Tomorrow Kansas City Chiefs’ head coach, Andy Reid will coach his team in a 4th straight AFC Title game. The franchise first known as the Dallas Texans did not host either an AFL or AFC Title game in its first 58 seasons (1960-2017) before this run of 4 straight home semis/AFC Title tilts.
Reid also guided the Philadelphia Eagles to 4 straight semis/NFC Title game appearances after the team had made the conference title tilt, just once, that under Dick Vermeil in 1980, (They won that tilt vs Dallas, Wilbert Montgomery bursting for a long td run on the game’s third? play, certainly on the Eagles’ first possession, before losing to Tom Flores’ Raiders in the subsequent Supe), in the first 31 years (Montgomery’s #), of the AFC/NFC configuration (1970-2000). The last three Reid/Eagles title tilts were home games.
Thus far, Reid is (3-4) in title tilts (3-3) at home. His team won 1 Supe, and lost 2 (both to a Brady led team, the ’04 Patriots and 2020 Buccaneers).
Another Reed, the Knicks’ Willis was part of Knicks’ teams that made 6 straight NBA “semis,” 3 final rounds, winning 2 titles from (1969-1974). Reed did not play in the 1972 playoffs.
There has never been a post-season clash between major North American Sports league teams from Kansas City and Cincinnati. Tomorrow’s Chiefs/Bengals will be the first.
A link goes to basketball again. The Cincinnati Royals, originally in Rochester where they won the franchise’s lone crown 70 years ago (The NFC title game hosts, the L.A. Rams won their lone L.A. crown also 70 years ago in 1951) and now in Sacramento, moved to Kansas City/Omaha and became the K.C. Omaha Kings in 1972-1973.
Also K.C. as is the case with Cincinnati, has 2 major North American sports league teams, one each in baseball and football. The K.C. baseball team, the Royals won titles in “5” years, 30 years apart in 1985 and 2015. The Cincinnati Reds have won 5 crowns, 3 in “5” or “0” years, including titles 15 years apart in 1975 and 1990.
I doubt you will find this anywhere else. Additionally, it is likely not many would care regarding that or these notes. However, here they are.
Joe Buck is in his 20th season as the Fox Network lead football announcer (he also just completed his 26th in baseball, at least in football he works the whole season) while Jim Nantz is in his 18th in that capacity at CBS.
In what will be Nantz’s 18th AFC Title tilt, home team Kansas City (Chiefs) are a touchdown favorite in the earlier title game vs the Cincinnati Bengals. If, as most expect, (beware when that is the case!), K.C. prevails, it would give the home team an 8th straight earlier/Nantz title game victory, after New England won at (15-1) Pittsburgh,, as a slight fave, in Nantz’ first AFC title game in ’04.
(13-4) records come up twice for home teams in these, beyond esoteric Nantz/Buck notes. First with home teams as (7-1) in earlier Nantz title games, add their (6-3) record in late ones and that yields (yield-Nantz-good record-chalk of home and hedge funds, but I fear regarding the far from sure market stuff, I have) a (13-4) mark for home teams in Nantz title games.
Home teams are (6-3) in previous later Buck title games, the 10th Sunday, a redux of the San Francisco “Niners” rout home win vs the Rams in the ’89 NFC title game, the only previous ‘offs clash between this week’s opponents. In fact there have been more (3) Supes among the AFC/NFC semi-finalists than the paltry one ‘offs clash of any kind between this week’s opponents. (S.F. won Supes vs Cincy, 40 years ago in ’81 and a “no cover” job in ’88 with 9 points the total margin of victory. K.C. took S.F. in a Supe played less than 2 years ago in ’19).
Thus in previous Nantz earlier/Buck later, title games, the home team is (13-4) going into that configuration this week. A (5-5),(.500) record by home teams in the 10 Buck earlier title games leaves the home teams with a (24-12)/two thirds wins/(.667 win percentage) in the 36 (19 Buck and 17 Nantz) title tilts with those two.
