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Buffalo Bills wide receiver Stefon Diggs (14) celebrates with teammates after scoring a touchdown against the Baltimore Ravens during the second half of Saturday night’s game. Photograph: Rich Barnes/USA Today Sports
Buffalo Bills wide receiver Stefon Diggs (14) celebrates with teammates after scoring a touchdown against the Baltimore Ravens during the second half of Saturday night’s game. Photograph: Rich Barnes/USA Today Sports

Buffalo Bills and Green Bay Packers roll into conference title games

This article is more than 3 years old
  • Bills reach first AFC title game since 1993 season with 17-3 win
  • Aaron Rodgers passes for 296 yards in Green Bay’s 32-18 triumph

Aaron Rodgers is thankful for the chance to play a conference title game at home for the first time in his career. Josh Allen is just happy to get into one wherever it happens to be.

Rodgers threw two TD passes and ran for another score to lead the top-seeded Green Bay Packers into the NFC championship game with a 32-18 win over the Los Angeles Rams in the first game Saturday.

Allen threw a TD pass to Stefon Diggs and Taron Johnson returned an interception by Lamar Jackson a record-tying 101 yards for a touchdown to lead the Buffalo Bills past the Baltimore Ravens 17-3 for a spot in the AFC championship game in the night matchup.

TARON JOHNSON PICK SIX‼️

📺 #BALvsBUF: https://t.co/VqXMJDH1vI pic.twitter.com/WjuPWerVod

— Buffalo Bills (@BuffaloBills) January 17, 2021

The Bills followed up their first playoff win in 25 years with a strong performance against the Ravens. They will either visit Kansas City or host Cleveland next week with a spot in the Super Bowl on the line.

Buffalo won this game with its defense, holding Baltimore to three points on five trips inside the 30 and then taking the game over when Johnson tied an NFL playoff record with his 101-yard return that made it 17-3.

“We got the job done,” Allen said. “You don’t get style points for winning in the playoffs. You either go home or you advance to the next round. We’re on to the next one.”

This will be the Bills first trip to the conference championship game since the 1993 season when they beat Kansas City before going on to lose their fourth straight Super Bowl.

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers throws under pressure from the Los Angeles Rams’ Aaron Donald during the first half of Saturday’s game. Photograph: Matt Ludtke/AP

Rodgers and the Packers started fast by scoring on their first five drives of the game and then he put it away with a 58-yard TD pass to Allen Lazard in the fourth quarter in the first game this season with fans in Green Bay.

“It’s special,” Rodgers said. “There’s absolutely nothing like it. We have really missed that part of this experience. To run out of the tunnel tonight with fans was unbelievable. It’s hard to explain how much the presence means on the field and just having that energy from the crowd.”

Now Rodgers will get to play in front of the home crowd in the NFC title game for the first time in his career, having gone on the road the previous four times he reached the game, including last season at San Francisco.

The previous time the Packers hosted the conference championship game came in Brett Favre’s final start for Green Bay at the end of the 2007 season in a 23-20 overtime loss to the Giants.

Rodgers and the Packers will host the winner of Sunday’s game between Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Drew Brees and the New Orleans Saints in the NFC title game on 24 January.

Rodgers had earlier thrown a one-yard TD pass to Davante Adams and joined Joe Flacco as the only players to throw at least two TD passes in eight straight playoff games.

Rodgers also ran for a score when he eluded Leonard Floyd with a pump fake before running it in from one yard. No Packers QB had run for a TD in the playoffs at Lambeau Field since Bart Starr’s iconic sneak that beat the Cowboys in the Ice Bowl 1967 and sent Green Bay to a second straight Super Bowl.

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