The Cincinnati Bengals did the unthinkable Sunday. They defeated the heavily favored Kansas City Chiefs at Arrowhead Stadium to clinch a trip to Super Bowl LVI. Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow made some history in the process.

Joe Burrow became only the second quarterback since 1950 to produce two game-winning drives in his first two career road playoff starts. The only other player to do that was Colin Kaepernick in 2013 and 2014.

Cincinnati trailed 21-3 Sunday midway through the second quarter. Yet, the Bengals did not flinch, yet again. Instead, Joe Burrow and the Bengals stuck to their game plan. They continued trying to run the football, using play action and finding players down field.

Burrow fired a couple touchdown passes during the comeback. Cincinnati actually took a 24-21 lead late in the fourth quarter. But Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes led the Chiefs to a game-tying drive, sending the AFC Championship to overtime.

In overtime, the Chiefs once again won the coin toss. However, this time Mahomes could not end the game on offense. Instead, he threw his second interception of the game. That opened the door for Burrow.

Burrow completed a couple of passes to Tee Higgins and led his team down the field. That set up the game-winning field goal from rookie kicker Evan McPherson.

Cincinnati earned their first Super Bowl appearance since the 1988-1989 season. That year, the Bengals lost to Joe Montana and the San Francisco 49ers in the Super Bowl.

It is very possible that is exactly who they will face again. The Los Angeles Rams and San Francisco 49ers are playing in the NFC Championship this evening.