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The Chiefs have faced the Buffalo Bills in each the past four years.

They say familiarity breeds contempt.

All four of the aforementioned meetings also occurred at Arrowhead Stadium. The Bills won three of those contests by a combined score of 121-61.

In 2008, the Chiefs allowed a franchise-high 54 points against the Bills, losing 54-31 in the final year of Herman Edwards' tenure as Chiefs head coach.

In the 2009 matchup, Jamaal Charles—who took over for Larry Johnson at RB—was doing his best to keep the Chiefs in the game, as he broke off the longest-rushing touchdown of his career, burning Bills defenders for 76 yards.

However, it was not enough for the Chiefs as they lost again to the Bills, 16-10.

The Chiefs were becoming one of the league's most surprising teams in 2010 when they hosted Buffalo on Halloween. But for Chiefs fans, it was this game against the winless Bills that provided the scariest moments.

Tied at 10 late in the fourth quarter, Bills quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick threw an interception to Eric Berry, as the Bills were trying to position themselves for a game-winning field goal.

In overtime, Bills kicker Rian Lindell made what appeared to be the game-winning field goal—but the kick came after then-Chief head coach Todd Haley tried icing Lindell with a timeout. His following kick hit the crossbar, giving the Chiefs new life.

After missing an earlier game-winning field goal attempt in overtime, Kansas City kicker Ryan Succop redeemed himself, making a 35-yard field goal with five seconds left in OT to give the Chiefs a nerve-wracking 13-10 win.

On top of that, who better than Gus Johnson to call a close game?

In last year's season opener, the Bills drew first blood and never looked back, destroying the Chiefs in one of the toughest home-opening losses in franchise history, 41-7.

The Chiefs and Bills will meet in Buffalo on September 16 in Week 2.