When the Bills lose a game, I usually claim afterward to have had a "bad feeling" about the game before it started. I make that claim once again this morning. Although my concern was certainly real after they fell behind the hapless New York Jets 10-0, the bad feeling I had was that the game was going to be much closer than pundits and most Bills fans were predicting. Plenty of NFL games quickly turn into blowouts even between relatively evenly matched teams but it seems that when one team is heavily favoured over an opponent, particularly in a divisional game with the visiting team favoured by double digits, blowouts rarely ensue. Instead, a nail-biting game which isn't decided until the last couple of minutes of the fourth quarter is just as likely as a rout.
Sports books favoured the Bills yesterday by between 9 and 11 points - the largest pre-game spread I can recall in a long time for a road game. Callers to WGR 550 last week declared that anything short of a decisive margin of 25 to 30 points against the Jets would be considered to be reason for concern. The Jets were clearly a team in turmoil at 0-6 going into the game. A schism between the head coach Adam Gase and defensive coordinator Gregg Williams flared up over the week with Gase at the top of the list of NFL coaches on the hot seat. Williams, a former Bills head coach from 2001 to 2003, would be the logical interim replacement for Gase. The Jets were reportedly shopping around quarterback Sam Darnold, picked third overall in the 2018 draft (the Bills selected Josh Allen seventh overall in the same draft), as trade bait given that the team has the inside track to draft Clemson star Trevor Lawrence. Credit is therefore due and owing to the Jets players who started the game strong and played a good first half before regressing to what had been expected of them all along.
Is the absence of a touchdown on the Bills side of the boxscore reason for concern? Quite possibly but some of the other data points related to the Bills offensive performance were impressive even if they came against a team which might struggle to beat Clemson: 26 first downs, 126 rushing yards, 296 passing yards for Josh Allen with no interceptions thrown. On the negative side of the ledger, the Bills were flagged for 11 penalties for 106 total yards. A Josh Allen touchdown pass to Gabriel Davis was negated on an illegal formation penalty.
There were at least two dangerous hits in the NFL yesterday. Bills safety Micah Hyde was flagged for his vicious hit on receiver Breshad Perriman late in the game. Hyde's perfectly timed hit broke up a long passing play but was delivered too high as he hit Perriman's neck and head area. Cowboys quarterback Andy Dalton lay motionless on the field for several minutes after taking a helmet-to-helmet hit from Washington linebacker Jon Bostic who was ejected from the game (and will likely face further sanctions from the league). The Bostic play was indefensible. Hyde's hit was tough to watch but players will always say just how difficult it is to pull up when running at full speed and trying to time their hit just as the ball arrives. Hyde did lead with his shoulder rather than with his helmet but I wish (and I hope he wishes) that he had hit Perriman in the chest or hips.
Watching the pre-game NFL Today on a Detroit CBS affiliate yesterday, nine days before the US election, exposed us to an avalanche of elections commercials. If I were an undecided voter who did not follow the Michigan Senate race closely, watching these ads yesterday would have caused me to lose all faith in the two main candidates whose messages only attack each other without making any case for why their own candidacies should be considered. Apparently, neither candidate will protect those with pre-existing medical conditions and both candidates intend to line their own pockets if they go Washington. These television ads are costly - both in real dollars for the candidates and, I suggest, in further eroding faith in the political process among potential voters.
Up next for the Bills: home to New England Patriots next Sunday November 1st. With Tom Brady gone and Cam Newton doing a relatively poor job in his place, the Patriots have looked like shadows of their former selves the past two weeks.