Bills new home will still be named ‘Highmark Stadium’

Highmark Stadium, here to stay:

[connatix div_id=”3f8b015acdd24c648befc5d5dac47469″ player_id=”afe1e038-d3c2-49c0-922d-6511a229f69c” cid=”7cbcea0d-4ce2-4c75-9a8d-fbe02a192c24″]

The Buffalo Bills will have a new stadium but not a new name for their home.

On Monday, the team held a groundbreaking ceremony for the construction of the new venue.

Team owner Terry Pegula spoke at the event. During his commentary, Pegula announced that the future home of the Bills will remain: Highmark Stadium.

“I’m proud to say we have a new, longer-term naming rights deal and their name will shine on our stadium for years to come,” Pegula said via video conference.

According to the Buffalo News, the original deal Highmark BlueCross BlueShield of Western New York worked with the team gave them the first right to negotiate the new stadium’s naming rights. Reportedly those conversations were taking place over the past few months.

Highmark Stadium’s name came to be in 2021. It replaced the former one, New Era Field. The venue was temporarily named Bills Stadium in between.

The final pen was put to paper on the Bills new stadium on May 23. The hope is the $1.54 billion, 60,000-plus seat venue, will set to be opened by the 2026 season across the street from the team’s current venue.

Check back at Bills Wire throughout the construction process for the latest updates on the new stadium.

[lawrence-related id=118012,118010,118005]

Report: Bills owner Terry Pegula leaves NFL owners meetings due to COVID concern

Report: #Bills owner Terry Pegula leaves NFL owners meetings due to COVID concern:

Buffalo Bills owner Terry Pegula was in attendance at the NFL owners meetings on Tuesday which are taking place in New York City until he was forced to leave.

The reasoning for that is because of a close contract COVID situation unfolding for him.

According to The Athletic, Pegula had to depart because he was in close contract with his daughter’s tennis coach who attended her wedding this past weekend. The coach tested positive for COVID-19:

Worth noting: It is understood that Pegula has not tested positive for COVD-19 himself. This is just a safety precaution.

Bills co-owner Kim Pegula, Terry’s wife, is not representing the team at the meetings, which are taking place Tuesday to Thursday. She is not there according to the Buffalo News.

Per Kim Pegula’s social media account on Twitter, the wedding took place in Ashville, NC.

The Bills, in some form, will potentially now attend the meeting virtually.

Bills Wire will provide any future updates on the situation.

[lawrence-related id=90604,90610,90601]

Will the Buffalo Bills play games in Penn State’s Beaver Stadium?

The Buffalo Bills are exploring the possibility of playing some home game sin Penn State’s Beaver Stadium if necessary.

The Buffalo Bills are currently in the process of getting plans together for a brand new stadium. And with time becoming an issue with a stadium lease expiration date coming up in 2023. With a new stadium not expected to be ready until at least two years after that lease expiration, the Bills are reportedly evaluating all potential backup plans to play “home” games in other venues. One of the venues mentioned has been Penn State’s Beaver Stadium.

According to a report from Thas Brown of WROC, the Bills are exploring potential stadium options for Bills home games in Beaver Stadium and in Toronto as a temporary home, or perhaps temporary homes.

From the WROC report;

However, the team is prepared to consider other options for home games. News 8 has been told that Toronto and Penn State are both possibilities for the Bills should they need a temporary home. It’s still a path the Bills would undoubtedly prefer to avoid.

This would certainly be a worst-case scenario for the Bills. Playing home games nearly four hours away in the middle of Pennsylvania is far from an ideal situation for the Bills. Toronto is significantly closer to Buffalo, but that is still an hour and a half away and requires traveling across the border. But again, these are worst-case scenarios for the Bills. It is very much expected the Bills will be able to work out a deal to continue using their current home until a new stadium is ready to be opened. It makes too much sense for all parties involved.

The Penn State connection is not surprising, however. Obviously, Beaver Stadium has a seating capacity to host an NFL game with a seating capacity that is roughly 35,000 seats more than Buffalo’s Highmark Stadium. And by the time the Bills would have to play games in Beaver Stadium, Penn State should have completed some facility upgrades to the stadium to make Beaver Stadium more accommodating for fans.

