Christmas Greetings from Moncton, New Brunswick. There’s no
snow here either which is much more unusual than green Christmases are in southern
Ontario. Yesterday we drove four hours or so from Edmundston on deserted roads
through a series of unpopulated valleys with Irving gas stations sprinkled
every 50km or so. It’s like driving in northern Ontario but with major rivers
taking the place of small lakes. This is Canada’s only truly bilingual province
where the young people working in service jobs pivot effortlessly between
English and French. We tried ordering in French at a Tim Horton’s drive-through
(because we were greeted in French) but the young woman recognized my weak
accent and switched to English. What remains of my high-school French is embarrassingly
poor but probably not as bad as New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs whose French
accent and vocabulary makes John Diefenbaker sound like Bloc Quebecois leader
Yves-Francois Blanchet.
The Saturday night Bills game was on television in our
Edmundston hotel room on CTV 2 which, for whatever reason, was only available in
standard definition. At first, it made me realize that I watched every hockey and
football game without HD for the first few decades of my life and that I
managed this just fine. But when Josh Allen heaved a long bomb to Gabe Davis for
the Bills first touchdown of the game, I thought that the ball had slipped
through his hands…..until I saw him dragging a defender into the endzone clutching
what appeared to be a football. It was a spectacular catch by Davis who decided
to have a “number one wide receiver” game with four catches on six targets for
130 yards and that important first touchdown which cut an early ten-point
deficit to three. As Chris Collinsworth pointed out, Davis seems to have two
speeds: he either goes off for more than 100 receiving yards or he focuses on
blocking (at which he is very good) and is not targeted at all in the passing
game.
I can’t quote the percentages but generally in the NFL a team
that loses the turnover count also loses the game. But obviously not always. Teams
that lose the turnover count by three surely have an even worse record. The
Bills handed the Chargers three turnovers on two fumbles – one by Deonte Harty on
a punt return and one by James Cook (who thankfully was not benched afterward) -
and a Josh Allen interception. The Chargers did not record a turnover and certainly
played well enough to win anyway. But the Bills defence stiffened when it was
most needed: Ed Oliver, a rare example of a player who responded to a lucrative
second contract by significantly improving his play, recorded a crucial sack in
the last minute of the game which mostly sealed it for the Bills who briefly looked
like they may have found a way to lose another last-second heart-breaker. The
final play of the game for the Chargers featured the obligatory series of
laterals which might just have worked if one of them had not been an illegal
forward pass.
Yesterday, Bills fans became Dallas Cowboys fans for three
hours but they were not able to close out the Dolphins who clinched a playoff
spot with their last-second 22-20 win in south Florida. I was surreptitiously following
the game on my Score app through Christmas Eve dinner (which was tourtiere from
an Acadian family recipe passed on through many generations) but I managed to slip
away to catch the last ten minutes on television. The Cowboys remain a good
team but they will have to figure out how to win away from Jerry Jones’s
palatial AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. The road to the Superbowl, on
the NFC side of the draw, will very likely go through Santa Clara, California
and the Cowboys will be in tough if they even make it far enough to face the
49ers.
Although the Patriots came up big in Denver last night for
only their fourth win of the season, the Bills should be able to handle them
next week in Orchard Park to go to 10-6 on the season. Hopes for another AFC
Division title for Buffalo are now in the hands of the Baltimore Ravens who
face the Dolphins next week at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore. I love the
story of the naming history of that stadium which was called PSI.Net Stadium
between 1999 and 2001. PSI.Net filed for bankruptcy in June, 2001 but since the
company had pre-paid the stadium naming rights through 2001, the stadium
carried that name throughout the 2001 season despite the company having ceased
operations before the season began. I’m sure that PSI.Net shareholders took a
special kind of comfort in the stadium continuing to bear the company name during
the 2001 season after its stock was delisted and while the liquidation process
played out. If the Dolphins can win next week (or if the Bills were to fall to
the Patriots), the AFC East title is theirs despite what may happen in week 18.
Week 17 brings Bills fans a rare 1pm (Eastern) Sunday game
on New Year’s Eve. The out-of-town scoreboard will be closely watched as the
Ravens and Dolphins kick-off at the same time. Ironically, New Year’s Eve is really
the only night of the year where I actually try to stay up until midnight (I
usually don’t succeed) so I would welcome having a late-night football game as
extra motivation. I’m glad I don’t live here in the Atlantic time zone where
night NFL games start at 9.15pm. Maybe I should try the west coast where they
start at 5.15pm and the regular Sunday slate begins at 10am. Go Bills! And
equally importantly, Go Ravens!
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