Frustration mounts after Bills lose to Patriots: ‘We’re pissed off’

Frustration mounts after #Bills lose to #Patriots: ‘We’re pissed off’

Following the Buffalo Bills 14-10 loss to the New England Patriots on Monday Night Football, frustrations are at an all-time high.

The Bills (7-5) not only allowed the Patriots (9-4) to maintain their lead in the AFC East, but Buffalo dropped back to seventh place in the conference. They are narrowly clinging to the final Wild Card spot.

Following the game, Bills players and coaches alike were visibly on edge while speaking with the media.

Bills safety Micah Hyde was asked if it’s fair to say the run game is an issue for this defense.

“You asked me that last time,” Hyde replied sharply. “They ran the ball how many times? 46 times? Do I think that’s an issue for this team… for this defense? No I do not… we can always do better… we can always do better.”

Following that exchange, Hyde and fellow safety, Jordan Poyer, were asked if the run defense was “embarrassing.”

Both Hyde and Poyer were clearly upset by that question and had a well documented response before eventually walking out of the press room.

Bills quarterback Josh Allen was not immune to the apparent irritation, either.

“We’ve gotta find a way to win… I don’t know what you want me to say. We didn’t play good enough,” Allen said following the game. “We gotta play better than the other team that we play on every Sunday, Monday, Thursday, whatever it may be and we haven’t done that too often in the last few weeks and we understand that.”

When Allen was asked to describe the mood in the locker room, the QB didn’t hold back.

“I think frankly, we’re pissed off,” Allen said. “We’re pissed off because we want to be great. We’re pissed off for greatness. And we expect so much out of ourselves that when we don’t play the way we know we can play, it can be angering at times. But again, with the makeup of the guys that we got, I got no doubt in our ability, in our team ability to turn this around and start winning games here towards the end of the season.”

Bills head coach Sean McDermott, who typically gives very little during his post-game press conferences, seemed more emotional than usual.

When asked if it is frustrating watching Patriots coach Bill Belichick do what he does best, McDermott was quick to cut that notion off.

“Ya, it’s not Bill… let’s not give more credit than we need to give to Bill Belichick in this one,” McDermott stated.

“It was… whether it was Bill or anyone else, they beat us, right? But you sit here and you tell me when we start with the average starting field position at the 40 yard line and he starts at the 23-yard line… and we were one for four in the red zone and they were 0 for one in the red zone, you give me that ahead of time and I’ll say I like my chances, I like my chances. So it’s not… I don’t think, with all due respect it’s not a Bill Belichick type thing, it’s what are you doing with the opportunities that you got?”

When asked how the Bills players and coaches take this visible frustration and use it going forward, McDermott did his best to give some sort of answer to a question that no one most likely has a direct answer to.

“You just keep doing your best to solve problems. That’s what you do. You keep coaching, you work your ass off, players work their ass off and we each gotta do a better job starting with me.”

McDermott continued, “that’s what you gotta do. It’s a short week and we’re going against another good football team down in Tampa, the defending World Champs. So, that’s what you gotta do. We’ve gotta figure it out. We’ve gotta continue to try to figure this thing out to why we’re performing the way we are and you know… I think I got a pretty good idea.”

McDermott concluded by saying he doesn’t think his emotion on the sideline has a negative impact, either.

“No, I think they know what I stand for,” McDermott said. “I think they know me well enough to know how I am day to day. I’m standing up for my team in those situations is what I’m doing… or I’m trying to encourage, or challenge my guys in a motivating way to get them to perform at a higher level, to get us to coach at a higher level. That’s what leaders do.”

While Hyde and Poyer did not take kindly to the question about being embarrassed, McDermott answered a similar question, very matter of fact.

“I get embarrassed every time we lose,” the coach said. “I take it personally and I expect our team to do the same.”

Frustration can be channeled into a positive, or it can cause a team to unravel further.

As the Bills head to Tampa Bay, to face old friend Tom Brady, in what has now become a challenge just to make the postseason… we’ll find out which it is for Buffalo.

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Bills vow to use AFC Championship loss to fuel them

Bills promise to use the pain of defeat to grow and improve next season.

The Bills’ magical season came to an end on Sunday, when the team lost 38-24 against the Kansas City Chiefs.

