Bills 38, Dolphins 17

Wow, they’re actually in playoff contention! I certainly never expected this. I still don’t expect them to actually make the playoffs, but the Bills have turned in one gutsy season, haven’t they?

Woo-hoo!

:: Trent Edwards: poise, confidence, and he showed that he can throw deep. Sorry, JP, but Trent’s our boyfriend now.

:: Marshawn Lynch and Freddie Jackson, the newest Dynamic Duo of running backs. Here’s hoping we’re looking at the second version of Thurman Thomas and Kenneth Davis!

:: In the playoff hunt!

:: Over .500! Seriously, that to me is huge, especially the way this season started. Remember, I forecasted a 5-11 finish for this team, figuring that if they could go 7-9 with a younger group of players than the squad from last year that also went 7-9, I’d be highly impressed. And now, with three games left, they’ve equaled that win total. Wow.

Meh.

:: John Beck. It’s not like the Bills feature one of the NFL’s stiffest defensive lines, but man, did Beck look like he had no idea what was going on. So far I’m not impressed.

:: The Dolphins. Man, have they fallen on hard times. Wow.

D'oh!

:: Bills safety George Wilson, who is now out for the year with a rib injury. This is a guy who was converted to safety from wide receiver, and has been playing quite well in that role. Bummer.

On another NFL note, I hereby proclaim Steelers safety Anthony Smith the NFL’s Biggest Dumb-ass. Guaranteeing a win against the New England Richard Nixons? Come on! Why would you give those guys anything for their bulletin board at all? Sure, they’ve obtained their talent by consuming the souls of the innocent in blood-soaked rituals convened upon an altar of stone by the light of a full moon, but they’re still the NFL’s best friggin’ team. Yeesh.

I’d like to see someone try reverse psychology against these guys. Have someone say, “Wow, they’re going to kill us. I just hope we manage to only be behind by ten points as we go into the second quarter. We are so screwed.” As soon as I saw that quote in the news last week, I immediately thought, “Well, so much for the Steelers restoring goodness and integrity to football. Maybe the Jets can do it the week after.”

Yeah. Because if there’s one group of guys who can pull it off, it’s the Jets. And if Luke hadn’t been there for the Battle of Yavin, Porkins could totally have destroyed the Death Star.

Next week: Buffalo at Cleveland, in the first really meaningful game, playoff-wise, for the Bills since the 2004 season finale (when they lost to the Steelers in a game that would have put them in the playoffs had they won). The Bills pretty much have to win out to make the playoffs, and anyway, this is their last game against an AFC opponent (their last two are against the Giants and Eagles), so for tie-breakers, this one’s essential. How likely is a win? Who cares? I’m really starting to think that the Bills may be a serious contender next year, depending on how their draft and free agent acquisitions turn out.

The New England Nixons may have the wins…but there’s no doubt that the Bills are the character champions of the NFL. Too bad they don’t hand out the Lombardi Trophy on that basis!

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Bills 17, Redskins 16

This was a strange game to watch. First, the whole Sean Taylor thing; I can’t imagine how gut-wrenching that must be for that team. Second, the way the game unfolded was just…weird. It’s interesting that the Bills apparently believe in themselves, because as a fan, I’m not there yet; the idea doesn’t start seeping into my head that they can win after all until well after they’ve been entertaining that same thought. And that’s why they’re on the field and I’m watching them on the teevee. Anyway:

Woo-hoo!

:: Rian Lindell. Lots of folks like to claim that he’s not a “clutch” kicker, despite his statistical status as the most accurate kicker the Bills have ever had. Well, he was sure clutch in this game, wasn’t he?

:: Trent Edwards played extremely well, I thought, for a rookie. He didn’t lead any touchdown drives (the Bills’ scoring consisted of five FGs and a safety), but he threw for over 250 yards and didn’t turn the ball over at all. He showed more command managing the tempo of the game than JP Losman did most of the time he was here. Now I’m starting to look with hope on what things might be like when the Bills have a slightly better offensive line (they need a new center, I think) and they upgrade their receiving corps and tight ends.

Meh.

