Sean McDermott ‘humbled,’ but not satisfied with playoff berth: ‘We haven’t arrived’

Despite securing a spot in the playoffs, Buffalo Bills head coach Sean McDermott has larger ambitions.

For a handful of fanbases around the NFL, a postseason berth is not a triumphant experience.

Though qualifying for the playoffs is undoubtedly a significant achievement, it’s one that some fanbases have come to expect. The joy of seeing an ‘x’ next to a team’s name in the standings wears after it’s become the norm for a few years.

In Western New York, however, that joyous feeling never gets old.

An ‘x’ now sits in front of the Buffalo Bills’ name in the standings for just the second time this century, as the team secured its second playoff berth of the millennium with a Week 15 win over the Pittsburgh Steelers.

It’s the second time that the Bills have qualified for the postseason under head coach Sean McDermott, who led the team to a 9-7 record and a wild-card berth in the 2017 season.

After a near two-decade-long streak in which the beloved franchise failed to reach the postseason, two playoff berths in three years almost feels a bit gluttonous.

The only head coach to create sustained success at One Bills Drive this century, McDermott realizes just how special a playoff berth is for the accolade-starved Buffalo faithful.

He also knows the value of every win in the NFL.

“It just feels good to win a game,” McDermott said following the team’s 17-10 win at Heinz Field. “It’s hard to win a game. Then when you talk about playoffs, being here three years, to be in it two out of three years, what a blessing.

“It’s all people. It’s all the people behind me in that locker room, all the people back home at One Bills Drive, all of our fans. The fans [Sunday], in a place like Pittsburgh, unreal. I’m humbled by it, yet we’re hungry to continue to grow and get better.”

Statistically, the year’s Bills team is the best of the millennium – and there are still two weeks remaining in the campaign. Buffalo currently sits at 10-4 on the year, its first double-digit win total since the 1999 NFL season.

Its defense is one of the best in the league, this made evident by its five takeaways against Pittsburgh. Its offense, when clicking, is exciting, with sophomore quarterback Josh Allen often looking like a future superstar.

Though having a spot in the postseason secured in mid-December is favorable, it’s hard to feel completely satisfied with Buffalo’s playoff berth, as it feels like the start of a new era rather than the culmination of a solid year.

With young, budding superstars at a number of key positions, a proven head coach, and a healthy salary cap situation, it’s clear that the Bills have been built for perennial success.

Though pleased with the playoff berth, McDermott knows that the team has larger ambitions.

“I’m just grateful to be a part of it,” McDermott said. “Again, just grateful to be a part of the group of guys and gals that are behind me in that locker room. They work extremely hard.

“Coming to Buffalo three years ago now, two and a half years ago, whatever it’s been, a lot of people said ‘Why are you going there? You’re not going to be able to get it turned around.’ We got it turned around, with a lot of work yet to do. We haven’t arrived, we have a lot of work to do, but I’m just humbled by it.

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Bills playoff picture: Updated playoff berth, AFC East title races

What Buffalo Bills must do for playoff berth, AFC East title, following Week 14.

The Bills lost 24-17 to the Baltimore Ravens in Week 14, but no worries.

A win would have been nice, but the Bills (9-4) still have outrageously good odds at making it to the 2019 postseason.

On Sunday Night Football next week, the nation will once again get a look at the Bills. That crowd could be watching the Bills clinch their second playoff berth in three seasons under head coach Sean McDermott because… that’s it.

If the Bills top the 8-5 Pittsburgh Steelers, they’re in.

But, this upcoming game is the Steelers’ final home game this season. Over the course of their final two regular season games, they’ll play at the Jets and Ravens, respectively, to roundout the year. In a playoff push of their own, Pittsburgh will be motivated to win in the final chance they have to play in front of their own crowd, a crowd they’ve gone 5-2 in front of this season.

It’s a tight race for the AFC playoffs in general thanks to the Bills’ loss to the Ravens, but even if they don’t beat the Steelers, if Buffalo beats either the Patriots or Jets in their final two games, they’re also in.

One win and Buffalo is in the dance.

That’s a straight forward one. How can the Bills still win the AFC East? That’s a little tougher.

AFC East title

The battle for the AFC East is between the Bills and long-time division champ, the Patriots. But there’s a slight hope.

Buffalo has to win out against the Steelers, Patriots and Jets.

If that happens, the Patriots would need to lose at least one of their other final three games, those coming at the Bengals and in New England against the Dolphins in Week 17.