Sorry, but without demeaning them, most things in life are relative and I prefer and profess that previous conference title tilt lead announcers Ray Scott, Curt Gowdy, Pat “Super” Summerall even the at times sappy with Merlin Olsen, Dick Enberg outdistance Nantz and Buck in Secretariat/1973 Belmont Stakes fashion. (e.g. by a great, great margin!!)
First of all, while the poor defense, yes great offense and exciting Chiefs (menos 2) (42-36) overtime win vs the hard luck franchise, Bills (horror loss in this, wild card game at Tennessee in ’99, the so called “Music City Miracle” and most of all the ’90 Supe vs the Giants. Alas they did not show up, even one time forgetting a helmet in Supe losses (’91-’93) but they qualify as hard luck) was a great game, “slow it down” regarding calling it the greatest game.
There had been 4 previous ‘offs tilts between the two original AFL teams, the K.C. Chiefs nee Dallas Texans and the Buffalo Bills and all were routs or at least virtual routs.
In the ’66 AFL Title Game, the Chiefs won (31-7) at venerable War Memorial Stadium and in ’20 won the AFC Title Game at home, in the closest of the four previous ‘offs games between the teams, a “never in doubt” (38-24), later game.
The Bills eased in the ’91 slot 3/earlier Sunday game (37-14) and (30-13) in an earlier AFC title tilt vs Joe Montana and K.C. in ’93. (Montana played in 7 Conference title games, 6 in the NFC, going (4-3), he was (4-0) in Supes, and his teams went (4-1) in later title games, as stated above in route to Supe crowns, but (0-2) in earlier ones (at “Wash” in ’83 and vs the Giants in ’90).
On all 4 occasions, the Chiefs/Bills playoffs game winner lost that year’s Super Bowl. Only in ’91, after a slots game between the two did the Buff/K.C. winner advance in its next game. K.C. is a touchdown fave to do so this week and only an approximate 7 to 5 underdog to win it all.
My coincidences certainly induced by having past media or simultaneous “media/books/writing here” continue and this was pretty big.
Two televisions, neither modern, one sans sound showing highlights involving Mr. Brady, the other a 1999 American Film Institute Top 50 performers, 25 of each gender, and simultaneously the great Spencer Tracy is shown.
The simultaneous “clip” is from “Inherit The Wind” and in a classic scene with the great Fredric March, Tracy really as Mr. Clarence Darrow but as “Henry Drummond,” says to March’s Matthew Brady (really William Jennings Bryan)– “BRADY/BRADY/BRADY.”
Prediction: Tommy will retire. Supposedly 6 to 1 for him to do so is “out there,” but where and how?
One more Brady thing, did “The Bunch’s, (alas Tommy married a BUNDCHEN) “Marcia, Marcia, Marcia” stem from “Wind’s” “Brady/Brady/Brady?”
I seriously doubt it, but my mind goes to that type thing.

In what certainly could be and likely was the “Brady/Brady/Brady” scene, Spencer Tracy is standing, Mr. March is sitting and Harry Morgan (Henry Morgan was another very good “Morgan,” baseball-er Joe was a great one) is “Da Judge.”
After a bad wild card round, the NFL got 4 excellent games in the slots/division round.
On Saturday, as posted here, the “linked” Bengals and 49ers won games as road underdogs, doing so on last play field goals.
Sunday’s games were even better, though it was the Rams’ miscues and poor coaching by so called genius, McVay, whose first down and at times, second down running was awful strategy, that enabled Brady and T.B. to tie the tilt with 24 straight points.
Luckily for L.A. which opened a 3 plus point(s) favorite vs S.F. in next week’s home title tilt, Stafford found Cooper Kupp to set up the third last play, game winning field goal in as many slots tilts.
Next, in as wild an NFL ‘offs game as every played, there was a last play of “reg,” game tying field goal and that, plus a winning coin toss (opposite of the ’18 title tilt vs Brady, Rex Burkhead and New England) enabled a Mahomes to Kelce TD, lifting K.C. to a 4th straight title tilt, all at home, after having NEVER hosting one in their first 58 seasons, the first 10, being in the AFL.