:: Joe Gibbs. Geez, I like that the Bills won, but how bad a call was that at the end, when Gibbs apparently was unaware of a pretty important rule? I’ve always liked Gibbs, even when he beat the Bills in Super Bowl XXVI, but wow, maybe he needs to look into re-retiring from the NFL.

D'oh!

:: For once, nothing, really. This was a gut-check of a game. The Bills didn’t let themselves get buried under the emotion that was running rampant in Washington, they kept their heads clear and played their style of football. This may have been their best executed game all year, and it could be a harbinger of better things to come. We’ll see.

Next week: the Bills host the still-winless Miami Dolphins. They barely got by the Dolphins a few weeks ago, but this one’s at home and the Dolphins will probably be feeling more demoralized now that they got shellacked by the not-very-good Jets this week. I canna wait!

And of course, let’s pray that Baltimore can knock off the New England Montgomery Burnses tomorrow night!

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Jaguars 36, Bills 14

Well, at least we finally got some definitive answers about one of the Bills’ quarterbacks in this game!

Woo-hoo!

:: Well…er…hmmmmm. Yeah, I got nothin’.

Meh.

:: The offensive line. I know, I harp on this all the time, but it’s still an issue, isn’t it? They do OK in pass protection, but the run blocking is terrible. They still don’t overpower guys off the line of scrimmage, so Bills running backs are either doing too much east-west running or having to push their way through crowds at the line for any positive gain. The line’s gone from jaw-droppingly-bad a couple of years ago to “Meh”, which I guess is an improvement, but Melvin Fowler’s just an awful center. I wonder if in spending so much energy wondering who the next Jim Kelly’s going to be, we’ve lost sight of the fact that this team won’t be a great team until we find the next Kent Hull.

:: Josh Reed whiffing on a pass toward the end of the game. At this point, the outcome was pretty much set, and the pass was way too high, but Reed should have gone up for it. It did, however, look to me that Reed may have had the sun in his eyes when he turned for the ball and whiffed on it because he just couldn’t see where the heck it was.

D'oh!

:: It’s over, folks. JP Losman’s era in Buffalo is done. He had his chance this year, and frankly, he blew it. I find this a bummer because I like the guy, but his inability to hit receivers on the numbers no matter how open they are, coupled with his inability to hit receivers in stride (every catch of a Losman pass seems to come when the receiver has come to a dead stop) and his generally bad decision process means that he’s just not going to get it done. It’s time for Trent Edwards.

:: Defensive line. They play hard, but without a large body in the middle to clog lanes and occupy multiple blockers, the smaller guys on the ends just get lost. Aaron Schobel has just 2.5 sacks so far this year. Ugh.

Like last year, this year has become about letting talented youngsters emerge and finding out about Losman. Maybe next year can actually be about getting good again. I think it can happen, but they have to get better at the line of scrimmage. Please oh please.

(Oh, and a giant raspberry to the Philadelphia Eagles, who toyed with my emotions last night in nearly knocking off the New England Baby Seal Clubbers, but instead allowing the Evil Ones to escape with the win. Ugh!)

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New England Satanic Puppy Eaters 56, Bills 10

Lord, now that was a steamrolling. Holy crap. I’m still not sure that Belichick’s Boys of Ultimate Evil are going to go undefeated, but yeesh, they’ve probably got a better shot at it than anybody has in years.

Why am I not convinced that the Foxborough Hitlers are going to go 16-0? Because of the way the standings work out. They’ll clinch the AFC East with just one more win (probably this weekend), and assuming Indianapolis doesn’t lose again, they’ll clinch the top seed with four more wins, which would leave two meaningless games at the end of their schedule. Now, their last two games are one at home against Miami (no problem), but then on the road at the Giants, who may need that game for either playoff position or possibly even a division crown. And they could end up playing meaningless games sooner than that, if Indy loses again. So, you never know.

Anyhow….

Woo-hoo!

:: Kevin Everett is out of the hospital.

:: The game ended.

Meh.

