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Longest division-winning streaks in NFL history could soon include the Bills

Buffalo Bills v Miami Dolphins

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The Buffalo Bills keep winning the AFC East.

The Buffalo Bills didn’t make the playoffs for 17 seasons in the early 2000s and most of you reading this lived through every painful year. An even longer drought was winning the AFC East title. Buffalo won is six times in eight seasons from 1988 to 1995, but then didn’t win the division again until the year 2020, a span of 25 years.

The Bills have won every division title since 2020 to claim five straight division titles. If the Bills pull off what most of you seem likely and win a sixth straight AFC East championship, it will put them in rarified air in NFL annals.

Only six NFL teams have won six straight division titles in NFL history. Buffalo would be the seventh.

The longest division title streaks in NFL history​

Eleven straight NFL division titles​


The longest division-winning streak is familiar to Bills fans, as the New England Patriots won eleven straight titles from 2009 and 2019. It should probably be even longer. The 2008 Patriots went 11-5 despite losing Tom Brady in Week 1 and failed to qualify for the playoffs. If Brady doesn’t get hurt, there is a real chance the Patriots go from 2003 to 2019 without someone else winning the East.

Nine straight NFL division titles​


The Kansas City Chiefs are currently in the middle of a nine-season streak winning the AFC West. Their streak pre-dates Patrick Mahomes when Alex Smith still slung it in KC.

Seven straight NFL division titles​


The Los Angeles Rams of the 1970s won seven straight from 1973 to 1979. In a league where some divisions had five teams, the NFC West only had four for most of that run.

Six straight NFL division titles​


Three teams are tied with six straight division championships — a list Buffalo hopes to join in 2025. The 1950-55 Cleveland Browns, the 1973-1978 Minnesota Vikings, and the 1974-1979 Pittsburgh Steelers all share the number.

The Browns won the NFL American and NFL Eastern divisions in the early 1950s which featured six teams, making their streak the only one on the list with so may potential teams ready to strike.

The Vikings began their NFC Central run in 1973 with four total teams in the division, but finished with five after the expansion Tampa Bay Buccaneers joined in 1976.

The 1973 Steelers lost the division on a tiebreaker before rattling off their consecutive titles.

Division-winning dynasties usually means a Super Bowl trip​


Every team on the division-title dynasty list has at least gone to a league championship game.

The Patriots’ history of winning the big game is well-documented, and you’re familiar with the recent Chiefs dynasty. The 1950s Browns won three NFL Championships during their dynastic run and the ‘70s Steelers won four Super Bowls.

The 1979 Rams won the NFC Championship before falling to Pittsburgh in the Super Bowl. Both teams ended their division-title streaks the following season. The 1970s Vikings made it to three Super Bowls, but lost each one.

Should the Bills win the AFC East and again fail to qualify for the Super Bowl, it will be another dubious footnote.

Bills fans think Buffalo wins another division title in 2025​


Recently, fans voted in our NFL Reacts survey. A vast majority of Bills fans think Buffalo will do it again and join the list. In similar polls, 15% of Dolphins fans and 8% of Jets fans think they will come out on top.



It’s somewhat unfortunate for the Miami Dolphins and New York Jets. From 2003 to 2024, they only have one division title between the two of them. Miami plucked it in 2008. New York won the division in 2002, immediately preceding the Patriots’ long run. They have both won the same number of titles as the Indianapolis Colts over the last 25 seasons. Indy won the division in 1999 and left the AFC East in 2002.

Source: https://www.buffalorumblings.com/20...-history-could-soon-include-the-buffalo-bills
 
Buffalo Bills to reveal alternate helmet in July, per source

Buffalo Bills Training Camp

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An anonymous source with Buffalo Rumblings shares that the Bills will also have an alternate helmet in 2025.

The Buffalo Bills are still within the opening stages of their 2025 season — a campaign that will see the franchise put its finishing touches on its home stadium of the last 52 years. While the OG Highmark may be heading out to pasture, all the traditions, sights, sounds, uniforms, and more will live on in the new Highmark Stadium, just across the road.

It remains to be seen what the Bills have planned to properly say goodbye to “The Ralph” in 2025. But an inside, anonymous source with Buffalo Rumblings has reported that Buffalo is set to reveal a new alternate helmet on July 22.

What, exactly, we can expect hasn’t been shared for obvious reasons. For now all we can do is speculate whether One Bills Drive will roll out a new modern take on their current helmet, a redesigned throwback, or something else entirely. It’s believed this reveal isn’t related to the Nike-sponsored Rivalries series uniforms that the Bills are part of in 2025.

Team uniforms are always a hot topic with fans, especially Bills Mafia. It’s become an annual tradition for quarterback Josh Allen to emerge from the tunnel before the Return of the Blue and Red scrimmage wearing a one-off alternate helmet. Are any of those designs realistic options?

Whatever is revealed later this month adds a new wrinkle to what chief operating officer Pete Guelli explained this past March about the team’s uniforms in 2025. In a one-on-one interview with Bills sideline reporter Sal Capaccio, Guelli explained a bit about the thought process for this season’s uniform options:

“Sal: You just mentioned a very big word with our listeners: Uniforms. We get lots of questions about uniforms. You see teams going with third jerseys, alternate jerseys, throwbacks, the standing buffalo. I know you’ve been involved with this in the past with the Giants and back in your basketball days as well. Where do things stand right now with maybe some alterations or changes in what the Bills will wear?