It is the second time Chiefs’ coach Andy Reid has guided a team to 4 straight title games. He did so with the Eagles (’01-’04), losing the first three before winning in ’04, only to lose, but cover vs Brady in the subsequent Supe.
With the Chiefs, thus far his team lost to New England in aforementioned ’18 title game, ripped Tennessee, in route to a title in ’19 and took Buffalo, before losing to Brady and Tampa Bay, which had a home Supe last season.
7 of the 8 Reid title tilts were at his home field. Belichick made 8 straight title tilts, all with New England (’11-’18). Six of those were played at home. His teams went (5-3) and (3-2) in subsequent Supes.
The great and too often forgotten Paul Brown, (the Browns are named for him and he started the Bengals) made the NFL Title game in his first 6 NFL seasons and 7 of his first 8 (’50-’55) and ’57, after winning all 4 ALL AMERICAN Football Conference crowns (’46-49).
The NFL alternated what were “all the way” title games (Reid and Belichick were in title game/semis), with Brown’s Browns at home in ’50,’52 and ’54. They won the crown in ’50, 54 and ’55.
KC has opened a 7 point fave. Again LA is menos 3 plus. If the two home favorites prevail, a second straight Chiefs at a team hosting a Supe will manifest.
No team hosted in the first 54 years of Supe play.
The first game of the “on paper,” scintillating slots round, after last week’s “not good,” matches the AFC “4” seed Cincinnati Bengals and the homestanding, AFC top seed, Tennessee Titans.
In the 4:30 or so, CBS with Eagle start, the 3 plus point(s) favorites, Titans hope to raise the home team’s record in slot 1 games to (43-9). The (42-9) “going in” record “reduces” to 14 of 17, an incredible win percentage of .823.
The nine road team slot 1 game winners went on to 3 Supe wins (’71 Cowboys and the former and current Baltimore teams, ’06 Colts and ’12 Ravens) 2 Supe losses, which means they won the subsequent conference title game (’92 Bills and ’03 Panthers) and 4 lost the next game/conference title tilt (’77 Raiders, ’83 Seahawks, ’01 Eagles, and ’08 Ravens). By the way, 2 of the road slot 1 winners, the ’71 Cowboys (it was not based on record) and the ’06 Colts (the top seeds Chargers and Ravens lost, giving the Colts a home tilt/semi) played their subsequent title games at home.
Linking the Packers of Green Bay, a team with a first round bye and a home slots tilt for the 8th time starting in ’96 (the only time they won the Supe with that advantage) and Tennessee, I go back to the NFL/AFL days of (1960-1962) and 1967.
In those first 3 cited seasons (’60-’62), both teams, the Packers and the Houston Oilers played for the “all the way” (cue Eric Carmen and The Raspberries) league titles with no Super Bowl following it. In ’67, a berth in the second Supe awaited the league title game winner.
Once in ’60 the Oilers won and the Packers lost, once in ’61, both teams won and in both ’62 and ’67, the Packers won and the Oilers lost in the title games, with ’67 being in effect, a “semi.”
There has been one instance of both the Packers and the Titans as the Tennessee based team, each playing a conference title tilt on the same day/year, that a scant 2 years ago, when both Kansas City in route to its second Supe win and SF, the Packers opponent in slot 2 tonight, in route to its second straight Supe loss after wins in their first 5 such games, handed the Titans and Packers respectively, “semis.” defeats.
Getting to a Cincy/S.F. link, the teams played for Super Bowl berths on the same day/year in both ’81 and ’88, with both teams winning, before SF prevailed in both subsequent Supes, “covering” the first, but not the second.
I will add regarding SF/Cincy that in the ’81 slots but not the ’88 such, the teams played on the same Sunday, each winning.