:: Al Michaels and John Madden, who acted like Buffalo’s City Hall is the single largest City Hall they’ve ever seen in their lives. Come on, guys. It would have been nice to hear them say, “That’s Buffalo’s City Hall, and let me tell you, that is one beautiful building, and this city is full of ’em.”

:: Again, JP Losman. It’s official, folks: I have given up on him. Not that I expected him to beat New England — that would have required, oh, some kind of event involving two snipers on the roof of Ralph Wilson Stadium, the ritual sacrifice of six goats, and a DVD of a Jerry Lewis movie — but can’t he at least complete short passes to open receivers? Apparently not, sadly enough.

Losman strikes me as a terrific guy, which makes this kind of sad for me. I didn’t just want him to succeed here because he was here, but because he’s genuinely likable. But sometime you just wanna win, you know?

D'oh!

:: Smuggy McBrady left the game with his knee intact. What somebody needs to do is send all eleven guys after him, on the game’s first play from scrimmage. Come on, remaining 2007 opponents of the New England Genghis Khans! Take him out! Do it for the children!

Next up: the Bills go to Jacksonville. Apparently JP Losman is still the starter, and Marshawn Lynch may still be out. Whoopee.

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Bill 13, Dolphins 10

I didn’t see all of this game; in fact, I pretty much missed the entire first quarter and the first few minutes of the second. Turns out I didn’t miss much, as the Bills waited until the fourth quarter to pretty much do anything at all in beating the worst team in the NFL. Seriously, Miami is a total mess of a franchise.

Woo-hoo!

:: After that disastrous 0-3 start to the season, the Bills are actually above .500, and at 5-4, they’ve matched my predicted win total for them this season. (Remember, I’d picked them to go 5-11.)

:: Ryan Lindell made a game winning field goal at the end, with the score tied at the time. Everyone who insists that despite his accuracy he’s still not a “clutch kicker” is now lacking a bit of ammunition for their argument (such as it was).

:: Clutch defense. They gave up a 100-yard rusher today, but still made some big plays when it counted.

Meh.

:: JP Losman. Look, I’m rooting for the guy, but he couldn’t do much of anything at all against the league’s worst defense? This was the kind of game we’d hoped for out of him last season, but this isn’t last season. Losman is now a veteran, and he should be able to go into the house of the worst D in the NFL and do better than 12 of 23 for 157 yards, no TDs, and a pick. Yeesh. Losman’s been in the league for as long as Ben Roeythlissburgerr (pretty sure I spelled that wrong), but Losman’s still “developing” while Big Ben’s won a Super Bowl, been to two AFC championship games, and currently has his team at 7-2? Oy.

I accept that Losman’s time here is nearing its end, and that we’re awaiting the official beginning of the Trent Edwards era. At least Losman could go out swinging, and enhance his trade value. Games like today aren’t going to help much.

:: The offensive line. We were told in the preseason, “Wait for the rebuilt line to gel, and then you’ll see good things.” Instead, we’re still seeing Marshawn Lynch run 19 times for only 61 yards. God, I hope Marv Levy uses next year’s draft to bring in some young O-line talent.

D'oh!

:: One first down in the first half? A third quarter score of 3-2? Huh?

There wasn’t a whole lot to love about this game. It was a game. Dull. Boring to watch. A game to have on when you’re in a cafe with free WiFi, so you can blog while halfway paying attention.

Next week? Smuggy McBrady and the rest of his nest of coiled vipers come to town. I can’t wait. (Well, yes I can, because let’s be realistic: this game is highly unlikely to go well for the Bills. I do hope that if the Forces of Evil start running up the score, throwing long passes and going for fourth-down conversions while up more than three TDs in the second half, the Bills have more moxie than the Redskins did and actually take some shots at Smuggy McBrady.)

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Bills 33, Bengals 21

The Buffalo Bills are, right now, a .500 football team.

Yes, you read that right. The team that found ways to lose to Denver and Dallas at home despite leading at the exact moment the clock in the 4th quarter ticked to 00:00, and that got manhandled on the road by New England and Pittsburgh, is now at .500. All they have to do to meet my preseason prediction for a 5-11 season is go 1-7 the rest of the way out, and this team is frankly showing too much character to go 1-7 the rest of the way out. Wow.

