Former Bills offensive lineman and nine-time Pro Bowler
Rueben Brown was a guest on WGR 550 Sports Radio in Buffalo a few years ago
talking about, among other things, what makes NFL offensive linemen tick. He
explained that while today’s pass-happy style of play values the
pass-protection abilities of offensive linemen, what they really love doing –
what makes them feel complete as football players – is run blocking. The offensive
lineman’s task in pass protection is to fend off, impede, hold up and misdirect
defensive pass rushers (whose job seems more offensive than defensive) for long
enough to allow their quarterback time to find open receivers downfield. On the other hand, with run blocking, the offensive line is in proactive mode, creating
gaps for running backs to dart through then moving second level linebackers and
safeties out of the way down the field. They need not worry about the dreaded
offence of being “illegally downfield” which only applies on passing plays. Ask
any NFL offensive lineman what plays they like to run and they will all provide
the same answer: running plays. The Bills ran the ball yesterday in Orchard
Park as effectively as they have in years. They won the game easily despite
Josh Allen completing only seven passes for 94 yards. After the game, he said
that he felt like the kid who contributed almost nothing to the class project
but still got an A.
In his post-game locker room speech yesterday, Bills head
coach Sean McDermott started by acknowledging the play of his offensive line
which created enough gaps and made the right blocks to enable the Bills offence
to rack up 266 yards on the ground with James Cook accounting for 179 of those
while adding another 42 yards on two catches with two touchdowns. Cook’s outstanding rushing day
was almost 100 yards short of the single-game franchise record of 273 yards set
in 1976 by one Orenthal James Simpson. Yesterday belonged to the Bills offensive
line - a five-man unit which has remained healthy and has started every game
this season. The Bills yesterday demonstrated that In this current era of “chunk
plays” and speedy wide receivers “taking the top off the defence”, an
old-fashioned running attack can still win football games. The Cowboys defence,
on the field for a full ten minutes longer than their offence was, looked tired
and demoralized as the game ground on. They are a unit built to defend against
the pass, often this season playing with a big lead and letting their dominant
pass rush quickly turn games into blow-outs.
The Bills sent their fans home brimming with optimism about
the final three games of the season and the prospect of a playoff berth and
maybe even a division title and the coveted home playoff game which comes with
it. There is much work to do to get there and the Bills will need help from
others to challenge for the division. The Dolphins moved to 10-4 with their
30-0 shellacking of the Jets yesterday but their schedule becomes considerably
tougher over the next two weeks. First up for the Dolphins is a home game next
week against these same Dallas Cowboys who are battling the Eagles for the NFC
East division title and still have their sights on home field advantage in the
NFC. After that, the Dolphins travel to Baltimore to face the Ravens who will be
trying to shore-up their hold on the top seed in the AFC. Should the Dolphins
lose one of these games and if the Bills were win their next two, the week 18
game in south Florida will decide the winner of the AFC East. If this happens, expect the Bills
v. Dolphins to be the Sunday Night Football match-up and the final game of the
NFL regular season.
Before Bills fans start shopping for February package deals
to Las Vegas (the site of Superbowl LVIII), they have a short week to prepare
for a team which will have had three full days of extra rest and preparation
and have just fired their head coach and general manager after an embarrassing loss
on Thursday to the Raiders who hung 63 points on them. The Los Angeles Chargers
have had a very disappointing season to say the least but teams coming off a
head coach firing can be dangerous for a few intangible reasons: professional
pride, players looking ahead to their next contracts, the naturally injected
energy of a new coach (interim head coach Giff Smith has been a defensive coach on the Chargers
staff since 2016) and, if they felt any contempt toward the fired coach, an instinct
to show the team owner that he made the right move. Add in a cross-continent
trip to the west coast for a Saturday night game and this is certainly an
opportunity for the Bills to stumble. I don’t think they will.
Saturday’s game will be carried on Peacock, an NBC-owned streaming service which I gather is not available in Canada – at least not legally. I assume then (but have not been able to confirm) that it will be available on TSN or CTV in Canada. I’ll be watching the game from a hotel in Edmundston, New Brunswick, a popular stopover point on the drive from Ontario to Atlantic Canada. On Christmas Eve, we drive to Moncton to spend Christmas with family there. We are booked in for three nights. Second prize was five nights in Moncton.
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