Bills-Jets: Who you got? Buffalo News writers make their predictions for Sunday's game


Ed Oliver will have to wait to build off his impressive Week 1 performance for the Buffalo Bills.

Sean McDermott told reporters Friday before the Bills' practice that Oliver's left ankle injury will prevent the talented defensive tackle from playing Sunday against the New York Jets at MetLife Stadium.

1757759168711.png
Buffalo Bills defensive tackle Ed Oliver (91) tackles Baltimore Ravens running back Derrick Henry (22) during the third quarter
at Highmark Stadium on Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025. Joshua Bessex/Buffalo News


Oliver may not be the only key defensive player unavailable Sunday.

Cornerback Tre'Davious White (groin) and nickel cornerback Taron Johnson (quad) were listed as questionable on the injury report released by the Bills following practice Friday. Linebacker Shaq Thompson (hamstring/hand) and safety/nickel cornerback Jordan Hancock (shoulder) are also questionable. Hancock wore a non-contact red jersey during practice Friday.

White practiced this week for the first time since Aug. 21, and he stayed in the fieldhouse Friday to catch balls from the jugs machine. Rookie cornerback Dorian Strong started in place of White in Week 1. Johnson came out of Week 1 with the quad injury. He did not practice Wednesday but logged limited practices on Thursday and Friday. Cam Lewis would fill in for Johnson if he's not available to face the Jets.

Edge rusher Greg Rousseau (knee), tight end Dawson Knox (hip), cornerback/returner Brandon Codrington (knee) and running back James Cook (hamstring) are off the report after each was limited at some point this week.

Oliver suffered the injury Wednesday during practice when a teammate stepped on his foot. He did not participate in the Bills' walk-through Thursday, and reporters saw him wearing a walking boot while using a scooter to navigate the team's locker room at One Bills Drive.

Bills rookies T.J. Sanders and Deone Walker will receive more snaps Sunday, with the other starter, DaQuan Jones, likely assuming a bigger role. The team can also elevate Jordan Phillips from the practice squad.

Oliver had six tackles, including three for a loss, in Buffalo's unprecedented 41-40 win over the Baltimore Ravens in Week 1. His forced fumble in the fourth quarter helped the offense score 16 unanswered points, and he had a sack in the first quarter that forced the Ravens to settle for a 52-yard field goal.
 

1757759374060.png

Even with the Bills’ electric 41-40 walk-off win over the Ravens in Week 1, they weren’t under any false illusions after the fact. The Bills knew they needed to be much better defensively, and that they needed to dig deep throughout the practice week to find answers.

Bills head coach Sean McDermott said the team needed to make it a difficult week for themselves, with the need to have honest, tough conversations. Especially with a potentially difficult rushing opponent in the Jets waiting for them in Week 2, McDermott knows they can’t let their Week 1 problems snowball.

On top of the defensive concerns, the injury bug bit many of their defensive starters.

Where are things trending for the Bills this week, and how do the teams match up? Here’s our Week 2 notebook, including several context clues of what could come on Sunday.

Uh-oh, Ed Oliver mid-week injury​

When the Bills initially sent out their practice schedule for the week, the plan was to have three practices leading up to Sunday’s game, like usual. On Thursday morning, the team sent an updated version of the schedule, detailing that Thursday would be a walkthrough rather than a full practice. It’s not an unprecedented move, as the Bills have exchanged a practice for a walkthrough in the past — usually later in the season to give the team some rest from the normal bumps and bruises. However, it has not been a common early-season call, which triggered a bit of curiosity as to the reason behind it. The Bills had been dealing with a lot of injuries throughout the week. Nickel corner Taron Johnson (quad) didn’t practice, defensive end Greg Rousseau (knee), running back James Cook (hamstring) and tight end Dawson Knox (hamstring) were all limited, while Tre’Davous White (hip) just returned to practice for the first time in almost three weeks.

