Bills’ offensive coordinator Joe Brady explains late QB sneak vs. Rams

Bills’ offensive coordinator Joe Brady explains late QB sneak vs. Rams

The Buffalo Bills lost to the Los Angeles Rams 42-44 on Sunday in Inglewood, CA.

The Rams came out swinging, competing in all three phases early to take a sizable lead.

Their offense never took their foot off the pedal, and while the Bills offense kept pace in a scoring shootout their defense and special teams were not able to get meaningful stops.

Near the end of the contest, some questionable playcalling caused a domino effect sequence that has raised game and clock management questions similar to the team’s loss to the Houston Texans earlier this season.

And it started with a failed quarterback sneak attempt at the goal line.

Head coach Sean McDermott would call a timeout after a failed QB sneak and before their last touchdown, which then led to an onside kick the Bills didn’t recover. The Buffalo defense was able to force a punt but needed to attempt a block to have the best chance, but there was no punt rush on the play.

“The highest percentage play at that point was just doing a QB sneak,” OC Joe Brady said about the play call. “At the same time, the cost of not getting it essentially, potentially, and kind of did cost us the game. So I have to do a better job in that situation. At the end of the day, we can’t burn a timeout there.”

Josh Allen rushing is as good a play as any in the red zone. After all, he has more rushing touchdowns at age 28 than some Hall of Fame running backs had in their entire careers. Still, on this attempt, the unsuccessful play proved costly.

“If we’re going to call it, we have to make sure that we know 100% that we can get it. I felt confident in it and felt confident in doing it. But that doesn’t make it right,” he said.

The sequence garnered a strong response from long-time Bills divisional nemesis and UGG spokesman turned FOX Sports analyst, Tom Brady.

“To me, take three shots throwing it—don’t use a timeout. Then you can kick it deep, use your three timeouts to still get the football with good time. That changes the entire complexity of the last 1:02 of the game. I did not like that one bit. That could’ve just cost them the game right there.”

While these statements all ring true, the Bills defense also had some explaining to do after failing to stop much less slow down the Rams offense.

DC Bobby Babich spoke about the grouping of issues that compounded throughout the game after his unit gave up a season-high 44 points.

“When you look at it and you really watch the tape, it’s, and I used this word earlier today, it’s a conglomeration, and I’m including myself, of people not doing their jobs at a high level,” he said. “The recipe to lose a football game is what we did yesterday, and it starts with me, first and foremost, what I did yesterday, and we just got to learn from it. Move on and not let it happen again.”

They’ll face a Lions team next week that has the No. 1 ranked scoring offense in the NFL, and Babich knows they will need to be at their best in the matchup.

“I believe our guys are up to the challenge, and they’re ready to respond.”

Why Bills’ Josh Allen still thinks he needed to play ‘better’ vs. Rams

Why Bills’ Josh Allen still thinks he needed to play ‘better’ vs. Rams

The Buffalo Bills headed West in NFL Week 14 to kick off a two-game road trip, and the first stop was in sunny Los Angeles, CA to take on the Rams at SoFi Stadium.

Buffalo had been on a winning streak since dropping two losses to the Baltimore Ravens and Houston Texans earlier this season. However, their third loss of the year came on Sunday in Inglewood, 42-44.

Allen, who is in the midst of an MVP-worthy campaign, had another big day with the Buffalo offense as he went 22/37 with 342 passing yards and 82 rushing yards to go with 6 total TDs while becoming the first quarterback in NFL history to throw and rush for three touchdowns in the air and three on the ground.

The Bills defense, however, gave up 44 points.

And while Allen dazzled in the second half to give Buffalo a shot, the defense simply could not get enough stops or limit the Rams offensive scoring enough to make the game winnable.

Even still, his focus after the game was on his responsibility as the offensive leader.

“Hate losing,” Allen said. “If you lose by two or lose by 100, it doesn’t matter, you are still losing. Offensively, we have to find ways to score before and after the half. We didn’t do our part.”

The two teams exchanged blows on offense for four quarters, with Allen and company fighting to keep Buffalo in the game and coming back to bring the score within two points in the final minutes before the Rams recovered a failed onsides kick to run the clock out.