Following the game, Bills players and coaches echoed a similar sentiment to one we heard last year when the team’s season ended in the Wild Card round against the Texans. That this loss and the pain the accompanies it, will only fuel them going forward.

“It’s not fun falling one game short of the Super Bowl,” Bills QB Josh Allen said via Zoom after the game. “It’s gonna fuel us. I’ve got no doubt in my mind that we will be back. This is a team that fought hard till the end. A team that loves each other. We’re still young and we’re only gonna get better. We’re close.”

It wasn’t a feeling used by young kids on the block, either. Bills defensive end Jerry Hughes, the longest-tenured player on the team, also spoke to using the loss as a means to propel this team in the offseason.

“This is a tough one to swallow, just because, you know, we got to where… we were so close,” Hughes said. “Climbing that mountain and to be so close and then to get knocked down sucks, but we got a great group of guys in the locker room and I know we’re gonna have a tremendous offseason where guys are gonna feel this feeling and know what it takes to get back here… We’re gonna remember this feeling in the offseason and it’ll be something that carries us through.”

Bills head coach Sean McDermott, who had some questionable decisions throughout the loss, spoke to what a moment like this can mean for a franchise moving forward.

“Give credit where credits due,” McDermott said via video conference. “They played a really good game… this is a learning experience for us. That’s how you have to look at it. We had a great season and came up a little bit short tonight and that’s a great football team on the other side. It stings to get this far… sometimes the further you go, the harder it is to lose. Again, it’s a learning experience for us as an organization and we’ve obviously got to get back to work.”

When asked specifically what the Bills can take away from this loss to improve going forward, McDermott spoke to his own experience having lost in the postseason back in Carolina and Philadelphia.

“Certainly wanted to win, but what you take from this as an organization of how you handle the week, how you handle the potential division of the next step, the speed and intensity of this game, in particular on somebody else’s field, home field… so all that, just having been here before myself, we as an organization, players, staff, coaches, all of us collectively, can learn a lot from this… At the end of the day, this is our measuring stick.”

While there are certainly no consolation wins on this stage, this Bills team should be awfully proud of what they accomplished. Ending many postseason droughts, shattering records and being one step away from the Super Bowl is nothing to hang your head about.
Couple that with the fact they did this all in a year when fans, perhaps more than ever, needed a distraction given all that is going on in the world. 
Losses, especially of this magnitude are never easy to swallow, but if last year’s playoff exit is any indication of what Josh Allen and this Bills team are capable of doing in the face of defeat… the NFL better lookout for the 2021 Buffalo Bills. They’ll be back.
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No Hail Mary repeat as Bills stop Colts’ last-second attempt

Micah Hyde insured the Bills weren’t getting burned on a last second play again.

The lowest point of the Buffalo Bills season, was perhaps back in week 10, when a last second Hail Mary by the Arizona Cardinals handed the Bills a 32-30 loss heading into the BYE week, dropping them to 7-3.

In fact, that was the last time the Bills have lost a game period.

While the play, then coined the ‘Hail Murray’ was plastered all over the Internet and TV nationwide, only adding to the heartache of Bills fans, the team took that moment and grew from it.

Fast forward to the first round of the playoffs and the Bills were faced with an eerily similar situation, only this time it ended with a victory.

Speaking to the media after the game, Bills left tackle, Dion Dawkins, said he was “less stressed” this time around because of how often he sees Buffalo’s defense working on that play in practice.

“Micah went up there and tomahawked the thing like he was a starter on a volleyball team,” Dawkins added.

In a piece published this week in The Players Tribune, Dawkins touched on how that low moment against Arizona propelled the Bills down the path they are on now:

We saw Arizona celebrating on the field, after the Hail Mary. And it was just something about it, man. It was the way they were running around, hooting and hollering, like they’d won the damn Super Bowl. It was something about that. I think for whatever reason, that just struck this chord with us. Not because we were annoyed with them or anything. They won, they can celebrate how they want. Nah. It was more like: We looked at them. And then we looked at us. And I think we just had this moment of, Alright — hold up. If they’re fired up like they won the Super Bowl….. why aren’t we upset like we lost the Super Bowl?

And I think that’s when it hit us. It hit us that things are different now.

