Tom Brady congratulated Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce for ‘one-upping’ him and Rob Gronkowski

Tom Brady was in awe of Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce’s playoff dominance.

They’re not done playing together, and Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce might already be the greatest duo in NFL postseason history. While the two superstars helped lead the Kansas City Chiefs to an upset win over the Buffalo Bills, they surpassed Tom Brady and Rob Gronkowski for the most playoff touchdowns (16) between a quarterback and receiver ever.

As the Chiefs began preparing for their sixth straight AFC title game, Brady saw fit to chime in on this news. It may as well have been his unofficial blessing to Mahomes and Kelce for their continued success together. On Twitter, the now-retired future Hall of Fame quarterback graciously complimented Mahomes and Kelce for “one-upping” Gronkowski (and himself, even if he didn’t type it).

Coming from Brady, such a compliment couldn’t mean any more:

There was a time when Brady to Gronkowski was unstoppable this time of year, helping lead the New England Patriots (and Tampa Bay Buccaneers) to terrific achievements in January (and February) year after year. It’s mind-boggling to consider that Mahomes and Kelce might be even better.

Heck, Brady himself seems to be acknowledging that reality. And that’s saying something.

Patrick Mahomes compared his rivalry with Josh Allen to the classic NFL QB duels he loved as a young fan

Even Patrick Mahomes seems to think his rivalry with Josh Allen compares to Tom Brady and Peyton Manning.

For years now, we’ve heard a lot about how Patrick Mahomes and Josh Allen were the NFL’s new great quarterback rivalry. There is simply nothing quite like watching these two go shot for shot (even if Allen’s Buffalo Bills are usually the ones coming up short).

After yet another instant classic in Buffalo, Mahomes expressed his tremendous appreciation for the show he and Allen put on every time they share a field.

When talking up Allen, the competitor (in addition to the Cincinnati Bengals’ Joe Burrow and the Baltimore Ravens’ Lamar Jackson), Mahomes compared his battles with the Bills’ talisman to the exciting quarterback duels he once watched as a young fan:

Given that Mahomes is only 28 years old, it’s fair to assume he’s referencing at least some measure of the rivalry between Tom Brady and Peyton Manning. Now that Mahomes is a Super Bowl-winning quarterback who saves his best for big games, he’s in the driver’s seat with Allen as two players getting new young fans to fall in love with pro football. The shoe is on the other foot.

A blunt Patrick Mahomes said Chiefs fueled Bills upset with their playoff road game criticisms

Patrick Mahomes took so many receipts about the Chiefs’ road game doubts.

The Kansas City Chiefs are the NFL’s modern gold standard.

There’s no other argument after they clinched a sixth consecutive appearance in the AFC title game at the expense of the poor Buffalo Bills. But up until Sunday night, with Patrick Mahomes as their quarterback, Kansas City hadn’t yet played in a true road playoff game (a neutral site Super Bowl 55 doesn’t count). So, even with the Chiefs’ established success, it was fair to wonder how they’d fare away from their home stadium.

Ever one to look for motivation literally anywhere, Mahomes took exception to this.

In his postgame interview with Tracy Wolfson, Mahomes praised the harsh environment of playing in Buffalo. At the same time, he admitted the Chiefs saw all the questions about their road game chips and that they wanted to prove everyone wrong:

Not that anyone was really doubting the defending Super Bowl champion’s ability to play anywhere, but this gives a great insight into the Chiefs’ mentality. They are now clearly at a point where all their rampant postseason success almost feels boring. And to add fuel to their fire, they’re taking even the smallest, most anodyne slights as criticism.

They’re the Tom Brady-Bill Belichick New England Patriots, and that’s not necessarily a bad thing — even if it’s a little annoying for everyone else.

Josh Allen’s Bills wasted their best Super Bowl chance with crushing loss to Chiefs

Josh Allen’s Bills threw away a golden opportunity and are now on very shaky ground.

The Buffalo Bills were supposed to win this time.

