Jaguars’ Josh Allen has all-time career day against Bills’ Josh Allen

Josh Allen of the Jaguars had one of the most amazing games in pro football history against the Bills’ Josh Allen.

In retrospect, we should have seen this coming.

Josh Allen, the Jaguars’ edge-rusher selected with the seventh overall pick in the 2019 draft, had one of the most incredible and unrepeatable days any defender has ever enjoyed in pro football history on Sunday, as the Jaguars upset the Bills, 9-6. Why was this day so unique for the Jaguars’ Josh Allen? Because of all things he did against Bills quarterback Josh Allen, selected with the…

*re-checks Pro Football Reference*

…seventh overall pick in the 2018 draft. Yes, it was already weird before the game, and it was about to get weirder. The Jaguars’ Josh Allen had a great hat trick against the Bills’ Josh Allen — he sacked the quarterback, intercepted the quarterback, and recovered the quarterback’s fumble. The Jaguars’ Josh Allen had 17.5 sacks coming into this game, including two sacks against the Seahawks in Week 8, which matched his career high, but he had never recorded an interception or recovered a fumble before the Bills’ Josh Allen showed up at his doorstep. It was as if one Josh Allen had been waiting for the other all along.

The Jaguars’ Josh Allen was asked this week about the potential same-name storyline.

“I’m just looking forward to playing against this team and then looking forward to playing against him,” Allen said Wednesday. “He’s been playing at a high level of recent. He’s been evading sacks recently, he’s been getting out of the pocket, his O-line does a really good job of protecting him. I love this challenge. We’re going to get after them but we have to do it early and throughout the whole game.”

Had this Josh Allen received any of the other Josh Allen’s mail? Turns out, yes.

“I have. I actually got an email that was something—I’m not going to tell his business out there—but I got an email for him and I was like, ‘Oh yeah!’ Then, I looked at it and I was like, ‘I don’t think this was for me.’ So, that was all the hiccup I got, outside of just fans or whatever. So, I thought that was pretty cool.”

The whole day was pretty cool for the Jaguars’ Josh Allen. The Bills’ Josh Allen, who finished his day with 31 completions in 47 attempts for 264 yards, no touchdowns and two interceptions, didn’t feel the same.

Jaguars’ Josh Allen sacks Bills’ Josh Allen, an NFL first

What happened for the first time in the NFL when the Jaguars met the Bills?

The name’s the same. Their game is quite different.

The Jacksonville Jaguars have a Josh Allen on their roster, an edge rusher/linebacker.

The Buffalo Bills’ quarterback is Josh Allen, too.

When Josh Allen met Josh Allen in the Bills’ backfield on Sunday there was an NFL first.

This marked the first time in league history a player sacked a quarterback who had the same name.

Why Bills QB Josh Allen has earned his new 6-year, $258 million contract extension

The Bills and quarterback Josh Allen have agreed to a six-year, $258 million contract extension. Allen earned it with the biggest third-year improvement of any quarterback in the modern era.

And then, there were two. On Friday. ESPN’s Chris Mortensen was the first to report that the Bills and quarterback Josh Allen have agreed to a new six-year contract extension that will keep Allen in Buffalo through the 2028 season. NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport confirmed the report.

Adam Schefter, Mortensen’s ESPN teammate, has the details.

The $100 million guaranteed Allen gets at signing is the most any NFL player has ever been given, exceeding the $95 million Dak Prescott received in March.

Selected with the seventh overall pick in the 2018 draft out of Wyoming, Allen went through two season in which he looked a lot like he did as a college quarterback — a player with fabulous physical gifts, and not always the best accuracy and situational awareness. That second season ended with a playoff loss to the Houston Texans (no, really), in which Allen was over his head and out of his element.

Josh Allen shows high ceiling, collapsing walls in Bills’ wild-card loss

Then, in 2020, Allen made The Leap. In 2020, including the postseason, Allen completed 473 passes in 692 attempts (a 68.4% completion rate) for 5,361 yards (7.7 yards per attempt), 42 touchdowns, and 11 interceptions. Allen also ran for 421 yards and eight touchdowns on 102 attempts in the regular season, adding 145 rushing yards and another touchdown on 25 attempts.

It was one of the most remarkable one-year and third-season turnarounds for a quarterback in NFL history. Allen worked on his mechanics in the offseason with performance coach Jordan Palmer, which helped, and offensive coordinator Brian Daboll helped Allen with route concepts that allowed the quarterback to rip man coverage to bits early in the season.

How Stefon Diggs and man coverage turned Josh Allen into a better quarterback

The trade for receiver Stefon Diggs also helped, but this was on Allen to improve, and he did — to a historic degree. Since 1983, per Football Outsiders, no NFL quarterback had a bigger third-year improvement than Allen, who had the biggest bump in DYAR, the second-biggest bumps in DVOA, completion percentage, and yards per attempt. Below Allen on the DYAR improvement list is Carson Palmer (Jordan’s brother), Ken O’Brien, Troy Aikman, Jim Everett, Jay Schroeder, Sam Bradford, Craig Erickson, Brian Griese, and Gus Frerotte.

That list of names tells you that a huge third-year improvement doesn’t automatically guarantee a future Hall of Fame career, but in Allen’s case, we’ll take the Palmer/Aikman/O’Brien over as opposed to the Erickson/Griese/Frerotte caveat emptor. 

