Bills-Jaguars: Who you got?


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Ed Oliver sacks Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence last season in London. The Bills will play host to Jacksonville in Week 3 this season. Harry Scull Jr., Buffalo News

MARK GAUGHAN
The Jaguars’ season is on the brink, and they visit Houston next week. You’d think the Bills will be facing a desperate team ready to play its best game. On paper, this Jaguars offense should be way better than it has showed. Based on yo-yo-like NFL results (Raiders over Ravens, Vikings over Niners, Falcons over Eagles), the Jaguars are overdue. But the rested Bills should make amends for the egg-laying in London.
Bills, 27-24.

JAY SKURSKI

The Jaguars have largely underachieved since the midway point of 2023, closing last season with a 3-6 record and starting this year 0-2. That’s inexcusable given the talent on the roster. They have, however, given Bills quarterback Josh Allen trouble in his two most recent games against them. Allen surely knows that and would like to turn that record around. Doing so would give the Bills some breathing room heading into a three-game road trip.
Bills, 32-25.

RYAN O’HALLORAN

Both teams should play with a heightened level of desperation – the Jaguars to avoid an 0-3 start (all losses in the conference) that would toe-tag their season before October and the Bills to improve to 3-0 ahead of three consecutive road games. The Jaguars are without cornerback Tyson Campbell, and the Bills should open up their passing game to get Dalton Kincaid, Keon Coleman and Curtis Samuel (combined 12 catches in first two games) going.
Bills, 31-23.

KATHERINE FITZGERALD

A number of players on the Bills have described this matchup as simply “weird.” Defensive tackle Ed Oliver and left tackle Dion Dawkins both said there’s something about the “aura” of the Jaguars that has made for these “weird” games the past few years. On Monday, the Bills shake that weirdness and get the win. The Buffalo offense rolls, putting up 30-plus points for the third straight week. The defense gets the better of Trevor Lawrence and wins the takeaway battle.
Bills, 30-20.
 
Balls: The Buffalo Bills

/thread.

This may be the best team we've had yet with Allen. In a year that many of us saw as a step back, they look unstoppable. Not just the talent, but the attitude! Every play it seems like they're fighting to get one more yard, one more tackle. Everything is humming right now
 

The Jacksonville Jaguars have had many more bad than good moments during their 30-year history. They have finished last in their division nine times. They have lost at least 10 games in 15 seasons. And they have generally chased their tails.

But through all that, they never played a first half as poorly as they did Monday night against the Buffalo Bills.

The Bills did whatever they wanted – and whenever they wanted – during a tour-de-force 34-point first half on their way to a 47-10 win at Highmark Stadium.

A Jaguars team had never allowed so many points in a first half, and they saw their season go down the drain, falling to 0-3.

The Bills improved to 3-0 entering three consecutive road games.

Here is a recap of the Bills’ thorough effort:

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Bills wide receiver Keon Coleman celebrates his touchdown during the second quarter at Highmark Stadium. Joshua Bessex, Buffalo News

Takeaways​

  • Quarterback Josh Allen was lights out. He was pulled with 9:58 remaining, having passed for 263 yards and four touchdowns. He ran for another 44 yards on six carries. Allen completed 23 of 30 passes and his 142.1 rating was the fourth-best of his career.
  • It is easy to like Bills coach Sean McDermott’s early-game aggressiveness. On the Bills’ first possession, they faced a fourth-and-3 from the Jaguars’ 44. Kind of a no man’s land – too long for a field goal – but the decision was good, and so was the play-call. Receiver Khalil Shakir motioned along the line of scrimmage before catching Allen’s pass for 12 yards.
  • Jacksonville ran a good scheme to block Bills kicker Tyler Bass’ first point-after attempt. The Jaguars had a defender going into the outside shoulder of Bills lineman Tylan Grable. That created an opening between Grable and long snapper Reid Ferguson. The Jaguars’ Roy Robertson-Harris wedged through and got his hand up for the block.
  • The Bills are feasting off takeaways. They scored a touchdown off their only takeaway against Arizona, 17 points off three takeaways against Miami and seven points off safety Damar Hamlin’s second-quarter interception.
  • to maneuver around the pocket and extend the play for 6.51 seconds before throwing a 6-yard touchdown pass to tight end Dalton Kincaid.
  • Jacksonville committed three defensive penalties on the same possession, allowing the Bills to take a 34-3 lead into halftime. The Jaguars jumped offside twice and were called for unnecessary roughness. The Bills capped the drive with a 16-yard touchdown catch by running back Ty Johnson.
  • The Bills’ 31-point halftime lead matched the third-largest in franchise history and was the largest since Nov. 1992 against Atlanta (38-7 halftime lead in a 41-14 win).

Game balls​

QB Josh Allen. He threw four first-half touchdowns for the second time in his career (October 2022 vs. Pittsburgh) and rushed three times for 22 yards as the Bills built a 34-3 halftime lead.
WR Khalil Shakir. Whew, he knows how to take a hit and keep on ticking. Does it seem like we say that every week? He scored on a 27-yard catch, breaking two tackles, in the second quarter.
S Damar Hamlin. He posted his first career interception when he collected quarterback Trevor Lawrence’s overthrow.

Gassers​

Jacksonville’s effort. Where was the want-to? The juice? The urgency? Just a pathetic first half by a team that needed a win to get its season going.

