The season ended when the Buffalo Bills defeated the San Diego Chargers in the AFL Championship game. Two years later, the AFL would join the NFL to form the AFL-NFL World Championship game, known today as the Super Bowl.
This was the final season of AFL telecasts on ABC before the games moved to NBC for the following season.
The AFL had 8 teams, grouped into two divisions. Each team would play a home-and-away game against the other 7 teams in the league for a total of 14 games, and the best team in the Eastern Division would play against the best in the Western Division in a championship game. If there was tie in the standings, a playoff would be held to determine the division winner.
The Buffalo Bills won their first nine games, before Boston beat them at home on November 15, 36β28. Buffalo came back from a 24β14 deficit at San Diego on Thanksgiving Day to eke out a 27β24 win. On December 6 at Oakland, the Raiders beat the Bills on the final play of the game, 16β13, and did not try for an extra point. Boston won at Kansas City, 31β24, to take Buffalo's lead away. In Week Fourteen, Boston was idle, and Buffalo took a 1/2 game lead with a 30β19 win at Denver. As it turned out, the Eastern Division title would come down to the final game of the season, with Buffalo (11β2β0) traveling to Boston (10β2β1) on December 20, with the winner to take all. Jack Kemp led the Bills to three touchdowns for a 24β14 win to capture the title.
The Western Division race was less dramatic. In Week Six, the Chargers took a lead over the Chiefs during a six-game winning streak, and held that lead for the rest of the season.
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