The Buffalo Bills bounced back from the loss to the Los Angeles Rams in Week 14 to slay the NFC's best team in the Detroit Lions 48-42, which makes the second consecutive game Joe Brady's unit has scored more than 40 points.
The Bills' Super Bowl push is of course fueled by Josh Allen - and the host of weapons at his disposal. And the records are now piling up.
The 28-year-old QB made NFL history with his Week 15 performance on Sunday as Allen is the first player in league history to record more than 35 combined passing and rushing touchdowns in four consecutive seasons.
"He is not human," the Bills wrote when announcing Allen's notable achievement in a post on X.
“It was incredible,” teammate Dalton Knox said of the offensive performance. “We always talk about 'Everybody eats' ... There's just a lot of unselfish guys that do their job and make plays when they need to.”
With outside weapons like Amari Cooper, Keon Coleman, Khalil Shakir, Curtis Samuel, Knox, Dalton Kincaid and Mack Hollins, that's a lot of weapons to stop. ... with the likely MVP Allen as the triggerman.
Oh, and then we factor in running backs James Cook, Ray Davis, and Ty Johnson, all of whom can be options in the passing game, too, with in this case Johnson leading the team in receiving yards against Detroit with 114.
So the weapons are cooking and the records are falling and the praise is coming in. are ample avenues for Allen to go with the football, and with no clear star on the field, there isn't a need to force-feed players the ball - whoever gets open gets the ball.
And it is that uncertainty of where Allen is going with the football on any given play that makes this Buffalo team a truly dangerous prospect in the playoffs. ... and makes the QB almost seem like something other than "human.''