Next​

The Bills start a three-game road swing with their second consecutive prime-time appointment on Sunday at Baltimore (8:20 p.m.). The Ravens (1-2) won their first game of the season Sunday at Dallas (28-25). The Ravens rushed for 274 yards
 

Buffalo Bills 47, Jacksonville Jaguars 10​


Grant Gordon's takeaways:
  1. Allen puts on prime-time spectacular. Maybe it’s still way too early to engage in Most Valuable Player discussions. Just don’t tell the Bills Mafia, which chanted, “M-V-P! M-V-P” all Monday long as Josh Allen ran roughshod and took Buffalo along with him for a complete lambasting of the Jaguars. Easily one of the most impressive individual showings and team wins for a club this young season, the Bills burst from the gates and never looked back with Allen leading the whole way. On the opening drive of the “contest,” the Bills marched 70 yards in 10 plays with James Cook concluding it with a 6-yard touchdown run. It was the first of five first-half touchdown drives in as many chances for Buffalo. The last four all ended with Allen touchdown passes. Allen was 22-of-28 for 247 yards, four touchdowns, a 143.0 rating and 22 rushing yards -- in the first half! Buffalo led, 34-3, at the half. There were 30 minutes of game time thereafter, but this one -- a full-blown masterpiece from Allen -- was done at the half. By this point, Allen and the undefeated Bills have shattered any perception that their Super Bowl window has closed.

  2. Bleak times for Jaguars. Through Jacksonville’s first two losses of the season, the Jaguars fell by a combined eight points. It was a bad start to the season, but they were in both ballgames. On Monday night, they were blown out from the kickoff on. The defense was walloped every which way and perhaps most problematic, at least from an optics standpoint, was the Trevor Lawrence-led offense couldn’t come close to keeping up with Josh Allen and Co. Though he got zero help, Lawrence was abysmal to the tune of 21-of-38 passing for 178 yards, a touchdown, an ugly interception and a 65.5 rating. The Jaguars have never made the playoffs after an 0-2 start, and since 1990, only four of 162 0-3 teams (2.5%) have made the postseason. These are not the best of times for Lawrence, once viewed as a generational talent who would transform the franchise, or the Jaguars, after a very unsettling Monday evening.

  3. Hamlin is all the way back and then some. It was on a Monday night 630 days prior that Damar Hamlin endured one of the most frightening injuries in NFL history, suffering a cardiac arrest during a game against the Bengals. This Monday night was a celebration for Hamlin, as he hauled in his first career interception, nabbing a badly thrown Lawrence ball in the second quarter. In his return to the field during the 2023 season, Hamlin was rarely active and played in only five games with two tackles over the campaign. Now, he continues to be an inspiration, but he’s also become a crucial piece in the Bills defense, having started each game and posted 18 tackles so far to go with one monumental INT. Hamlin’s tale of perseverance has entered its most prosperous chapter on the field.

  4. A tale of two supporting casts. Remember all the concern and ballyhoo regarding the Bills trading away Stefon Diggs? Well, 10 Bills caught passes on Monday, with Khalil Shakir (six catches for 72 yards and a touchdown on Monday) settling in as Allen’s top wide receiver target and James Cook (87 scrimmage yards, TD) emerging as the offense’s No. 2 weapon behind Allen. Since Allen has taken over under center, he’s never had a back who's played a pivotal role like Cook. That’s a nod to Cook’s talents and offensive coordinator Joe Brady’s approach. Both have been crucial in Buffalo’s hot start. Just the opposite is the case for the Jaguars. Thanks to garbage time, Travis Etienne rushed past 60 yards for the first time this season, and the promising receiving trio of Christian Kirk, Brian Thomas Jr. and Gabe Davis has largely been a disappointment aside from some flash plays from the rookie first-rounder. Being without an injured Evan Engram was also notable. Heavy is the helmet that wears the crown, and so it goes that Lawrence and head coach Doug Pederson will need to answer for the tribulations, but the struggle bus is filled up with Jaguars.
Next Gen Stats Insight from Jaguars-Bills (via NFL Pro): In his first game lining up against Bills QB Josh Allen since changing his name from Josh Allen to Josh Hines-Allen, Hines-Allen had just one QB pressure and a 3.8% pressure rate.

NFL Research: The Jaguars have lost an NFL-worst eight straight games, dating back to last season. Trevor Lawrence has started each game and has joined Jim Plunkett as the only quarterbacks drafted No. 1 overall in the Common Draft Era to have multiple losing streaks of eight or more games in their career. Lawrence lost eight straight as a rookie in 2021.
 
I could see this be a Tennessee Titan situation for a couple years ago. For a few years they had our number…usually playing them on the road. Then they came here for a Monday night game….first of a double header that night…and we smoked their asses…and just like the Titans the Jags are down their cb1 so…
Mitch Survivor Australia GIF by Australian Survivor
 

1. With a 3-0 start, are the Bills exceeding expectations?

Yes, in the sense that even the most optimistic Bills fan didn’t have two blowouts in the first three games on their bingo card. But we still have to wait to see where they stand in three more weeks. The bar is very high in Buffalo after five straight division championships.

Since the NFL schedule came out in May, the Bills have been staring at a tough opening six games. If they can start 4-2, they’re in excellent shape. They need to be at least 3-3, and they’ve already guaranteed themselves no worse than that.

Now the Bills go on a rare three-game road trip against three teams with Super Bowl aspirations – the Baltimore Ravens, the Houston Texans and the New York Jets. The Bills need only one win to get to 4-2 and have a shot to be 5-1, which would be a big surprise.

2. What are the sustainable takeaways for the Bills’ defense?

There are a bunch. The defensive line is playing as well as the Bills hoped. Granted, the Dolphins and the Jaguars do not have top-10-caliber offensive lines. But the Buffalo front four dominated the line of scrimmage. Von Miller looks just as fast and springy as he did in training camp. Greg Rousseau is off to a fast start. Ditto for A.J. Epenesa.

