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    Former Wyoming Cowboy Josh Allen helps Buffalo Bills clinch first AFC East championship since 1995

    BuffaloBills.com release:

    The fun fact had made its rounds for more than a week, passed around on social media sites by fans and media alike. Adam Schefter tweeted it. So did NFL Research, ESPN Stats & Info, and Sportsnet.

    Josh Allen, 24, was not yet born when the Bills last won an AFC East title in 1995.

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    Why, then, does it seem like Allen has been here before? The quarterback broke down the huddle following Buffalo’s division-clinching victory in Denver on Saturday with the same level-headedness he displayed while talking to the media afterward. His message has been consistent since he showed up to camp.

    “We did something that nobody’s done in a long time,” Allen told his teammates. “Understand what’s at stake though. Understand what there is out there more for us. This hat’s fine and dandy. This hat and shirt’s fine and dandy. I want the one that says ** Super Bowl champs.”

    Allen turned in a dominant performance against the Broncos, passing for 359 yards and two touchdowns and rushing for two more. He played with as much poise with a division title on the line as he did while leading a game-winning drive in Week 3, or while playing in the wake of a personal loss in Week 9, or while delivering a win against his childhood team on Monday Night Football in Week 13.

    Cole Beasley rattled off the head-turning tosses Allen completed against the Broncos with bewildered amusement. There was the one Beasley caught, a bullet between two defenders to begin the second half. There was a breadbasket lob to Stefon Diggs down the right sideline for 55 yards. And who could forget the rocket of a touchdown to rookie Jake Kumerow on second-and-goal from the 22-yard-line?

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    “It’s hard to even be impressed now,” Beasley said. “It’s more expected. He’s been doing it all year now. He’s been dropping some dimes, man.”

    Allen’s performance this season has earned mentions not only alongside some of the NFL’s modern-day elite, but next to the best passers in Bills history as well. Consider the following:

    • Allen’s passer rating against Denver was 114.5, his seventh game with a rating above 100. That’s a Bills single-season record.
    • After making headlines with the first 300-yard passing game of his career back in Week 1, Allen now has seven. That ties the Bills single-season record set by Drew Bledsoe in 2002.
    • Allen’s two rushing touchdowns gave him 25 for his career. That not only ties the franchise mark set by Jack Kemp, it ranks second in NFL history by a quarterback through 42 career games (one behind Cam Newton).

    Allen broke Jim Kelly’s single-season franchise record with his 35th total touchdown against the Steelers last week, prompting praise from the Bills legend. His 4,000 passing yards are already more than Kelly threw in a season (albeit in a very different game) and just 360 short of Drew Bledsoe’s record.

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    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DjWCxrZrIO0


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