Report card: Bills lose Wild Card to Texans, 22-19

The Bills lost to the Houston Texans, 22-19 in a heartbreaking overtime defeat.

The Buffalo Bills first playoff appearance of this decade did not disappoint. The Bills and Texans battled all four quarters, forcing overtime.

Ultimately, Deshaun Watson and the Texans offense made enough plays in overtime giving Houston the Wild Card victory.

After a heartbreaking loss, here’s how the Bills graded out in what will be their final report card of the 2019 season:

Josh Allen #17 of the Buffalo Bills. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

Quarterback: C

Josh Allen started the first half strong, with a touchdown reception on the opening drive that seemingly set the tone for the rest of the game. The Bills never capitalized on that momentum, settling for field goals throughout the game.

When looking at Allen’s stat line it shows that he wasn’t consistent, he completed 24 of his 46 throws, 264 yards, zero passing touchdowns, and zero interceptions. To be fair, Allen wasn’t sharp in the second half and when the Texans were sending pressure he was making rash decisions. As the game progressed Allen started looking for the game winning play, when a more effective option was available.

Allen also tried to extend plays when they were dead, and cost his team valuable yards down the stretch. Allen has been an enigma all season, and Saturday was no exception. At times he extended plays with his legs, and made some sensational throws. Other times, especially late in the game he made some head-scratching decisions, like taking a deep shot to Patrick DiMarco in the fourth quarter.

What we learned from Bills’ Week 16 loss to Patriots

What we learned, Buffalo Bills vs. New England Patriots, NFL Week 16

The Buffalo Bills have climbed a long way in just a year from the depths of the NFL to the league’s summit, as they have earned a trip to the postseason and have proven themselves enough to be mentioned among the best teams in the league. However, they have still been unable to knock off the king from the top of the hill.

The Bills’ woes against the New England Patriots continued on Saturday night as the Patriots outlasted a very good Bills’ team, 24-17, to clinch the AFC East for the 11th straight season.

There was no shame in losing this game for Buffalo as the Bills shook off a sluggish start to tie the game at 10 in a thrilling sequence before halftime that saw quarterback Josh Allen hit a deep ball to tight end Dawson Knox and throw a touchdown pass to offensive lineman Dion Dawkins.

They moved out to a 17-13 lead in the third quarter on a 53-yard Allen to receiver John Brown pass, the Bills’ longest play from scrimmage all season. The Bills held onto the lead well into the fourth quarter and found themselves just minutes away from a monumental victory. But as has happened so many times before in this rivalry, Tom Brady and the Patriots put together a drive to get into the end zone and take the lead for good.

With a chance to answer, Allen led a gutsy last-minute drive inside the New England 10, but the drive fizzled and Allen found himself chucking a desperation pass up for grabs into the end zone on 4th and goal from the 15 that was knocked away by J.C. Jackson.

The loss now makes the playoff picture clear for the Bills. They are locked into the No. 5 seed while New England takes the division. The Bills can now turn their attention to wild card weekend and their Week 17 matchup against the Jets is meaningless, which likely means plenty of backups in the Buffalo lineup.

Here are four things we learned as Buffalo fell to 10-5 and New England claimed another AFC East title:

Report card: Bills fall 24-17 vs. Patriots

The Bills had their first chance to win the AFC East in 20 years on Saturday, but couldn’t seal the deal in New England.

The Buffalo Bills went to Foxborough and gave the New England Patriots an intense matchup that resulted in a 24-17 win for the home team. Both defenses played well in the cold New England night.

Buffalo made the game competitive, but they couldn’t seal the victory in the fourth quarter.

With the unfortunate loss against the Patriots, here’s how the Bills were graded against New England:

Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

Quarterback: C

Josh Allen started off the game terribly, completing just three passes before the end of the second quarter. At the end of the first half Allen found his footing and drove the offense down the field, and tied the game. That drive saw Allen hit a deep ball to Dawson Knox, and the touchdown came from finding Dion Dawkins in the back of the end zone on the final play of the first half with some trickery.

The second half Allen found more consistency, and again connected on the deep ball but this time to John Brown. Brown made a great move against Stephon Gilmore to create separation, and walked into the end zone with the ball was in hands.