So yeah, color me impressed. Of course, I’m one who thinks that they’re beating decent teams, while other, more pessimistic Bills fans might say that the fact that the Bills are beating these teams makes those teams bad teams. Well, to that I saw, Pshaw. That’s right. Pshaw. So onto the commentary!

Woo-hoo!

:: JP Losman. He only had one really bad throw all day, he managed the game smartly, he spread the ball around to different receivers (it seemed like he was only throwing to Lee Evans, but eight different Bills caught passes in this game), and he did some decent running when there was nothing to gain by throwing. I don’t know if this game was enough to convince the Bills’ brass to keep him around, but I still think he’s got a decent NFL career inside him, even if it’s not here, so games like this can only enhance his trade value. I’ve always liked Losman, so even if he’s not the guy in Buffalo, I’m rooting for him to have success.

:: Marshawn Lynch. What a stud. He always keeps his feet moving, he always seems to grind out at least a yard or two after he takes the initial hit, and he finally broke the long run we’ve been waiting to see from him. When he ends up running behind the next great Bills O-line, he’s going to be an absolute force.

:: The Bills’ young players. Just think, folks: these guys will be coming of age when Darth Brady and the rest of his Sith apprentices in New England are on the physical decline of their careers. Heh!

:: Coaching. This game was, as far as I could see, very well coached. Nothing really stupid was done, with one exception (see below). The defense always seems to have guys right around the ball, wherever it is. Tackling has been improved immensely. The motivation continues to be amazing. I don’t know that this is a championship coaching staff, but they’ve got to get some mad props for getting this team back up off the mat after what had to be the most dispiriting start to a season ever.

:: The NFL’s flex schedule! The Bills’ resurgence has given the league cause to move their upcoming home game against New England to Sunday Night Football on NBC in two weeks. Huzzah! Now I really hope that this week at Miami doesn’t become a “trap” game. And how sweet would it be if Buffalo was the team that ended the talk of an undefeated season? (Not that I’d bet on that outcome, but it could happen!)

Meh.

:: I guess I’ll file this under “Meh”, even though they had a pretty good game. I’d still like to see the offensive line improved over the offseason, preferably with a high draft pick. Ditto the D-line. Those guys play incredibly hard, and they’d only benefit from having a nice big body in the middle.

D'oh!

:: Ocho Cinqo. I like that guy, and I hated seeing him go down like that. I hope he’s OK.

:: No defensive pass rush. Oy.

:: Red zone efficiency. Gotta get better down there, guys. Had those four FGs been TDs, this game would have been a blowout.

:: And speaking of red zone efficiency: first-and-goal from the one yard line and you got cute with the playcalling? Aieee! I have a feeling that given four chances to run it up the middle, Marshawn Lynch would have picked up the yard and scored.

Other stuff from around the NFL:

:: Wow, this Peterson kid in Minnesota seems to have some potential, doesn’t he?

:: My preseason pick for the Super Bowl? Saints over Ravens? Yeah, it could happen — and, in the immortal words of Wayne Campbell, monkeys might fly out of my butt.

:: It’s OK, Indianapolis. In the James Bond movies, Blofeld always wins Round One.

Next up: the Bills travel to winless Miami, who are off this week after losing in London last week. Be careful, guys! This looks like a classic “trap” game! Be mindful, for past the Dolphins, Eeee-vil lurks!

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Can the Colts have haloes attached to their helmets?

In comments to this post, Jess Nevins, who is a fan of the New England Stupid Patriots, takes exception to the fact that I used the word “evil” in reference to his team. Here is his comment, in full:

Yes, by all means, go Colts–let’s root for the team whose coach is out there giving speeches against gay marriage and shilling for a poisonously homophobic organization. (Just do a search for “Tony Dungy” “gay marriage”).

All Bill Belichick did was cheat at a game. (And run up the score). Tony Dungy is actively making life harder for millions of gay men and women. (Not to mention claiming that the homophobic organization is doing God’s work, which by extension means that those who oppose that organization are doing the Devil’s work).