“I have to make one more play than they do. It was a total team loss in three phases. We didn’t play up to our standards,” Allen noted.

“I don’t know how well we did on third down or completion percentage, I don’t know any of that. I just know it wasn’t good enough to win a football game. I just got to find more completions, got to be better for our guys.”

Nonetheless, the QB’s performance was nothing short of historical.

“Incredible,” said Bills head coach Sean McDermott to the media. “Incredible. We’ve got to do a better job around him. If you look at the game, it’s line of scrimmage and being able to run the ball with our running backs. It’s line of scrimmage on defense, it’s special teams giving up big plays.”

In a clash of the league’s top clubs, each with Super Bowl aspirations this season, the Bills will next face one of their biggest tests yet in the Detroit Lions.

“Sometimes this can be as hard as it is, a good reminder of what you need to do every week in this league and how we have to adjust as a football team,” McDermott added. “Next week is a challenging game as well – they’re all challenging – against a really good football team on the road so we have our work cut out for us this week.”

Grading the Bills’ free agency moves

Grading the #Bills’ free agency moves:

The Buffalo Bills took a measured yet efficient approach toward free agency and might have already improved their depth chart at multiple positions of need in the process.

GM Brandon Beane brought in two young players with starter potential and upside to the offensive line group, added dynamic, young talents to their safety and wide receiver groups, and a big-bodied play clock and yards eater to round out the running backs group. He even brought back a familiar face to the defensive line.

In all, save for the loss of Tremaine Edmunds, who the right draft pick could offer a long-term replacement for, the Bills roster appears to have generally improved. They even cracked the top five of Pro Football Focus’s post-free agency power rankings.

And with that in mind, here’s a grade on each of the team’s free-agency signings in 2023:

One thing to love about each of the Bills’ free agent signings

One thing to love about each of the #Bills’ free agent signings:

Bills general manager Brandon Beane has established himself as a king of short-term deals in recent seasons

This offseason, he’s putting on a clinic in an NFL version of “Moneyball” by adding low-risk/high-reward players, some of whom saw their market affected by injury in the 2022 season.

Still, the GM has an eye for value.

With that, here is one thing to love about each of the Bills’ free agent signings:

Josh Allen, Stefon Diggs happy with Ken Dorsey after Game 1

Josh Allen, Stefon Diggs happy with Ken Dorsey after Game 1″

The Buffalo Bills beat the Los Angeles Rams 31-10 in offensive coordinator Ken Dorsey’s first regular season contest with play-calling duties.

That included a 53-yard bomb from QB Josh Allen to WR Stefon Diggs in the fourth quarter for a TD in Buffalo’s final scoring drive of the day.

The second half didn’t start with such a sizable lead, however, as the teams were tied with 10 points apiece by halftime.

“I was actually happy at halftime,” Allen said to the media following the win. “Three turnovers and going in 10-10 — zero to zero — that gave us all the confidence in the world, our defense being able to back us up. We hurt ourselves a lot in that first half. There’s a lot to learn from. But that second half, that’s who we want to be, going out there and executing the way we expect to execute.”

In addition to racking up the lead on the scoreboard and holding the Rams to no points in the second half, the Bills also converted on nine of 10 third downs in the game to keep offensive drives moving.

And Allen was quick to recognize Dorsey

“I think Coach Dorsey called a heckuva game,” he added. “It’s his first live action. So I’m proud of him for handling those situations how he did. We were 90% on third down. That’s a recipe for success.”

So what was the difference in the offense between halves one and two? WR Stefon Diggs weighed in on just that, pointing to Dorsey’s coaching as the catalyst.

“He came in at halftime and he understood that we couldn’t ride the roller coaster, there was going to be ebbs and flows to the game,” Diggs said during his press session. “He did some great things when he came in the locker room and calmed us down and said stop shooting ourselves in the foot.”

Dorsey rolled out a diverse variety of personnel packages during the contest to successful results, as the Bills bested the defending Super Bowl champs in convincing fashion.

The vote of confidence from the team’s two offensive stars in their coordinator speaks volumes, as Diggs continued to affirm the coach.