Pete: I’ve been involved in a lot of uniform projects, and it doesn’t surprise me anymore how excited people get about that. So I think this final year at Highmark is more about optionality. There’s a couple of things, but we want to make sure, ‘What are the combinations that we want to wear?’ and when to strike the right tone with our fans. We are looking at some things relative to that first year, the opening of the stadium. Nothing I can disclose at that point, but I’m invested in the uniforms. It’s a huge important part of our brand. I know how much that resonates with our fans, so it’s something that we’re all focused on.”

Of note is the fact that the team’s current throwback uniforms (featuring the standing bison logo helmet) haven’t been used in several seasons — notably since the introduction of the red Color Rush uniform. Stay tuned, because, as per our anonymous source mentioned above, it sounds as though the Bills will at least have a new alternate or classic helmet for their final season at the incredible home that Ralph C. Wilson Jr. helped build.

Interestingly, The Bills Store just released the team’s new Throwback Collection for 2025 this week. What do you have to say, Rumbler — any particular combo, color, or logo you’re hoping is revealed?

Source: https://www.buffalorumblings.com/20...ernate-helmet-on-7-22-per-source-nfl-uniforms
 
Can Bills LB Edefuan Ulofoshio carve out a larger role in 2025?

Miami Dolphins v Buffalo Bills

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Can the 2024 fifth-round pick carve out a larger role this season?

The Buffalo Bills run a nickel defense as their primary personnel grouping, meaning that there is both an increased focus on linebackers and a decreased focus on the position grouping at the same time. Sure, that sounds contradictory, but it means that Buffalo may not need as many linebackers as some teams, but if their linebackers aren’t good, it’s incredibly easy to notice.

Just because the Bills are only playing two linebackers at a time for most of their defensive snaps doesn’t mean that the team can skimp on quality depth. In the defensive system Buffalo runs, the linebackers have myriad responsibilities, and they have to cover a whole lot of ground.

In today’s installment of our “90 players in 90 days” series, we discuss a young linebacker vying for a larger role on the team this season.



Name: Edefuan Ulofoshio
Number: 48
Position: LB
Height/Weight: 6’1”, 239 pounds
Age: 25 (26 on 1/23/2026)
Experience/Draft: 2; selected by Buffalo in Round 5 (No. 160 overall) of the 2024 NFL Draft
College: Washington
Acquired: Fifth-round draft choice

Financial situation (per Spotrac): Ulofoshio enters the second year of his four-year rookie contract, which is worth $4,334,024 overall. For the 2025 season, Ulofoshio’s cap hit is $1,038,506 if he makes the 53-man roster, and the Bills will carry a dead-cap charge of $235,518 if he’s released.

2024 Recap: Ulofoshio made the 53-man roster as a rookie after a solid, if unspectacular, preseason performance. In three exhibition games, he totaled seven tackles, including one tackle for loss.

In the regular season, while he was on the 53-man roster, Ulofoshio was often the inactive linebacker on game days, as the Bills essentially used the 2024 season as a “redshirt” year. He made his NFL debut in Week 9 against the Miami Dolphins, playing exclusively on special teams.

He was inactive again until the final three games of the regular season, when he again played almost exclusively on special teams. I say “almost” because, in Buffalo’s 24-21 loss to the New England Patriots in what was a meaningless season finale, Ulofoshio started on defense and played every snap. In that game, he made five tackles, including one for a loss, and broke up a pass. He had one other tackle in the regular season, which came in Buffalo’s Week 17 win over the New York Jets.

While Ulofoshio was active for all three of Buffalo’s playoff contests, he only played on special teams and did not register a tackle.

Positional outlook: The Bills have just seven linebackers on the 90-man roster at the moment. Aside from Ulofoshio, Matt Milano, Terrel Bernard, Shaq Thompson, Joe Andreessen, Baylon Spector, and Dorian Williams are the others.

2025 Offseason: Ulofoshio is healthy and participating in offseason work.

2025 Season outlook: Buffalo’s linebacker situation is interesting, as they have a clear top three in Bernard, Milano, and Williams, and then an interesting mix of players vying for spots in the reserve ranks. Will Buffalo run it back with the same six players they rostered last season, or can Thompson, the veteran former Carolina Panthers player coming off two injury-plagued seasons, step in to provide extra depth?

For a team that generally plays only two linebackers at a time, it’s hard to imagine the Bills keeping all six players here, so at least one player has to go. I believe Andreessen is safe as the fourth linebacker/top special teams player, so it’s really a three-way race for one or two spots.

I’d be wary of keeping just five linebackers given the injury history of some of the participants involved. In any case, the Bills will likely keep five linebackers active on game day, so from a player’s perspective, you want to be in the top five so that you can earn the uniform on Sundays.

If I had to decide the roster, I’d be taking a long look at Thompson in hopes that he can replace one of the two reserve linebackers that Buffalo drafted. That player I’d like to replace isn’t Ulofoshio, though — it’s Spector. For me,

Ulofoshio is one of the last guys on the 53-man roster, and he’ll be fighting for he chance to be active on game days this season. I like his athleticism and his motor, and as we’ve seen with other recent additions at linebacker, with a year or two in the system, there is potential for big-time growth. Hopefully, Ulofoshio is the latest drafted Buffalo linebacker to take a step forward this season.

Source: https://www.buffalorumblings.com/20...nebacker-edefuan-ulofoshio-2025-nfl-offseason
 
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