its first since the 1995 season — a few months before Allen was born. It also snapped the Patriots’ 11-season division winning streak, and ended a stretch during which Bill Belichick’s bunch had won 17 of the last 18 division crowns.

“I think our guys understand, and we’ve stressed that all year and all offseason, is what we did last year was really good but it means nothing,” Bills general manager Brandon Beane said. “We’re 0-0.”

The last time a non-Belichick coached team won consecutiv­e AFC East titles was when the Patriots did it under Bill Parcells (1996) and Pete Carroll (’97). And the last time a team other than the Patriots finished first in the AFC East in back-to-back seasons: the 1988-91 Bills.

CHANGING OF THE GUARD

New England’s 7-9 finish was its worst since 2000, when the Patriots went 5-11. That was Belichick’s first year as coach and the rookie season for Tom Brady, who appeared in only one game.

Belichick and Brady partnered on what became one of the league’s most successful runs, winning six Super Bowls together over the next 19 years.

The Patriots believe they found their next franchise quarterbac­k and gave Jones some weapons in tight ends Jonnu Smith and Hunter Henry and wide receivers Nelson Agholor and WR Kendrick Bourne.

“I think any time you take a team like we had last year — we all spoke about it at the end of the year — things were going to be different. And they’ve been different,” safety Devin McCourty said. “We got new players in here and we’ve just got to continue to build. I like what we have.”

TAKING FLIGHT

The Jets have the league’s longest playoff drought at 10 seasons, and it figures to continue through what is very much a rebuilding year.

New coach Robert Saleh has the franchise thinking optimistic­ally about its future, and Wilson gives the Jets an exciting playmaker they hope can be a longterm answer at quarterbac­k.

But Saleh is preaching patience for the long-suffering fans of one of the NFL’s youngest teams.

“We embrace the urgency at which everybody wants to win, but at the same time that can’t affect your decision making for the long haul of the goal of winning championsh­ips for extended periods of time,” Saleh said. “That urgency in the past has led to spurts of success and lengths of failure. We’re trying to get that reversed, to where we have long, long runs of success.”

PREDICTED ORDER OF FINISH

Bills, Patriots, Dolphins, Jets

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