‘They aren’t the Marv Levy-Jim Kelly Buffalo Bills. They aren’t even the Wade Phillips-Doug Flutie Buffalo Bills. Even so, the team that squared off against the New England Patriots yesterday at Foxboro Stadium proved just as blue-collar tough as those more successful Buffalo teams of recent times.’
BillsBeat - November 12, 2001
One more way to lose
‘Should have, could have, would have. That has been the ongoing story of this dreadful season for the Bills.’
Was Pats' game Rob's last stand?
‘If Rob Johnson’s right clavicle is indeed broken, he will not be playing football for the Buffalo Bills the rest of the season. Now the question is, will he ever play for the Bills again? If it were my call, the answer would be no.’
Ouch! Those growing pains hurt
‘"The defense played well enough to keep us in this ballgame, but we need to play better as a TEAM," coach Gregg Williams said. "We find new ways each week to (lose)."’
Buffalo Bills report card
‘Another uninspiring effort by Rob Johnson, who converted just 2 of 12 third downs against Bill Belichick’s defense and was sacked five times (most his fault). Left the game with a serious shoulder injury with 4:17 left so you win the office pool if you picked eight starts as the number of games he would last. D+’
Positive Charge
”’We got lucky today,” said Patriots receiver Troy Brown. ”That’s a pretty good football team.” Brown’s comments may be a stretch, because the Bills are far from good. And the Patriots weren’t ”lucky” all the time, at times they were good.”
A winner in the long run
”’He was very excited. You could tell this morning when he walked in,” said Patriots quarterback Tom Brady, who handed the ball to Smith 20 times and watched as he gained 100 yards, the final 42 of which locked up a 21-11 victory at Foxboro Stadium. ”He really wanted to make an impression. He came out and ran hard – he always runs hard – even there at the end, he was real excited to break that one off.”’
The stat that matters goes in Brady's favor
‘He lost the ball, he lost great gulps of yardage, he lost a bushel of points from his quarterback rating yesterday at Foxboro Stadium. But he didn’t lose the game.’
Defense shows mettle in this performance
‘The Bills finished a borderline morose 2 for 12 (17 percent) on third-down attempts. They totaled only 68 yards rushing and a barely respectable 173 net yards in the air. On an afternoon when neither side showed the ability or inclination to control play, it was the New England defense that did the better job of surviving along the breakdown line on the south side of Route 1.’
Many are taking hits for Johnson decision
‘To prevent that condition from continuing, the Bills installed the West Coast offense in Buffalo this summer, hoping to help Johnson get rid of the ball quicker and hence reduce his sacks and his injuries. Unfortunately for the Bills, by then Buffalo’s offense already had left for the West Coast.’
Bledsoe may be set to go
‘The Patriots are expected to announce within two days that quarterback Drew Bledsoe has been cleared by the medical staff to play Sunday night against the Rams.’
Game will be Ram tough
”’If we don’t control the ball on offense and hold on to it, you don’t want to put our defense in position to be on the field that long against that team. We’re on a roll right now. It feels great to be over .500 finally, but we have to play better than we did [today]."’
It wasn't too pretty, but Pats will take it
‘"We lacked the consistency we’d really like to have, but you have to recognize Buffalo (1-7) has a much better team than their record indicates," said the coach. "We’ve had games like this where we’ve had lapses and mistakes and lost. It’s good to get one."’
Corner breaks Mould
‘Battling an All-Pro wide receiver mano-a-mano has always been a welcome challenge for Patriots cornerback Ty Law. Buffalo Bills wide receiver Eric Moulds, a two-time All-Pro, has resided in the top strata of the NFL’s pass catchers since breaking into the league in 1996. Decision: Law.’
Smith pads our account
‘Shake the hand of the big man – Antowain Smith.’