‘Peyton Manning showed the Buffalo Bills offense how to get it done in the red zone and in the clutch.’
Archives for October 1, 2000
Colts 18, Bills 16
‘Peyton Manning showed his poise, Edgerrin James made the big plays and Mike Vanderjagt boomed the winning field goal.’
Bennett heads back to Buffalo, again
‘The fans will still not boo him Sunday during introductions. He meant too much to them for too long for them to do that. With the more recent departure of stalwarts Bruce Smith, Thurman Thomas and Andre Reed from the Bills’ Super Bowl years, familiar faces are tougher to come by. "We made (game days at Rich Stadium) special," Bennett said. "When I played there we had some special guys, but I thought we did a great job making it a special place." But now, the Bills and Colts are fighting the New York Jets for supremacy in the AFC East. It is still difficult to win at Rich Stadium, but that is what Bennett is about this weekend. Forget sentimentality. "It’s another game. There’s always going to be great memories, but right now I’m just still trying to get better and help this team win football games," he said. "That’s about all it means now."’
Bills look to Linton to provide a lift
‘The third-year veteran from North Carolina will try to add a spark to a Bills offense that has been average through three games. The Bills’ attack ranks 12th in yards and 16th in points. It has a fair fight on its hands today, because average is an apt description of the Indy defense. The Colts finished 15th on defense last year. They’re 15th this year.’
Holler guy
‘"Intense . . . loyal . . . high attention to detail," Bills center Jerry Ostroski said when asked to describe [Carl] Mauck. "He wants to win. I never dread hearing what he has to say, even when we lose. A lot of times he’s feeling the loss just as bad as we are, because he’s been on our side, and he knows what it’s like."’
Bills’ offense must help the defense rein in the Colts
‘No matter what the oddsmakers say, a Bills win would be a mild upset. . . . . But the timing, after a Colts Monday night game, might just be right for Buffalo. Bills, 27-26.’
Passing ability seems to run in the Manning family
‘"The style of college football changed so much while he [Peyton Manning] was there [at Tennessee] that his sophomore season was better than his junior or senior seasons," said Archie [Manning]. "Part of it was the offensive line was better, but the SEC, the toughest conference to begin with, was stronger and there were great defensive coaches like Bill Oliver at Alabama and later Auburn, Bob Stoops of Florida (now head coach at Oklahoma) and Woody Widenhofer (the ex-Steeler defensive coordinator) at Vanderbilt.’
Can Bills defense keep Peyton in place?
‘"As a quarterback, I know any time you face Buffalo it’s tough to move the ball," Manning said. "So when you have it, you really want to take advantage of the possession because you won’t get many. "I think Buffalo has the best defense in the league … and I’m not just saying that, I thought that last year."’
Colts, Bills play for real this time
‘When the Bills (2-1) and Colts (2-1) square off today at The Ralph, nobody will say the game doesn’t mean anything. Neither club can afford to slip too far behind the idle New York Jets (4-0) and the 3-1 Miami Dolphins, who also have a ”bye” facing winless Cincinnati. The Bills, coming off a 27-14 loss to the Jets two weeks ago, are in the midst of a critical three-game stretch against division rivals, traveling to Miami next week. Today marks the start of a three-game road trip for the Colts with the first two against division foes Buffalo and New England. Both sides are crying sympathy, if anyone cares to listen.’
Bills’ scouting report
‘Bills win if…Their special teams don’t implode again. The only thing Ronnie Jones can ask of his beleaguered unit is to not lose the game. The Bills stack up well in the offense vs. defense matchups, but special teams could be huge…Manning doesn’t have another game like he had last Monday. If he gets hot, it could be lights out for the Bills despite their great defense…Rob Johnson continues to play at the efficient level he has worked at so far, then adds a couple of big plays. The Bills need to score points today, and it would be nice to not have to work too hard for a score such as a 75-yarder to Eric Moulds, Peerless Price or Jeremy McDaniel.’
Bills ready for rematch
‘"The Bills were the best team in the AFC at the end of last season, in my opinion," Mora said in his weekly conference chat with Buffalo reporters. "And I mean that 100%. Other than that fluke play against Tennessee, they were probably going to be in the Super Bowl. I felt going into the season they were going to be as good as they were last year."’
Healthy Flutie promoted to backup
‘Bills coach Wade Phillips didn’t rule out Flutie seeing action against the Colts, but didn’t make it sound too likely, either. "We have to play all that by ear, but I think (Flutie’s) a guy that can come in and spark-plug you," Phillips said Wednesday. "But I’m awfully happy with how our quarterback is doing. I don’t think you want to endanger that."’
Colts haven’t enjoyed most trips to Buffalo
‘Since the Colts relocated to Indianapolis in 1984, they’ve won twice at what now is Ralph Wilson Stadium, home of the Buffalo Bills. Once was during the strike-interrupted 1987 season when the replacement Colts walloped the counterfeit Bills 47-6. Jim Harbaugh led the Colts to a 27-17 victory in 1994, but normalcy has since returned to the series. The home-standing Bills have won five in a row over Indianapolis. "I’ve only been here for two of them,” coach Jim Mora said. "Don’t blame me for the other ones." OK, but the last two have been decidedly one-sided — 34-11 in 1998, 31-6 on the final weekend of the ’99 regular season. "On those particular days," Mora said, "they were a lot better than we were."’
Colts, Bills stay busy lauding each other
‘Something’s been lacking leading up to this afternoon’s early-season AFC East showdown between the Indianapolis Colts and Buffalo Bills. Namely, bulletin-board material. Rather than spitting verbal barbs back and forth, the two rivals seemed content to swap sugar-coated superlatives.’
Buffalo pulls running back switch
‘Smith, a former first-round pick who rushed for 1,124 yards in 1998, has not taken the demotion well. He lashed out at the decision earlier in the week, saying he was being made a scapegoat for a rushing offense that ranks 16th in the NFL in yards (298) but 25th in per-carry average (3.2). And the bulk of that work has been done by Johnson himself, the team’s leading rusher with 109 yards and a 6.8 average. Smith and backup Shawn Bryson have managed 159 yards on 68 carries (2.3). "There aren’t any scapegoats," Phillips said. "We’re 2-1. Make me the scapegoat if we end up 13-3."’