When Bills quarterback Josh Allen takes the field for the AFC Championship Game in Kansas City, the franchise will have its best player having the best season of his career, trying to lead the organization back to the Super Bowl for the first time in 31 years. Allen will poetically attempt to get them there against the very team that thwarted their attempt in the same game four years ago, and in the same building, no less. Advertisement However, a significant difference persists between that first AFC title game in the 2020 season and the one that will be played on Sunday night.
Allen’s legitimacy as one of the best quarterbacks in the league is no longer in question. His bank of work over the years, with one unbelievable play after the other leading to sustained Bills success, has him universally among the league’s elite. And this year is an all-time one for Allen, who had his best professional season to date, with a chance to take home his first ever Most Valuable Player award on Feb.
6. “It’s electric. It’s almost like guys react, and you’re like, ‘I couldn’t believe it.
I couldn’t believe he just did that,'” defensive end A.J. Epenesa said.
“But he does it on such a consistent basis. It’s like, do I really not believe it?” Micah Hyde has had a different experience than most in the locker room — a similar one to many reading. The longtime Bills player spent the first three months of the regular season in San Diego with his family as a Bills fan .