Meanwhile, the Bills are getting standout play so far from starting cornerbacks Rasul Douglas and Christian Benford. That's sustainable. Who would have expected that the Bills wouldn’t have missed slot cornerback Taron Johnson? Cam Lewis is a good player.

Then there’s the safety situation, which was a massive question mark entering the season. The Bills have allowed only one pass in three games that has traveled 20-plus yards past the line of scrimmage (a 24-yarder).

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Bills defensive end Javon Solomon forces a fumble by Jaguars quarterback Mac Jones on a sack play in the fourth quarter at Highmark Stadium. Harry Scull Jr., Buffalo News

3. What were the Jaguars thinking, playing a ton of man coverage?
That’s the question Jaguars owner Shad Khan should be asking himself. The Jaguars’ defensive game plan was nothing less than coaching malpractice.

Jacksonville is without its star cornerback, Tyson Campbell. Slot safety Darnell Savage was inactive. Then slot cornerback Jarrian Jones got hurt on the first series. A practice squad player, Christian Braswell, took his place. And the Jaguars still played a load of man coverage.

Allen is such a dynamic runner, it’s extremely dangerous playing man coverage against him, with the cornerbacks’ backs turned to the passing pocket. It gives him free rein to scramble. And Allen ran six times for 44 yards. This isn’t to say you can’t play man coverage against the Bills. Kansas City does it. But the Chiefs don’t live in man coverage against Allen, and they mix it up. And the Chiefs have elite cover cornerbacks.
 

Grading the Buffalo Bills in their 47-10 demolition of the Jacksonville Jaguars on Monday at Highmark Stadium …

Running game: A​

It’s not usually a good thing when your quarterback is the team’s leading rusher, but when that quarterback is Josh Allen, conventional wisdom does not always apply. Allen carried six times for 44 yards in the win. The first five of those carries turned into first downs, including a third-and-11 run. Good luck defending that. Allen’s first run came on a designed quarterback draw that converted a third down on Buffalo’s opening drive. James Cook rushed 11 times for 39 yards, including a 6-yard touchdown. Rookie Ray Davis had an up-and-down game, but did have a 10-yard run as part of a seven-carry, 22-yard game. Davis also scored his first career touchdown on a night with plenty of similar milestones. Overall, the Bills rushed for 122 yards on 29 carries, an average of 4.2 yards per carry.

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Bills wide receiver Khalil Shakir, middle, led the Buffalo offense with six catches for 72 yards and a touchdown Monday night against Jacksonville. Joshua Bessex, Buffalo News

Passing game: A+​

Allen completed a swing pass to Cook on first play from scrimmage for a gain of 19 yards, and the passing attack never looked back. The quarterback completed back-to-back passes to Khalil Shakir that each gained 12 yards on Buffalo’s opening possession. Shakir led the Bills with six targets that he turned into six catches for 72 yards and one touchdown, but he was far, far from alone in making contributions through the air. The Bills had 10 different players catch at least one pass, one short of a team record. Cook had four catches for 48 yards. Tight end Dalton Kincaid had three catches for 41 yards, including a touchdown. Keon Coleman’s only catch went for a 24-yard touchdown. One last thing on Shakir: He has caught 27 consecutive targets, which ties Michael Thomas of the Saints in 2018 for the longest such streak by a wide receiver since at least 1991. Let’s also give the Bills’ offensive line its flowers. Allen was not sacked by the Jaguars, making it the second straight game an opposing defense has failed to record a sack. What’s more, Allen has been hit just once the past two games.

Run defense: A​

The final numbers don’t tell the full story. The Jaguars finished with 92 yards on 17 carries, an average of 5.4 yards per rush. Travis Etienne gained 22 of those yards on a garbage-time carry with about 3 minutes left in the game. What in the world was Etienne doing in the game at that point is a great question, but we digress. Otherwise, Buffalo’s run defense was solid. Etienne torched the Bills the last time these teams met in London in 2023, but he was mostly held in check until that fourth-quarter carry. Mostly because of the score, the Jaguars attempted just 17 runs compared to 46 passes. Linebacker Dorian Williams led Buffalo’s defense with 10 tackles. In the first half, the Jaguars gained just 19 yards on seven carries. Etienne’s long carry in the first two quarters was 3 yards.

Pass defense: A+​

Pick a stat, and it looks good for the Bills’ pass defense. The team registered five sacks against Jacksonville’s two quarterbacks – one each by Von Miller, A.J. Epenesa, Javon Solomon, Ja’Marcus Ingram and Casey Toohill. The Bills registered eight passes defensed, with safety Damar Hamlin leading the way with two, including his first career interception. Rasul Douglas expertly read an RPO play on Jacksonville’s second offensive play to force an incompletion. On the next play, Cam Lewis had a pass defensed. Christian Benford played another solid game, including a stout open-field tackle against Jaguars tight end Luke Farrell that resulted in just a 1-yard gain.

Special teams: A-​

Tyler Bass had an extra point blocked after Buffalo’s first touchdown, but that was the only negative. Bass rebounded nicely. Rookie Brandon Codrington has some real juice as a returner. He returned two punts for 41 yards. That's looking like a sneaky-good move by general manager Brandon Beane to acquire Codrington from the divisional-rival Jets. Ty Johnson’s only kick return went for 31 yards. Sam Martin was called on to punt just once, and that went 49 yards and was not returned. Eight of Bass’ nine kickoffs went for touchbacks.