In the only other same day SF/Cincy playoffs, the Niners wild card round win at Green Bay followed the 5th of 7 straight (hey I cite my coincidences, thus as I typed “straight,” on NPR, Scott Simon interviewing writer, Edmund White said there are also mentions of “STRAIGHT sex” in the 80 plus year old writer’s latest book) Cincy wild card round losses, a streak that ended with their “(-6) by 7” win, vs the Raiders in the first of last week’s 6 wild card round games.
Enjoy the slots! I will try to do the same.
If the two AFC division round favorites, albeit small such, win this round, a redux of the famed 1962 overtime AFL title game, will manifest, with the same home and road locales.
In 1962, with Curt Gowdy, Paul Christman and Jack Buck as the equivalent of a sideline reporter, the Dallas Texans, now the Kansas City Chiefs, won (20-17) at Houston vs the Oilers, who are now the Tennessee Titans.
Tommy Brooker’s field goal in the second overtime was decisive, the Texans winning despite a famed “we will kick to the clock” gaffe, by the excellent Chiefs’ player, Abner Haynes.
The Titans nee Oilers were (2-2) in AFL title tilts, (1-1) at home and the road. In AFC title games/semi-finals, the franchise is (1-3), all in road games.
Thus, if Tennessee prevails as 3 plus point(s) favorites, vs the Cincinnati Bengals (they are (2-4) in this round, winning the subsequent title tilt after each such win, only to lose the subsequent Supe each time to the 49ers. The Niners are Saturday’s other underdog, getting 6 or so points at night in blustery Green Bay), the franchise will host its first AFC title tilt/NFL “semi,” since the aforementioned, so memorable 1962 AFL Title Game.
Additionally, if the AFC “2” seed Chiefs prevail, (right now menos 2) as well, it does yield a redux of the ’62 game, with again, the Titans nee Oilers franchise at home and the Chiefs nee Texans as the visiting team.
The 4 surviving NFC teams the Packers (4), 49ers(5), Buccaneers (2) and Rams (1) have won a combined 12 Super Bowl crowns.
In the AFC, it is quite different as only the Chiefs, among the 4 surviving teams, have ever won a Supe. They have won two, while the Bills (0-4), Bengals (0-2) and Titans nee Oilers (0-1), that a loss as the Titans, on the #, in an Alfalfa Michaels/ABC one, concluding the ’99 season.
Last week 5 results moved in the direction of more combined NFC “Slots” Participants Supe crowns and the other way regarding the AFC. In the other one, SF (49ers) with the aforementioned 5 titles were the only underdog to “bark,” winning outright (teams winning in the recent wild card round have a great record “covering the spread.”), doing so vs the Cowboys, a team that also has 5 titles.
In the AFC last week the Bengals (0) beat the Raiders who have 3 titles, the Bills (0) took out New England (Patriots)–Belichick losing by 30, a scant 5 days after Saban lost by half that margin, although in an exponentially better effort by his Alabama team–the Pats have 6 crowns, all under Belichick, while ‘Bama has half its 12 titles under Saban. Also last week, the Chiefs with 2 titles beat the Steelers, who also have 6 titles, all won in Supes, as the franchise failed to win a playoff game in its first 39 possible seasons (1933-1971).
NFC last week, in addition to SF/Dallas. Tampa Bay with 2 titles beat Philadelphia which has one, while the Rams with one crown beat the Cardinals, who have not only no Supe wins, but though they have one title that won as the Chicago Cardinals in 1947, their title drought is the NFL’s longest.
The Eagles(1947-1949), Cardinals (1947 and 1948) and Rams (1949-1951), combined for 8 of the 10 NFL title game appearances from ’47-’51, with the Cardinals and Rams securing all 5 awarded to the Western Conference winner.
