Chiefs vs. Bills score: Buffalo beats Patrick Mahomes during a wild finish at Arrowhead to keep their playoff hopes alive.
The Buffalo Bills beat the Kansas City Chiefs 20–17 at Arrowhead Stadium to improve to 7–6 on the season and keep moving toward the playoffs.
This game between the two AFC rivals came to the last few yards. Harrison Butker tied the game at 17 with a 27-yard field goal that the beginning of the fourth quarter. The last two plays decided the winner.
The Bills moved 48 yards and got to field goal range. Tyler Bass kicked a 39-yarder to give the Bills the lead with less than two minutes left.
On the other hand, the defense kept Patrick Mahomes as well as the Kansas City offense at bay, which led to a turnover on downs as well as the win.
But the referees said Toney was set up offside, which meant that the play that would have changed the game did not happen.
In spite of this, the Chiefs did score what could be considered the decisive touchdown at 1:12 in the fourth quarter.
Travis Kelce caught a pass for 25 yards and then passed it to Kadarius Toney, who ran it in from the end zone.
There was a 14-0 run by the Bills to start the game. The Chiefs were having trouble scoring because Mahomes’ pass was tipped at the line of scrimmage and picked off by The bills defender A.J. Epenesa on the first drive.
The Chiefs then kicked on their next three possessions while Buffalo went on a 14-0 run. In the second half, K.C. started to come back, scoring 10 straight points to tie the game at 17. However, Buffalo made one last push to secure the win.
There was one interception and 23 completions for 233 yards by Josh Allen. The QB ran for 32 yards as well as a touchdown as well.
The running back James Cook had been his best tool; he gained 141 yards and scored a touchdown.
Mahomes completed 25 out of 43 passes for 271 yards, one score, and one interception for the Chiefs. Rashee Rice snagged seven of the ten passes thrown to him, for 72 yards and a score.
With a thrilling 20–17 win over the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday, Josh Allen along with the Buffalo Bills kept their NFL playoff hopes alive. Meanwhile, Baltimore held away the Los Angeles Rams to take first place in the AFC playoff race.
With 1 minute and 54 seconds left, Tyler Bass’s 39-yard field goal won the win for Allen as well as the Bills at Arrowhead Stadium, home of the Chiefs. It was another exciting game between these two rivals.
The Chiefs’ last drive gave the Bills a scare when a perfectly executed score was called back for offside. Tight end Travis Kelce threw a lateral pass that sent Kadarius Toney racing through the end zone.
Instead, the score was thrown out, and Chiefs player Patrick Mahomes couldn’t move the chains. Buffalo celebrated their win, which made them 7-6 as well as second overall in the AFC East.
Allen, the quarterback for the Bills, couldn’t hide his happiness when the touchdown was called back, which gave Buffalo a hard-fought win.
“That could have been the most insane play I ever seen,” Allen said about Kelce’s touchdown pass across the middle.
“We got the win. There are some things we need to fix, but we’ll take it.” We just played over each other and stood by each other.
It would have been nice to score more points, yet a win is a win.” Allen threw for 233 yards and ran for another, scoring one touchdown and setting up another.
Jackson made 24 out of 43 passes for 316 yards, three touchdowns, and one interception as the quarterback for the Ravens.
The Cowboys make a statement by beating the Eagles 33–13 in Dallas. The win tied them with the Eagles for first place in the NFC East with a record of 10–3.
The Cowboys were ahead the whole game. To end their first drive, quarterback Dak Prescott threw a touchdown pass to CeeDee Lamb that was completed from 13 yards out.
Brandon Aubrey, the kicker for Dallas, kicked four field goals, including one from 60 yards out and one from 59 yards out. He was perfect for the season.
The Cowboys got revenge for last month’s 28–23 loss to Philadelphia. Prescott threw over 271 yards and two scores, and the defense gave a clinic.
In the last minute of the first half, Prescott threw a touchdown pass of one yard to Michael Gallup. Rico Dowdle also ran for a touchdown of one yard, giving the Cowboys a 24-6 lead at halftime.
Jake Elliott could only kick two field goals for Philadelphia in the first half. Jalen Carter picked up Prescott’s fumble as well as ran it 42 yards over a touchdown in the third quarter.