Penn State is also an expected option to be explored given the relationship between the university and Bills ownership. The Bills are owned by Terry and Kim Pegula. The Pegulas have been highly invested in the growth of Penn State’s hockey program. The Pegulas donated $102 million to the university for the construction of the Pegula Ice Center, helping to allow Penn State to grow its club teams into full-fledged NCAA sports. Terry Pegula is a Penn State graduate.

If NFL expands schedule, will Steelers and Eagles play in Penn State’s Beaver Stadium?

The discussion about Beaver Stadium potentially hosting any NFL game is nothing new. The expansion of the NFL’s regular-season schedule has opened the door to a possible neutral-site game for the Pittsburgh Steelers and Philadelphia Eagles. Surely, Pegula would revel in the opportunity to see the Bills take the field in Beaver Stadium as well. But Penn State has suggested in recent years that updating Beaver Stadium first is essential before hosting any marquee events outside of Penn State football, specifically referring to an event like the NHL’s Winter Classic or Stadium Series. Former Penn State running back and current Philadelphia Eagles running back Miles Sanders said he would love to see a Super Bowl in Beaver Stadium.

But the Bills in Beaver Stadium? File it under the category of “Sure, it could happen.”

Follow Nittany Lions Wire on Twitter and like us on Facebook for continuing Penn State coverage and discussion.

[vertical-gallery id=3264]

[listicle id=3045]

[lawrence-related id=1341]

Report: Terry Pegula ‘loved’ Patrick Mahomes, Bills thought he’d fall

Buffalo Bills co-owner Terry Pegula “loved” Patrick Mahomes prior to the 2017 NFL Draft.

Playing the “what if” game is always a dangerous one. But we’re about to anyway. What if the Bills did draft Super Bowl winning, MVP quarterback Patrick Mahomes in 2017?

A report on Wednesday states that had team owner Terry Pegula had his way, or at least insisted that things were done how he wanted, perhaps likr Jerry Jones would do, the current Kansas City Chiefs QB would be playing for the Bills right now.

According to a report in the newly-founded NFL newsletter Go Long with Tyler Dunne (subscribe), the team’s co-owner wanted to draft Mahomes with the No. 10 overall pick at the 2017 NFL Draft. Former team executives Doug Whaley and Jim Monos both backed that Pegula mentioned multiple times prior to the draft that he was very impressed with the Texas Tech QB.

Naturally it’s important to preface that the Bills are currently 7-3 and in the driver’s seat to win the AFC East with their 2018 first-round pick and starting quarterback Josh Allen. Everyone at One Bills Drive is happy with the way things currently sit.

But in the report, Whaley even reportedly told Pegula “This is your team,” prior to the 2017 draft, in an attempt to explain that he has the final say because it was widely-known by the Bills’ scouting staff that the owner loved what Mahomes could do.

However, it doesn’t take much more than an educated guess to see what happened in the end. Just prior to the 2017 draft, Sean McDermott was hired as head coach. He clearly did not want Mahomes at the No. 10 overall pick, so the Bills traded back with the Chiefs, took Tre’Davious White there, and eventually landed Allen with extra first-round picks via the Chiefs deal.

We all already knew McDermott was pulling the strings at the year’s draft because hours after it, the front office was cleaned out, including Whaley and Monos. A week-plus later, Brandon Beane was hired as general manager.

Again, we all lived happily ever after (or happier than a 17-year playoff drought).

But in an added twist, in 2017, the Bills still had hoped Mahomes would be there in a trade back to pick No. 27. Despite McDermott’s relationship with Chiefs head coach Andy Reid (their relationship was probably helpful in pre-draft trade discussions), the Bills were not sure what QB that Reid & Co. coveted with the No. 10 pick. Could it be Deshaun Watson (who went No. 12)? Nope, it was Mahomes, and now here we are.

As stated: Things did workout for both the Bills and the Chiefs. KC has risen to higher levels than Buffalo since 2017, but who knows what could have happened with the “what if” scenario here. Maybe Mahomes is ran out of western New York for liking ketchup on his chicken wings like he does with his steak? Maybe the Bills win a Super Bowl already?

Or… maybe we can just keep riding into the 2020 postseason with Allen and see what happens and just admit that maybe this Pegula guy had it right on Mahomes?

For much, much more on Allen, Mahomes, and the Bills’ fortunes moving forward, click here and visit Go Long with Tyler Dunne (subscribe).

[lawrence-related id=73534,73560,73538,73375]

Sean McDermott signs multi-year extension with Bills

Buffalo Bills head coach Sean McDermott signs an extension to remain with the team.

