Yesterday's game in the heat and humidity of South Florida looked like it had slipped away from the Bills after they had built an early 14-0 lead. But trailing by a point late in the 4th quarter, their $16 million man, defensive end Mario Williams, sacked Dolphins quarterback Ryan Tannehill and forced him to fumble into the backfield. The fumble was recovered by defensive tackle Kyle Williams - but just barely. Kyle looked like he wanted to try to pick up the ball and run with it but fell clumsily and was able to grab it with some difficulty. From there, quarterback Thad Lewis led the Bills into filed goal territory where former Dolphins kicker Dan Carpenter put them up by 2 points. His subsequent short kick-off was returned to mid-field and the game finally ended with a hail-mary pass to the end zone which was knocked to the ground.
Bills coach Doug Marrone was asked at his post-game press conference if he was surprised that the Dolphins were passing at that point in the game. He considered his answer carefully before saying "you would really have to ask them about that". I like Marrone a lot. He is trying to change the culture of mediocrity which has become entrenched within the team for almost 15 years now. He talks about expecting to win. Chan Gailey, by comparison, often looked thankful to win and sometimes even surprised. Not that he experienced the sensation all that often. Marrone's team is now 3-4 and yesterday he talked about wanting the team to "get on a roll". It's going to be tough however as the Bills play at New Orleans next week. The Saints lost their last game at New England and will have had 2 weeks to prepare for the Bills. Not that coming off a bye week seemed to help the Dolphins much yesterday.
One thing I noticed watching yesterday's game was the surprising number of empty seats at Sun Life Stadium in Miami. The Dolphins have a rich history with much success in their past. The franchise has had a Hall of Fame coach in Don Shula and was quarterbacked by one of the most prolific passers the NFL has ever seen in Dan Marino for many years. The team has not reached the Superbowl since the 1984 season but had numerous playoff appearances with Marino under centre. Florida is college football country with the Gators, Seminoles and Hurricanes all enjoying very strong fan support. The state's 2 other NFL franchises, in Jacksonville and Tampa, have not had much recent success either (although Tampa won the Superbowl in 2002) and are also experiencing attendance problems. In Jacksonville, for example, the top corner sections of the upper deck of EverBank Field have been covered by tarps (maybe the Toronto Argonauts learned this strategy from them) but the team still can not come close to selling out their home games. I can't explain why pro football seems to take a back seat to the college game in Florida to the extent that it does but the league can not be happy about persistent empty seats and local television black-outs.
Speaking of black-outs, the Bills announced last week that their next home game against the Kansas City Chiefs on November 3rd has sold out. Each of the first 5 home games have now sold out and if the team can string together a few more wins and stay in contention, they could sell out the last 2 as well. I'm going to the Chiefs game and I'm looking forward to spending the day with my old school friend and Buffalo native Chris Banning. Maybe the Bills can be the first team to beat Kansas City this season.
For most of the second half, I had debated the idea of watching the entire game versus going out for a run while there was some daylight left. I left my TV with about 6 minutes left in the 4th, satisfied that not much was going to change! LOL!
ReplyDeleteAnyhow, I'm down in Miami for the game in November vs San Diego. I was actually relieved to see there were so many empty seats as that could only mean it's a buyers market! - Dennis