Amari Cooper has enough catches, yards and touchdowns over his 10-year NFL career to satisfy his ego. What’s missing in the 30-year-old’s career is playoff success, and Cooper wouldn’t trade this run to the AFC championship game he’s enjoying with the Buffalo Bills for anything.
Amari Cooper has only had two playoff catches with the Bills. In fact, he’s only had two games in Buffalo with more than three targets. Cooper is satisfied
The Chiefs could have a lot of success against the Bills if they expose this fatal flaw of theirs.
The Bills touted Amari Cooper as a true No. 1 wide receiver when they traded for him Oct. 15. It hasn’t worked out that way. He made 20 catches for 297 yards and two touchdowns in eight regular-season games, with a single-game high of 95 yards. In the postseason, Cooper has done even less.
The Buffalo Bills' midseason acquisition of Amari Cooper was expected to provide a significant boost to the offense. So far, the former Cleveland Browns wide receiver hasn't played a huge part in the team's first two playoff victories.
The divisional round has come to a close after Sunday night's game in Buffalo. Here's who the Bills will play next.
Tom Brady is in broadcasting, Bill Belichick is coaching in college, Mike Vrabel just landed another NFL head coaching gig, and Rob Gronkowski and Julian Edelman are studio analysts. Indeed, the Patriots' dynasty is long gone,
The Cowboys also have three former players in the AFC Championship, all playing for the Buffalo Bills. Those players are Amari Cooper, Connor McGovern, and Jordan Phillips. The Cowboys themselves have not made it to the NFC Championship since 1995, marking the longest drought in the NFC.
Amari Cooper has enough catches, yards and touchdowns over his 10-year NFL career to satisfy his ego. What's missing in the 30-year-old's career is playoff success.
Win or lose, Sunday’s AFC championship game in Kansas City will bring a new experience for Amari Cooper. “I’ve never been this far in the playoffs,” the Buffalo Bills' wide receiver said Wednesday.
Buffalo Bills receiver Amari Cooper has been invisible in the last two playoff games, and offensive coordinator Joe Brady has explained why.