Sean McDermott is sticking around with the Buffalo Bills.

The team announced on Wednesday that the head coach has signed a new multi-year contract extension to remain with the team. The organization’s co-owners, Terry and Kim Pegula, penned a statement along with the announcement:

“Sean’s leadership on and off the field has been nothing but genuine and transparent, qualities we appreciate as owners. He is the same great person to us, the players and everyone across all our organizations.”

Updates to follow…

[lawrence-related id=68310,68287,68227,68147]

11 takeaways from Sean McDermott’s pre-summer presser

Takeaways from Buffalo Bills head coach Sean McDermott and his final press conference before summer.

The Buffalo Bills have finished their recent “minicamp.” Well, actual minicamps were cancelled by the NFL this offseason due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. But the league still held weeks of “virtual”meetings over video chats.

The Bills just wrapped those up and following that, Buffalo head coach Sean McDermott wrapped up his media availability for this summer as he virtually chatted with members of the western New York media on Wednesday.

Here are 11 takeaways from McDermott’s final pre-summer press conference:

Buffalo Bills head coach Sean McDermott. (AP Photo/Eric Christian Smith)

Virtual reflections

McDermott would’ve loved to be seeing his players in-person during minicamps, as would any coach. In fact, we’d all love to not have to change our lives due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Alas, we have. But McDermott gave his evaluation on how his team’s “virtual” offseason has gone. The coach thought things went well.

Here’s what McDermott had to say:

“To sit here now, if you would have asked me, ‘Would we be able to get this done?’ Back, four five months ago, to execute what we’ve been able to execute, and at the level we’ve been able to execute it at, I would have said that’s going to be a very heavy lift, and it has been. That said, it’s just been incredible to watch our team come together, not just our players, but the staff, the support that we get from our IT department, everyone in our building has had to do things, to make what used to be easy, become reality.”

 

Recent Sabres changes aren’t worrying Sean McDermott

Buffalo Bills head coach Sean McDermott on firings, changes at Buffalo Sabres with Jason Botterill, staff.

The thought of “One Buffalo” took a whole new life once Terry and Kim Pegula, first owners of the NHL’s Buffalo Sabres, took over the Buffalo Bills. So when the hockey club has some big headlines surrounding it, the football team is certainly aware of that.

Recently the Sabres made wholesale changing causing a lot of speculation. Many members of the organization were revealed of their duties recently. Most notably, Sabres general manager Jason Botterill was let go, just weeks after co-owner Kim Pegula backed his return.

But that’s just scratching the surface as changes were even made even all the way down at the minor league level of the hockey club.

Playing a part there for the hockey team is certainly the club now not playing a game until the start of next season after it missed out on the playoffs once again. So far, the Bills aren’t in such a situation as the NFL is planning on a status quo start to the year.

But even if it doesn’t, Buffalo’s football head coach in Sean McDermott isn’t overly concerned that the Pegulas will have to make changes on the Bills front office.

“We’re all human and it’s unfortunate it happened,” McDermott reflected upon with the Sabres. “As much as I’m focused over here, I support what’s going on over there and root for the Sabres.”

“Terry and Kim have modeled to me that they’re committed to winning,” McDermott added. “All I can go off is my experience and what they’ve communicated with me first hand.”

With the much bigger business the NFL is as opposed to the NHL, it might be awhile until the Pegulas make any wholesale changes. But the big factor here is the comparison between the two leagues currently. Hockey has had a massive makeover and creation of a 24-team playoff (which the Sabres missed out on) to help bring the sport back after it was postponed due to the ongoing coronavirus.

With that in mind, many folks at the hockey team lost their responsibilities, and combined with loss of revenues from actually playing games, led to their unfortunate removals. Or at least that likely played a part. For the football club, everything and everyone’s jobs are still happening, albeit remotely.

McDermott is likely a ways away from needing to worry about any sort of similar changes.

 

[lawrence-related id=64408,64390,64470,64464]

Despite insider report, NFL owners not waiting on Jerry Jones to speak out

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones is one of the NFL’s leaders, but he’s taken a sudden backseat in using his powerful voice to speak out for change.

With every passing hour of silence from the big office at The Star in Frisco, the message being relayed only grows louder. It’s been 17 days since the first protest in Minneapolis, and Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has yet to make any statement regarding the current social injustice movement in America.

