Le Journal

The Chiefs, Bills & Ravens dominated this era in the AFC. What changed?
The Kansas City Chiefs have been the dominant team of this era. I understand this isn’t news to anyone, but it needs to be said up front. The two other AFC teams most prominent from 2019-2024 were the Baltimore Ravens and the Buffalo Bills. These three teams combined for nine of the 12 possible AFC Championship Game slots in these six years. They also had — by far — the best records among all AFC teams over this stretch, a combined 135 games over .500. The only other AFC teams to maintain a record above .500 from 2019-2024 were the Pittsburgh Steelers (58-41-1) and the Miami Dolphins (52-48). It’s hard to overstate the dominance Kansas City, Buffalo and Baltimore had over this conference for more than half a decade. That run of dominance came to an abrupt halt this season. The Chiefs and Ravens missed the playoffs entirely. The failure was enough for the Ravens to fire long-time head coach John Harbaugh. The Bills’ dramatic exit from the postseason in the divisional round convinced ownership it was time to move on from head coach Sean McDermott. It’s worth noting that the other AFC teams mentioned did the same. Andy Reid is the last head coach standing out of the bunch. The change atop the AFC was a shock to the system, the kind of movement that requires a deeper assessment. The Chiefs, Bills and Ravens enter an uncertain future despite having arguably the three best quarterbacks in the conference. How did we get here? And what comes next? Sustaining this level of success is remarkably difficult. It’s what made the New England Patriots’ dynasty so impressive. Opposing teams will poach the coaching staff and front office, and that bleeds into free agency, where players on winning teams are hot commodities. Winning comes at a cost, both literally and figuratively. These are good problems to have, but it’s something to overcome nonetheless. The truth is, these issues are easier to overcome while your quarterback is on a rookie contract. Teams can eke out some extra flexibility through the first year or two of a quarterback’s mega-deal, as well. The rookie deal flexibility came to an end for the Chiefs and Ravens in 2021 with Mahomes and Jackson, respectively. The Bills provided themselves with added flexibility in Josh Allen’s deal through the 2023 season. Cost-controlled young talent is the most valuable commodity when your quarterback accounts for more than 15 percent of the salary cap. Free agency becomes more targeted. Trades are harder to pull off because, again, those draft picks carry their weight in gold. Especially early round selections. How did the best teams in the AFC fare with those picks in recent years? Let’s take a look. The Chiefs’ top 40 selections since 2020: 2020 – RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire (#32) 2021 – N/A 2022 – CB Trent McDuffie (#21) & DE George Karlaftis (#30) 2023 – DE Felix Anudike-Uzomah (#31) 2024 – WR Xavier Worthy (#28) 2025 – OT Josh Simmons (#32) Bills top 40 selections since 2020: 2020 – N/A 2021 – DE Gregory Rousseau (#30) 2022 – CB Kaiir Elam (#23) 2023 – TE Dalton Kincaid (#25) 2024 – WR Keon Coleman (#33) 2025 – CB Maxwell Hairston (#30) Ravens top 40 selections since 2020: 2020 – LB Patrick Queen (#28) 2021 – WR Rashod Bateman (#27), DE Odafe Oweh (#31) 2022 – S Kyle Hamilton (#14), C Tyler Linderbaum (#25) 2023 – WR Zay Flowers (#22) 2024 – CB Nate Wiggins (#30) 2025 – S Malaki Starks (#27) There are some solid players on that list. McDuffie and Karlaftis have been foundational pieces of the Chiefs’ defense since they were drafted. Worthy showed flashes as a rookie before injuries took hold in year 2. Simmons looks the part of a franchise left tackle. Rousseau is a solid rotational edge rusher for the Bills. Kincaid’s had his moments. Queen made a Pro Bowl appearance before leaving the Ravens via free agency. Hamilton is a star. Linderbaum might be the top center on the free…

3 Houston neighbors hustle onto top 100 list of U.S. career hotspots
Houston has already proven to be a major hub for business, and now three of its neighbors – Pearland, League City, and Sugar Land – are rising up among the best small U.S. cities for big career opportunities.

Volvo EX60 Revealed: 'An End To Range Anxiety', With Next-Generation Seat Belts
Volvo's 400-mile electric crossover could be a major comeback story—and it's packed with tech that takes EVs to the next level.

The Volvo EX60 Cross Country Has Something The Rivian R2 Doesn’t
The Swedish EV one-ups both the Rivian R2 and the Tesla Model Y with a feature that used to be a staple of rugged-looking crossovers.

12 Houston restaurants score James Beard Award semifinalist nominations

Arctic air will bring hard freeze to Houston this weekend

2027 Volvo EX60 Global Reveal: Watch The Livestream Here

A New Car Chip Shortage Is Brewing—And It's All AI's Fault
Today's EV news: How AI is "roiling" auto supply chains, California's booming EV sales, and a controversial e-bike law.
The Night Agent: Season 3 | Official Trailer | Netflix

Renault EV Sales Jumped 72% In Europe In 2025