Allen had an improved stat line from his first game against the Patriots, he completed 13 of his 26 passes for 208 yards and had two touchdowns. His biggest flaw though was his accuracy. He missed Cole Beasley twice, once in the middle field, and again on an out route where the ball was behind Beasley.

Instant analysis: Game just out of Bills’ grasp in loss to Patriots

The Buffalo Bills fell just short against their long-time nemesis, losing to the New England Patriots 24-17 Saturday afternoon.

The Buffalo Bills fell just short against their long-time nemesis, losing to the New England Patriots 24-17 Saturday afternoon.

The game featured strong defense and several big plays for Buffalo, but it ultimately was not enough to knock off the evil empire of the NFL, giving the Patriots the AFC East crown for the 11th consecutive season.

New England carried most of the play in the first half, possessing the ball and putting pressure on the Bills defense. However, the unit did not break despite being on the field over 21 minutes in the first half.

The Bills defense dealt the first blow of the game, forcing a Rex Burkhead fumble. Jordan Poyer tracked down the New England running back and punched the ball out, and Micah Hyde returned it into Patriots territory.

However, Buffalo could only muster a 35-yard Stephen Hauschka field goal in response. The Bills moved the ball only 14 yards on seven plays.

New England responded with two long drives, both of which ended with points on the board. Matt LaCosse caught an 8-yard touchdown reception to finish off an 11-play drive, while Nick Folk added a 36-yard field goal to culminate a 17-play drive.

Buffalo’s offense struggled for most of the half, but then put it together for a two-minute drill. Allen, who only had 11 yards passing leading up to this drive, completed three of his four attempts for 51 yards. Dawson Knox was on the end of a great pass-and-catch, going for 34 yards and bringing the Bills down to the one-yard-line of New England. The playcalling became a bit more creative, as Allen found Dion Dawkins on a one-yard touchdown pass to even the game at 10-10 going into half time.

The teams then traded punches in the second half. The Patriots forced a three-and-out to open the second half. Buffalo’s defense kept Brady and company under wraps, allowing only a field goal.

Buffalo responded with a stellar route run by Brown, finally making Patriots cornerback Stephon Gilmore look human. John Brown smoked Gilmore on a double-move, and Allen found him in stride. The 53-yard touchdown receptions gave the Bills a 17-13 lead.

The remainder of the scoring went in favor of the Patriots. Nick Folk knocked through his third field goal of the game with just under 11 minutes remaining in the game. New England’s defense forced a Bills three-and-out, and the Patriots offense responded with another touchdown. Brady found Rex Burkhead in the flat, and the running back atoned for his fumble, breaking multiple tackles en route to the end zone. Julian Edelman scored on the two-point conversion, giving the Patriots a 24-17 lead.

Buffalo drove deep on their final drive of the game, traveling 60 yards on 14 plays. However, their penultimate offensive play put them back on their heels, as Allen was swarmed and took a sack. On the final offensive play for Buffalo, Allen faced the heat of New England’s pass rush. He turned his back to the line and was forced to throw up a low-percentage pass that fell incomplete. It was what was expected of Bill Belichick at that moment.

The Bills defense kept them within striking distance, but the Patriots offense was efficient all game. Brady ended with 271 passing yards on the day. The New England rushing attack was effective as well, totaling 143 yards gained on the ground. The Patriots put up 414 total yards on offense. Buffalo’s defense also failed to register a sack.

Buffalo’s ground attack never really got rolling along. Plus, their aerial attack was limited against Belichick’s defense. Buffalo converted only 2-of-11 third-down attempts during the game.

There were several things to be content with during today’s game for Buffalo. The big plays to Knox and Brown were impressive. Defensively, they forced a turnover on the opening drive.

However, the game still felt like it was a big brother toying around with their little sibling. Buffalo is close, but they are just not there just yet.

Allen was close on several passes. He missed Knox twice in the end zone. It was the usual mix of great passes combined with a few inaccurate tosses.

The Bills will have a chance to show their growth during the Wild Card round of the playoffs. For now, it’s a little bit of what could’ve been, as once again the team falls by one-score to their enemy.

