Buffalo Bills S Cole Bishop becomes ultimate eraser vs. Kansas City Chiefs

Buffalo Bills S Cole Bishop becomes ultimate eraser vs. Kansas City Chiefs
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Throughout the 2025 NFL season, SB Nation’s Doug Farrar will write about the game’s Secret Superstars — those players whose performances might slip under the radar for whatever reasons. In this installment, we focus on Cole Bishop, the Bills’ second-year safety who had the best game of his NFL career against Buffalo’s bete noire — Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs.

Sunday’s matchup between the Bills and the Chiefs was among the Games of the Year as it is in most regular seasons, and the 28-21 result, which had Patrick Mahomes hurling a possible tie-making pass into the end zone with three seconds left, lived up to the hype.

There were two very good things to be taken for the Bills out of this game: The resuscitation of Josh Allen as a deep passer (thank goodness), and a defense that has been up and down all season, but really pressed Patrick Mahomes and his crew to the maximum.

Per Next Gen Stats, Mahomes was pressured on 20 of his 38 dropbacks (52.6%) and sacked three times in his fifth consecutive regular season loss to the Bills. It was the first time Mahomes faced pressure on a majority of his dropbacks since Week 5 of the 2020 season, and just the fourth time in his career. The Bills forced Mahomes to hold on to the ball, leading to his longest time to throw in a game over the last two seasons (3.37 seconds). This helped boost the Bills’ pass rush, who had just two of their 20 pressures come under 2.5 seconds.

This is also what happens when you tie pressure to coverage, and safety Cole Bishop was the main man in that department. I was a fan of Bishop and his NFL potential when he came out of Utah for the 2024 draft, and evidently so was general manager Brandon Beane, who said that he would have traded up for Bishop in the second round, but he ultimately didn’t have to.

The Chiefs decided to target Bishop more in a game than he’d ever been targeted in his NFL career, and they really regretted it at the conclusion. On seven targets, Bishop allowed two receptions for 18 yards, seven yards after the catch, no touchdowns, four pass breakups, a couple of near-interceptions, and an opponent passer rating of 39.6.

If you want to know why Mahomes completed just 15 of 34 passes for 250 yards, no touchdowns, one interception, and the third-worst passer rating of his career (57.2), you can start there.

Bishop’s deflections came from everywhere, and they hit all levels of the Chiefs’ passing game. From his attack and near-pick of a potential swing pass to receiver Xavier Worthy with 4:18 left in the first half to his denial of the aforementioned Hail Mary that ended the game in Buffalo’s favor, Bishop was everywhere, all the time.

“I felt Cole out there,” head coach Sean McDermott said postgame. “He could make big plays, you could sense his speed, and...