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Buffalo Bills' Josh Allen wins AP MVP at NFL Honors

Buffalo Bills' Josh Allen, AP Most valuable player speaks during the NFL Honors award show ahead of the Super Bowl 59 football game, Thursday, Feb. 6, 2025, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
David J. Phillip
/
AP
Buffalo Bills' Josh Allen, AP Most valuable player speaks during the NFL Honors award show ahead of the Super Bowl 59 football game, Thursday, Feb. 6, 2025, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

NEW ORLEANS (AP) Josh Allen beat out two-time winner Lamar Jackson for the Most Valuable Player award in the closest race since Matt Ryan beat out Tom Brady in 2016. Allen, who led Buffalo to a fifth straight AFC East title, got 27 first-place votes to Jackson's 23 and finished with 383 points. He received 22 second-place votes and one third. Jackson, who led the Ravens to a second straight AFC North championship, got 26 second-place votes and one fourth for a total of 362 points.

Bills head coach Sean McDermott shared earlier this season why Allen is deserving of this year's MVP.

"I've been around this league long enough to know to see MVPs every year for many years. And what Josh has done on this team and this organization in this community -- and no offense to anybody else -- but I've got a hard time believing that someone's done more. I really believe that," McDermott said.

Allen was in attendance at NFL Honors in New Orleans to accept the award. He was joined by his fiancé Hailee Steinfeld, his parents as well as McDermott and GM Brandon Beane.

For the past 11 seasons, being named the AP first-team All-Pro quarterback was a prelude to winning the NFL's MVP award.

There was some logic to that with quarterbacks providing the most value to a team and the same panel picking the All-Pro team and all of the awards.

There was a rare flip this year with Buffalo's Josh Allen narrowly edging Baltimore's Lamar Jackson in the MVP voting announced Thursday night after finishing second in All-Pro voting revealed last month.

This marked just the third time since the AP started handing out the Most Valuable Player award in 1961 that a player won at least a share of the MVP after not being voted first-team All-Pro. (The AP had a Most Outstanding Player award from 1957-60 and those winners also were first-team All-Pros).

So how did it happen this season:

The All-Pro votes

Let's start with the All-Pro votes where Jackson had the edge. He received 30 of the 50 first-team All-Pro votes from a national panel of media members and 19 second-place votes. Allen got 18 first-place and 24 second-place votes, while Cincinnati's Joe Burrow got the last two first-place votes, along with nine second-place votes.

What switched for MVP?

Several voters viewed the MVP vote differently. While Jackson and Allen finished 1-2 on 48 of the 50 ballots (Burrow and Saquon Barkley each got one second-place vote), Allen had the edge when it came to the top spot, gaining nine additional first-place votes from the All-Pro team with Jackson losing seven.

Allen also finished third on one ballot, and Jackson was fourth on another, but that had no impact on the winner.

Allen finished with 383 points based on scoring that gives out 10 points for a first-place vote, followed by five, three, two and one for the last four spaces. Jackson had 362 points.

How did Offensive Player of the Year play a role?

The AP also has several other awards, including Offensive Player of the Year. While that award has been given to non-quarterbacks the last five seasons, Jackson garnered significant support there.

He finished second to Barkley in that voting and got 12 first-place votes to the one for Allen, who came in sixth.

Nine of the voters who picked Jackson as the top offensive player chose Allen as MVP, accounting for almost all of the switched votes from the All-Pro team.

Jackson became the first player to finish second in both awards since Drew Brees in 2018.

Has this happened before?

There were two other seasons when a player won MVP after not being a first-team All-Pro. In 2003, Peyton Manning was the first-team All-Pro but shared the MVP with Steve McNair, who finished second in All-Pro voting.

Voters only selected first-place in the voting back then and both quarterbacks got 16 MVP votes after Manning had a 28½-16½ edge in All-Pro voting.

It also happened in the 1987 season with John Elway winning MVP after finishing second to Joe Montana in All-Pro voting.

There were 84 MVP votes that season and San Francisco had two candidates drawing support after Jerry Rice set an NFL record with 22 TD catches despite one game getting canceled because of a player strike and Rice sitting out three games with replacement players.

Elway also sat out all three replacement player games, while Montana crossed the picket line and played in two of them.

Elway got 36 votes for MVP, followed by Rice with 30 and Montana with 18.

The Associated Press is one of the largest and most trusted sources of independent newsgathering, supplying a steady stream of news to its members, international subscribers and commercial customers. AP is neither privately owned nor government-funded; instead, it's a not-for-profit news cooperative owned by its American newspaper and broadcast members.