Buffalo Bills starting safety Taylor Rapp has been ruled out for the AFC Championship Game on Sunday against the host Kansas City Chiefs.
The Buffalo Bills will be without key player Rapp as they look to reach their first Super Bowl in more than 30 years.
We welcome Matt Byham of Buffalo Rumblings — our sister SB Nation site covering the Bills — for Five Questions with the Enemy. As of publishing, Rapp has been downgraded to “out” for Sunday. That’s not ideal for the Bills,
Buffalo Bills safety Taylor Rapp exited Sunday's AFC divisional playoff game against the visiting Baltimore Ravens with a hip injury. Rapp was injured in the second quarter and initially termed questionable to return.
Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts was not on the team's injury report Friday and said that his left knee is "progressing" as he prepares to play in Sunday's NFC championship game against the Washington Commanders.
Before two of the top teams in the AFC go head-to-head for the conference title game, the Bills announced that starting safety Taylor Rapp has been ruled out. Rapp has been dealing with a back/hip injury and was listed as "did not practice" (DNP) in the week leading up to the game.
The Los Angeles Rams and Matthew Stafford await the loser of Sunday night's Detroit Lions vs. Minnesota Vikings showdown at Ford Field for a wild-card game in the 2024-25 NFL playoffs next weekend.
Washington Commanders quarterback Jayden Daniels threads the needle to connect with wide receiver Dyami Brown.
The Washington Commanders pay off their opening possession with 3 points thanks to a 34-yard field goal from their kicker, Zane Gonzalez.
Since meeting for the AFC title on Jan. 24, 2021, the Bills and Chiefs have met seven times, with Buffalo winning all four regular-season matchups and Kansas City winning each of the three playoff games.
KANSAS CITY — The Kansas City Chiefs are chasing a record third consecutive Super Bowl title, but first they have to beat the Buffalo Bills in the AFC title game on Sunday night.
Two-time defending champion Kansas City, the top seed in the AFC, welcomes an opponent the Chiefs know all too well — and not just because of a 30-21 loss at Buffalo on Nov. 17. This is the fourth postseason meeting in five years between the Bills and Chiefs,