Begin:So close and
yet so far. Nothing epitomizes that idea more than the Super Bowl history of
the Buffalo Bills. In the early 1990s, they attained an unprecedented
accomplishment--appearing in four straight Super Bowls, which no other team has
ever done. Yet they did not win a single one of those Super Bowls, and their
0-4 record forever marks the agony of coming in second. That frustration is
still marked with great pride, however, for even as the Bills' success is mixed
with failure, so too did that failure come mixed with extraordinary success. The
Team The Buffalo
Bills of the 1990s hit upon an outstanding formula for winning under head coach
Marv Levy. It was built around the "hurry-up offense," which treated
every offensive drive as if it were taking place in the last two minutes of the
game. Quarterback Jim Kelly proved incredibly adept at moving the ball quickly
down the field, and the team's practice of going without a huddle kept defenses
disoriented and confused. Time of possession was meaningless of the Bills. When
coupled with a fearsome defense, the tactic proved impossible for anyone in the
AFC to stop. Super Bowl XXV The Bills' string of Super Bowl appearances began
in January 1991, when they faced the New York Giants in Super Bowl XXV. The
game was widely considered one of the best in Super Bowl history, with multiple
lead changes and a pair of gutsy teams battling toe to toe. In the end, it came
down to a 47-yard field goal kick from Buffalo
kicker Scott Norwood. His missed it, cementing the Giants' 20-19 victory. Super
Bowl XXVI In some ways, the Bills never recovered from that missed kick. The
next year, they again thrashed their AFC rivals and again headed into the Super
Bowl looking for the championship trophy. They were stopped by the Washington
Redskins, under coach Joe Gibbs, who built a commanding halftime lead that Buffalo couldn't
overcome. The Bills lost again, 37-24. Super Bowls XXVII and XXVIII It was the
Dallas Cowboys who sealed the Bills' 0-4 Super Bowl record. Led by Quarterback
Troy Aikman and running back Emmitt Smith, they dominated the NFL of the early
1990s. Their only real rivals were the San
Francisco 49ers--also in the NFC--and the Bills simply
couldn't compete with them in either of two consecutive Super Bowl matchups.
Super Bowl XXVII was a 52-17 laugher, and Super Bowl XXVIII was only marginally
better at 30-13. As of 2009, the Bills have yet to return to the Super Bowl. Legacy
Despite the heartbreak, the Super Bowl Bills left a legacy behind that any team
would be proud of. Three players on those teams--quarterback Jim Kelly, running
back Thurman Thomas and wide receiver James Lofton--were eventually selected to
the Pro Football Hall of Fame, along with head coach Marv Levy. An even more
touching moment came from wide receiver Don Beebe who--in the midst of the
Super Bowl XXVII rout--ran down showboating defensive tackle Leon Lett to strip
the ball away from him and deny the Cowboys a touchdown. The gesture had no
effect on the outcome of the game, but became an enduring example of never
giving up. The end!
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