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Hey Buffalo, the Door’s Open — Time to Walk Through

Hunter Tierney 's profile
By Hunter Tierney
December 10, 2025
Hey Buffalo, the Door’s Open — Time to Walk Through

You know that feeling when you’ve been stuck behind the same three cars on the freeway for miles… and then, out of nowhere, they all take the same exit?

That’s the AFC right now.

For the better part of a half-decade, the path to a Super Bowl in this conference has been a toll road with three booths: Patrick Mahomes, Lamar Jackson, and Joe Burrow. You could drive a really good team right up to the gate, feel great about the engine, the tires, the whole build, and then one of those guys would look across at you and calmly send you packing.

Buffalo knows that feeling better than anyone. The Bills have been knocking on the door every year, and Josh Allen has played enough postseason football to have seen every kind of heartbreak: the late lead, the missed stop, the “how did that just happen?” moment that turns into a gif forever.

But here’s the twist: as we hit the stretch run of the 2025 season, those familiar AFC nightmares are fading out of the picture.

Kansas City is sitting at 6-7, fighting just to stay relevant in the wild-card race. Baltimore is 6-7, chasing Pittsburgh in the AFC North. Cincinnati is 4-9 and may not be mathematically eliminated, but they might as well be.

So if you’re Buffalo — and especially if you’re Josh Allen — this isn’t just another “get in and see what happens” year. This is the year where the conference was supposed to look around and realize, if the usual AFC bogeymen aren’t there, what’s stopping the Bills?

The Lane Opened Up — Now Don’t Miss the Exit

Dec 10, 2023; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen (17) talks with Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) after a game at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium.
Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images

The Bills are 9-4. That’s a fine record — looks great when you see it on a graphic, but feels a little different when you zoom out and look at everything stacked around it. Because even at 9-4, Buffalo is staring down the No. 6 seed, which isn't anywhere near the ideal path.

This isn’t the cushy version of a playoff run where you win the division, hang a banner, and enjoy two straight games in front of your own fans. You might have to win three straight games in stadiums that want to eat you alive. And those teams? They’re not the familiar playoff villains you’ve been seeing every year, but they can still pop you right in the nose if you’re not ready.

And that’s really the first thing worth laying out: yes, the AFC door is open, but it did not swing open like some grand gesture. It creaked open just enough for Buffalo to slip through — if they don’t trip over the welcome mat first.

Because the conference standings look like someone hit shuffle on the playlist.

New England is 11-2, and they can clinch the AFC East by beating the Bills this weekend. After five straight seasons of Buffalo running this division, they’re now staring at the one phrase coaches absolutely love and fans absolutely hate: “control what you can control.” Translation: you put yourself in this spot, now deal with it.

Denver is 11-2 too, and the Broncos are playing like a team that’s been possessed. They’ve run the AFC West so completely that Kansas City — yes, that Kansas City — has already been eliminated from the division race. That still doesn’t sound real.

Jacksonville sits at 9-4, the kind of team that looks calm on the outside but will absolutely ruin your day if you underestimate them. Houston is 8-5, and their defense hits like it’s trying to audition for a spot in the 80's. If you draw them in January, bring ice.

And then there are the Chargers, also 9-4, who have become the team equivalent of a migraine: annoying, stubborn, and impossible to get rid of once they show up. Jim Harbaugh has them playing bully-ball, and Justin Herbert is going to show up and show out no matter how injured he is.

So no — the AFC isn’t some free runway for Buffalo to cruise down. It’s still tough. It’s still crowded. It’s just… reshuffled. But when you look at this through the quarterback lens — and really, that’s what every playoff conversation boils down to — the picture sharpens:

Josh Allen is the most battle-tested superstar quarterback left in the AFC playoff field.

And that matters more than people want to admit, because in January, experience isn’t just a bonus — it’s currency. Allen has more of it than anyone else still on the board.

The AFC's "Big-Four"

Sep 29, 2024; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen (17) speaks with Baltimore Ravens running back Derrick Henry (22) and quarterback Lamar Jackson (8) after the game during the second half at M&T Bank Stadium.
Credit: Tommy Gilligan-Imagn Images

Once you get into the postseason, everything tightens up. Drives feel shorter, your margin for error gets thinner, and every mistake suddenly feels like it’s carrying extra weight. One late throw can become six points the other way before you even finish yelling at the TV.

And when it’s loud, cold, tense, and the season’s hanging in the balance, nobody cares about how pretty your script looked on Wednesday. In those moments, you’re really asking your quarterback to do one of two things: either pull you out of the fire… or at the very least, not throw you into another one.

That’s why the “Big Four” tag has stuck for so long. Mahomes. Lamar. Burrow. Allen. Those are the AFC quarterbacks who can take a perfectly normal situation — a 3rd-and-8, a broken play, a late drive — and suddenly tilt the field. They’ve been the bosses at the end of the AFC level for years.

What’s left is a collection of talented quarterbacks who all bring something to the table — but who are still writing their playoff resumes on the fly. Justin Herbert can make throws that shouldn’t physically exist, but he still doesn’t have that defining postseason moment. Drake Maye looks like he’s auditioning for the cover of Madden already, but the playoffs are where the training wheels come off for good. Denver’s resurgence has been legit, but the postseason doesn’t care how hot you were in October. And yeah, Aaron Rodgers is technically still in the bracket… but nobody is sitting down and confidently saying he’s about to rip off three straight wins in this conference.

Josh Allen, the Reigning MVP, is Still the Ultimate Advantage

Allen is the reigning NFL MVP, and if you’re wondering why the league still treats the Bills like a threat even when the roster can feel a little uneven week-to-week, the stat sheet does a lot of the talking for him.