“He didn’t look half bad today.”

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqbw1j59gmjw5gdj player_id=none image=https://billswire.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

[lawrence-related id=104925,105259,105192]

Bills’ Von Miller: ‘Everybody was hungry’ vs. Rams

#Bills’ Von Miller: ‘Everybody was hungry’ vs. #Rams:

Thursday night the Buffalo Bills beat the Super Bowl Champion Los Angeles Rams in convincing fashion.

While the team’s offense delivered a 31-point final score, it was the Buffalo defense that notably held the defending title holders’ offense led by QB Matthew Stafford to only 10 points.

A leader on that defense, OLB Von Miller crossed over team lines during the offseason from the Rams to the Bills.

And it wasn’t long before Miller got his first sack on his previous team’s quarterback. In fact, it took only seven plays into the Rams first offensive drive for him to do just that.

The Buffalo defense would record three of their seven total sacks on the day in that first half of the game.

“I trusted my preparation,” Miller said while speaking to the press postgame. “I did everything I could possibly do to have success in this game. And today was fine. I didn’t feel like I had anything to worry about. I already thought about the things that could possibly happen on the field.”

A Super Bowl Champion with the Rams, Miller hopes to help bring a championship to Buffalo, releasing a heartfelt video to Bills fans before the game.

His hunger to win is shared by his defensive teammates, to whom he credited the effort on their side of the ball after the win.

“You can look in their eyes and you could tell that everybody was hungry, and everybody wanted this game,” Miller added. “Everybody expected success today, and went out there and took it one play at a time, and here we are.”

Since joining the Bills in free agency, Miller has made an impact on some of his Bills teammates, including second-year defensive edges Greg Rousseau, Boogie Basham, and A.J. Epenesa, who would combine for 3.5 of the team’s sacks and one of the Bills defense’s three interceptions to go with them.

“Our front four was just absolutely eating,” S Jordan Poyer said during the postgame press conference. He wasn’t alone in recognizing the defensive effort.

“I’m not on the defensive side, but I can see that energy,” WR Stefon Diggs said added during his own media availability.

The play by the pass rushers caught their head coach’s eye as well.

“Yeah, I loved it,” HC Sean McDermott said during his press session. “Gotta be able to get there with four. And we were able to do that tonight. So, I thought it was a great, great first game for those guys.”

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqbw1j59gmjw5gdj player_id=none image=https://billswire.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

[lawrence-related id=105259,105192,105240]

Josh Allen on stiff arm: ‘An example of what I’m willing to do to win a game’

Josh Allen on stiff arm: ‘An example of what I’m willing to do to win a game’

The last time the Rams played a game at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles, things worked out pretty well for them, as they won Super Bowl LVI against the Cincinnati Bengals.

Their 2022 home opener to the regular season went very differently, as the champs fell to the Bills 31-10.

Bills QB Josh Allen delivered a signature offensive performance in the win, throwing for three touchdowns with 297 total passing yards and an 83% CMP%, also adding a fourth TD on the ground to go with 56 rush yards.

While getting it done on offense with his arm and his legs is nothing new for Allen, occasionally he’ll extend an arm to hold a defender at bay and to extend the play to try to gain more yardage.

At 6’5 and 237 lb, he’s a big boy and hard to tackle, and it’s not uncommon on his runs that a defender finds themself on the receiving end of a stiff arm.

The latest recipient of a Josh Allen stiff arm is Rams safety Nick Scott.

The Buffalo Bills QB dropped back to pass while staring down a third-and-7 during the team’s opening offensive drive, when he took off towards the sideline for the first down, finding himself in a one-on-one matchup with Scott who came to meet him and try and make a tackle — who in turn then found himself on the wrong end of an Allen stiff arm that shoved him down on the turf.

After the game, Allen spoke about the play and how it fired up his team.

“Just trying to make a play for the team, just doing what I can do to try to get first down,” Allen said to the media. “That’s it. You know, guys appreciate that. I play hard. I want to win games no matter how I can do it. That’s just, I guess, an example of what I’m willing to do to win a game and just try to get a first down and allow us to keep moving the ball. It’s just all in the heat of the moment and I think guys appreciate that.”