It hit us that this team, our team, these Buffalo Bills — we’ve moved on to a different place. Like, with all due respect to the Cardinals: I think they’re in a similar spot now to where we were these last few seasons. Just trying to claw and make the playoffs with an up-and-coming roster. Whereas, for us? It’s not like that now. We’re taking the long view. Every game isn’t the Super Bowl for our team.

The Super Bowl is the Super Bowl for our team.

Bills safety, Micah Hyde, who was directly involved in the Hail Mary against Arizona, wasn’t shy about having another shot this time around.

“I love that I was able to do that again,” Hyde said after the game.

“…it was a big play obviously. The game sealing play. As soon a I saw, you know, four seconds left, they had to go for the endzone, I just backed up in the endzone and said, ‘there ain’t no way this is happening again.’ I got a running start to go up there and get it. Looking back on it, I wish I would’ve done it in AZ, but hey, you win some, you lose some and when you lose, you learn along the way.”

Bills head coach, Sean McDermott, was seen pointing to the sky for a prolonged period of time after the Hail Mary was batted down and the clock hit zero.

“Looked like it was well executed by our defense,” McDermott told reporters. “I liked the look in their eye when they took the field for that last drive.”
While we will never know what would have happened had the Bills knocked the ball down in Arizona, we do know that going 13-3 and winning in the playoffs is a whole lot better than going 14-2 and losing.
Perhaps as Dawkins and Hyde both stated, that moment needed to happen for the Bills to learn from and get to where they are today… which is heading to the divisional round after getting their first playoff victory since 1995.
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Like it or not, the Bills are no longer underdogs

Buffalo Bills discuss no longer being an underdog in the NFL.

Ask any member of the Bills Mafia if they prefer the Bills be favored going into a game and we can almost guarantee you, the answer is a resounding no.

The Bills (12-3) have thrived over the last couple of seasons while being doubted and dismissed. It is an identity that lends itself perfectly in many ways, to the city of Buffalo. Often overlooked, rarely celebrated.

While flying under the radar might be preferable, with the season the Bills have had, it just couldn’t continue forever.

As praise from those outside the organization continues to mount, the Bills continue to dismantle opponents on the national stage, only growing expectations. Buffalo head coach Sean McDermott was asked after the game how his team now transitions from that underdog role to operating with a target on their back.

“You can ride that underdog deal for some amount of time,” McDermott said via video conference follow Buffalo’s 38-9 win over the New England Patriots on Monday Night Football. “But when you become good, I guess is the best way to say it, you gotta also know how to be good.”

McDermott raises a great point. Being “good” on the field is one thing, but knowing how to handle all that comes with it, is another.

When thinking of of McDermott’s “process” learning how to be good certainly seems to coincide with his other popular catchphrase of remaining humble and hungry.

“I think that comes over time,” McDermott continued. “I think what you’re seeing is the maturation, professionalism and leadership of our players.”

Bills left tackle Dion Dawkins, as he often does, had his own way of describing where the Bills are at as a team. It was a unique, as one would already “Schnow” with Dawkins.

“We’re nobody’s little brother,” Dawkins said. “We’re here and you’re going to respect us.”

While Dawkins is certain these Bills deserve respect, he also knows the job is not done.

“We still haven’t done anything yet,” he added. “We need to do what we’re doing now in the playoffs.”

Fellow offensive lineman Jon Feliciano, also echoed a similar sentiment.

“None of this means anything right now unless we go out and handle our business in the postseason,” Feliciano said.

While the Bills are not going to be overlooked by anyone going forward, that doesn’t mean you can’t continue to play like it.

Bills Defensive End, Jerry Hughes, perhaps put it best.

“That chip stays because that’s who we are, it’s our DNA,” Hughes said.

Perhaps the key to being “good” isn’t channeling the disrespect, but rather ignoring the outside noise all together.

The Bills have believed in this themselves from the moment this season started… and at 12-3 & second place in the AFC, it’s worked out pretty well for them.

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Josh Allen shines on primetime: ‘He loves the big moments’

The Bills got their first win on Monday Night Football since 1999.

The Bills ended another drought on Monday Night Football against the 49ers in Week 13… Thanks in large part to quarterback Josh Allen.

