Josh Allen's MVP win elicits quick response from Bills NFL Hall-of-Famer

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In one of the closest MVP races ever, Buffalo QB Josh Allen and the Bills Mafia got something to celebrate as Allen took home the coveted award, edging out Baltimore quarterback, Lamar Jackson, by four votes. Allen became the 3rd Bills player to ever win the award and just the first quarterback.
Josh Allen is the first Buffalo Bills QB to win MVP. pic.twitter.com/Ld5u1h0QEe
— Real Sports (@realapp_) February 7, 2025
A Bills Mafia favorite with a great underdog story, congratulatory messages poured in for Allen from the Bills organization, teammates, and fans around the country -- including one from a man who understands what it feels like to be called the Most Valuable Player of the entire NFL. Bills' legend and Pro Football Hall-of-Famer, Thurman Thomas.
Welcome to the club young man. You deserve it all brother 🏆 https://t.co/DtMi7PLODW
— Thurman Thomas (@thurmanthomas) February 7, 2025
Allen's win comes 34 years after Thomas took home the trophy in 1991. In that remarkable season, Thomas clearly earned the MVP, going for over 2,000 yards from scrimmage and 11 touchdowns as a dangerous threat both running and catching the football.
Josh Allen is the Bills’ first MVP winner since Thurman Thomas in 1991 🏆 https://t.co/KezKOOP2Y0 pic.twitter.com/8MQX4NjdkX
— The 33rd Team (@The33rdTeamFB) February 7, 2025
Allen is midway through an outstanding career and while the Bills have yet to advance to the Super Bowl many have wondered why Allen hasn't been considered for this award in the past, a sentiment expressed recently by Thomas himself.

While the talk of Allen as an MVP can be laid to rest with his win last night, Allen is most certainly not satisfied. After being bounced in the AFC championship game again this year, it's safe to say the only award that Allen and his teammates desperately want to win is the one the eluded Thomas and his Bills: the Lombardi Trophy that goes to the Super Bowl champions.
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A Michigan native, Brian graduated from the University of Michigan in another century, where he earned a degree in economics and a Rose Bowl Championship ring while playing football for the Wolverines under Head Coach Gary Moeller. Brian went on to coach Division 1A football for several years before becoming a full-time writer and actor while maintaining an unhealthy interest in sports. He is currently developing a scripted television series, THOSE WHO STAY, based on a series of historical fiction articles he wrote about Bo Schembechler's Michigan football program as they struggle to unite and win the championship - which requires beating #1 Ohio State - during the tumultuous civil rights and anti-war movements of 1969.