If Buffalo loses to the Steelers, they still have a look at the division, but the Bills have to win their other two games, again, against the Patriots and Jets, while the Pats have to lose to the Dolphins.

Regardless, Buffalo’s Week 16 game in New England will have something attached to it, one way or another, so that’ll certainly make things fun.

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In front of national audience, Bills prove they’re for real

The Buffalo Bills proved their legitimacy in their Thanksgiving Day win over the Dallas Cowboys.

As fans of the Buffalo Bills moved their Thanksgiving gatherings from their kitchens to their living rooms early Thursday evening, winning football is not something that many expected to watch.

The Bills certainly had a chance to upset the favored Dallas Cowboys – they entered the game with an 8-3 record, after all – but Buffalo fans had seen this movie before. They knew the ending.

The game served as an opportunity for the Bills to show the nation their legitimacy, a chance for Josh Allen to silence his doubters and lead his so-called ‘overrated’ bunch to a victory over a respected opponent in front of a national audience.

And thus, a win seemed unlikely. For decades, ‘Buffalo Bills football’ and ‘disappointment’ have been near-synonyms. Though this year’s Buffalo team has proven that it bears little resemblance to those of years past, many expected the team to regress to its seemingly innate organizational ways, laying an egg in a matchup that could’ve shifted national perspective.

The Bills did ultimately shift national perspective in its Thanksgiving meeting with the Cowboys, but not because the team struggled against a perceived superior opponent.

They showed the world that their record is not a fluke – that they’re a well-constructed, well-coached, well-oiled machine that will give any team a run for its money regardless of the spread, analyst predictions, or other outside noise.

Buffalo dominated its Week 13 meeting with Dallas, leaving AT&T Stadium with a 26-15 win and a 9-3 record, its best since the 1996 season. Though a quick look at the stats would suggest that the Cowboys hung around until the final whistle, the flow of the game never fell in Dallas’ favor.

Though the Cowboys finished the game with more yardage than the Bills, it never felt as though the team had a chance to win after Buffalo took its lead in the second quarter.

The Bills controlled the tempo of the game with stout defensive play and long, methodical scoring drives that, more often than not, resulted in a score or poor starting field position for Dallas.

Buffalo consistently spurned the Cowboys’ offensive efforts and played well with the ball in its possession, leaving Dallas fans in Arlington stunned, agitated, and disheartened.

The game perhaps saw the Bills’ most complete performance of the season, a microcosm of what head coach Sean McDermott and general manager Brandon Beane are trying to build. Its strong play across both lines was complemented by an overall solid defense and an offense that moved the ball with a deliberateness and efficiency the unit has yet to showcase this season.

The offensive emergence stemmed from the play of quarterback Josh Allen, who took a bite out of the Cowboys’ defense like he took a bite out of a turkey leg in his post-game interview. It was the best game of the second-year passer’s career – he was quick with his decision-making, his passes were accurate, and he used his much-touted athleticism to create magic out of plays that appeared to be dead on arrival.

Allen finished the game with a career-high 79% completion percentage, passing for 231 yards and tallying two total touchdowns. In front of a national audience that has doubted him throughout much of his professional career, Allen muted his critics, showing that he’s an already capable quarterback with a ceiling that could eventually place him among the league’s elite signal-callers.

Allen played with intensity and intelligence, matching that with emotion that impressed many watching the sophomore for the first time. A second-quarter fourth-and-one scenario saw the 23-year-old drop the snap before picking the ball up and gaining the necessary yardage on his third effort.

That emotion is perhaps what makes this year’s Buffalo team different than others, what sets it apart from the team’s disappointing past. It’s clear that the Bills’ quality coaching staff has created a family-like culture, one that encourages players to leave everything on the field for their teammates each and every week.

Though Buffalo entered its Week 13 matchup with an 8-3 record, the strength of the team was rightfully questioned. The Bills had not beaten any team of any real quality and had lost the games against the three competent opponents it had played, nearly dropping games to less than stellar opposition along the way, as well.

But its 8-3 record still stood. Against Dallas, Buffalo had the opportunity to show its doubters that its winning record was not a fluke, that it could win a game it was not supposed to.

And it did just that with a commanding victory that helped make its postseason dreams a bit more of a reality.

Now at 9-3 on the season, the playoffs appear to be a realistic destination for the Bills. One win in its remaining four contests would likely secure a spot for Buffalo, and given what the team showed against Dallas, a 10-6 record now looks to be the absolute worst-case scenario.

