Here’s what it’s like inside the tunnel at Arrowhead Stadium when superstar singer Taylor Swift arrives for a Chiefs game.
NFL Playoff schedule is finally here, and the Wild Card Weekend is packed with blockbuster matchups featuring football’s biggest names and teams. From Patrick Mahomes leading the Kansas City Chiefs in their quest for a historic three-peat,
Even if the Bills fall short of next month’s Super Bowl, they remain positioned for prolonged greatness. If that’s not enough for perennial contention, then the rest of the AFC East’s decrepitude will keep that window wide open.
Bills wide receivers Mack Hollins, Amari Cooper and Khalil Shakir run off the field during first half action of their home game against the San Francisco 49ers in Orchard Park on Dec. 1, 2024. / Tina MacIntyre-Yee/Democrat and Chronicle / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
The Denver Broncos (10-7) galloped past the Kansas City Chiefs (15-2) on Sunday, securing a decisive 38-0 home win and punching their ticket to the playoffs for the first time in nine seasons. It was only Denver’s third victory over Kansas City in their last 20 matchups dating back to 2015.
The Buffalo Bills are beginning their journey to Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans. Here's a look at which teams stand in their way.
The path for a Kansas City Chiefs three-peat is clearer after Sunday's regular season finale. The AFC playoff matchups have been finalized for the opening round. The seventh-seeded Denver Broncos will travel to Buffalo to take on the second-seeded Bills.
The Denver Broncos, who earned the right to face the Bills in next week’s Wild Card playoff round, faced a Kansas City Chiefs team in the same position as Buffalo. They clinched the No. 1 seed and barely showed up for a road beatdown. The Broncos cruised to a 38-0 win.
QB Nix started 18 of 18 before throwing incompletion on final pass of first half. Sutton reached final $500,000 incentive by surpassing 1,065 receiving yards.