Coaching: A+​

Facing fourth and 3 on the Bills’ first possession, Sean McDermott again showed no hesitation in going for it, and the resulting first down kept alive a drive that eventually reached the end zone. Offensive coordinator Joe Brady called an absolute beauty of a game. A perfect first half allowed Brady to take his foot off the game somewhat in the second, or else the Bills could have been well on their way to hanging 60 on the Jaguars. If we wanted to nitpick, we could point out the team had to burn a timeout in the first quarter with 6:35 remaining. We also could point to the six penalties for 47 lost yards, a week after being penalized just once. Nobody likes a buzzkill, though, and those complaints feel like reaching. McDermott, Brady and defensive coordinator Bobby Babich all came through in a big way.
 

They all heard you, Buffalo Bills fans. The players on offense had joined quarterback Josh Allen for another touchdown celebration Monday night, and amid the yelling and helmet-slaps, they all heard you.

“MVP! MVP! MVP!”

“Oh yeah, I could hear it,” left guard David Edwards said with a wide grin in the Bills’ locker room after a 47-10 rout/blowout/bludgeoning of the hapless Jacksonville Jaguars.

It was that loud, the collective chant after the Bills completed a nearly perfect first half, scoring their fifth touchdown in five possessions. And it was that clear, the chant after Allen threw his fourth touchdown to a fourth different teammate, all four from varying distances (6, 24, 27 and 16 yards).

“MVP! MVP! MVP!”

“It was fun hearing that,” center Connor McGovern said.

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Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen celebrates running back James Cook’s 6-yard touchdown run to start the scoring Monday night against Jacksonville. Harry Scull Jr., Buffalo News

And delivering the zinger and The Story of the Bills’ 3-0 start, McGovern added: “It’s true. It’s just the truth.”

It sure is true.

The chants were appropriate and accurate.

“He’s just special,” Edwards said. “What he does throwing the ball, it’s really hard to describe how good of a player he is. I think he’s one of the all-time greats.”

The chants were earned and deserved.

“Personally, I think he’s the best quarterback in the league,” nickel corner Cam Lewis said.

Put Allen atop the NFL MVP race. Keep him there until he shows he doesn’t merit it. Vault him ahead of Kansas City’s Patrick Mahomes.

Three games into this season, Allen has yet to throw an interception. Three games into this season, he has seven touchdown passes. And three games into this season, he is playing a smart-as-all-get-out style of football that has him spreading the ball around and avoiding punishment (he even slid on one play!).

Allen completed 23 of 30 passes for 263 yards. His 142.1 rating was the fourth-highest of his career (including regular season and playoffs). All four of his touchdowns came in the first half, the second time he’s done that. He rushed six times for a team-high 44 yards. And he sat out the final 9:58.

This was nearly three hours of one team (the Jaguars) tapping out on their season and headed toward another floor-to-ceiling overhaul by owner Shad Khan (coach Bill Belichick, anybody?), and one team (the Bills) that keeps ascending week after week.

Allen, naturally, led the way, and he didn’t begin a little after 7:30 p.m. Monday.

The tone was set last Wednesday during the Bills’ first practice since beating Miami on Sept. 12. The players had all weekend to rest and enjoy their 31-10 win over the Dolphins. But it also created a sense of wariness – could the Bills build on the 2-0 start instead of resting on their initial achievements? The Bills practiced in full pads. There was no let-up. There was no repeat of stinker-type losses to Jacksonville in 2021 and ’23.

“This could have easily been a game where we had 10 days off and we let up on the gas; I didn’t sense that from our guys,” Allen said. “I sensed a lot of urgency.”

The urgency was in plain sight from the Bills’ opening drive. From the start, on display was a quarterback in command of his team’s scheme, confident in his teammates to get open and comfortable with his pass protection to stay in the pocket.

Allen was throwing darts to all of his eligible receivers. Literally.

First drive: James Cook for 19 yards. … Khalil Shakir for consecutive 12-yard completions. … Curtis Samuel for 9. … Nine-yard Allen keeper. … Bills led 6-0.
Second drive: Samuel for 10 yards. … Marquez Valdes-Scantling for 7. … Dalton Kincaid for 28. … A 2-yard Allen sneak on fourth-and-1. … Kincaid for a 6-yard touchdown. … Bills led 13-0.
Third drive: Cook for 17 yards. … Keon Coleman for a 24-yard touchdown. … Bills led 20-3.
Fourth drive: Shakir for 8 yards. … Shakir for a 27-yard touchdown. … Bills led 27-3.
Fifth drive: Ty Johnson for 8 yards. … Shakir for 8. … Kincaid for 7. … Johnson for a 16-yard touchdown. … Bills led 34-3.
Every darn bit of it before halftime.

Allen had only 42 pass attempts in the first two games as offensive coordinator Joe Brady leaned into the running game, knowing he had a whole satchel full of pass plays to draw upon if needed.

Brady and Allen felt it was the best route against Jacksonville. That meant trouble for the Jaguars, who were without top corner Tyson Campbell and top nickel Darnell Savage.

“We knew we would have to throw it,” Allen said. “They played us with a lot of man (coverage), and guys just made plays. Our O-line fought their tails off, and our defense gave us good field position.”

So Allen threw it and threw it and threw it. He was 5-of-6 passing for 56 yards on the first drive and 6-of-8 passing for 60 yards on the second drive. It was one of those games that any football fan should appreciate for Allen’s talent. This was Great Josh.

“It’s difficult to describe how awesome he is,” Edwards said.

“MVP! MVP! MVP!”
 

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There’s a new No. 1 in town, with Josh Allen playing better than anyone on the planet, and he’s got the Buffalo Bills on a mission very early in the season.

Plus, Patrick Mahomes hasn’t exactly looked like … Patrick Mahomes.