Buffalo wraps up their season next Sunday against the New York Jets at New Era Field.

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Bills snap counts: Depth chart breakdown vs. Steelers

Buffalo Bills Week 15 snap counts against the Pittsburgh Steelers.

In front of a lot of eyes, the Buffalo Bills clinched a playoff berth with a 17-10 win on Sunday Night Football.

It was a defensive showcase for most of it, but when needed in crunch time, the Bills offense ended up with more numbers on the scoreboard than the Steelers when it was all said and done.

Who took charge in both the good and bad of the game? Here’s a full depth chart breakdown via snap counts for the Bills against the Steelers in Week 15:

Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen. (AP Photo/Don Wright)

Offense

Notes:

  • Only Jon Feliciano, who briefly went down with injury, did not play in 100 percent of snaps along the Bills’ offensive line.
  • For the fourth-straight game, rookie Cody Ford played in every snap. Ty Nsekhe (ankle) was still injured and missed the game.
  • WR Robert Foster did not play a snap on offense. In Week 14 against the Ravens, he saw 25 percent of snaps on offense. The Bills used less 11 personnel, likely to help with blockers, as Isaiah McKenzie only played 46 percent of snaps after seeing 72 percent last week.
  • Over the past three games, respectively, WR Cole Beasley played in 99%, 89% and 81% of snaps. Against the Steelers, he only saw 69 percent of snaps.
  • OL Spencer Long filled in for Feliciano and played seven snaps in the game.
  • TEs Dawson Knox and Lee Smith both played in 48 percent of snaps, likely to help with blocking. Knox was playing in more than 72 percent of snaps over the past four-straight games prior to facing the Steelers.

Report card: Bills outlast Steelers, 17-10

The Bills are playoff bound after their victory of the Pittsburgh Steelers. It was a victory where the Bills relied on their stout defense.

Buffalo, you can party like it’s 1999 because the Bills are sitting at 10-4, clinching just their second playoff appearance this century.

The game was an ugly, hard fought battle that saw seven turnovers between themselves and the Pittsburgh Steelers, a game which the Bills won 17-10.

Ultimately, Buffalo’s offense made more plays down the stretch that gave them the victory. It wasn’t a stellar performance from Josh Allen and company though.

With that, here’s how the Bills graded out in this week’s report card following their win over the Steelers:

Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic)

Quarterback: C

Josh Allen had a tough game against the Pittsburgh Steelers, he completed just 52 percent of his passes for 139 yards. He struggled throughout the game, missing some wide open receivers, his interception was a perfect example of these errant throws. Allen had a clean pocket, and threw a pass to the outstretched arms of receiver Cole Beasley, that bounced off the hands of Beasley and into arms of the Steelers defensive back. The interception doesn’t fall on the shoulders of Allen alone, but a better pass could have been caught by Beasley.

The quarterback did have his moments of brilliance, mainly coming in the fourth quarter with the game on the line. He hit a massive 40-yard strike to John Brown that help set up the game winning touchdown. Speaking of the game winning touchdown, he found tight end Tyler Kroft on third down, sealing the victory for Buffalo.

Allen also had 28 yards on the ground, and one rushing touchdown that opened the scoring for Buffalo.

Why Dawson Knox thinks Bills locker room is ‘special place’

It hasn’t been bad, but it hasn’t been perfect for Bills tight end Dawson Knox during his rookie season. 

It hasn’t been bad, but it hasn’t been perfect for Bills tight end Dawson Knox during his rookie season.

Knox has had some issues with drops, but when he does grab the ball, they’ve been exciting plays. His effort after the Bengals earlier this year is still in contention for the catch of the season for the Bills.

While Knox, and everyone else wants him to cut the drops out, those drops have inadvertently made him believe Buffalo is a good place for him to be.

After struggles, Knox has bounced back. He gives credit for his bounce-back efforts to his teammates around him, he told NYUP.com this week. Last week against the Ravens, there was a drop. Later in the game, there was a great catch. Knox mentioned everyone but himself as to why he was resilient.

“Having guys like (Cole Beasley), Lee Smith, Tyler Kroft – I feel like it’s a really special place to be here,” Knox said.

