The Buffalo Bills were home underdogs agaisnt the Baltimore Ravens, and for tight end Dawson Knox, that was a powerful motivator for his team.
In just a few hours the Baltimore Ravens and Buffalo Bills will take the field for a rematch of their Week 4 showdown that ended with a 35-10 Ravens victory.
The Buffalo Bills were winning and the offense was humming, so tight end Dawson Knox was aware – but not overcome with angst – about his lack of production. Through seven games, the Bills were 5-2, and Knox had just four catches for 47 yards.
In what appeared to be a small gesture from Buffalo Bills fans donating to Baltimore Ravens tight end Mark Andrews’ favorite charity after his struggles in an AFC divisional loss to the Bills, the Mafia has outdone itself this time.
The Killers’ hit song “Mr. Brightside” has been echoing through the stands at every Bills home game hyping up both fans and players. Now, Bills Mafia is trying to take this new anthem all the way to Kansas City for Sunday’s Bills vs.
The Bills' passing game has been mundane thus far in the postseason, but it needs to get rolling against the Chiefs Sunday.
This is one of the best traditions in the world: when Buffalo Bills fans -- AKA Bills Mafia -- decide to support an NFL player (whether it's their own or from another team), they go all in and donate their money.
After four years, plenty of playoff heartbreak and an offseason roster purge of leadership and skill, the Buffalo Bills are finally returning to the AFC championship game.
The Bills held on for a thrilling 27-25 win over the Ravens to advance to the AFC Championship Game. Here's how Sal Maiorana graded their performance.
Von Miller and Dawson Knox did their jobs for the Bills against the Broncos. And they were mic’d up, too. Knox had an important 25-yard catch in the 31-7 win. Meanwhile, Miller was graded as his team’s best defender from Pro Football Focus following the contest.
Tom Brady is in broadcasting, Bill Belichick is coaching in college, Mike Vrabel just landed another NFL head coaching gig, and Rob Gronkowski and Julian Edelman are studio analysts. Indeed, the Patriots' dynasty is long gone,