They were at home, forcing Patrick Mahomes to play the first true road playoff game of his career. They got almost every favorable call, epitomizing the definition of home cooking with referees seemingly not unsympathetic to Buffalo’s pro football woes. They got every bounce, with the football gods clearly trying to throw them a bone. They had the quarterback, Josh Allen, hellbent on avenging the finest performance of his already Hall-of-Fame-caliber career with a Bills team that seemed more than worthy of a championship.

To defeat the Kansas City Chiefs now, the NFL’s indefatigable Kaiju, who always takes a few skyscrapers on its way crashing down, would’ve been perfect symbolism. It would’ve been the Bills putting themselves on the doorstep of a Super Bowl by overcoming the one opponent usually standing in the way. It would’ve meant everything to a Western New York region obsessed with its beloved football team.

Instead, the Bills fell short. Again. In the most devastating way imaginable. Again. And even with a 27-year-old quarterback in his prime, it’s hard to imagine Buffalo will ever get another golden opportunity like this.

The Bills have had postseason vengeance with the Chiefs on their minds for nearly two years, but 2023 felt a bit more urgent.

Fresh off a different brutal postseason defeat, the onus was on Sean McDermott’s team to prove it wasn’t a paper tiger destined to be torn apart the moment the games became sudden death. While Stefon Diggs is still a fine playmaker, fears that he would hit a wall as he neared 30 were not unfounded. There was a reason there was incessant clamoring for the Bills to find a legitimate No. 2 receiver. The Bills’ defense was laden with star power, but the long-term commitments weren’t grandiose or overwhelming. They were balanced, giving Buffalo an ideal complement on both sides of the ball. Still, that balance wouldn’t last forever, adding an extra tinge of pressure for a team chomping at the bit to win now.

When push came to shove, the Bills never answered the call in any of these facets.

McDermott’s Bills let a shaky Chiefs team hang around all night. Buffalo accumulated nearly 200 yards rushing, almost doubled up Kansas City in time of possession, and made fewer mistakes in every meaningful category. Yet it was the Chiefs who held a tenuous 27-24 lead before kicker Tyler Bass added double meaning to the phrase “wide right.” It was the Chiefs who were much more prepared for a nail-biting crunch time that illustrates the chasm between these two franchises. McDermott had his Bills ready to put the Chiefs’ backs against the wall, and they did, but it still wasn’t enough.

The biggest difference between the Chiefs and Bills is not Mahomes and Allen. We haven’t had as much of a 1A and 1B at quarterback since Tom Brady and Peyton Manning. The hype is warranted; we see it every time they square off. The two superstars are even on paper. No, no. The main distinction between the Chiefs and Bills is how the two quarterback’s star playmakers show up in climactic games. A lesser-power Travis Kelce scored two touchdowns against Buffalo despite being the only clear receiving threat the defense should worry about. By contrast, as the only receiving threat the Chiefs’ defense should’ve concerned itself with, Diggs let a picture-perfect 65-yard bomb go through his hands late in the fourth quarter to punctuate an invisible three-catch, 21-yard performance.

Kelce is widely regarded as one of the greatest postseason performers in NFL history. You can nail him down as a lock to come through for his quarterback, bar none. Diggs, meanwhile, has now been a complete non-factor in each of the Bills’ last three season-ending losses. He hasn’t caught more than four passes in any of these instances. His consistent disappearing act as the Bills leave the playoff field is no coincidence.

The Bills’ defense presents a challenging dilemma, but only because it was so decimated. Star linebacker Matt Milano, former All-Pro cornerback Tre’Davious White, and difference-making pass-rusher Jordan Phillips missed most of the year on injured reserve. After a knee ailment suffered last season, Von Miller was a shell of himself, losing that trademark “bend” around the edge that made him a mainstay in the nightmares of offensive linemen.

In theory, the Bills would’ve performed better if they were healthier on defense. In practice, Buffalo could only hold it together for so long. Because the Chiefs, even with an anemic offense, were built perfectly to exploit these sorts of absences.

These Bills’ fatal flaws are more dire than you might think. Ironically, it’s all thanks to their talisman quarterback.