Following the Bills’ loss to the Ravens, Beasley told reporters he got in Knox’s ear and told him to keep his head up, his team will need him later. Beasley was right, and Knox delivered.

The teammate-building efforts in the Bills locker room is something you can’t teach a player. Picking each other up is a trait the Bills front office of general manager Brandon Beane and head coach Sean McDermott have coveted in players. In this case, it’s paid off. Even offensive coordinator Brian Daboll thinks so, as he reflected on Knox’s play earlier this week.

“It’s not always going to be perfect. You’re going to have to fight through some things, whether it’s a young player or old player. And Dawson in this case – he’s a strong-minded guy,” Daboll said. “I have a lot of confidence in him. Just play the next play.”

With three games left, Knox has 26 catches for 344 yards with two scores this year. He’s a raw rookie prospect who hadn’t scored a touchdown since high school. All things considered, those are some decent numbers then. The Bills will hope Knox continually improves on his numbers over the years, but they can also count on Knox learning the proper way to be a teammate years down the road thanks to the current crop of Bills vets.

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Report card: Bills lose 24-17 to Ravens

In a classic AFC slugfest, the Ravens came away victorious over the Buffalo Bills at New Era Field to clinch a playoff birth.

The Bills received plenty of national attention after their Thanksgiving victory over the Dallas Cowboys, and with the national media watching two weeks in a row the team fell flat. The Bills offense was smothered by a dominate Ravens defense in Week 14 at New Era Field as the visitors took a 24-17 win.

While Buffalo’s defense had a stout performance they couldn’t stop MVP front runner, Lamar Jackson for four quarters.

A fourth quarter touchdown did make the final few minutes interesting, but it was too little too late.

Here’s how the Bills graded out in this week’s report card following their loss to the Ravens:

Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen. (AP Photo/Adrian Kraus)

Quarterback: D

Josh Allen had an atrocious first half, let’s not kid ourselves.

He was 8-for-17 passing, threw for just 39 yards, and was constantly hounded by a ferocious Baltimore defense. His production increased in the second half, which gave Buffalo an opportunity to tie the game in the fourth quarter but he couldn’t produce on the final throw of the game.

While the Bills kept it close throughout the game, Josh Allen simply wasn’t good enough during the first three quarters. Allen missed on a majority of his deep shots, which resulted in drives stalling out, or stopping before they could even start. He also missed on some of his shorter throws, with most of his misses sailing over the head of his intended receiver.

Allen’s final stat line was 17-for-39, 146 yards, and one touchdown, and one successful two-point conversion throw. Frankly, this may have been Allen’s worst game of the season and it couldn’t have come at a worst time.

Six Points with David Dorey: Week 13

Six items of interest heading into the weekend

Credit: Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports

Thanksgiving Day started with a 75-yard touchdown pass from David Blough, watched the 622 sideline views of Jason Garrett looking progressively more nervous and ended with the Falcons not only recovering the ultra-rare onside kick but doing it twice in a row.

Dallas Cowboys head coach – They haven’t beaten a winning team this year and they were embarrassed at home in from of a national audience yesterday. As was mentioned during the telecast, the Cowboys are the only team with the same coach they had in 2011 and they have not been to a Super Bowl. They lost 26-15 in a game that they were favored by seven points. And naturally, the calls for HC Jason Garrett to be fired are no longer a low roar. In jumps Las Vegas with the odds of a new coach.

Urban Meyer already lobbied for the job. Josh McDaniels seems like a lock to step in and run the Patriots whenever Bill Belichick steps down. Lincoln Riley would be in the vein of hiring a successful college coach and that worked out pretty well with Jimmy Johnson. I doubt they change anything during the season and they are still atop the NFC East. But as Jerry Jones said, the Cowboys have too much talent to be a 6-6 team.

David Blough – The undrafted 24-year-old rookie was a four-year player at Purdue who was originally signed by the Browns but was traded to the Lions. He became the first quarterback since Matt Ryan (2008) to throw a touchdown on his first NFL pass. Blough was called to start when Jeff Driskel’s hamstring had not healed enough. The rookie threw for 280 yards and two scores with one interception on his final pass. But that was 205 yards and one touchdown after his first pass. He found Kenny Golladay for 158 yards on four catches with the opening-play touchdown. No other receivers did much.