After the game, Bills running back Devin Singletary confirmed something that could be seen in some angles of the stiff arm play- Which is Allen smiling and laughing while putting the outsized Scott on the ground.

“Of course,” Singletary said to Spectrum News 1 Buffalo reporter Jon Scott when asked if it provided the team with a jolt. “And while he’s doing it he’s laughing, so that’s going to turn you up even more. Yes, he’s laughing as he’s doing it, I’m watching him laugh as he’s doing it.”

Needless to say the Rams sideline may not have enjoyed it as much as the Bills as Allen and Scott came crashing into their area.

“They weren’t too happy about it, but it is what it is, they got to deal with it,” the RB said with a smile.

Allen is aggressive at the quarterback position in his playmaking abilities and in his desire to win games and advance offensive drives when carrying the ball. That can sometimes include trucking guys on the opposite side of the ball by laying an extended hand on them.

“I like winning. Whatever I’m asked to do, I’m willing to do,” Allen said of his running. “And again, limiting the hits, obviously sliding getting out of bounds. The utmost importance there, the best ability is availability. But again, when I’m called upon to do something for my team, I’m willing to do it.”

A native of Firebaugh, CA outside of Fresno, Allen had his family present watching from one of the SoFi stadium fieldside suites. The performance on one of the NFL’s newest and grandest fields made quite an impression.

“There have been a lot of great moments,” his father Joel said, via Sam Farmer and the Los Angeles Times. “But this is epic.”

[lawrence-related id=105240,105225,105219]

Jalen Ramsey’s coverage issues summed up Rams’ defensive nightmare vs. Bills

Jalen Ramsey’s coverage busts against the Bills on Thursday night personified a nightmare for the Rams’ defense. How did this happen?

Jalen Ramsey of the Los Angeles Rams is one of the NFL’s better cornerbacks. In fact, we listed him as the NFL’s top cornerback in our recent ranking of the best players at his position — and we did so for the second year in a row.

Even great players have bad days, and that’s certainly what happened to Ramsey in the Rams’ 31-10 loss to the Buffalo Bills in the 2022 regular-season opener on Thursday night. Ramsey allowed six catches on seven targets for 88 yards and either one or two of Josh Allen’s three passing touchdowns, depending on how you want to chart it.

“We got our ass beat, straight-up,” Ramsey said after it was over.

“They were really attacking our little zones, like our soft spots in our zones,” Ramsey continued, via Jourdan Rodrigue of The Athletic. “Obviously we’ve gotta watch the film, but I’m sure we all would’ve liked to play man a little bit more. I feel like we kind of had a mentality like, ‘bend, don’t break’ a lot, because they were driving the ball but they weren’t scoring, like, we were getting turnovers, interceptions, whatever it was.”

That will undoubtedly prompt some discussions with defensive coordinator Raheem Morris. In the first half, Allen completed 17 of 20 passes for 95 yards, one touchdown, two interceptions, and a passer rating of 86.2. In the second half, he completed nine of 11 passes for 144 yards, two touchdowns, no picks, and the highest possible passer rating of 158.3.

That said, Ramsey’s nightmare of a night started on the first play of the game — Allen threw a quick slant to Stefon Diggs (No. 14), Ramsey (No. 5) seemed to be looking for something more vertical, guessed wrong, and Diggs had his first easy catch of the night. It would not be his last.

This 12-yard pass to Isaiah McKenzie with 2:32 left in the first quarter presented a different problem — the Bills motioned McKenzie from right to left pre-snap, and the Rams didn’t seem to adjust. Again, they were playing single-high zone (clearly, a focus was on Allen as a running threat), and with safety Jordan Fuller playing deep and safety Nick Scott underneath (Scott clamping down on Davis up top would have been better), Ramsey had to choose between McKenzie and Gabe Davis to that side. At that point, all you can do is limit the damage. Should the Rams have been playing man or match here? Clearly Ramsey thought so, based on his postgame comments.