Though the Kansas City Chiefs star is on pace for a career high in completion percentage, he’s got five touchdowns against four interceptions — nearly as many picks as he had in all of 2019 (five) and 2020 (six) and putting him on pace for a career high. His 219.7 passing yards per game would be significantly lower than last year’s career worst of 261.4 and almost a football field shy of his career best of 318.6 in 2018.

This isn’t to say Mahomes is cooked or falling off the same cliff everyone wanted to shove Tom Brady off of in 2014. More than likely, Mahomes is working to see what will and won’t work as the season progresses, much like he did in 2023. They’re incorporating new elements to the offense, while perennial safety net Travis Kelce appears to finally be fading.

All the while, the Chiefs are undefeated. They’ve got more room for error than any team in the NFL, especially with an upper-tier defense, so Mahomes doesn’t need to post record-breaking numbers every week like he did earlier in his career. He’s savvy enough to recognize that after winning three Super Bowls, there’s a long-term element at stake. Remember, the Chiefs looked vulnerable for most of last season before another epic playoff run.

Mahomes’ superlatives are still unmatched. And if the NFL started over with a fantasy draft, Mahomes would be the consensus top pick. Posting numbers or not, Mahomes is still a nightmare for defenses with the game or season on the line.

But Allen has been considerably better this season. He’s completed 75 percent of his passes for 634 yards, seven touchdowns and no interceptions. He’s also added 85 rushing yards and two scores on the ground.

Even after losing Stefon Diggs and key members of the defense, Allen’s Bills are the only team to start the season with three 30-point games, and he’s looking like the early MVP favorite.

The Athletic’s Week 4 QB rankings

This week in ‘why coaching matters …’​

Sam Darnold, Justin Fields and Malik Willis have already smashed preseason expectations, and they’re all doing it with new teams.

Darnold, a backup or spot starter in recent years, was brought to Minnesota as a safety blanket for rookie J.J. McCarthy, who ended up tearing his meniscus in the summer. The 27-year-old has never looked better, and head coach Kevin O’Connell’s scheme is a major reason. Darnold never had an opportunity like this with the New York Jets or Carolina Panthers.

The Pittsburgh Steelers traded for Fields to push Russell Wilson, whose calf injury flared up in Week 1. Now Fields is orchestrating an offense that can highlight his mobility while sprinkling in smart, timely passing, and the defense is allowing a league-low 8.7 points per outing.

There’s absolutely no pressure for Fields to play outside his means, and he’s completing an astounding 73.3 percent of his passes with a single interception. If Fields didn’t have — at minimum — an above-average day with the Chicago Bears, they didn’t have much of a chance to win.


The Green Bay Packers acquired Willis on Aug. 26 from the Tennessee Titans for a seventh-round pick to boost the backup spot. The Packers were essentially in regular-season mode by the time Willis arrived, so his practice opportunities were limited. The 2022 third-rounder had never thrown a touchdown pass before taking over when Jordan Love sprained his MCL in the opener.

Now Matt LaFleur is the early favorite to win NFL Coach of the Year with Willis leading the Packers to two victories while completing 25-of-33 passes for 324 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions in two starts. He’s also got 114 rushing yards and a score.


Like Darnold and Fields, Willis entered the league with enough talent, but he wasn’t in a great situation due to the offense around him. All three were such unknowns in new situations that they debuted in the bottom 10 of the rankings. Now, with more evidence, they’re deservedly climbing, though Willis will eventually fall out when Love returns.

Remember this when labeling a quarterback a bust. There are situations every year when QBs — young and old — can’t succeed because they aren’t given the appropriate help.

And when they are given the necessary resources, it’s a thing of beauty.

This is 40​

Aaron Rodgers delivered a vintage performance Thursday against the Patriots, completing 27-of-35 passes for 281 yards and a couple of touchdowns. He did whatever he wanted.


To be fair, the Patriots didn’t offer a lot of defensive resistance. But aside from their poor tackling against the Jets, this had been a defense that league evaluators have described as tough, aggressive and well-coached, so credit Rodgers for making it look easy. He was in total control, delivering quick completions from the pocket or extending plays to give his receivers time to get open.

They’ve got a few more tough defenses coming up with the Denver Broncos, Vikings, Buffalo Bills and Steelers, so we’ll quickly discover how much of a threat Rodgers and the Jets can be in the AFC. But if Thursday was the start of something, the Jets have a chance to contend in the conference.

No more scholarships​

As mentioned in previous rankings, the standards can be different for certain players based on experience, past accomplishments, the situation around them, the potential for high ceilings or low floors and, of course, current performance. That’s why top pick Caleb Williams debuted at No. 19 and expected breakout candidate Anthony Richardson — the 2023 No. 4 pick who entered the season with four career starts — opened at No. 21.

So far, both ubertalented QBs have flashed but have been largely inconsistent. Those inconsistencies were on full display Sunday when they squared off and struggled throughout most of the game. Circumstances matter, like offensive line performance or play calling. The blame doesn’t usually fall squarely on the QB, not in these rankings anyway.

They both fell this week to their season lows in the rankings. It’s not indicative of their future. It’s entirely representative of their performance.

For Williams in particular, it looks like everything is still too sped up for him. He badly airmailed a go-route to an open Rome Odunze in the second half on a throw Williams is capable of making nine out of 10 times. However, he rushed his read and delivery, and the throw sailed as a result. That’s just one example.

Once Williams and Richardson improve their consistency, they’ll fly up the rankings. It’s not out of the question that both could finish in the top 20, if not the top half. They just need experience.

Under protection​

It’s become increasingly evident Patriots coach Jerod Mayo made the right call to start Jacoby Brissett and leave Drake Maye safe on the sidelines.

