| Buffalo Bills Team History
  The 
                  Buffalo Bills began their pro football life as the seventh team 
                  to be admitted to the new American Football League. The franchise 
                  was awarded to Ralph C. Wilson on October 28, 1959. During their 
                  more than three decades in the AFL and, beginning in 1970, the 
                  merged National Football League, the Bills have experienced 
                  extended periods of both championship dominance and second-division 
                  frustration. 
 The Bills' first brush with success came in their fourth season 
                  in 1963 when they tied for the AFL Eastern division crown but 
                  lost to the Boston Patriots in a playoff. But in 1964 and 1965, 
                  they not only won their division but defeated the San Diego 
                  Chargers each year for the AFL championship. Head Coach Lou 
                  Saban, who was named AFL Coach of the Year each year, departed 
                  after the 1965 season.
 
 Buffalo lost to the Kansas City Chiefs in the 1966 AFL title 
                  game and, in so doing, just missed playing in the first Super 
                  Bowl. Then the Bills sank to the depths, winning only 13 games 
                  while losing 55 and tying two in the next five seasons. Saban 
                  returned in 1972, utilized the Bills' superstar running back, 
                  O. J. Simpson, to the fullest extent and made the Bills competitive 
                  once again. That period was highlighted by the 2,003-yard rushing 
                  record set by Simpson in 1973.
 
 But Saban departed in mid-season 1976 and the Bills again sank 
                  into the second division until a new coach, Chuck Knox, brought 
                  them an AFC Eastern division title in 1980. In 1981, Buffalo 
                  advanced to the playoffs again but lost to Cincinnati. The roller 
                  coaster ride for Buffalo fans then took another downturn with 
                  six straight non-winning seasons in the mid-1980s.
 
 However, Marv Levy, who took over the coaching reins in 1986, 
                  quickly fashioned the Bills into one of pro football's truly 
                  dominant teams. Starting in 1988, the Bills won five AFC Eastern 
                  titles in six years and became the only team ever to play in 
                  four straight Super Bowls. Levy was inducted into the Pro Football 
                  Hall of Fame in 2001.
 
 While three coaches -- Saban, Knox and Levy -- have been primarily 
                  responsible for the Buffalo's winning years, so too have a handful 
                  of superstar players been key factors in the Bills' successes. 
                  While Simpson was the key man in the winning years in the early 
                  1970s, such stars as quarterback Jack Kemp, who later became 
                  a United States Congressman, fullback Cookie Gilchrist, defensive 
                  tackle Tom Sestak and Hall of Fame guard Billy Shaw played dominant 
                  roles in the 1960s. Levy's teams in the late 1980s and 1990s 
                  were powered by such perennial all-stars as quarterback Jim 
                  Kelly, running back Thurman Thomas and defensive end Bruce Smith.
 
 Through it all, Buffalo fan support has been magnificent. Attendance 
                  demands forced the expansion of the Bills' first inner-city 
                  home, War Memorial Stadium, from 26,000 to 45,748 during the 
                  13 seasons the Bills played there. In 1973, the Bills moved 
                  to Rich Stadium in suburban Orchard Park, NY. Buffalo fans set 
                  an NFL single-season attendance record of 635,889 in 1991. Through 
                  it all, Wilson has remained as one of the oldest owners, in 
                  terms of longevity, in the entire pro football world. In 1998, 
                  civic leaders decided to honor the owner and renamed the home 
                  of the Bills, "Ralph Wilson Stadium."
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