With the Buffalo Bills knocking on the door of their first Super Bowl appearance in 31 years, fans got to hear from the only man to get them there. Former Bills coach Marv Leavy appeared on the "Beal in Bills" podcast ahead of the team's AFC Championship matchup with the Kansas City Chiefs.
The Buffalo Bills ' season ended in heartbreak as fans watched their Super Bowl dreams slip away yet again. In a crushing 32-29 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday night, Buffalo's hopes of reaching Super Bowl 59 were dashed, leaving fans devastated.
You won't find a more beloved figure in Buffalo Bills history than former Bills coach Marv Levy. The leader of the team's four consecutive Super Bowl appearances, the coach who pulled the team out of back-to-back 2-14 seasons,
Gov. Kathy Hochul of New York, an unabashed fan of the Buffalo Bills, was perhaps never more popular than on Sunday in downtown Albany.
He’s the only man in NFL history to be the head coach of both the Kansas City Chiefs and Buffalo Bills. Hall of Famer Marv Levy has seen so much in the game of football. Best known for his years in Buffalo from 1986-97,
Buffalo and Kansas City can each boast of inspiring a classic song from a venerable American musical. It's hardly the only thing these great American cities have in common, but let's start there.
Bills head coach Sean McDermott once again needed to scale the Chiefs. But he stated the "obvious" admission involving K.C.
Levy, a Hall of Famer, coached his last game up there at age 72, and it was an unappreciated metropolis at the epicenter of the snow belt. Jim Kelly, his quarterback, told him that you had to be there to appreciate its people.
On top of that, you can spot the Philadelphia defense up in the top right corner of that graph. This is a defense that can double team Terry McLaurin without getting torched by Dyami Brown or Olamide Zaccheaus. That should be enough to result in a win by seven points or more — though I do hate betting against the Commanders Cinderella story.
Once again, the Bills season comes to an end in Kansas City with a sickening 32-29 loss to the Chiefs in the AFC Championship Game.
The Buffalo Bills are the only team in NFL history with four consecutive Super Bowl appearances but have an agonizing past.
Kansas City and Philadelphia will meet in Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans, a rematch that will determine if the Chiefs can become the first team to win three Super Bowls in a row.