The Patriots have given up a sack on 12.5 percent of their dropbacks, the third-worst rate in the league this season and a mark that’s on pace to be the 14th worst since sacks became an official stat in 1982. The 1992 Eagles were the only team to give up such a high percentage of sacks and finish with a winning record.

What’s more, Patriots wide receivers have combined to catch 21 passes for 169 yards and one touchdown through three games. There are five wideouts around the league who have exceeded that output by themselves.

While there were credible reasons to start Maye in Week 1, last week put things into perspective. The Panthers have, at best, set back Bryce Young’s development a couple of years. At worst, they’ll never get anything out of their heavy draft investment. This has been the result of starting Young without enough help around him and sinking his confidence to the point where they had to bench him.

The Patriots can’t afford to do that with Maye. Their quarterback play has been among the worst in the league in the post-Tom Brady era, as the veteran route with Cam Newton had a restricted ceiling and the development path with Mac Jones was an exercise in organizational self-sabotage.

The concern in the short term, though, is that Brissett has withstood an increased number of hits that have taken him longer to get back to his feet. It may only be a matter of time before one leads to an injury that forces him to the sideline. And Maye was sacked twice in 10 dropbacks Thursday during a relief appearance against the Jets.

While there’s value in watching and learning, there’s even greater value in keeping Maye out of harm’s way and maintaining his confidence until the Patriots can improve the entire operation around the quarterback.

The Brian Flores effect​

Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores is on a heater. After stymying the struggling Giants in Week 1, Flores’ defense created constant headaches for Brock Purdy and C.J. Stroud, forcing two of the league’s best quarterbacks to look ordinary.

A market correction this week felt necessary for Purdy, who dropped from 10th to 12th after losing to the Vikings. We’ll continue to bookmark that thought when quarterbacks have substandard days against Flores, and he’s got some more doozies on the schedule. The Vikings face the Packers this week (so, Love or Willis) then take on Rodgers, Jared Goff, Matthew Stafford, Richardson and Trevor Lawrence to round out the first half of the season.

Flores is looking like the NFL’s best defensive coordinator through three weeks. Just ask a couple of the league’s top QBs.
 

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The “M-V-P!” chants inside Highmark Stadium began with 3:25 still left in the first quarter.

Though excitedly premature, Buffalo Bills fans weren’t wrong.

They simply couldn’t know Josh Allen was merely beginning his onslaught Monday night. By halftime, he’d already had one of the greatest statistical games of his career. But what was truly remarkable was how Allen went about his nasty business in a 47-10 victory over the Jacksonville Jaguars.

We spent months analyzing and guessing and kvetching about how Allen would perform without Stefon Diggs and Gabriel Davis anymore. Diggs and his brother, Dallas Cowboys cornerback Trevon Diggs, insinuated on social media it was the receiver who made the quarterback, not vice versa.

So whom would Allen throw to?

Whomever he damn well pleases, apparently.

At the intermission, he’d completed passes to nine teammates while guiding Buffalo to touchdowns on each of its five possessions. He was 22-of-28 for 247 yards and touchdowns to four players: tight end Dalton Kincaid, rookie receiver Keon Coleman, receiver Khalil Shakir and tailback Ty Johnson. Oh, Allen also led both teams with 22 rushing yards, 3 more than Jacksonville’s entire roster, while protecting his injured left hand.

And there were 30 more minutes left in the game.

“M-V-P!” indeed.

Right around then, a minted MVP tweeted this:


Bills edge rusher A.J. Epenesa knows how LeBron feels, at least on this topic.

“As a defensive player, I get to watch him a lot, up close and personal,” Epenesa said. “I’ve seen him do some crazy things and it’s just … . He’s one of one. I don’t even want to say ‘It’s miraculous’ because he just does his job to the best of his ability, and he does it so well and is such a great leader for us.

“Josh defines what a Bill is.”

When Johnson snagged Allen’s 16-yard lob in the end zone 19 seconds before halftime, he became the sixth Bill with at least one touchdown reception this year. No other club has as many TD catchers.

Winking locker room sources confirmed it was no coincidence that, two offensive plays into the third quarter, Allen made sure to get the lone first-half straggler, Mack Hollins, a reception. It was the 10th time in club history at least 10 players caught a pass.

And then there were 25 more minutes left in the game.

“It’s paying dividends of what we’ve worked on through the entire offseason and through training camp of the ‘everybody eats’ mentality,” Allen said. “It could be your play this play. You never know when it’s going to happen. That’s the beauty of it, when guys buy into this and really understand, like, ‘I may not get the ball four or five times thrown to me a game, but the one or two times I do, I’m going to have opportunities to be in the end zone.’”

To wit, Coleman didn’t play the entire first quarter because he was punished for a tardiness issue. But on his third snap, he caught his first NFL touchdown with 6:19 remaining in the second quarter.

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Rookie Keon Coleman scored his first NFL touchdown in the Bills’ win against the Jaguars. (Gregory Fisher / Imagn Images)

“It’s a fun and wonderful thing,” Allen said, “when you’ve got a bunch of guys that don’t care about the stats. They don’t care about the touchdowns.”

Davis, meanwhile, didn’t make Bills fans miss him Monday night. He caught two passes for 18 yards, both in the third quarter. Diggs has played decently for the Houston Texans, catching 20 passes for 164 yards and two touchdowns. But he’s running the shortest routes of his career and he’s 4.0 yards below his career average per reception. The Bills visit Houston in two weeks as part of a grueling upcoming schedule. More on that below.

Shakir has emerged as Allen’s security blanket. They remained perfect, with Allen completing all six of his attempts sent Shakir’s way for 72 yards and the second-quarter touchdown. Shakir this year has 16 catches on 16 targets for 168 yards and two touchdowns.