Tight Ends to watch – Most tight ends do very little as a rookie but the better ones tend to break out in their second season. Here’s a quick list of the rookies drafted this year that are more likely to see a notable increase in 2020:

T.J. Hockenson (1.08 DET – Current stat line: 32-367-2)
Noah Fant (1.20 DEN – Current stat line: 30-374-2)
Irv Smith Jr. (2.18 MIN – Current stat line: 27-261-1)
Dawson Knox (3.32 BUF – Current stat line: 25-307-2)

Their production is all close. All but Knox are playing in the first year of their offensive coordinator and that should help them grow with their offense. Each leads their team’s tight ends except for Smith and Kyle Rudolph.

Christian Blake – The undrafted second-year player from Northern Illinois was signed to the practice squad, released, re-signed and so on until October 23 when he was brought up to the active roster. He was only catching one or two passes per game after Mohamed Sany left. Justin Hardy and Russell Gage also saw more work. Yesterday, Blake ended with six catches for 57 yards in the loss to the Saints – more than either Hardy or Gage though he scored once on his five catches for 52 yards. The Falcons are trying out other players and that’ll make the unit harder to predict unless one of them steps up more. With Julio Jones gone, both Gare and Blake saw nine targets, only one less than Calvin Ridley.

Mo Ali-Cox – Eric Ebron landed on injured reserve and that leaves Doyle and Mo Alie-Cox as the starters. Ebron totals 31 catches for 375 yards and three scores this year after posting 13 touchdowns in 2018. He was catching four or five passes for the last three games so his absence will be felt. Alie-Cox is an undrafted third-year player who was a basketball player in college (6-5, 267 pounds). Chances are that Doyle will see an increase in work more than Alie-Cox becomes a common target.  Watch this week when they play the Titans because, in Week 14, they face the Buccaneers No.31 defense versus tight ends.

Those Team Defenses – We all say defenses are too hard to call so why draft them early? Some of us don’t, some of us just cannot resist taking that first or second defense far earlier than everyone else. Last year – the Bears were the defense-I-have-to-have. Here’s where that stands between the top ten drafted defenses and where they currently rank.

The Bears are barely average and in a 12 team league haven’t been worth starting most of the time. The Rams did well though it never feels like it. Six of the top ten ended up below average.

And here is what we should have done.

Yeah, I’ll try to hold off on the Patriots next year. Bet someone else won’t.

Report card: Bills win 37-20 vs. Dolphins

The Bills came out swinging against the Dolphins, who took an early lead and never looked back.

The Buffalo Bills continued their strong road performances this season with 37-20 win over the Miami Dolphins. The Bills are now 7-3, sitting pretty for a wild card spot.

After their loss against the Browns, the Bills offense was called into question by both their fans and the media. The Bills responded by pouring on 37 points against a poor Miami defense.

The Bills defense also came out and stopped the run, as well as getting pressure to the quarterback. It wasn’t a perfect game from Buffalo, but a step in the right direction after the disappointing loss to Cleveland.

After the victory in Miami, here’s how the Bills graded in this week’s report card:

Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

Quarterback: A-

This was possibly the best performance by Josh Allen in his young career. Allen started the game strong, but on the first two drives he couldn’t create touchdowns, only field goals. On the third drive Allen found receiver John Brown for a 40-yard touchdown strike. Allen hit Brown who was streaking down the sideline, and Brown bumped off a defender before heading into the end zone.

After a drive that led to just a field goal, Allen worked some red zone magic and found tight end Dawson Knox who shrugged off a defender after the catch to walk in for the score on an all-out blitz from the Dolphins defense. In the third quarter Allen had an eight-yard scramble where he used his speed to reach the outside and hurdle for the score.

It wasn’t a perfect game for Allen, he didn’t complete many deep shots, and had some head scratching throws. Ultimately, Allen had one of the best games of his career. He completed 21 out of his 33 passes, a 63.6 completion percentage, he threw for 256 yards, three touchdowns, and zero interceptions.