Speaking of scheme, there was Allen’s first of three touchdown passes on the night. Here, the Bills sold run so well, all 11 Los Angeles defenders were playing it — as Allen booted out after faking the handoff to running back Zack Moss, Ramsey read run, backed off covering Davis, and No. 13 had a wide berth to the end zone for the 26-yard score. If you want to know how terrified the Rams were of Allen as a runner, look no further than this play.

“Once he starts scrambling, you gotta try to find somebody and, like, latch on to ’em,” Rsmsey said of this play and others. “It is even tougher, actually, when you’re in zone. Once you’re in your zone, then he starts scrambling, you gotta go find somebody to attach to, like the nearest person in your zone. It’s extremely tough, and he did that a couple times.”

The killer play for Ramsey and the Rams, of course, was Allen’s 53-yard touchdown pass to Diggs with 9:25 left in the game. The Rams had no shot from here on out. There appeared to be a coverage miscommunication here — Long (No. 33) seemed to carry the deep half to that side, but in the end, he focused relatively underneath against tight end Dawson Knox.

Either Ramsey thought he had help over the top, or he thought he could catch up to Diggs out of quarters coverage. Either way, the result was no bueno for this defense. I don’t care how good you are — you can’t be late carrying Stefon Diggs up top in off-coverage. Allen had to make a pinpoint throw out of pressure and out of the pocket; the underthrow was the only reason Ramsey was able to catch up at all.

“We felt like their corners were really looking in at the quarterback and Diggs just ran a heck of a route,” Allen said of this play. “The offensive line protected and just gave him a chance and he went there and made a play for us.”

As for Diggs, he was just doing what his quarterback told him to do.

“He just told me to run,” Diggs said. “That actually wasn’t even an original play. Josh sees a lot of things at the quarterback position that you might not see at the receiver position. So, one thing I learned is to listen to your quarterback.”

Buffalo’s patience to take what the Rams’ zone-heavy plan gave them, as opposed to trying deep shots when they didn’t make sense, flustered the Rams and their best cornerback.

“We felt like they weren’t going to be patient enough to do that the whole game,” Ramsey said. “Just take those five yards, three yards, four yards, right? But they were, for the most part… then they had two or three explosives that ended up turning into touchdowns, and that was like, the difference. They won by three touchdowns.”

You can credit new offensive coordinator Ken Dorsey for that one. Dorsey knew that his offensive line would have no shot against Aaron Donald, so the plan was to go with the quick game, and when Allen needed an explosive play (like the Gabe Davis touchdown) get on the move and away from the NFL’s best player.

“We knew coming in we had to be efficient offensively,” Bills head coach Sean McDermott said after the game. “In part because of what Aaron does and how quickly he can get to your quarterback. So, if you hold the ball too long back there, he’s going to show up or somebody else is going to show up. I just thought we did a good job taking what they gave us. Josh was very patient, and the receivers were running crisp routes.”

Like a lot of the Rams’ top defensive backs, Ramsey didn’t play at all in the preseason. After the game, safety Nick Scott refused to peg that as the reason for the coverage issues. But he did express the feelings his guys had after that disaster.

“Obviously, we never want to be in this situation. Every guy in this locker room is sick to their stomach because of everything we put into this game, and everything we put into a game plan week-to-week. It’s the NFL, guys are talented on both sides of the ball, and if you don’t execute to your standard, it’s just what’s going to happen. We have to take a long look in the mirror — starting with this group. Starting with the DBs. Starting with myself, trickling down to the defense and the whole team, and figure out how we’re going to get better. The guys we have in this locker room are pro’s pros, and I have every confidence in the world in these guys and myself to look at the mistakes we made, be honest with ourselves, and hopefully get better next week.”

Next week sees the Rams facing the new-look Falcons, who don’t have anywhere near the offense Buffalo does. But get-well games are only that if your defense gets well. With extra time to work out the kinks, perhaps this particular spike strip won’t typify the Rams’ defense throughout the season.

Otherwise? You are seeing, once again, why it’s so hard for Super Bowl champions to repeat. And you are seeing, once again, that the margin for error in a cornerback’s life is indeed wafer-thin.