The 2023 season was the last year Josh Allen was “affordable” on his rookie contract. After holding a manageable $18.6 million salary cap hit, that number skyrockets to $47 million in 2024. Currently, per Over The Cap, Buffalo has just under $44 million in cap space. Do the math. Tough roster decisions are likely on the way, and the Bills are otherwise effectively locked into their current roster. Outside of lucking into several rookie sensations at once, the Bills have no choice but to just … run it back.

That probably means more McDermott, even if his persistent postseason failures and leadership in the crunch leave much to be desired. That probably means another year of relying too much on Diggs, a receiver who disappears under the brightest lights and will almost certainly start losing a step in his 30s. There should be more optimism for the defense, considering that whole health elephant in the room, but it’s not a particularly young unit. If the Bills’ defense also runs it back, hoping for more injury luck, there could be six projected starters sitting in their 30s.

Football is a young man’s game. Not everyone will find the fountain of youth here. That’s not how it works, nor will it ever be.

The Bills’ loss to the Chiefs was not devastating because it called back to other infamous moments of heartbreak. It was devastating because this was the Bills’ best shot at a Super Bowl, at least for a long while. This was the weakest the Patrick Mahomes Chiefs have ever been, with the rest of the AFC not being much to write home about, either.

This was it, and the Bills still couldn’t get over the hump. It’s really hard to imagine they ever will.

Patrick Mahomes had a petty response to Dion Dawkins’ mild trash talk after Chiefs bested Bills

Patrick Mahomes is now taking even the mildest trash talk as motivation.

With Patrick Mahomes as their quarterback, the Kansas City Chiefs have been so good for so long that they’re probably getting a tad bored. When you’ve qualified for six straight AFC title games (the second-longest streak ever), falling into a rut might be easier than you can imagine.

That also means they’re going to latch onto the silliest tidbits of criticism and trash talk as motivation.

After the Chiefs beat the Buffalo Bills in an instant classic postseason battle on Sunday, Mahomes took to Instagram with his reaction. He wrote “good luck” in a post, seemingly referencing Dion Dawkins’ incredibly mild trash talk about the Chiefs earlier in the week.

Credit: Patrick Mahomes on Instagram

Just for context, here is precisely what Dawkins said via ESPN:

“[Mahomes has] only been here once. So he’s never been here. Simple as that,” left tackle Dion Dawkins said. “Pat has never been to the Bills stadium in full. … The environment will be different, and not to say it’s in our favor, but stadium is our favor. Stadium is us. That helps us. I don’t care what nobody says. This is the most dopest feeling I’ve ever had. We’re having two back-to-back playoff games home. Come on now, like we get to leave and go eat wings. It’s cool. So good luck.”

I mean, yes, that’s disrespectful of the Chiefs, but it’s also so tame. It’s literally just a player expressing confidence in his teammates. It barely references anything about the Chiefs or Mahomes and is much more about Buffalo’s home-field advantage.

I’m happy for Mahomes and the Chiefs’ latest bout of success, but this was a bit of a stretch to take as some massive slight to their profile.

Josh Allen classily defended Bills kicker Tyler Bass after Buffalo’s brutal loss to the Chiefs

Josh Allen is a true leader.

It’s tempting to say otherwise, but postseason losses don’t usually come down to one missed kick. Sure, Buffalo Bills kicker Tyler Bass will have to live with “wide right” for a while, but it’s not as if his game-tying miss was solely why Buffalo fell short of the Kansas City Chiefs yet again.

And of all people, Josh Allen understands this perfectly.

In a topsy-turvy game that seemingly featured so many chaotic bounces and strange calls by officials, the Bills did not lose because their kicker couldn’t tie the game at the end. They lost as a team, and Allen wants everyone on the outside looking in to know that:

This shouldn’t even be a controversial statement. Bass’s miss wide right will get more attention, especially because of the other infamous Bills’ play it’s now synonymous with. But it’s not why the Chiefs went into Buffalo and won.

It’s because the Bills couldn’t capitalize and made too many mistakes as a team.