“I can say this over and over: He’s a freakin’ football player, emphasis on ‘football’” Allen said. “He loves the game. He does things the right way. He’s so selfless in his approach throughout the week. He might get two passes in practice, and he just keeps finding ways to be in the right spot at the right time.”

The Bills scored 34 points through two quarters for the fifth time in club history, including playoffs, a feat unaccomplished since 1992. The regular-season record for largest halftime blowout was 48-10 over the Miami Dolphins in 1966. The Bills led the Los Angeles Raiders 41-3 in the 1990 postseason.

Allen passed for only 16 yards in the second half (the Hollins completion) but still posted the fattest Week 3 fantasy football total among all quarterbacks and was second only to San Francisco 49ers receiver Jauan Jennings in non-PPR leagues. Allen also was the game’s leading rusher with 44 yards at the time Mitchell Trubisky relieved him with 9:58 remaining.

The Bills are 3-0, but the schedule gets arduous from here. Buckle up.

Their next three games — four of their next five games and five of their next six games — are on the road, starting Sunday night with the Baltimore Ravens.

Allen, unsolicited, made an MVP Award reference himself. He knows the measuring stick.

“We got a short week, and we’re going into a hostile environment with the Ravens and two-time MVP Lamar Jackson,” Allen said. “We’re going to turn this real quick and start focusing on them real quick.”

Then the Bills visit the Texans and New York Jets before they return to Highmark Stadium. Their bye is in Week 12, sandwiched between a pair of home games against last season’s Super Bowl teams, the Kansas City Chiefs and 49ers.

“You don’t win a Super Bowl or get in the playoffs with only three games,” Allen said. “I think this team understands that. We’ll watch this film and put this behind us as quickly as we can.”

The Ravens defense, on the other hand, will be watching Allen’s footage on a loop all week.

They’ll see what LeBron did, but to them, it won’t be nearly as amusing.
 
Balls

Everyone. Honestly. Lets get to particulars

Josh Allen. God, enough said

Shakir. Mr. Reliable

Hamlin. Great moment

Keon. Welcome to the NFL rookie

Cook. Another week, another td

Von. Sack again

Brady. Cooking all night long

McD and Babich. Down 3 starters? ... no worries mate. Jags did nothing.

OL. Kept Allen clean and safe. Did well run blocking too.



Goats

The blocked PAT I guess

The Cook drop??

The Samuel shotgun run??

Its nitpicking. What an amazing performance.
 
Balls

Everyone. Honestly. Lets get to particulars

Josh Allen. God, enough said

Shakir. Mr. Reliable

Hamlin. Great moment

Keon. Welcome to the NFL rookie

Cook. Another week, another td

Von. Sack again

Brady. Cooking all night long

McD and Babich. Down 3 starters? ... no worries mate. Jags did nothing.

OL. Kept Allen clean and safe. Did well run blocking too.



Goats

The blocked PAT I guess

The Cook drop??

The Samuel shotgun run??

Its nitpicking. What an amazing performance.
1727191856397.png
 
Balls:

JA17 - MVP

Let James Cook - TD and very efficient

Shakira - He is Diggs. Maybe better.

Johnson - TD

Sugar Ray Davis - TD

Neon Keon - TD

KINGcade - TD

Dawkins - Anchor

McGovern - Bull Dozer

Brown - Best RT in football

Con Miller - Sack

AJ - Sack

Soloman - Sack

Toohill - Sack

Williams - Animal

Ingram - Sack

Hamlin - INT The Walking Dead

Codrington - Excellent returns

Ferguson - Excellent snaps all day

Goats:

None - Perfect game
 
Not impressed. Bills have beat no winning record team. They will win this eeek cuz Ravens are 1-2 but The Texans.., there might be a challenge unless they lose this week and go 2-2.
 
Not impressed. Bills have beat no winning record team. They will win this eeek cuz Ravens are 1-2 but The Texans.., there might be a challenge unless they lose this week and go 2-2.
As long as they keep winning I really don't have any issues.
 

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The Bills made it three-for-three on Monday night in as smooth-sailing of a contest as you’ll see in the NFL. The 47-10 trouncing of the Jaguars was yet another statement win on a national stage, putting the team in a great spot ahead of a difficult stretch of games.

Road games against the Ravens, Texans and Jets await in Weeks 4, 5 and 6. But before the Bills get to that test, what stood out on the coaches’ film to produce the result everyone witnessed on Monday against the Jaguars?

After studying the All-22, here is a full analysis of the Bills’ game plan and the individual performances that stood out amidst the blowout.

How Josh Allen and Joe Brady unraveled a previously competent Jaguars defense​

Just hours removed from the blowout victory over the Jaguars, the offense’s performance remains atop the minds of Bills fans. Offensive coordinator Joe Brady’s great game plan combined with Allen’s seemingly effortless accuracy to dismantle the Jaguars’ defense. As we alluded to following the game, the Bills took away the Jaguars’ defensive calling card by running it just enough to keep them honest. They focused the attack on the passing game and exploited the Jaguars when they ran man coverage looks. However, upon reviewing the film, a few more things stood out about the performance, making Allen’s day even more impressive.

The one word that comes to mind about Allen’s showing against the Jaguars is “unflappable.” Without the real threat of a pass rush, Allen rarely looked like someone without an answer to the next question on the play-to-play test. When the Jaguars were in man coverage, he identified quickly after the snap and got the ball out of his hands. When the Jaguars actually ran zone, Allen recognized it, took one look at his first couple of reads and if they weren’t there, he fired it to the short area target to keep it all moving.