Buffalo (9-3) took a 34-24 win over the Niners (5-7), and in doing so, won on Monday Night Football for the first time this century. That last win came back in 1999. Allen’s abilities easily led the way as he shined in front of the national audience, finishing 32-of-40 passing with 375 passing yards and four touchdowns.

During the lead up to the game, Allen commented that at this point, primetime football is just another game to him. That’s not how some of his teammates see it, such as offensive lineman Dion Dawkins. They’re saying Allen thrives on that spotlight, and that assessment sure looks right.

“I think Josh loves the hype,” Dawkins said following the game. “He loves to show people the truth. He’s one of those people that loves the big moments.”

However, like before the game, Allen still shrugged off the notion that such games mean any different than others. Do the Bills have something to prove on the bright lights of Monday night?

“No,” Allen said via his Zoom call after the game. “We know who we are as a team, that’s all that matters.”

Sean McDermott stated that this was the Bills’ most complete game of the season, but in a way, also downplayed things. You better believe McDermott wants his team to keep improving.

“I’m always looking for more and I love the fact that our players are as well,” McDermott said.

“All wins are good wins,” McDermott added. “I’m happy for our organization and I’m happy for our fans. I’m sure everyone in Buffalo stayed up late to watch it.”

McDermott made mention, in a bit of a behind the scenes look during his post-game speech shared by the team, that there’s still “more meat on the bone” for the team to get better. There’s a good opponent en route, too.

Next up, the Bills will face the 11-1 Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday Night Football, who are fresh off their first loss of the season. Allen knows the Steelers are going to want to get back on the right track.

“We’ve got a really tough challenge with Pittsburgh,” Allen said. “They’re coming off a loss, so they’re going to try to find ways to win this next game… so are we. We gotta put our best foot forward, go out there and have a good week of practice.”

Regardless of what happens on Sunday night in Orchard Park, Bills fans can sleep well knowing their team is back on the right side of the Monday Night Football win column and perhaps even more importantly, have a true franchise QB who helped them get there.

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Bills players lament final play in heartbreaking loss

With 34-seconds left in today’s games, the Bills took a 30-26 lead over the Arizona Cardinals and looked to be heading to an 8-2 record.

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With 34 seconds left in Buffalo’s Week 10 game om Sunday, the Bills took a 30-26 lead over the Arizona Cardinals and they looked to be heading to an 8-2 record… but the football Gods had other plans.

With 11 seconds remaining, Arizona quarterback Kyler Murray threw a prayer to the end zone, and somehow, wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins managed to catch it for the miraculous touchdown with three Bills defenders around him. The catch gave the Cardinals the win and sent the Bills into their bye week stunned.

It goes without saying, players in Buffalo’s locker room was much like your living room. Guys were at a loss for words when describing whawt happened.

“It’s gonna be the only thing on our mind for the next two weeks,” quarterback Josh Allen told reporters.

But as the leader of the team, Allen attempted to find optimism at the moment.

“But I think it’s also a good thing. It makes us hungry. You’re not gonna win every game, but to lose this one the way we did… it hurts. But it’s fuel for the fire,” Allen said.

Bills safety Jordan Poyer, who was one of three defenders surrounding Hopkins on the final play, was more matter of fact with his assessment.

“Frustrating. Extremely disappointed,” Poyer said via video conference. “Somehow, someway, we gotta get that ball out of D-Hop’s hands… I thought we guarded it pretty well, we had three people around him. Just gotta find a way to make a play.”

Safety Micah Hyde, also in on the play, said that no one in the Bills locker room felt good after what went down.

“My reaction? Pissed,” Hyde said. “It felt like the ball was in the air for 10 minutes on the last play… he just beat us in the air, he timed it perfectly. That one hurts.”

The fact the Bills had just driven down the field to get the–what at the time appeared to be winning touchdown themselves– made this ending even tougher to swallow. Especially for the defense.

“It’s like a huge gut punch that took the wind out of you,” Bills defensive end, Jerry Hughes said after the game. “Certainly have been on the other side of things, but it sucks. It’s a huge gut punch because our offense executed a great drive in that situation.”

While this one hurts, the Bills are still 7-3 at the bye and remain in first place in the AFC East. Left tackle Dion Dawkins tried to keep the positives in mind.

