Texans, Buffalo Bills
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Needless to say, the Houston Texans’ No. 1 defense lived up to its billing, which made for a long night. Buffalo saw its top-five offensive line get thrown around for four quarters, which resulted in Josh Allen taking a career-high eight sacks and 12 hits.
The Bills had a shot in the final minutes to get the lead. They pulled off a wild hook-and-ladder play for 44 yards on fourth-and-27 to keep the game alive. But on fourth down in Texans territory, Allen threw an INT.
The Texans’ ferocious defense prevented the Bills’ offense from getting in any sort of rhythm. A 45-yard touchdown run by James Cook on the team’s first possession of the game was the only offensive touchdown Buffalo scored all night. The Bills’ other points came on a 97-yard kickoff return by Ray Davis and two Matt Prater field goals.
The Bills rank dead last in the league in first-down passing attempts, a predictability that is untenable. That is a tendency Miami, a division opponent who knows the Bills so well, picked up on which led to all the unfavorable down-and-distance situations.
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — Coming off a humbling loss last week, the Buffalo Bills returned home to deliver a helter-skelter 44-32 statement win over the NFC South-leading Tampa Bay Buccaneers, a game that featured nine lead changes.
The Buffalo Bills have ruled out Dalton Kincaid and two other offensive playmakers ahead of their "TNF" game against the Texans.
The Buffalo Bills are reportedly set to bench wide receiver Keon Coleman for their 'TNF' game against the Houston Texans.
Coleman didn’t play because he keeps using the Bills’ code of conduct as a Kleenex. For the third time in only 26 NFL games, coach Sean McDermott benched him for showing up late to work. Three days before a crucial game for which everyone should’ve been laser-focused, Coleman was tardy for a team meeting.
An NFL writer named a three-time Pro Bowl wide receiver a suitable fit for the Buffalo Bills to help the offense.