On a day in which families gather to share what they’re thankful for. the Bills gave their passionate fan base a performance they can be proud of. It’s an unusual feeling, Buffalo, but it’s one you can relish in – this year’s Bills are for real.

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Bills playoff picture: Browns down Steelers, likely lose Myles Garrett

Buffalo Bills playoff picture with the Pittsburgh Steelers, Cleveland Browns, Myles Garrett and Mason Rudolph.

There’s a lot to note from Week 11 of the NFL season in regard to the Bills’ playoff picture.

And it’s only Friday.

So far, we’ve only seen Thursday Night Football. That contest was between two teams within reach of the Bills in the AFC playoff picture.

Heading into the game, the Browns needed to, and did, win, over the Steelers. The score was 21-7. Pittsburgh was holding the second wild card spot at 5-4 but no longer is. Cleveland’s now a 4-6 and while still on the outside looking in, they’re hot after beating the Bills last week, too.

That also means if they stay hot, Buffalo will have lost that tiebreaker.

But the huge story out of this game is Myles Garrett. The pass rusher is Cleveland’s best player and his season could be over. After getting tied up with Steelers quarterback Mason Rudolph, he ripped off his helmet and swung it at him.

Yes, that happened:

Garrett owned up to what happened after the game.

“I made a mistake, I lost my cool and I regret it,” Garrett said.

But some are calling for legal action against Garrett for what he did. This could get ugly.

Regardless, Rudolph was not happy, naturally.

“I know it’s bush league, and I know it’s a total coward move on his part,” Rudolph said.

But to round things out, this is a big blow to the Browns’ chances of catching the Bills in the standings.

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Bills playoff picture: Post-Week 10 recap of AFC teams ‘in the hunt’

The Bills’ loss to the Cleveland Browns hurt. All loses tend to do that in the NFL, but this one hurt a little more. The feeling that Buffalo let this one get away, combined with other teams around the AFC playoff picture scoring some wins of their …

The Bills’ loss to the Cleveland Browns hurt.

All loses tend to do that in the NFL, but this one hurt a little more. The feeling that Buffalo let this one get away, combined with other teams around the AFC playoff picture scoring some wins of their own, things didn’t go well for Western New York in Week 10.

Here’s a recap of the latest happenings in the AFC playoff picture:

AFC seeding:

  1. New England Patriots (8-1)
  2. Baltimore Ravens (7-2)
  3. Houston Texans (6-3)
  4. Kansas City Chiefs (6-4)
  5. Buffalo Bills (6-3)
  6. Pittsburgh Steelers (5-4)

  7. Oakland Raiders (5-4)
  8. Indianapolis Colts (5-4)
  9. Tennessee Titans (5-5)
  10. Jacksonville Jaguars (4-5)

In the hunt teams recap:

10. Jacksonville Jaguars (4-5)

Week 10:

Bye

Next game:

at Indianapolis Colts (5-4)

9. Tennessee Titans (5-5)

Week 10:

Titans block late FG attempt, stun Chiefs 35-32.

Next game:

Week 11 bye

8. Indianapolis Colts (5-4)

Week 10:

Backup QB Brian Hoyer can’t overcome Dolphins in 16-12 loss.

Next game:

vs. Tennessee Titans (5-5)

7. Oakland Raiders (5-4)

Week 10:

Raiders win back-and-forth Thursday game vs. Chargers, 26-24, with Josh Jacobs’ 18-yard rushing TD with one minute remaining.

Next game:

vs. Cincinnati Bengals (0-8)


Playoff teams recap:

6. Pittsburgh Steelers (5-4)

Week 10:

Steelers hold Rams (5-4) offense without TD in 17-12 win, their fourth-straight victory.

Next game:

at Cleveland Browns (3-6)

5. Buffalo Bills (6-3)

Week 10:

Bills miss game-tying kick late, fall 19-16 to Browns (3-6).

Next game:

at Miami Dolphins (2-7)

4. Kansas City Chiefs (6-4)

Week 10:

In Patrick Mahomes’ return from injury, Titans use late FG block for upset, 35-32.

Next game:

at Los Angeles Chargers (4-6)

3. Houston Texans (6-3)

Week 10:

Bye week.

Next game:

at Baltimore Ravens (7-2)

2. Baltimore Ravens (7-2)

Week 10:

Ravens routed winless Bengals (0-9), 49-13.

Next game:

vs. Houston Texans (6-3)

1. New England Patriots (8-1)

Week 10:

Bye week.

Next game:

at Philadelphia Eagles (5-4)

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