“It was a Mike Tyson haymaker. It hurt,” Dawkins said. “But the good thing is, I know what it feels like and my teammates do too. I guarantee with the guys we have here, we’ll never have this feeling again.”

Head Coach Sean McDermott wrapped up things in a way most Bills fans can surely relate to.

“It hurts. It hurts. It hurts bad… but that game should not have come down to that play,” McDermott said. “At the end of the day, give them the credit… they made a special play.”

While not the way Buffalo wanted to enter their week off, the Bills now get some much needed time to rest and recover before kicking off the final stretch of six games.

No one wants to lose, but it’s how you respond to the losses that define who you are as a team. After a loss like this, we will certainly see what the Bills are made of.

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In the wake of grandmother’s passing, Josh Allen leads the Bills to win

While the mourning the sudden loss of his grandmother, Allen lead the Bills to 7-2.

Often times when watching professional athletes it is easy for us to lose sight of the fact that they are actual people, with feelings just like the rest of us. there are certain occasions that cause us to take a step back and remember.

Following the Bills’ 44-34 win in Week 9 over the Seattle Seahawks (6-2) Sean McDermott shared that quarterback, Josh Allen’s grandmother, Patricia, had passed away last night, unexpectedly, at the age of 80.

“I called Josh [last night] and asked where he was on it,” McDermott said to reporters after the game via Zoom. “He said he wanted to play and we just felt like he was going to have to compartmentalize for the better part of 24 hours and that’s what he did. Not an easy thing to play through.”

McDermott added, as one would expect, that Allen was rather emotional after the game and was, “mentally tough” for putting together the performance he did, despite all that was going on in his personal life. There have been many well documented moments in sports history where athletes use a loss, such as this, to motivate themselves to play and play well in a game to honor someone.

It appears Allen did just that.

The Bills QB finished the day 31-for-38 passing for 415 yds & three touchdowns in the air, while adding another rushing TD to his stat line.

“We took care of business today,” Allen said after the game. “We played complementary football. It was a complete, total win today.”

While winning a football game doesn’t equate to the pain one feels when losing a loved one, hopefully Allen can take comfort in knowing that he gave it his all today.

One would think his grandmother is looking down proud of what her grandson was able to accomplish, even while mourning her loss.

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Josh Norman shines in Bills debut: ‘I’ll do it, I’ll make a play’

Activated just yesterday, Norman certainly made his presence felt almost immediately.

During the offseason, the Bills added depth to their secondary by signing veteran cornerback Josh Norman.

Many had written Norman off after a less than spectacular tenure in Washington, but Norman decided to come to Buffalo and attempt to prove the doubters wrong. In signing with the Bills, Norman joined Buffalo head coach Sean McDermott, who Norman had his greatest success under back in Carolina with the Panthers.

After an injury caused him to end up on the injured reserve list to start the season, Norman told the media via video conference. “I was up in a box, pissed off.” Activated just a day prior to the game, due to the new COVID-19 rules, Norman certainly made his presence felt almost immediately.

When cornerback Levi Wallace had to leave the game with an ankle injury early, it was Norman’s time to shine.

With the Bills leading by only seven points in the fourth quarter, Norman made perhaps the defensive play of the game, knocking the ball out of TE Darren Waller’s hands and recovering his own fumble:

“Coach told us somebody needed to make a play,” Norman said. “So I told myself, I’ll do it, I’ll make a play.”

The Bills ended up feeding off of that momentum and driving down the field to score a touchdown that ended up being the difference in the game.

In his own interesting way, Norman described his excitement to finally being able to help the Bills defense.

“Guys really invited me to the party,” Norman said. “It was one of those things, they was having a pizza party and I was like, ‘Shoot I’m knocking on the door, y’all not gonna let me in?’ So I had to kick it down.”

Norman’s teammates were also thankful for his return to the field.

“I don’t know if we win the game without him,” wide receiver Cole Beasley said.

Running Devin Singletary also explained how excited the team was when Norman was able to jar the ball loose for the fumble, telling the media that everyone was, “crunk” on the sideline.

Sean McDermott seemed to agree with Beasley’s assessment of Norman’s importance.