The Cowboys organization released a video statement promising ongoing conversation, but the man who runs the highest-profile team in all of sports doesn’t appear in it. The league has announced monetary support– albeit a microdrop in their lake-sized financial bucket- to fight systemic racism. And while many players and coaches from around the league have participated in marches and rallies in cities across the country, team owners have been largely missing in action on the ground.

On Thursday, a media insider suggested that other NFL owners have maintained silence on the issue directly because of the example being set by Jones.

Read that again.

As incendiery a headline as that makes, it’s not entirely factual. The truth, however, may be even more damning for the man who runs America’s Team.

ESPN’s Dianna Russini appeared on the network’s show Get Up and recapped her findings after a Players Coalition meeting that took place on Wednesday. The meeting was held virtually, and, according to Russini, began with a request for all media members to exit so that the meeting could be “a safe space” for all to talk freely.

While the GMs, coaches, and players who were present- representing several major sports besides the NFL- talked about education and community outreach, what didn’t come up, per se, was owners’ roles in the current movement or their responsibility to speak out, Russini told host Mike Greenberg.

But one NFL head coach Russini debriefed after the meeting told her:

“Everything falls in line with Jerry Jones. All eyes are on him. He’s the most vocal owner in the league. And not only is he the most vocal leader, but there are numerous owners that listen to him. He mentors them. What Jerry does, they do. And until he makes that move, the dominoes can’t start falling.”

 

“It’s not pulling them like it is the rest of the country,” San Francisco 49ers cornerback Richard Sherman said of the league’s owners. Sherman went on to single out Jones for his silence in the wake of nationwide protests.

Even former Cowboys receiver Dez Bryant- who is lobbying for a return to the league and has targeted Dallas as a preferred destination- called out his ex-employer in a tweet for not lending his powerful voice to any protests.

Russini’s source similarly believes that what Jones does or doesn’t do is apparently the bellwether for the league’s other owners. But, as the facts bear out, rather than allowing themselves to simply be “dominoes” waiting for a nudge from Jones, a not-insignificant number of NFL owners have stepped out and spoken up on their own.

Tennessee Titans owner Amy Adams Strunk delivered an impassioned statement on Thursday, announcing, “Hearts, minds and institutions need to change throughout our country. Those who face racism need to be heard, and more importantly, understood by those who haven’t listened before.”

Strunk shed light on some of the Titans’ ongoing efforts and concluded her statement by declaring: “I support our players using peaceful protests and their platforms to advance us as a nation. I would encourage those who haven’t thought about these issues before to understand the pain, anger and frustration of the black community. Black lives matter. We should all agree on that.”

As NFL journalist Paul Kuharsky notes, the Titans owner isn’t the first or the only league owner who isn’t waiting around for Jones. “We’d seen or heard statements from at least 10 NFL owners, 32 percent of them,” before Strunk released her statement, according to Kuharsky.

On May 30, San Francisco 49ers owner Jed York said in a tweet, “Before we are able to realize impactful change, we must first have the courage and compassion as human beings to come together and acknowledge the problem: black men, women, and children and other oppressed minorities continue to be systemically discriminated against.”

On May 31, Las Vegas Raiders owner Mark Davis told ESPN regarding his players, “If they have something to say, I’ll stand beside them. I won’t stand behind them; I’ll stand beside them. And if there’s something I don’t know, I’m happy to listen to them. We’ve got to find a solution.”

On June 1, New Orleans Saints owner Gayle Benson said in a statement, “Our goal will be to advocate for issues of change when and where we are able to in black and brown communities. Hopefully our work will be a model for others. They will have my full support.”

On June 1, Chicago Bears owner George H. McCaskey said, “We must do more than wring our hands and hope it doesn’t happen again… Through our voice, our actions and our resources, it is our obligation to lead.”

On June 1, Cleveland Browns owners Jimmy and Dee Haslam promised, “We must work together to elevate our efforts and our actions to ensure that we can be a positive and productive change agent off the field.”

On June 1, Baltimore Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti vowed, “I have asked a group of former and current Ravens players to decide which organizations should receive proceeds from the $1 million donation we are making today.”

On June 2, Philadelphia Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie tweeted, in part, “At times, I have too many words. At times, I have no words. But silence is not an option.”

On June 2, Buffalo Bills owners Terry and Kim Pegula spoke out: “We stand with and will continue to work with those dedicated to eradicating racism and inequality. We stand with those peacefully protesting. We stand against those who are motivated by hatred and violence.”