I can understand hating the Patriots and rooting against them–but when you bandy around words like “evil,” let’s remember who the really bad people are.

[second comment]

Also–do some searching into Belichick’s work with Jim Brown’s Amer-I-Can Program, or his work with the Lazarus House Ministries.

Everyone’s entitled to hate a team and individuals on that team. But, finally, *enough* with the “evil.” Belichick may be boorish, asocial ,a philanderer, and a bad sport (although he’s always been more gracious in defeat than Peyton Manning has been–Belichick never blames anyone else for his losses, which Manning can’t say), but the man does good work outside of the realm of football, while Dungy is an activist for homophobia outside of football (and undoubtedly inside–if one of the Colts were gay, there’s no way they could come out in that locker room environment). “Evil” is for God (if there is any such creature) to decide. But I know which one is the better person.

Well…lately I’ve noticed that more than a few commentators, as well as outright New England and/or Boston sports fans, seem utterly shocked that someone out there isn’t swooning over the dreamy football feats of Brady-and-company. A few points in response:

:: This is, first and foremost, my blog, and I’ll choose the words I use, thank you very much. If I want to use the word “evil” to describe Bill Belichick and the Patriots, I’ll do just that.

:: That said, I will also assume that my readers are capable of differentiating “evil” used in the context of a sports team and “evil” used in other contexts. Now, I’m not sure if Jess is just a Patriots fan or if he’s a fan of all the Boston-area sports teams, but I’ve noticed that some people are upset about the “evil” label being applied to the Patriots, where I don’t recall ever seeing any such disapproval toward describing the New York Yankees as “the evil empire”.

Of course, everybody knows that the Yankees are neither “evil” nor an “empire”. Everybody recognizes that as a metaphor. That so many hyper-defensive Pats fans suddenly seem to be unable to recognize an over-the-top metaphor when it smacks them in the face when applied to their team strikes me as funny. Get a grip. More on sports metaphor in a moment, but….

:: Jess has been a sporadic reader of this blog for a long time, and he’s been reading my over-the-top venting about the Patriots for an equally long time. I was calling the Patriots “evil” before it was “cool” to do so (here’s my post from their Super Bowl win in 2004, if you don’t believe me), and Jess knows this. I’ve also led off each season of football blathering in this space with a frank admission that what I’m doing is pure blathering, and to that point I’ve even taken to decorating my football posts with pictures of Homer Simpson. So Jess knows that he shouldn’t take me seriously when I say that the Patriots are “evil”. I suspect then that he’s reacting to all the other commentators out there who have glommed onto the word — such as the sanctimonious claptrap recently penned by Gregg Easterbrook on the subject. I’ve seen other Patriots fans reacting thusly to the “evil” characterization, and I never saw Yankees fans react that way. Or Cowboys fans, back in the 1990s — in fact, they relished it. (Here’s a profanity-laced post on another blog that illuminates that very point.) Tell a Yankees fan that their team is evil? They’ll laugh at you. Same deal with a Cowboys fan. Tell a Pats fan that their team is evil? Break out the corkscrew, because here comes the whine.

:: Point-by-point comparisons of the off-the-field activities of the various personages involved are, for the purposes of this discussion, a waste of time. I’m not excusing Tony Dungy’s stance on gay marriage, because I stand totally opposed to it (Dungy’s stance, that is). But really — since we’re talking over-the-top language here, this is really all rather pointless, because except for extreme cases, sports fandom just doesn’t work that way. I’ll bet there are plenty of Indianapolis Colts fans who find Dungy’s anti-gay views objectionable, but forgive them because he’s their coach. That may be an ugly reality, but that’s the reality. Arguing about it here seems odd. If, in the future, some turn of events transpired that brought Tony Dungy to the Patriots sidelines, would Jess then dump his investment of fandom in that team? Would I? Well, maybe he would — we all have issues that are deal-breakers. I know that if the Bills are the team that gives Michael Vick his second chance in the NFL, I’m going to have a pretty hard time rooting for them.

