‘When the league formula dictated that the Bills and Titans would meet this season, the game was booked for the first week … reintroducing that bizarre finish, but at least getting it out of the way in the opener. Even now, some Buffalo fans swear the Bills were jobbed on the play … that Wycheck’s toss was illegal and not a lateral at all. And they’ve found in ally in coach Wade Phillips who has his own name for the memorable play: "Home Run Throw Forward." But, of all people, he has a sympathizer in his Tennessee counterpart. "I just think it’s just his opinion of the play," said Titans coach Jeff Fisher when asked if Phillips’ contention smacked of sour grapes. "I often times put myself in (his) shoes and can only imagine how he feels. After playing the way his team did … having the season his team had … and the expectations they had… to come down to what they thought it took to win the ball game and have it end like that … I could only begin to understand how he feels. I’m sure a lot of people in that organization haven’t had a good night’s sleep since it happened." Especially, since Fisher thought the game was lost with 16 seconds to go.’
Archives for September 2000
Throwback Playback
‘The electricity on the sidelines was enough to make one’s hair stand on end. The Buffalo Bills had taken what seemed like the best haymakers the Tennessee Titans could throw for three hours. They had seen teammate after teammate get carted off the field. Both starting tackles were injured. Running back Antowain Smith hobbled off. Linebacker Marlo Perry broke his leg and went off on a stretcher. Yet they had hung together. They had fought back. Here they were, in the loudest stadium in the NFL, Adelphia Coliseum in Nashville, Tenn. It had been a madhouse all afternoon, but all of a sudden it was dead quiet. Half their teammates on the sideline had just mobbed Steve Christie, whose 41-yard field goal gave the Bills a 16-15 lead. Sixteen seconds remained as they gathered to hear special teams coach Bruce DeHaven tell them how Christie would kick off. Their adrenaline was off the charts. "Everybody was jacked," said Christie. "I had another coach in the league tell me that if you think those guys heard anything you said in that huddle before you went out, you’re crazy," said DeHaven this week from his San Francisco 49ers office. "I’m not sure I totally agree with that." What happened next, of course, is NFL history.’
Bills could send message against Titans
‘A victory over the AFC Champion Tennessee Titans would do a lot more than exact a tiny measure of revenge for last January’s Music City Miracle. It would give a surprising boost to the Bills’ expectations for the season and send a message to the football world that they are serious playoff contenders.’
Holding his ground
‘Antowain Smith can almost hear the whispers coming from the fans. He knows there are two younger players pushing from behind. They might have better instincts. They might have more ability. They might take his job someday soon. Everywhere he turns, he knows there are people doubting whether he should still play a significant role for the Buffalo Bills this season, as if his time here has come and gone. It seems everyone in his world is lurking, waiting for him to make one false move, so they can replace him with Shawn Bryson or Jonathan Linton. No doubt, this is a pivotal year in Smith’s career. He started thinking about the importance of this, his fourth NFL season, moments after the Tennessee Titans ended the Bills’ season last year with that fluke kickoff return. His effectiveness this year could very well decide whether he has another one with the Bills. And nobody is more clear about Smith’s future than Antowain Smith himself.’
Last year’s accomplishments mean little to this year’s Bills’ defense
‘This was early in the Buffalo Bills’ training camp. A well-known football annual had reached the newsstands and it was the talk of the St. John Fisher campus. The magazine included a feature story that rated all 31 NFL teams by units. The Buffalo defense, which had finished No. 1 in the league less than six months before, was ranked 16th in the story. The defensive backfield, which lost two starters, was rated 26th, somewhat understandable. But the linebacking, with three young starters returning, got a rating of 23. The most startling number was the 28th ranking, just three from the bottom, awarded to the defensive line. "I read it to our defensive guys," said Ted Cottrell, their coordinator. "They were angry. Really mad."’
Deep thinkers may turn Bills-Titans into aerial showdown
‘This should be a great game, with the decisive factors being pass rush and quarterbacking. The Titans’ pass rush is a lot more proven and may create pivotal turnovers. . . . Titans 27-20.’