“Josh Norman brings the same dog mentality (Stefon) Diggs does,” McDermott said after the game. “It affected the defense in a major way in the second half of this game.”

While the offense has certainly been the story through the first four games of the season, despite their struggles, the defense headlined by Norman was a big part of getting the job done on Sunday vs. the Raiders.

Norman concluded his media availability by telling reporters that he has a new appreciation for the game since arriving in Buffalo.

“I’m just glad to be apart of this,” Norman said. “We’re 4-0 and you can’t have a better feeling than this.”

While the Bills have one all-pro CB in Tre’Davious White, perhaps a career resurgence for the 32-year old Norman, isn’t as farfetched as some had originally thought.

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Josh Allen displays ‘ice in his veins’ with another comeback win

The third year quarterback led his team to yet another come from behind victory on Sunday.

Depending who you ask, Bills quarterback Josh Allen is either the greatest of all-time, or the most overrated. But one thing that is hard to argue, is his ability to takeover games in the fourth quarter.

Coming into Week 2 vs. the Dolphins, Allen had six-career fourth quarter comebacks and eight game-winning drives. With the Bills’ 31-28 victory over Miami, he added another one to each of those columns.

A year ago against the Dolphins, Bills offensive lineman Dion Dawkins called Josh a “mon-star” following a comeback victory. This year, the praise came right from the top. Buffalo head coach Sean McDermott was the one with the big hype for the QB.

“He’s got ice water in his veins,” McDermott said via video conference follow the win. “There’s no moment too big for him.”

While there still remains plenty of skeptics surrounding Allen and his ability to reach an “elite” level of play, it’s hard to not see improvement from the third-year QB, especially late in games. It’s even a trait he already had, having been tied for the NFL lead with five fourth-quarter comebacks in 2019.

With the Bills trailing for the first time this season, 20-17 in the fourth quarter, Allen drove the team down the field with several throws that showcase the QB’s growth. These are the type of steps you look for in Year 3.

The first of hopefully many fourth quarter, eye-popping catches from Diggs came at the expense of rookie cornerback Noah Igbinoghene:

That series was capped off by a sensational catch by rookie wideout Gabriel Davis, which gave the Bills the lead and they never looked back:

Once the Bills took the lead, they didn’t just sit back as we’ve seen in the past. Good thing too as Miami was able to get another score in the dying seconds that ended up having little meaning. Another one for Diggs in the dying moments:

Allen continued to lead this offense down the field and put up yet another touchdown that was unexpected. This time on a long throw to John Brown, which put Allen over 400 yards for the first time in his career, he showcased the confidence the QB is now playing with:

While there are certainly areas the Bills will attempt to clean up, given the absence of starting linebacker Tremaine Edmunds and Matt Milano in this one, the Bills have to be pretty pleased with the end result.

For the first time in a long time, the defense leaned on the offense to put away a game, something Buffalo general manager Brandon Beane and McDermott had hoped for when continuing to invest in the Bills offense this offseason.

At the end of the day, despite all of the weapons on offense, comebacks start and end with your quarterback. Given the regularity at which they are occurring so far in his career, it might be time we anoint Allen with a new nickname… Captain Comeback.

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PODCAST: Bills 2020 Draft recap; How’d they do?

Buffalo Bills Wire podcast on the Buffalo Bills and 2020 NFL Draft.

For the first time in seemingly forever, the Buffalo Bills entered a NFL Draft without much need for urgency.

Of course, you want to hit at every pick, but it was nice to know that the future of the team didn’t ultimately depend on any selections made in this 2020 draft.

Utilizing their seven draft picks, Beane acquired it’s highest priority, a second running back to complement Devin Singletary. He also grabbed depth at receiver, adding two pieces to aide join the likes of Diggs, Beasley, Brown and others. A quality prospect for the defensive line, and a cornerback were sprinkled in as well.

Perhaps the most surprising choices were quarterback Jake Fromm and kicker Tyler Bass. Those two choices have been quite the discussion topic in the stratosphere of Buffalo social media. Regardless of what side you are on, how long has it’s been since the Bills could get away with something like this? It’s a good feeling.

Billswire Podcast Hosts Matt Johnson and Jeremy Juhasz recap the weekend, and discuss the newest acquisitions:

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