For the first time in nearly a decade, the NFL playoffs will begin without the Kansas City Chiefs.
It sounds impossible. For seven straight years, Patrick Mahomes has ruled January football like a monarch, turning the AFC into his personal battlefield. Every Super Bowl dream in this conference ran through him. Three Lombardi trophies, five AFC Championship appearances in six seasons â the road was always blocked by No. 15.
Until now.
Kansas Cityâs collapse and Mahomesâ season-ending injury have done more than remove a contender. They have shattered the psychological grip that has suffocated the AFCâs elite â especially one franchise that has been living in heartbreak.
Buffalo Finally Breathes
No team has suffered more at Mahomesâ hands than the Buffalo Bills.
Josh Allenâs Bills have spent half a decade knocking on the same door, only to have it slammed shut by Kansas City. Four postseason defeats to Mahomes. Two AFC Championship losses. Each time, Buffalo walked away knowing they were close â and knowing they werenât close enough.
Now the Grim Reaper is gone.
Allen enters these playoffs as the AFCâs alpha. Seven straight seasons of double-digit wins. MVP-level play. And for the first time, no Mahomes. No Joe Burrow. No familiar ghosts waiting in the tunnel.
For a franchise that hasnât seen a Super Bowl since 1993 â the final act of its infamous four-loss nightmare â this feels different. This feels like destiny daring them to finally take it.
The Trap Waiting in Jacksonville
But opportunity in the NFL is never free.
Buffaloâs road begins in Jacksonville, against a Jaguars team nobody wants to meet right now. Eight straight wins. Best point differential in football since November. They are red-hot, fearless, and hungry to prove this isnât just a Cinderella run.
Worse still, history is not on Buffaloâs side.
The Bills have not won a road playoff game since 1992. The Jaguars did not even exist the last time Buffalo celebrated January football in someone elseâs stadium.
The Mahomes shadow is gone. The gate has finally opened.
Now comes the hard part â walking through it.





