The largest point spread of the 2025 NFL season through four weeks opened early in the week at 16.5, floated down to 14.5 on Thursday and settled in at 15.5 early yesterday morning as I was packing my sauerkraut, Dijon mustard, vegetable tray, beer and Italian sausages into my cooler. The Buffalo Bills were playing the league doormat New Orleans Saints and some of the pundits on the radio early yesterday were saying take the points and the Saints. If I was to have wagered against the spread on this game, I probably would have too. And it would have been the winning call as the Saints lost by 12 and covered the spread. I had a feeling that it would be a closer game than was expected. A spread of more than two converted touchdowns is almost unheard of in the parity-driven NFL and proved to be too high yesterday at a sun-baked Highmark Stadium. And the brutalist slab of concrete bult in 1973 now features (from my seats 23 rows behind the visitor bench) a clear view of the top of the new, much taller Highmark Stadium just across Abbot Road which will open ten months from now. I’m looking forward to it for football and for traffic reasons.
For Toronto sports fans, the Blue Jays 162nd game
of the season was top of mind, even for those of us attending the game in
Orchard Park. Would they blow the division lead they had held for most of the
summer? Would the Yankees finally stumble after seven straight wins? Would they
both win or both lose? I like the MLB’s scheduling plan starting every game on
the season’s final day at 3pm or shortly after as every team with something to
play for would have to field their best line-ups. We dialed up the game on the car
radio with the Jays leading 5-4 and listened as they pounded out eight more
runs and sealed the deal on their first division title in ten years, earning the
top seed in the American League playoff draw and a valuable first-round bye.
Quite an accomplishment.
My first experience entering the United States after the President’s
re-election came a couple of weeks ago (At Toronto Pearson) and was quite smooth as was yesterday’s
encounter at the Queenston-Lewiston crossing. It almost felt as if a memo had been
circulated by the Department of Homeland Security to the border agents suggesting
that they might be a bit more welcoming of low-risk Canadians as they pass
through border checkpoints. Travel by Canadians to the US is down 30% since the
winter and businesses in American border communities have suffered accordingly. With
all the tough talk from the White House in the administration’s first few
months, local and state Chambers of Commerce have carefully and quietly expressed
their concerns and, after all, business is business. Rather than asking
questions requiring detailed answers, the pleasant mid-thirties border agent woman
asked – pleasantly - if we were going to the Bills game and if we would be returning
to Canada later the same day. “Yes” to both of those I answered as she ran our
passports through the scanner and we were on our way. Easily the friendliest, fastest
and most relaxed border agent experience I’ve had at least since 9/11. After
early reports last winter of phones being scanned and occasionally even an uncomfortable
question or two about the President being asked of Canadian travellers, despite
the admittedly small sample size of two, for what it’s worth, both of my recent
experiences have been good.
As for the Bills who, along with the Eagles, now sit atop the NFL at 4-0, have plenty to work on in preparation for the Patriots next Sunday night as they close-out their three-game homestand. Starting with tackling. The Saints
running game racked up almost 200 yards by breaking easily through to the second
and third levels of Buffalo’s defence far too many times. The ageless Alvin
Kamara, now in his ninth season with the Saints, gained 70 yards on 15 carries
while Kendre Miller ran for 65 and quarterback Spencer Rattler added 49 yards, making
some impressive open-field moves along the way. Getting DT Ed Oliver back will
help to shore up the line play but even with him, the Bills defensive front is soft
and seems to operate, like it did last year, in “bend but don’t break” mode
which often just looks too easy for opposing offenses to move the ball at will.
Josh Allen through an interception – the Bills first turnover since before
Christmas - but James Cook continues to justify his new contract by running for
over 100 yards once again and reaching the endzone for the eighth straight
game.
Another key division game is up next for the Bills as the
New England Patriots, fresh off a routing of the Carolina Panthers and now
sitting at 2-2, come to Orchard Park Sunday night. My game tickets remain available
but here’s something which explains the scarcity of parking at Highmark Stadium
in 2025: My Lot 7 parking pass, for which I paid $40, sold for $175 (all USD)
online the other day. I mean Lot 7 is certainly well-located if you’re sitting
on the visitor side of Highmark and is right in the thick one of the best
tailgating experiences in the NFL but I just can’t see paying $175 for the
privilege. You have to park somewhere I guess as there is no public transit
option that I’ve ever seen. For over 50 years now, eight Sundays every fall and winter, 70,000
people drive to Orchard Park, consume alcohol (some more than others of course)
then, a few hours later, drive home.
No comments:
Post a Comment