On June 2, Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay quoted Martin Luther King Jr. via Twitter: “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”

On June 3, Houston Texans owner Cal McNair said in a posted tweet, “This has been a pervasive and mostly silent problem for the past 400-plus years… I believe that these injustices cannot continue.”

On June 3, Jacksonville Jaguars owner Shad Khan said in a released statement, “As a member of the NFL family, I recognize I have a unique opportunity to address inequity wherever it is present, expand opportunity for all who seek it, and seek justice for all who deserve it. I take that responsibility seriously.”

As of June 12, Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has yet to say a word.

His is the flagship team of the league, and the most valuable sports franchise on the planet. His fanbase reaches every corner of the globe. One from-the-heart statement from him into the nearest microphone would surely have ripple effects throughout the NFL, the sports world, the country, and beyond.

Russini’s head coach source was right. All eyes are, in fact, on Jones. And yes, what Jerry does, other owners invariably do as well.

Jones had the chance to be the undisputed leader within the NFL’s ownership by speaking out immediately. The Cowboys could have been the example and set the tone for other franchises to follow. Instead, more than a third of the other owners have beaten Jones to the punch. At this point in the story, Jones risks being barely more than a follower in the middle of the pack who did way too little, way too late.

The only thing worse is continuing to do nothing at all.

[vertical-gallery id=648572]

[vertical-gallery id=646597]

[vertical-gallery id=645744]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Bills release statement on George Floyd, protests

Buffalo Bills owners Terry, Kim Pegula release statement on George Floyd protests.

The Buffalo Bills released a statement in regard to the recent nationwide protests following the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

Here’s the message via the team’s social media account on Twitter, a message which is headlined by Kim and Terry Pegula’s names at the top:

 

 

[lawrence-related id=63696,63689,63675,63660]

Buffalo mayor ‘certainly would like’ to see new Bills stadium downtown

Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown would like to see a new Bills stadium constructed in downtown Buffalo.

In a modern NFL that’s done little to hide its love of glamorous markets and multi-billion dollar football palaces, the Buffalo Bills’ long-term stability in Western New York has been oft-questioned.

The Bills, who play in the league’s second-smallest television market and fourth-oldest stadium, appear to be in danger of ultimately relocating to a more attractive destination, if you talk to certain people around the NFL.

And as the team’s lease at the near-50-year-old New Era Field nears its 2023 expiration date, an eventual departure from Orchard Park is starting to look like a realistic possibility.

Where could the Bills hypothetically relocate, you ask?

That’s easy. Buffalo.

A move from the suburbs to Buffalo-proper has been long-rumored, an inevitability that some feel will finally propel the Bills into the modern NFL. The theoretical move has a strong supporter in Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown, who expressed his desire for a new downtown stadium during a Thursday-evening appearance on WIVB-TV.

“I’ve said it many times. I’ve said it every single time that I am asked,” Brown said. “I certainly would like to see a new stadium in the city of Buffalo, where so much progress is being made, where so much investment is taking place. I think the stadium being where it’s located, when it was located there decades and decades ago, it was one of the major planning mistakes in this region. We talk a lot about the planning errors that took place in the region, I certainly think that is one of them.

“I know the Pegula’s are looking at this very extensively, they have a study going on. They are major decision-makers in this process, of course, with other stakeholders. But certainly, as Mayor of the City of Buffalo, the largest municipality in this region, would love to see the stadium in the city of Buffalo.”

As Mayor Brown alluded to, team owners Terry and Kim Pegula are currently exploring their options in regards to the Bills’ stadium. The ownership group hired CAA Icon to conduct a “comprehensive study of New Era Field” in November 2018, a study that will help determine the feasibility of renovations to the current stadium or the construction of a new venue entirely.

In September 2019, Pegula Sports and Entertainment revealed that the results of the study will not be released publicly.

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell recently spoke about Buffalo’s stadium situation, citing both renovations and the building of a new stadium as possible outcomes.

“A stadium that is going to be competitive with other stadiums around the league is going to be important in that context,” Goodell said while speaking to the media last Wednesday. “I think everyone is committed to that, whether it’s a new significant renovation or a completely different facility in a new place.”

What PSE ultimately decides to do in regards to its football team’s stadium remains to be seen, but one thing is clear – Buffalo’s mayor is willing to play ball.

[lawrence-related id=54376,54604,54597]