Bills D Comes up
in a Pinch
Bills still looking for the O
The Bills D went by the old model of "bend don't
break" mentality this week. The 'Fins could drive but Buffalo
would dig in in the redzone. The Bills had a pair of Redzone turnovers
and had a +3 on the turnover margin for the day, but they had
0 points off the turnovers. Kelly Holcomeb surplanted JP Losman
as the starting QB, but it didn't really spark anything offensivly,
20/26 and 169 yds . . . that isn't going to cut it for Bills Fan.
Bills 20, 'Fins 14
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) -- Nate Clements had to act fast. The
game was on the line and the Buffalo Bills couldn't afford another
loss.So when the Bills cornerback saw the ball coming loose, he
provided one last punch to pry it free.
Clements delivered the key play -- forcing Ronnie Brown's fumble
in the final minutes -- and preserved Buffalo's 20-14 win over
the Miami Dolphins on Sunday.
"I've been trying to punch at it all day because that dude's
a load," Clements said. "I just went for the ball and
it came out."
It happened after the Dolphins overcame a 17-0 deficit and were
threatening to pull ahead.
After marching the Dolphins 36 yards on seven plays, Gus Frerotte
hit Brown with a short pass over the middle. Brown cut to his
right and was caught from behind by London Fletcher. Clements
ran up and stripped the ball before Brown was down, and Troy Vincent
recovered on the Bills' 18.
"Today, our backs were up against the wall on several occasions
and we did some good things," Vincent said. "They were
in a position to score and we got a fumble -- it's always huge."
Forget the apparent quarterback controversy that might suddenly
be brewing in Buffalo after veteran backup Kelly Holcomb started
in place of 2004 first-round pick J.P. Losman.
Chalk this win up to a banged-up defense that overcame its suddenly
maligned reputation after allowing 1,054 yards in its last three
games.
"This victory period is a big confidence boost," Clements
said. "This is something that can start a snowball effect.
... For us to come out on top it's huge."
Clements' turnover was the fifth of the game for Buffalo (2-3)
and helped snap the Bills' three-game losing streak.
The Bills offense also responded to a degree. Holcomb completed
11 of his first 15 attempts and engineered scoring drives on Buffalo's
first three possessions.
Holcomb finished 20-of-26 for 169 yards passing and a touchdown.
Willis McGahee had 86 yards rushing and a touchdown while Eric
Moulds had 59 yards receiving and a TD. After scoring 17 points
in the first half, the Bills were limited to Rian Lindell's 47-yard
field goal.
The Dolphins (2-2), coming off a bye week, couldn't overcome
their undisciplined play.
Miami committed a franchise-record 18 penalties for 108 yards.
The costliest was a holding call against linebacker Donnie Spragan
that negated Vonnie Holliday's 8-yard sack on third down. The
penalty gave Buffalo a first-and-goal at the Dolphins' 3, setting
up Moulds' 2-yard touchdown catch that put the Bills up 17-0.
Linebacker Zach Thomas shook his head in frustration.
"We killed ourselves on defense, man," Thomas said.
"Let them beat you, don't let yourselves beat you."
Coach Nick Saban wouldn't pin the blame on Brown's fumble, saying
the Dolphins dug too big a hole for themselves in the first half.
"We need to improve our ability to play with discipline,
especially on the road, especially in the beginning of games,"
Saban said. "That put us behind the 8-ball."
Limited to 106 yards in the first half, the Dolphins responded
when Frerotte hit Will Heller for a 1-yard touchdown pass 10 minutes
into the third quarter. Frerotte then found Randy McMichael for
a 30-yard TD with eight minutes left, capitalizing on McGahee's
fumble at the Buffalo 35.
Frerotte went 21-of-33 for 226 yards, with two touchdowns and
three interceptions. Brown had 97 yards rushing.
The Bills offense was just the opposite, looking strong in the
first half under Holcomb, who threw in rhythm and relied mostly
on quick outs or short throws over the middle, all things Losman
appeared incapable of doing.
It was a big turnaround for a Buffalo offense that managed 29
points -- two touchdowns and five field goals -- in the last 14
quarters.
While pleased with Holcomb's outing, coach Mike Mularkey refused
to say who his starter was for next week's game against the visiting
Jets.
"We needed a win and this team understood it," Mularkey
said. "We have to win close games at the end. And when we
needed plays, guys made them at the end."
Game notes
The Dolphins are 1-9 in their last 10 road games. ... McMichael
has scored in four straight games, becoming the first Miami player
to do so in a single season since Mark Clayton in 1988. ... Lindell
also made a 24-yard field goal. ... Holcomb's first-half numbers
alone -- 14-of-20 for 118 yards -- bettered what Losman managed
in his last three outings. After throwing for 170 yards in a season-opening
win against Houston, Losman had 113 against Tampa Bay and 75 each
against Atlanta and New Orleans.
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