‘"It’s a lot more fun being on the field throwing the ball than standing on the sideline cheerleading," said Flutie, who turns 38 tomorrow. "I enjoy Sundays. I enjoy competing. But the bottom line is that we have to win a game. It’s important we get to 4-3 rather than fall to 3-4."’
Archives for October 2000
‘Flutieball’ gives Bills hope
‘"We’ve had a similar offense the last two years and six games. That won’t change, it’s how they play us," Phillips said. "Doug has different strengths than Rob. How they try to play us and stop his strengths (is the key). It’s the same plays but they’re run differently at times because of the quarterback." And sometimes, things just happen.’
Q&A: Steve Christie
‘If you were the NFL commissioner, what would be the primary thing you would try to change about the game? "I would say the fields. There’s a lot of complaining about Astro-turf, but I think there should be a lot more attention paid to the grass fields because a lot of them are in poor shape. I would think that your venue for such a game, the surface, for the benefit of the players, should be much better. The Jets’ field was terrible. Last year, Baltimore and Washington were terrible. If you can’t do grass, then don’t do it. Jay Riemersma went down in New York, and that’s a sandbox. And that’s in New York where the commissioner is. That’s not acceptable. Our field is pretty good, it’s layered, it’s very good."’
Scouting report
‘This is the 12th time since the 1970 merger that Buffalo has played an undefeated team through at least four games. The Bills are 8-3 in such games, including wins in five in a row. All three losses have been to unbeaten Miami teams.’
6-0 Vikes fear Flutie
‘Many in Buffalo, coach Phillips included, seem to be toning down the return of Flutie. It’s part of the lingering hangover of Phillips’ controversial decision to hand the job to Johnson prior to the Bills playoff loss to the Tennessee Titans this past January. Flutie fumed and sulked at the time and later said the Bills would have defeated the Titans had he started. He has been relegated to Johnson’s backup since. When meeting with Buffalo media this week, Flutie, who is 17-8 as a starter with the Bills, bit his lip and stuck to the company line. But in a conference call with Minnesota reporters, he said the demotion still eats at him.’
New gunslinger in town
‘The soon-to-be-outdated NFL textbook suggests that a quarterback should only carry the ball on draws, sneaks and broken plays. It also says 6-foot-5, 255-pound players are supposed to fill positions such as linebacker and perhaps fullback. Oldtime students of the game, meet Daunte Culpepper.’
The last word
‘Doug Flutie doesn’t look like Rob Johnson, act like Rob Johnson or throw like Rob Johnson. He can’t step back and pass. He can’t be the prototypical NFL quarterback. He isn’t tall enough or strong enough. He probably can’t even start on a full-time basis anymore. But there is something inside Flutie that Johnson may never have or even comprehend. And that is an inherent understanding of what it takes to win a football game and how to go about accomplishing it. In this, Flutie is commanding. In this, Johnson remains a neophyte with skill but not guile.’
Vikings Anderson an unlikely scoring king
‘Soon, perhaps as early as the Vikings’ game this afternoon against Buffalo, the kicker who grew up playing soccer and rugby in South Africa will lay claim to one of the most-sacred records in American sports. Anderson is 10 points away from eclipsing Blanda’s NFL record of 2,002 career points, a milestone compiled over 26 seasons by a player who doubled as a quarterback during a more rugged era of professional football.’
Thomas likes Griffith even better up close
‘When Emmitt Thomas coached in Philadelphia and Green Bay, he always had great respect for Vikings safety Robert Griffith. Now that Thomas is the Vikings’ defensive coordinator, he has an even greater appreciation for Griffith’s talents. "The thing I admire about him is that from looking at people from afar, you never get the full impact," Thomas said. "When I was at Philadelphia and at Green Bay, we really loved this young man. And then coming here, he’s not a disappointment. He’s a heavy hitter, good cover guy and a good team player. "He is smart, but he also likes to compete. He’s intense and very competitive, even in practice. He’s got a great work ethic, and is the leader of our defense."’
Kent Youngblood’s predictions: Vikings vs. Bills
‘Vikings 21, Buffalo 17.’
Flutie no stand-in: he deserves top billing
‘It’s the belief here that Flutie still may be the most magical player in the NFL. He knows that. What drives you crazy is to hear all the whispers from newspaper columnists that teammates don’t like him and how they hope he fails so Robbie can flourish. There’s only one problem with that theory: When does he fail? And when does Robbie flourish?’
Once again, Flutie steps to the fore
‘Here we go again, Flutie at 38 has to prove himself worthy one more time. The pressure’s on. Let’s say Johnson is ready in three weeks. That gives Flutie two games to produce wins and look good doing it. He was winning last year (10-5) but the the coaches didn’t think he looked so good doing it. So they pulled the plug on the guy. Flutie went on record as saying he thinks the Bills would have beaten the Titans had he played. He took a lot of grief for saying so. That’ll teach him to be honest.’
Culpepper adds spice to already hot Vikings offense
‘Culpepper enters Sunday’s game against the Buffalo Bills as the first first-round draft choice to win his first six starts since 1950, when they started keeping track of such a thing.’
ESPN program lets everyone feel Bills fans’ pain
‘Bills fans, set your VCRs. ESPN is premiering a love letter to you, "NFL Films Presents – A Town, a Team and a Dream: The Story of the Buffalo Bills," at 3 a.m. Monday. The way things are going with the length of postseason baseball, that may be the time that Game Two of the World Series ends. The special includes a variety of NFL Films footage of the past, as well as new interviews with Bills cheerleader Tim Russert of "Meet the Press," former Buffalo News writer Vic Carucci, filmmaker Vincent Gallo ("Buffalo ’66"), radio voice Van Miller and ex-Bills Jack Kemp, Bruce Smith, Jim Kelly and Paul Maguire. It also airs at 4 p.m. Monday on ESPN, and at noon and 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and at 3:30 p.m. Thursday on ESPN2. Russert, Carucci and Gallo get most of the air time in the half-hour program, which discusses the pain one experiences as a Bills fan and the fantasy of what it actually would be like if they ever won the Super Bowl.’
Behind 6-0 are healthy bodies
‘Remarkably, left guard Corbin Lacina is the only starter to miss a game. He suffered a sprained medial collateral ligament in the third preseason game and missed three weeks, including the season opener against Chicago.’