The perfect start
‘Bills head coach Wade Phillips doesn’t need advice from us, but if the Titans score a late touchdown or field goal, and the Bills have the game safely salted away, perhaps he might think of letting his return man lateral the ensuing kickoff to another Bill, who would then throw the ball across the field and . . . Oh, never mind. A victory will be good enough.’
Sky high for Bills game
‘Seems the Buffalo Bills will help make some high-altitude history tonight – and we’re not talking about Rob Johnson’s passing. JetBlue Airways says it will make aviation and broadcasting history as it plays host for the first National Football League game to be broadcast live on ESPN in flight – between the Buffalo Bills and the Tennessee Titans. Each seat comes with a personal satellite TV, featuring 24 channels of DIRECTV programming, provided free of charge.’
AFC Preview
‘Never count Bills out until the playoffs.’
A sold-out, super-charged opener
‘The Titans and Bills meet tonight at sold-out Ralph Wilson Stadium in one of the most anticipated regular-season openers in history. Just eight months ago, Tennessee thwarted Buffalo’s Super Bowl hopes with a stunning 22-16 wild-card playoff victory in Nashville, scoring the winning touchdown in the final seconds on a controversial 75-yard lateral kickoff return. "We are all expecting a hostile environment going up to Buffalo this time," Titans running back Eddie George said. "Especially the way that playoff game ended. I’m pretty sure they circled this game at the top of their schedule." The Bills don’t deny the memory of Kevin Dyson running untouched up the sideline haunts them. They don’t deny revenge is a powerful motivator.’
The last resort
‘It should be noted that Bills punter Chris Mohr, the team’s designated emergency quarterback, has a much higher career completion percentage than either Rob Johnson or Doug Flutie. Of course, it also should be noted that Mohr has tossed just one spiral in his 10-year Buffalo career. He’d like to keep it that way. "If I’m in there taking snaps then we are in serious trouble," says Mohr, who is expected to enter tonight’s season opener against the Tennessee Titans at Ralph Wilson Stadium as Buffalo’s third-string signal-caller. "I’d love to give quarterback a brief shot, but not under these circumstances. If I’m in there against the Titans that means Rob (Johnson) and Alex (Van Pelt) have been knocked out, and I don’t want to see that."’
Bills-Titans scouting report
‘This goes without saying, but . . . If they’re kicking off to the Titans in the final seconds, stay in their coverage lanes.’
When last we saw the Buffalo Bills …
‘It was a horror show the Buffalo Bills special-teams players couldn’t possibly forget. And, as his first order of official business, new special-teams coach Ronnie Jones wasn’t about to let them. When the Bills convened at training camp in Rochester, N.Y., in mid-July, Jones began his initial meeting with special-teams players by showing the gruesome video of the Music City Miracle, an epic tragedy for an NFL team all to familiar with high-profile failure. "Guys were screaming at me to turn it off," Jones said of his first chance to make a bad impression. "They were upset and tired of seeing it but I let it run. You have to see it. The veterans don’t need to be reminded, I suppose, but the rookies haven’t been through that."’
By George, Titans ready
‘At 6-foot-4, Eddie George of the Tennessee Titans is one of the NFL’s tallest running backs, and more susceptible than most to punishing blows from opposing defences. Still, George rarely sits out a play and hasn’t missed a start in his four years in the league. So, as punishing a blow as last January’s 23-16 Super Bowl loss to the St. Louis Rams was, George expects to rebound the same way. "I think it definitely made us hungry, you know, to try to get back to that point again," said George, who intends to pick things up in tonight’s season opener, a Music City Miracle rematch against the Buffalo Bills at Ralph Wilson Stadium (8:35 p.m., TSN). "We want to be a better football team and grow off of it," he said. "I think that was just a building block."’
Bills fans seeking payback for Miracle
‘”I would rank the indignation by people in Buffalo over ‘Home Run Throw Back’ to more than ‘No Goal,’ ” said sports writer Larry Felser, who has covered the Bills for the past 40 years. “Because ‘No Goal’ happened late at night, people woke up to it. This thing happened in front of God and everybody. “It was an instant explosion. People were instantly indignant and have stayed that way.”‘