LA (Rams) played for the NFL crown an impressive 5 times in 10 years/11 seasons from (1945-1955), winning it as the Cleveland Rams, with the great Bob Waterfield as quarterback, (he also was once married to the beyond attractive Jane Russell. The story is told of Jane getting up from her seat to say get a snack or use the facilities with most eyes diverted from the game as a result) in ’45 and with Bob and Norm Van Brocklin sharing QB duties in 1951. They lost to the great quarterback Otto Graham and the Cleveland Browns in both 1950 and in Otto’s last Browns’ tilt at the venerable L.A. Coliseum in 1955.
After ’55, the Rams did not play for the crown until 1979, losing not only the game but a tough point spread (plus 11 and a half) to a 4th Steelers’ title in 6 seasons. After that as the St. Louis Rams, they as cited, “on the #’d” the Titans to win the ’99 season Supe but lost as a big favorite to a rookie QB named Brady and New England in ’01 and to what was said rookie/turned into the greatest football title winner’s 6th and final New England title in 2018.
Of course in this week’s slot 3 game, the Rams face Brady again, this time with Tom the Tampa Bay quarterback. He led them to what was his 7th and the franchise’s 2nd crown last season.
In now the 72 seasons after 1949, the Eagles have played for the NFL crown 4 times, splitting the 4 games. They handed the great coach Vince Lombardi his lone ‘offs defeat, winning a Monday December 26th/noon start at (no lights) FRanklin Field in 1960, losing to the Raiders in a Supe 20 years later (the Eagles’ kicker was Tony Franklin. Ode to Joe Franklin and trivia beyond esoteric) and splitting 2 vs Brady and New England, winning in 2017 and losing, but “covering” in ’04.
Oh the Cardinals! After playing for the title in both ’47 and ’48, only60 years after in 2008, when they lost but covered vs Ben Roethlisberger’s 2nd and last crown–he and Pittsburgh, though good were “sinked” out of additional crowns as the NFL/karma did not “BEND” on that one–have they played for a title. That is one final round appearance in 73 seasons.

Jane Russell and Bob Waterfield, pictured above.
There are past title games/semi-finals rematches in 3 of the 4 Slots/Division Round games this week.
The first game at about 4:30 Eastern Time on Saturday matching the AFC “1” seed Tennessee Titans and “4” seed Cincinnati Bengals does not offer such. It is a redux of what was the last Bengals’ ‘offs win before last Saturday’s first game of the so called “Super Wild Card Weekend,” which turned into boring, not well played and I usually do not knock officiating as it is a thankless, albeit, well paying job–but poorly officiated games.
Then in the ’90 wild card round after the then Houston Oilers had won vs Pittsburgh in a last week of the “reg” Sunday night tilt, to gain ‘offs entry (maybe they were already in?) not only for them but also for the Bengals, Cincy ripped the Oilers in the earlier Sunday wild card round game.
The next and other 3 games have “semis” history, starting with a redux of the Packers ’97 title tilt win vs the S.F. 49ers. Subsequently, Terrell Davis and NOT John Elway, led Denver (Broncos) to their first Supe win in 5 tries. GB is menos 5 plus, Saturday night at home, likely with Joe Buck.
Next, earlier on Sunday, but still relatively late in the day (only I note this is just the fourth of 10 Rams’ Sunday slots tilts that started earlier than the other Sunday game. It is however, a 7th, 3 or later start among the 10. Only the easy Wash home win in ’83, the Willie Anderson game ending TD giving L.A. a win at the Giants in ’89 and the home Rams’ ease job vs Minne in the title winning ’99 season as the St. Louis Rams were truly early Sunday “Slots,” Rams’ games.
This one 20 years later and 3 years later matches the Rams, early 3 point underdogs after ripping Arizona (34-11) last night, vs Tom Brady.
This time Brady is with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. In ’79 the Rams won the NFC Title Tilt at Tampa Bay.
Finally, Sunday night with again, the efficient Jim Nantz, the K.C. Chiefs are a near 3 point “fave” vs the Bills.
The Chiefs won both the ’66 AFL (at War Memorial Stadium, where the baseball part of “The Natural” was filmed) and last year’s home AFC Title game, before losing the subsequent Supes.