:: This is perhaps a harder point to defend, but I can say with experience that one can hold some pretty dispiriting views on certain issues and still be a decent person. We once had a family friend who was a fine, fine friend indeed — and he was also a terrible bigot, to the point where he stopped going to his favorite bar when the bar hired a black bartender. I don’t like Dungy’s stance on gays; it leaves a pretty bad taste in my mouth. But picking sports teams isn’t like picking a political party, and we shouldn’t act like it is.

:: From what I’ve read about the NFL and its general approach toward masculinity, I find it hard to believe that an openly gay player would be any more welcome in the Patriots locker room than any other. This is a serious problem with the NFL in general, not just with Tony Dungy.

:: No, Jess, you don’t “know who the better person is”, unless you know both of these guys personally and can assess their lives and their vices and their virtues as part of a whole package. And neither do I. This is just silly. My general impression is that Belichick is a creep. Yes, this is certainly colored by my being a Bills fan — after all, I get to watch my team get clobbered by the guy twice a year, and he coached the Giants’ D in Super Bowl XXV. But yes, his public persona is, to me, that of a creep. (And I’m not a complete homer here; I didn’t like Gregg Williams when he was here, or Mike Mularkey, and Lawyer Milloy lost me with that stupid “You can’t feed your family on Super Bowl rings” nonsense.)

:: I’m going to need an explanation someday about why it is that Barry Bonds’s cheating is so horrible, so beyond the pale, that his Hall of Fame credentials are besmirched and that an entire era of baseball records needs to be asterisked at best and completely ignored at worst, while Bill Belichick’s cheating is just “Oh, that whacky Bill, just looking for an edge!”, and he pays his fine and the matter’s closed.

:: On a more general point, objecting to the use of the word “evil” in a sports context seems a tad naive. Sport is founded on the entire notion of competition, and competition with rooting interests pretty much implies that for the spectators, there are “good guys” and “bad guys”. And football amps this up to a very high degree. It’s inherent in the game’s very terminology: offense and defense. Aerial attack. Long bomb. Front lines. Shotgun formation. Blockers described as battering rams. Heavy hits. Quarterbacks as “generals”, in “command”. “Gridiron warriors”. “Monsters of the Midway”. “The Killer B’s.” “Steel curtain”. The Bills’ offense during the Super Bowl years, called the “K-gun”.

Football’s entire persona as a sport is steeped in terminology of conflict, war, and the like. Just watch any of those old NFL Films documentaries, with John Facenda’s voiceovers droning on about the “gladiators of the gridiron” tumbling over the “frozen tundra” of the field, and you’ll hear this kind of thing over and over. To take a sport like this, and then complain about the word “evil”? Come on, Pats fans.

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Bills 13, Jets 3

We’re on a roll! Playoffs or bust! (Yeah, I know which of those is more likely, but still….)

Woo-hoo!

:: The Bills’ defense had a pretty good game, although they were helped out by the Jets’ coaching staff and its decision to not run the ball as much as they should have. Going on the road and holding the opposition to three points is superb, though.

:: JP Losman. I’m still a fan of his, and I’m glad to see him come in and succeed. No, he didn’t set the world on fire, but he completed one long bomb and very nearly completed another (he put the ball right where Roscoe Parrish needed it to be, and Parrish simply dropped it). Now, if the Bills are convinced that Trent Edwards is the future and needs to play, then I’m fine with that. I just hope they’re able to trade Losman in the offseason and get something good in return — a draft pick or two. If Losman gets more time this year that looks like yesterday, the chances of that happening go up.

I’m not convinced that Losman is a bust in the NFL. Is he the next Jim Kelly or Brett Favre? Probably not. But I wouldn’t at all rule out the thought of him having a career like, oh, Brad Johnson, Jeff Hostetler, Mark Rypien, or Rich Gannon. All of those guys were around a long time, none of them is a Hall-of-Famer, but all went to Super Bowls and three of them won it.

:: Lee Evans. Wow, did he want to make a play or what?

Meh.

:: Marshawn Lynch. Not Lynch himself, actually; just the fact that he’s trying so hard to have a big game and he keeps running into eight-man fronts every time he touches the ball. He’s a draft-horse type of player, but for one reason or another he hasn’t got the results yet. He will, though.

