Following an entertaining weekend of football, the 2024 AFC Championship Game and 2024 NFC Championship Game are officially set. The Kansas City Chiefs will play host to the Buffalo Bills on the AFC side of things. That game will have a familiar New York Giants feel from a coaching staff standpoint on both sidelines.
Conference Championship Sunday will be an in-your-face reminder of everything the New York Giants have done wrong since 2022.
The Bills, who have lost seven straight road playoff games dating back three decades, beat the Chiefs, 30-21, in Week 11 in a game played in Buffalo. The Chiefs are a mind-boggling 15-2 in playoff games played since 2020 (they beat the Bills in three of those games, including a win in the 2021 AFC championship), so, yeah, they’re battle-tested.
Kansas City's win that put them a win away from a third straight Super Bowl title averaged 57.4 million viewers for CBS, according to the Sports Business Journal's Austin Karp. The number tops the previous AFC title game record of 55.5 million set during last year's game between the Chiefs and the Baltimore Ravens.
With their NFC Championship win, the Eagles will face the winner of the AFC Championship in Super Bowl 59.
The NFL's final four teams compete Sunday for a spot in Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans. Here's what to know about both games.
The actual sports part and storylines are incredible: Patrick Mahomes and Andy Reid are in their seventh consecutive AFC Championship Game; the Bills have a lifetime of heartbreak, including Buffalo leading Kansas City with 13 seconds left in a 2021 Divisional Round game before losing.
NFC championship features the Philadelphia Eagles vs. the Washington Commanders. Check out all-time championship records and stats now.
There have been 35 head coaches that won a Super Bowl. Just four of those won Super Bowls after their seventh season with their organization.
Fans saw two completely different games on Conference Championship Sunday. The Philadelphia Eagles dominated the Washington Commanders, 55-23, in the NFC
As Super Bowl 59 nears, here's a countdown of the 59 greatest teams to play on Super Sunday. Guess what? Not all are champions.