Article 72J00 Josh Allen 'good to go' for Bills on Sunday, keeping NFL's longest active QB start streak alive

Josh Allen 'good to go' for Bills on Sunday, keeping NFL's longest active QB start streak alive

by
Jack Baer
from on (#72J00)

It's unclear how much Josh Allen the Buffalo Bills are going to get on Sunday, but it should be enough to keep a notable streak going.

Bills head coach Sean McDermott told WGR 550 on Friday that Allen will play in this weekend's regular-season finale against the New York Jets after missing practice on Wednesday and Thursday due to a foot injury. Allen was a limited participant Friday and carries no injury designation for the game.

Allen has been dealing with the foot injury for a couple of weeks, with X-rays coming back negative last weekend after he briefly left a game. McDermott painted the time off from practice as more about rest for the 2024 MVP:

We wanted to make sure his health was No. 1 the last two days. He had two good days of recovery and today he'll be out there. He'll be limited. He'll be good to go for the game, and we'll take it one day at a time."

Look at Josh Allen in the red helmet as he practices for the first time this week pic.twitter.com/KuwSoJDzaH

- Alaina Getzenberg (@agetzenberg) January 2, 2026

However problematic the foot injury really is, the Bills have little reason to push Allen against the Jets. They've already clinched the playoffs and will have a better understanding of their seeding scenarios by the time their game begins at 4:25 p.m. ET.

If the Houston Texans, Jacksonville Jaguars and Los Angeles Chargers all win, the Bills are locked into the No. 7 seed in the AFC. If the Texans and Chargers both lose, Buffalo can move up to the No. 5 seed with a win over the 3-13 Jets, which is highly possible even if Allen plays only one snap. There are scenarios in which the Bills would earn the No. 6 seed as well, such as one of the Texans or Chargers losing.

The reason the Bills would play a limited Allen at all is his 127-game consecutive start streak, which will become the longest such active streak among NFL QBs again with Philip Rivers planning to sit this weekend. The run goes back to Allen's rookie year, in which he missed a month due to an elbow injury.

a4d06b06-0d3f-43f2-9574-1edfc776c0f1Josh Allen is keeping his iron man streak going. (Photo by Timothy T Ludwig/Getty Images)Timothy T Ludwig via Getty Images

Rivers retired at 240 straight starts, but his streak was revived when he returned to an NFL roster as the starter for the Indianapolis Colts. Rivers' run will end on Sunday, as he will sit out the Colts' game against the Texans.

That will leave the quarterback leaderboard for consecutive regular-season starts looking like this:

1. Brett Favre (297 games, 1992-2010)
2. Philip Rivers (243 games, 2006-2025)
3. Eli Manning (210 games, 2004-2017)
4. Peyton Manning (208 games, 1998-2011)
5. Matt Ryan (154 games, 2009-2019)
6. Russell Wilson (149 games, 2012-2021)
7. Matthew Stafford (136 games, 2011-2019)
8. Josh Allen (127 games for Bills, 2018-present)

In case you're curious, a 170-game gap between Favre and Allen means the Bills' star would need 10 straight seasons of 17 starts to break a record that many consider unreachable.

To be clear, that leaderboard is quarterbacks only. Among all active NFL players, Allen's streak is second behind that of Atlanta Falcons offensive tackle Jake Matthews, at 193.

External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/rss.xml
Feed Title
Feed Link https://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/
Feed Copyright Copyright (c) 2026 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Reply 0 comments