Why? The extent to which Allen improved with the things that had his struggling earlier in his NFL career. Allen struggled for a bit in the middle of the season when he faced teams that played more zone and disguised coverages against him — after throwing 10 touchdowns and one interception in September, he threw 12 touchdowns and seven picks in October and November combined. Daboll gave Allen more conservative options until he could figure it all out, and in the end, he did — in December and January combined, he was good for 15 touchdowns and just two interceptions. And though the Bills missed the Super Bowl again, Allen wasn’t the postseason liability he had been the year before.

In Weeks 1-10 of the 2020 season against zone coverage, per Sports Info Solutions, Allen completed 129 of 189 passes for 1,543 yards, 999 air yards, five touchdowns, and four interceptions. From Week 11 through the AFC Championship game, against zone coverage, Allen completed 126 of 172 passes for 1,423 yards, 1,016 air yards, seven touchdowns, and three interceptions. That kind of improvement in-season against concepts that used to have you flustered? This is what you want to see from a young franchise quarterback, and Allen confirmed his franchise designation with that improvement.

“I think Josh has a good offseason plan in terms of the things that he’s done since he’s been here,” Daboll said in June. “It’s like a golf swing, right? His mechanics, his follow through, his base, his movement in the pocket. He does those things I would say religiously throughout the offseason and we get him back here along with all the other quarterbacks and [QB coaches] Ken [Dorsey] and Shea [Tierney] are working on those things.

“Each year he’s obviously learned a little bit more about the system, we’ve tried to tailor the system specifically to him. There’s a lot of good give and take between the two of us in terms of things he feels comfortable with and maybe things we can do a better job of. He’s the consummate pro in terms of he’s never satisfied, and none of us really are. Never satisfied with what you did the previous year.”

Next up for these types of contracts? 2018 first-overall pick Baker Mayfield, and 2018 32nd-overall pick Lamar Jackson. Allen has set a (if not the) tone for those negotiations.

Anatomy of a wild-card win: In Josh Allen, the Bills must trust

Josh Allen has earned the trust of his coaches this season due to his play. That might bring a Super Bowl to Buffalo.

The Buffalo Bills won the AFC East for the first time in 25 years, finishing with a 13-3 record and earning the second-overall seed in the conference. However, their goals are much higher. If the Bills are going to reach those lofty expectations they’ll need to start with a win this weekend over the Indianapolis Colts. How that accomplished might come down to a phrase that a few years ago, heck even a few months ago, might have sounded outlandish.

They’ll need to trust Josh Allen.

Think back to when he was drafted, and what was written about him by so many, including this author. There were skeptics, those questioning his ability to play at a high level in the NFL. Those skeptics grew louder after a rookie season where Allen struggled. Yes the talent was there, but with the rest of the Bills’ roster looking strong, was he a talented quarterback waiting to break out, or the anchor holding the team back.

Then there was last season, when Buffalo took another step forward and earned a playoff birth. Yet think to that Wild-Card game, when you saw Allen running around like a child on Christmas morning, throwing scramble drill vertical routes to his triple-covered fullback. Was this truly going to be the savior for the Bills?

Then think back to the start of this season. Expectations were still high around the Bills, but if there was a question mark it was the quarterback. Could Allen be good enough for this team to get over the hump?

Question, answered.

Allen was more than good enough this season, he played at an MVP level and made the leap from “quarterback you win with” to “quarterback you win because of.” Teams had to try and find ways to slow him down, and they could not. Allen had an answer for anything that defenses threw at him, and perhaps a Week 16 demolishing of Bill Belichick and the New England Patriots – a defense that had given him fits in the past – is a prime example of the strides he took this season.

So let’s work through that season a bit, starting with a win early in the year against the Miami Dolphins. This video is a breakdown of Allen working the middle of the field on crossing routes, something that has become a staple of the Bills offense:

As you see in this video, Allen’s ability to layer throws into the middle of the field was a huge sign of things to come. That was a massive question mark about him coming out of Wyoming, and he showed early this season an ability to answer that question.

Then there was this outing against the Las Vegas Raiders, where Allen displayed more of the touch necessary to attack defenses, as well as the ability to move defenders with his eyes and his mind (more on that in a bit):

You saw more of that ability to manipulate defenders in this win against the Pittsburgh Steelers, particularly on the third play broken down in this clip, a touchdown to Gabriel Davis:

When the Bills beat the Denver Broncos a few weeks ago to clinch the division, you could see the power of this fully assembled quarterback. Allen is playing in rhythm even when working through multiple progression reads, a huge sign of his development. And the touchdown that splits the safeties here – where he uses his eyes to influence the safeties – is a thing of beauty:

That leads us to the game against the Patriots. Week 16, in Foxborough, a chance to perhaps put the stamp on the season. As you will see in the first two plays broken down, Allen is tasked with manipulating a defender.

But not any old defender. Devin McCourty, one of the best safeties in the league.

Allen does it with ease:

Think about what those first two throws represent for a moment. The growth in Allen to the point where he is trusted to play the cat-and-mouse game against McCourty, and win.

But that is how far he has come, shutting people like me up along the way, leaving us to simply mutter “this freakin’ guy” as he carves up another team. To see a quarterback viewed by skepticism by so many, trusted to make plays like this against one of the game’s best, shows the development from him, and the trust by his coaches in him.

That trust needs to continue. If the Bills are going to win this weekend, and beyond, the trust that Josh Allen has earned from his coaches will be why.