:: Offensive line. This is the main reason why Lynch hasn’t excelled yet. They should be “gelling” by now, and yet…they don’t look like they’re gelling. They still aren’t asserting command over the line of scrimmage. And how many consecutive corner blitzes did the Jets run yesterday, with none of them being picked up at all, even when the TV guys are saying, “Here comes another corner blitz!” before the ball was even snapped?

D'oh!

:: Throwing a long bomb in an obvious running situation again. Yes, it worked out well this time, but it didn’t have to, and I’d really like to see the Bills not have to contain a last-gasp comeback attempt in the final moment in a game. I’d like to see them get the ball with 3:30 or so left and never give up the ball again. That’s when I’ll start believing that the O-line is coming together.

:: The Washington Redskins. Were you guys even on the field? And you know what: if you’re pissed about the Stupid Patriots running up the score on you, then why not take a few shots at Brady? Why not take some jabs at Moss? It’s not like the penalty yards are going to hurt you anymore than you’re already hurt, since you’re already bleeding points all over the field anyway. Do what they do in baseball: take some shots at ’em. You’re getting paid millions of dollars to play football anyway, so either dish out some punishment in return, or shut up about being rung up for 52 points. As far as I’m concerned, the right to complain about running up the score ends when you’re making what an NFL player makes.

:: That game in London. How lame was that???

Next week: the Bengals come to town. And go Colts! Only you can stop evil from becoming truly ascendant.

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Yeah, but how do they get the scores to run across the bottom of the screen?

Today’s Buffalo News ran an interesting article, believe it or not, on the technical challenges posed to the TV people in superimposing the yellow first-down line on the screen during football games. Unfortunately, I can’t for the life of me find that article on the News‘s website (maybe it’s not even there, given that it didn’t originate with them), so here’s a page that details the process. Cool!

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Bills 19, Ravens 14

Wow — a win! I get to post about a win! Woo-hoo!

Woo-hoo!

:: The Bills’ defense, which played exceptionally hard yet again and this time didn’t fold in the closing minutes.

:: Trent Edwards, who didn’t play spectacularly but played with a good deal of poise. I’m not terribly wild about Edwards yet, but it does say something that in his third career start he’s roughly doing what Buffalo fans hoped JP Losman would be able to do in his second season.

Meh.

:: The quarterback “controversy”. Last week, in naming Edwards the starter this week, Dick Jauron cited JP Losman’s knee injury, an excuse which everyone knows is bogus and only puts off the actual moment when Jauron has to admit that he thinks Edwards is the best hope for the Bills’ future. That was dumb.

:: Losman’s career in Buffalo possibly being over. I’m pretty bummed that Losman apparently hasn’t panned out as a starter and is likely on his way out, because frankly I like the guy enormously. You have to go with who wins, obviously, or who appears more likely to become the guy you’re looking for. If Losman’s not the guy, then Losman’s not the guy, and so be it. But the way the staff is letting him twist in the wind is pretty cold, since he’s never shown himself to be anything other than a team player and a community guy.

And if Losman’s time here in Buffalo is at an end, I do hope that he becomes a quality starter someplace else. I still hope he has success and isn’t just a career backup. And I hope that’s in the NFC, so we don’t have to see him all that often.

D'oh!

:: Is offensive coordinator Steve Fairchild going to call a dumb pass play in every late-game obvious running situation that comes up this year??? He made such a call again, and it hurt the Bills tremendously: leading by twelve and deep in their own territory, the Bills faced a third-and-eight situation. Obviously you run the ball, grind more time off the clock, and then punt. Fairchild, however, calls a pass. Which the rookie QB misfires, resulting in a pick that later gets converted into a touchdown. Ugh.

:: The lack of size on the defensive line. If this team had a big run-stopper in the middle, imagine how good things would be right now.

:: Tom Effing Brady and the rest of his evil, stinking team. God, I am the biggest Colts fan on Earth right now.

Next up: at the Jets, with a late kickoff. That’ll be cool; I like the occasional late kickoff.

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