The Kansas City Chiefs are in historic territory. The Chiefs, thanks to a wild 32-29 win over the Buffalo Bills in the AFC championship game on Sunday night, clinched their spot in Super Bowl LIX. They'll take on the Philadelphia Eagles — who rolled over the Washington Commanders in the NFC championship game — next month in New Orleans.
The Kansas City Chiefs are headed to Super Bowl 59 in New Orleans. Here's who they'll play in this year's Big Game.
Overall, the Bills and Chiefs have met seven times in the playoffs, with the Chiefs going 5-2. Here's each postseason matchup between the two teams:
The Kansas City Chiefs are chasing the first three-peat ... decisions and could lose a Pro Bowler in free agency. The Minnesota Vikings have a long offseason ahead of them with a lot of potential ...
The Philadelphia Eagles will play the Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl LIX at the Caesars Superdome in New Orleans. Here's how the two teams advanced past the Buffalo Bills and the Washington Commanders.
If the two-time defending champs defeat Buffalo in Sunday's AFC championship and make it to the Super Bowl, it'd be their fifth appearance in the big game since 2020.
Before the game, Jon Batiste, five-time Grammy winner, is set to sing the national anthem. Christian recording artist Lauren Daigle will sing "America the Beautiful" with Trombone Shorty. R&B vocalist Ledisi will perform "Lift Every Voice and Sing."
The three-peat is so rare in American professional sports in general, too. The last major men's professional team to win three straight championships was the Los Angeles Lakers. They won three consecutive NBA titles from 2000-02. Here’s a look at every time the NFL has come close to a Super Bowl three-peat.
Patrick Mahomes threw for 245 yards and a touchdown, ran through the Buffalo defense for two more scores, and relied on his defense at key moments to help the Kansas City Chiefs beat the Bills 32-29 on Sunday night and reach the Super Bowl for the third consecutive season.
Super Bowl LIX. . .that’s 59 for you non-Romans out there. . .is set for New Orleans on 9 February, and it will see the Philadelphia Eagles representing the NFC and the Kansas City Chiefs on the AFC side.
The Vikings need help on the interior offensive and defensive lines and in the defensive backfield. Can they find it in free agency?