Jim Nantz’s call of Tyler Bass’s wide-right miss poured salt in the wound for Bills fans

Jim Nantz wasted no time making Bills fans feel worse.

Buffalo Bills fans are accustomed to postseason torment. Scott Norwood’s “wide-right” miss to lose Super Bowl 25 is perhaps the most famous (and infamous) play in franchise history. If that’s the case, then Tyler Bass’s wide-right miss to lose to the rival Kansas City Chiefs might be a very worth second place.

CBS announcer Jim Nantz captured the moment of heartbreak in a particularly devastating fashion. After it was clear that Bass’s kick had hooked right, Nantz wasted no time invoking past demons in the Bills’ history. Because of course he did.

MORE: This Bills fan summed up exactly how heartbreaking Buffalo’s latest playoff loss to the Chiefs was.

“Wide right” is now indeed synonymous with not one but two heartbreaking Buffalo postseason losses:

Nantz isn’t wrong. The last thing Buffalo needed was for “wide right” to potentially mean one of two heartbreaking defeats. Sunday night proved to be another dark day in Buffalo professional football lore.

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The Bills’ Tyler Bass missed a game-tying kick wide right vs. Chiefs that will haunt Buffalo for years

“Wide right” will once again torment Bills fans for years.

The Buffalo Bills had it in their grasp. In another instant classic playoff battle with the Kansas City Chiefs — this time at home — all the Bills had to do was close their rivals out. Nothing was guaranteed if they could get Kansas City to overtime, but at least they’d have a chance.

That is, unfortunately, not the hand they were dealt.

In the final moments, Bills kicker Tyler Bass had a 44-yard attempt lined up. A chip shot in most circumstances, but one that was undoubtedly teeming with pressure in a close playoff game. Bass missed … wide right — two words that the Bills and their fans probably never wanted to hear this time of year again.

With Bass’s miss, all the Chiefs had to do was churn out a single first down (which they did) to clinch a sixth straight AFC title game appearance. Meanwhile, despite possessing Josh Allen — a bona fide Hall of Fame caliber quarterback — the Bills have once again experienced unfathomable postseason heartbreak.

January can be a very cruel time in the NFL, especially in Buffalo.

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NFL fans turned a sideline shot of Chris Jones crying into a great meme from Chiefs-Bills playoff game

No one knows why Chris Jones was crying but it doesn’t matter!

While Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce are the Kansas City Chiefs’ best players on offense, Chris Jones is the engine behind the Chiefs’ dominant defense. With Jones being a key piece in Kansas City’s efforts to slow down Josh Allen on Sunday, that means he gets plenty of attention, too.

And not all of it would be something he’s necessarily pleased with.

As the Chiefs’ battle with the Buffalo Bills shifted to the second quarter, CBS shared a montage that featured Jones weirdly crying on the sideline. It’s unclear why Jones was so worked up, but NFL fans never miss an opportunity to make jokes:

Honestly, I get the showcase for a star player being really invested in the game at hand. But showing Jones like that was so random, especially because he resembled “Crying Jordan.” No wonder so many memes flowed about this franchise player’s tears after the fact.

Baker Mayfield had the most heartbroken response to the Bucs’ playoff loss against the Lions

Baker Mayfield really needs a hug.

The 2023 season was a resurgent one for Baker Mayfield. He nearly enjoyed career highs across the board and took the Tampa Bay Buccaneers to the NFC divisional round. Unfortunately, despite Mayfield’s best efforts on a revitalized and confident team, the Buccaneers’ ride ends in the NFL’s quarterfinals after losing to the ascending Detroit Lions.

This is a grim reality that isn’t sitting well with Mayfield.

After the Buccaneers’ tough loss, Mayfield unsurprisingly equated Tampa Bay’s season concluding to having his heart ripped out. Given Mayfield’s reputation as a fiery competitor, you feel badly for him, but don’t expect any less. This is how an NFL player should react to postseason heartbreak:

The Buccaneers now enter an offseason rife with pivotal roster decisions on both sides of the ball. It seems apparent that Mayfield, at the very least, has earned another season to build on his tremendous first-year success with Tampa Bay.