‘It figures to take a year or two for Donahoe’s rebuilding plan to pay off, but the Bills have enough talent to remain competitive for a wild-card playoff berth. The 2001 Bills will be playing what appears to be a much softer schedule in a division that could be slipping.’
BillsBeat - March 6, 2001
Flutie could give Chargers a spark
‘"If we get Doug, beware of our team," Wiley said. "If that happens we’re about to make that Baltimore run. Flutie is a winner. He’s a great fit and an immediate impact-maker."’
R.I. native Smith is trying to lure Flutie to Chargers
‘Last night, Flutie was taken out for an Italian dinner by Butler, Smith, White and Turner. Flutie is scheduled to tour the Chargers’ facilities today.’
Flutie to meet with Chargers
‘Doug Flutie planned to arrive in San Diego on Monday night and meet with Chargers officials on Tuesday. New Chargers general manager John Butler, who brought Flutie back to the NFL when he was GM of the Buffalo Bills, is angling once again to sign him.’
No Flutie, no excuses for Johnson
‘Technically Johnson won the job, but it reality, all he was awarded was an opportunity.’
Doug Flutie meets with John Butler tonight
‘A San Diego radio station (XTRA 690), is reporting that Doug Flutie will meet with John Butler tonight. They say it is a confirmed story and a 2 year contract is being discussed. San Diego is $4 million under the cap.’
BillsBeat - March 5, 2001
Why the West Coast offense has stood the test of time
Dan Pompei says the West Coast offense is a solution to a league of imperfect passers. Four West Coast quarterbacks – Rich Gannon, Brian Griese, Jeff Garcia and Donovan McNabb – received Pro Bowl invitations in 2000, and another, Kerry Collins, went to the Super Bowl. None of these players was considered a Pro Bowl- or Super Bowl-caliber performer going into the season…
Butler did it: Snagged Marcellus Wiley
‘He receives a six-year deal worth $40 million, with a signing bonus of $9 million. His cap number for 2001 is $2 million, when including a $500,000 base salary.’
Wily GM locks up Wiley for Chargers
‘Wiley said he would miss Buffalo and its fans. He said the city opened its arms to him, and he felt as if he belonged. But the lure of returning to Southern California, where he grew up, was too attractive.’
Cap Lessons
Citing the NFL Management Council, at the start of free agency, Buffalo was $2.0 million under the cap – with a mere 43 players under contract.
Len Pasquarelli's Tip Sheet
The article begins with speculation that if Flutie were to sign with San Diego, he would be unwilling to step aside in two years for Michael Vick. Also: "In his exit physical with the Bills at the end of the 2000 season, Washington weighed 365 pounds. More significant, SportsLine.com has learned doctors found some arthritis in his right ankle." Also: "If you’re wondering why little-used tailback Antowain Smith has not been a part of the Buffalo Bills salary cap purge, it’s because general manager Tom Donahoe actually has a few teams interested in trading for the four-year veteran. Not a major deal, mind you…."
Chargers lure Wiley away from Bills
‘It was going to take a free-agent market miracle for the Buffalo Bills to be able to retain defensive end Marcellus Wiley. The miracle did not happen.’
Butler's Chargers bound to improve with Wiley
‘That’s easy to do when a hard-luck team is coming off a 1-15 season, will benefit from a fifth-place schedule, and has the rights to the No. 1 pick in April’s NFL college draft.’
Bills uniform options won't make fans blue
‘The red, blue and white of the Bills we know are synonymous with Buffalo. Look around. We’d all be hard-pressed to find someone we don’t know who doesn’t own some piece of Bills’ apparel. Men, women, teens, children. Winter jackets, baseball caps, sweatshirts, golf shirts.’
Free-agent catch Wiley lands with Chargers
‘"Of the teams interested in Marcellus, and those in which he was interested, too, the Chargers seemed to be only one with sufficient cap room. The market is bad right now, and it’s going to get worse. We didn’t want to still be out there when all the money dried up."’