ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — The Buffalo Bills are a flawed team with an elite quarterback. And that should be enough to include them in the late-season Super Bowl-contending conversation.
For all their injuries on defense, middling group of receivers, and draft picks who have yet to pan out, the Bills are a greater sum of their mismatched and recycled parts because of Josh Allen.
Anything seems possible with Allen behind center, as the saying has gone in Buffalo since beginning his assault on re-writing the Bills record book in 2020. And the eighth-year starter and reigning NFL MVP once again put that on display in Buffalo's 39-34 win over Cincinnati on Sunday.
At 9-4, the Bills improved their position in the AFC playoff race, and maintained their slim hopes of catching the AFC East-leading Patriots (11-2), who they travel to play this weekend.
Against the Bengals, Allen squeezed in a season's worth of highlight-reel plays into a four-quarter outing in which the Bills overcame a 10-point deficit in the final eight minutes.
Two of Allen's three touchdown passes came on fourth down, starting with his nine-second scramble before threading an 11-yard throw to Khalil Shakir, who was surrounded by three defenders.
Allen's 40-yard touchdown run broke his own team record for longest by a quarterback. And who else but Allen to seal the victory with a 17-yard scamper to convert third-and-15 and allow the Bills to run out the clock.
''It's actually really lit,'' cornerback Christian Benford said of watching Allen from the sideline.