The offensive line looked great for the Bills, partly because of how decisive Allen was all game. Over the first two quarters, Allen averaged only 2.66 seconds per drop back on his time to throw. This is a remarkable stat for Allen, who over his career has had a 3.03-second average time to throw. The 2.66-second mark is the sixth-quickest of his career, according to TruMedia. For all the good that Brady did in his game planning and strategy, Allen was the one who made the Jaguars feel helpless with how quickly and effectively he pushed the ball out of his hands.

But the Jaguars didn’t do themselves any favors, either. They inexplicably ran man coverage on 64 percent of their defensive snaps in the first half, even more prominent than their two-week average of 55 percent coming into the game. Allen has long been known for his ability to defeat man coverage over the past several years, but the Jaguars apparently wanted to see what it felt like to fly close to the sun. They got burned, as Allen completed 12-of-16 passes for 175 yards and three touchdowns against man coverage.

Those statistics are good for an uncanny yards-per-attempt mark of 10.8. When the Jaguars were in zone in the first half, Allen averaged only 6.3 yards per attempt — a massive difference of 4.5 yards. Making their overall game plan more head-scratching was when they chose to only rush three defensive linemen at Allen. The Bills offensive line already had the advantage against a Jaguars pass rush that hasn’t generated pressure at a high rate in 2024, and allowing five players to work against three people is asking for trouble.

On top of all that, there was the use of Khalil Shakir as a weapon against the Jaguars’ most exploitable defender — rookie slot corner Jarrian Jones. Of all the plays, this one truly took the cake with how it combined Brady’s game planning, Shakir’s skill set, Allen’s recognition and accuracy, and using the Jaguars’ identity against them. And it set the tone from the first drive through the rest of the game.

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On a pivotal 4th-and-3 play at the Jaguars’ 44-yard-line, Shakir is to Allen’s right in the formation, with Jones lined up over him. The next step for the Bills is to put Shakir in motion, confirming the man coverage look they’re expecting.

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(Courtesy: NFL+)

As Shakir trots toward the left side of the formation, Jones travels with him, tipping the Bills off that they have the man look they were hoping for with the specific play call.

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(Courtesy: NFL+)

This point of the motion is a crucial one, because Shakir slows down and begins to turn, getting Jones to also begin to turn his body to mirror Shakir’s movement. The ball, obviously, still hasn’t been snapped.

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(Courtesy: NFL+)

As center McGovern snaps it to Allen in shotgun, with the ball halfway to Allen, Shakir sprinted back toward the right side of the formation. This automatically signaled Jones to think he was going to need to fight through the traffic of his own teammates just to get back to Shakir. And that brings us to the “gotcha” moment of the rep.

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(Courtesy: NFL+)

The inexperienced Jones, still putting all his energy into getting back over to the right side of the Bills formation fails to recognize that Shakir slammed on the breaks and jogged out to the left side of the formation once again. Dealing with the commotion of the defensive line and all his teammates gathering their assignments, Jones is rudderless and effectively lost at sea.

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(Courtesy: NFL+)

As Shakir heads to the flat, no other Jaguars defender picks him up. Dalton Kincaid and Mack Hollins were both heading from the left side of the formation to the right at different depths. At the same time, Marquez Valdes-Scantling went from right to left with a deep crossing pattern. Once again, no one is paying attention to Shakir.

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(Courtesy: NFL+)

And here’s the payoff point. As Shakir catches Allen’s pass, there isn’t a single defender past the hashmarks closest to Shakir. And Jones, realizing what just happened, is frozen on the wrong side of the formation while his assignment had a lane the size of a garbage truck to get the necessary three yards with some more on top.

Allen, Brady and Shakir were the most critical trio of the evening for the Bills offense, and they all executed at near-perfect levels all evening.

Quick thoughts on the Top 5​

*Without any really poor individual performances, we’ll focus solely on the Top 5 this week.

QB Josh Allen (A) — Allen put together his second ‘A’ grade in just three games. He is minimizing his errors, and giving opposing teams absolute mayhem to deal with between his processing, his accuracy and his legs. He made one turnover-worthy throw against the Jaguars, but that was the extent of his errors. He is the reason the Bills have one of the most dynamic offenses in an NFL that has seen its point totals fall over the first three weeks.

WR Khalil Shakir (A-minus) — Shakir’s ability to exploit a plus matchup in only one half of work was another masterful performance. He crushed the man coverage when given a chance, allowing his sneaky shiftiness to take hold while also remaining the Bills’ best yards-after-catch threat in the receiver room. Shakir has been their best receiver in 2024, and it hasn’t been close. Shakir should be on the field far more than he has been even, but promisingly, he was on the field for some 12 personnel snaps Monday.

RT Spencer Brown (A-minus) — Outside of a holding call that didn’t cost the Bills any yards, Brown was a significant strength both as a pass blocker and a run blocker. The Jaguars didn’t have an overwhelming pass-rushing presence at left defensive end and Brown won those matchups pretty handily, but more impressively handled his matchup with stout run defenders.

LT Dion Dawkins (A-minus) — Matched up with the ever-impressive Josh Hines-Allen almost all game, Dawkins did an excellent job of keeping the pass rusher away from his quarterback for almost the entire game. He even got Hines-Allen to the ground a couple of times. Dawkins’ impressive start to the year has continued through his most difficult matchup to date.

CB Christian Benford (A-minus) — The third-year cornerback has simply been superb, and he continued his potential breakout season Monday. His ability to stick with any receiver, regardless of speed or size, looks effortless. He can flip his hips after a cut and stay with the wideout. He makes plays on the ball, he’s active in run support. He also helped neutralize rookie Brian Thomas Jr.
 
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