Through 13 games, Allen has thrown for 3,083 yards with 22 passing touchdowns, completing 70.1% of his passes with a 102.9 passer rating. Those are the kind of numbers that sneak up on you. You look around the league, hear everyone talk about who’s “hot” or who’s “emerging,” and then you check the board and go, “Oh… right. Josh Allen is still sitting there putting together another MVP-level year.”

But the real spice — the part that makes defensive coordinators close their laptops with a sigh — is what he does on the ground. Allen runs like a linebacker who got lost and wandered into the quarterback room. There’s no tiptoeing. No sliding unless he absolutely has to. He has 487 rushing yards and 12 rushing touchdowns, leading all quarterbacks in both categories, and every one of those feels earned.

When your quarterback is a legitimate red‑zone rushing threat, defenses lose their ability to play normal football. They can’t sit in their favorite calls. They can’t drop seven and relax. They can’t even pretend their standard QB contain rules will be enough. Suddenly, you’re inserting an extra hat in the box, shifting leverage, playing math games where 11 defenders start to feel like 10.

And Buffalo leans into that. They know exactly what they have. They’re not shy about making Allen the problem that other teams have to solve.

What’s sneaky, though — what really shows how far Allen has come — is that it’s not all hero ball anymore. A 70% completion rate doesn’t happen by playing backyard football every snap. It means he’s taking the layups, hitting the easy answers, getting the ball out on time… and then flipping into chaos‑mode only when the situation actually calls for it.

That balance is everything. Because the Bills don’t need Allen to be a maniac for 60 minutes. They need him in control until the exact moment they need a spark, a jolt, that one play that flips a game — or a whole postseason.

When Buffalo is at its best, it’s the fear that comes baked into every snap. If you overplay the pass, he’ll truck your linebacker and embarrass your safety. If you overplay the run, he’ll throw something over your head that makes you wonder just how far a human can throw a football.

Buffalo Still Has Real Flaws

Buffalo Bills quarterback Mitchell Trubisky and Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen react to the Patriots field goal leaving them several seconds to try and tie or win during second half action at Highmark Stadium in Orchard Park on Oct. 5, 2025. Walking by is Buffalo Bills head coach Sean McDermott.
Credit: Tina MacIntyre-Yee/Democrat and Chronicle / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

If you’re a Bills fan, you don’t need a spreadsheet to tell you what this team is. You’ve lived it. You know how ridiculously good Josh Allen is — the kind of good that makes you daydream about February — and you also know how this team sometimes treats momentum like a suggestion instead of a rule. One minute they’re rolling downhill like the best squad in football, and the next they’re giving up a third-and-12 that makes you scratch your head.

The Defense Can Be Great — Until It Suddenly Isn’t

On paper, Buffalo’s defense has absolutely been good enough to be a difference-maker. But Sundays don’t always match the resume.

Against Cincinnati, the Bengals went 10-for-12 on third down. Ten. For twelve. That’s not just a bad day — that’s the football version of forgetting your keys, your wallet, your phone, and your sanity all at once.

Turnovers can mask those issues. A pick-six changes everything. It buys you momentum, confidence, vibes — all of it. But turnovers are also the most unstable currency in football. You can’t build your playoff identity on “we’ll snag two picks and call it good.” That’s not a plan. That’s a wish.

Buffalo needs to win the boring snaps — the ones that don’t get clipped and posted on social media. Tackling on first-and-10. Rallying on second-and-6. Forcing a punt instead of giving up another life raft on third-and-long. That’s the stuff that keeps your season alive when your offense has an off quarter.

The Offense Still Lives and Dies on Allen’s Shoulders

Buffalo’s offense has clearly tightened up. Allen’s efficiency is up. The ball’s coming out quicker. They’re not relying on Josh to go make something insane happen nearly as often as they used to.

But there’s still a question hanging over this team like a blinking neon sign:

Can they win a playoff game if Josh Allen is just good instead of superhuman?

That’s where the little things become the big things. James Cook’s fumbles aren’t just annoying — they’re “season-ending” kind of dangerous. The receiver room can’t disappear for long stretches. The playcalling can’t get skittish or predictable. In January, you don’t get credit for effort. You either cash in or you pack up.

And if Buffalo ends up on the road — in Foxborough against a quarterback who can pick you apart even when you're getting pressure, or in Denver against altitude and a top seed — you’re going to need more than Allen improvising his way through broken plays. You need an offense that stays on schedule, avoids the self-inflicted wounds, and actually finishes drives without always needing No. 17 to turn into a human bulldozer.

This is a Year Buffalo Can’t Waste

The AFC isn’t rolling out a red carpet for Buffalo — nothing’s ever that simple — but it is clearing out the boogeymen that have been blocking the door for years. Mahomes might not be there. Burrow probably won’t be there. Lamar might not be there. 

And Josh Allen? He’s already lived all of it. He’s been in the fire. He’s felt the heartbreaks that keep you up at night. He’s won the MVP, played in shootouts, carried teams, dragged games back from the edge, and proven — over and over — that he can be the best player on any field he steps on.

If the Bills want to win the AFC — if they want to finally shake the label of “the best team that didn’t” — they have to grab this season by the throat. Not by shouting about it. Not by relying on magic. By doing the boring, grown‑up, playoff-winning stuff.

Because if Buffalo gets to March and realizes they let this version of the AFC slip away, they’re going to be stuck asking the one question no fan base ever wants floating around in their head:

If not now… when?

All stats courtesy of NFL Pro.

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