‘"I doubt seriously Rob Johnson will ever be a Buffalo Bill," he says. "Buffalo Bills don’t wear bandanas on their heads or have that devil-may-care, surfer boy attitude that he has. "He ought to be playing for San Diego."’
Archives for March 2001
Dropping Flutie first step toward rebuilding team
‘In my Fantasyland, Flutie’s 27 and Rob’s in high school cruising for chicks. But reality bites. And like the choice or not, the Bills took one more step toward becoming a true team again.’
Johnson has much to prove to Bills’ faithful
‘Sadly, Doug will be working his magic elsewhere, while the Bills pin their hopes on a quarterback whose potential no longer seems unlimited.’
Buffalo Bills Wallpaper
‘Download great Buffalo Bills’ artwork to use as wallpaper for your PC. Includes a calendar for the month of March!’
Rob lives
‘When Wade Phillips introduced Rob Johnson three years ago as quarterback of the Buffalo Bills he said he hoped it would be the start of the Rob Johnson-Wade Phillips era. Well, on Wednesday night, Feb. 28 the Johnson era really and belatedly began as general manager and president Tom Donahoe …’
Johnson Stays, Flutie Goes
"There is no more controversy," Williams said. "The locker room is unified."
Johnson logically prevails in turf war
‘First of all, the word has always been that the Bills’ players preferred Johnson at quarterback.’
Bills to cut Flutie, retain Johnson as starting QB
‘Donahoe said last week that the one quarterback who remains probably will have to restructure his contract to accommodate the team’s tight cap status. Flutie has a 2001 cap value of $7.753 million and Johnson of $8.292 million.’
Doug is Done – Bills choose to keep Johnson as starting QB
‘After weeks of internal debate on the merits of their two quarterbacks, the Bills have decided in favor of Rob Johnson. The team will officially announce the decision to retain Johnson at a 7 p.m. EST news conference at the team complex.’
Bills to keep Johnson, cut Flutie
‘The Bills were forced to make a decision mostly for salary-cap reasons as they had to cut almost $8 million off their payroll in time for Thursday’s 4 p.m. deadline.’