In Bills’ opening win, Josh Allen looked to finish what he couldn’t last season

Josh Allen’s 2021 season ended as he never expected. Now, he seems intent on making the entire NFL pay for it.

The 2021 divisional playoff game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Buffalo Bills was one of the most dramatic we’ve seen. It propelled the Chiefs to the AFC Championship game, and forced the NFL to change the overtime rules, because the Chiefs had an overtime possession, scored a touchdown, and the Bills were unable to respond per the rules of the time.

NFL changes postseason overtime rules to give each team a chance to score

“It’s just tough, you know? To be in that moment again,” Allen said after the agonizing 42-38 loss. “It sucks the way it happened, you know? We wanted to win that game. We had opportunities. Just, yeah, taking it all in, holding onto that feeling, and making sure we don’t feel like this again — back-to-back years in the same spot. It’s tough to take in.”

Making sure he didn’t feel like that again was Job One for the Bills in the new season. Allen, who completed 27 of 37 passes for 329 yards, four touchdowns and no interceptions (he actually out-performed Patrick Mahomes in that game) came into the new season with a clear sense of vengeance. In the 2022 preseason, Allen threw just three passes, but he made them all count, completing all three for 45 yards and this 28-yard touchdown missile to receiver Gabe Davis out of considerable pressure.

Allen continued his revenge tour in the Bills’ 31-10 thrashing of the Los Angeles Rams in the 2022 regular-season opener, completing 26 of 32 passes for 297 yards, three touchdowns, and two interceptions (more on those in a minute). Allen also ran 10 times for 56 yards and another touchdown.

“That first half, being careless with the football and putting our defense in bad situations,” Allen told NBC’s Melissa Stark after the game. “But they bowed up, they gave us a chance, and we went in with three turnovers at halftime. We knew that if we came out and executed like we know we can execute, we were going to move the ball and score.”

There weren’t many howitzers to start in this game — Aaron Donald was killing each member of the Bills’ offensive line early on, and new play-caller Ken Dorsey responded by keeping Allen in the quick-game corral for the most part, hoping that this would keep Allen upright, and mistake-free.

In the first half, it actually worked pretty well.

It worked especially well when Gabe Davis caught the first touchdown pass of the 2022 season — a boot-right touch pass that the Rams weren’t prepared to defend, because Buffalo’s offense sold the run so effectively. Among Allen’s other attributes, he was the most effective boot-action quarterback in the NFL last season, so the Rams should have been better-prepared for this.

Bills score first passing TD of the season by selling the run

Of Allen’s two interceptions in the game, only the second was his fault. The first was the aforementioned pass to McKenzie. The second was on a crosser to receiver Jamison Crowder that looked like either Allen miscalculating the route, or Crowder forgetting that he was supposed to keep going.

There weren’t many other throws Allen would have wanted back on the night.

When Allen did finally decide to uncork one deep, it was a 47-yard killer to Gabe Davis at the start of the fourth quarter that set up Allen’s touchdown run, where he just blew up new Rams linebacker Bobby Wagner a six-time First-Team All-Pro and future Hall of Famer.

And this 53-yard touchdown pass to Stefon Diggs with 9:25 left in the game was absolutely ridiculous.

Speaking of Allen as a runner, there was this vivisection of Rams safety Nick Scott on this third-and-7 stiff-arm at the end of a conversion run.

If you’re getting the idea that Josh Allen is on a mission to make the rest of the NFL play in triplicate for its stupid overtime rules, that was certainly the feeling on the field. The Bills took the Rams to the proverbial woodshed, handing the Rams the second-largest margin of defeat any defending Super Bowl champ has ever suffered — their 21-point embarrassment was exceeded only by the 2013 Baltimore Ravens, who suffered a 49-21 loss to the Denver Broncos in which Peyton Manning threw seven touchdowns and no interceptions.

Josh Allen wasn’t dealing it at Manning’s level, but then again, Manning wasn’t beating up safeties and legendary linebackers as a runner, either.

In the end, the effect was about the same. The reigning champions were rained on from the start, to an embarrassing degree, and if this is how Josh Allen is going to play all season, there are 31 NFL teams who will wish the league had changed its overtime rules a year before it did.