Then on Thursday, during the team’s open locker room, starting defensive tackle Ed Oliver strolled through on a scooter, with a walking boot on his left foot. That, with all the other ailments, may have been one of the catalysts for switching Thursday’s practice to a walkthrough. Oliver was using the scooter to get from point A to point B, though he did park it off to the side and stood on the walking boot long enough to play a game of table tennis. It was a context clue that he wasn’t just off his feet the entire time. Once the game finished, Oliver got back on the scooter and rolled his way out. The team labeled him as an official non-participant for Thursday’s walkthrough due to an ankle injury. For what it’s worth, the severity is still unknown and walking boots are often used as a precautionary measure by teams to immobilize an injury, but it’s a big change in status that can’t be ignored. Either way, it’s a difficult injury even in the short-term to take for the Bills, considering Oliver was their best defensive player by far on Sunday, and the team is already thin at defensive tackle.

What might they do in the interim? Well, if Oliver can’t go, which would be a safe assumption at this point, given when the injury occurred and that they had him stay off of it on Thursday, a rookie would make his first start. Without Oliver, that puts rookie defensive tackle T.J. Sanders — who was Oliver’s direct backup in Week 1 — in line to make his first career NFL start against the Jets on Sunday. The Athletic caught up with Sanders on Thursday about the potential chance.

“Life’s all about opportunities. This one right here, you know, could be a big one for me,” Sanders said. “Go out there and put my best foot forward. Just remember all the training and teaching I’ve been getting throughout the week, even back to training camp, and the lessons I learned from Week 1, just going out there and putting it on display.”

Although all the information is fresh, the coaching staff had a central message for Sanders ahead of a potentially significant uptick in snaps this weekend, following his 16 snaps against the Ravens in his NFL debut.

“Just kind of continuing to get my mind right. Have my mind ready, being intentional about everything I’m doing throughout the week — even walkthrough reps like game reps,” Sanders said. “Just making everything intentional as it can be because they know when I’m like playing fast, flying around, I’m at my best.”

But that also leaves the Bills with only three healthy defensive tackles. The team could play it one of two ways. Either they could elevate veteran Jordan Phillips, a three-technique, for the week and have him pair with Deone Walker, or they could slide Walker over to three-technique and use a practice squad elevation on Zion Logue, a one-technique who is more equipped to stuff the run. Phillips told The Athletic on Thursday that he wasn’t sure what the plan would be for him on Sunday. Before that, he did say that he’s taking things day by day and still working on getting back in game shape.

Considering that, plus the fact that Phillips only began practicing with the team after final cuts on Aug. 26, it might be a case of too much, too soon. Logue could be the better option for this week, especially against a run-heavy opponent like the Jets. They could even limit Logue’s snaps and have Walker split his responsibilities between three and one technique as a rotational player, depending on who he lines up next to, especially down the stretch in a close game. Either way, the Bills potentially have some decisions to make for Sunday.

USATSI_27031754-scaled.jpg

Rookie Dorian Strong had a solid debut against the Ravens. (Gregory Fisher / Imagn Images)

How is Tre’Davious trending, and how does Dorian Strong factor in?​

When the Bills entered training camp with the cornerback group they had, probably the last thing they expected was sixth-round rookie Dorian Strong being the starter in Week 1 against the Ravens. It was a perfect circumstance, though. White and Maxwell Hairston were both injured, while Strong moved past both Ja’Marcus Ingram and Dane Jackson on the depth chart. Strong’s debut was a solid one, too. While he had some regrettable moments, he also wasn’t a liability, which gives them a good option moving forward. Then White practiced on Wednesday.

White appeared to be moving around well during the media availability portion of practice. Whether or not he’s ready for Sunday remains to be seen. However, White being prepared to at least get a limited session to begin the week is a promising sign for him potentially playing in the game. When speaking to the media, White was coy and wouldn’t give much about his chances for Sunday. Though if White can play, given Strong’s showing against the Ravens, it is worth wondering what the Bills would do with their starting lineup against the Jets this weekend.

Although it would be tempting to keep Strong atop the depth chart, that would go against how the Bills have usually operated. As a recent example, the Bills had several opportunities in 2024 to allow rookie Cole Bishop to take Damar Hamlin’s place as a starter in the playoffs, but they stood by Hamlin upon his return from injury. Going back further to Matt Milano’s rookie season in 2017, the Bills had every chance to keep Milano in the starting lineup ahead of then starter Ramon Humber after Humber missed three games with an injury. Milano was the clearly superior player, and it still took another five games with Humber starting before they committed to Milano as the starter in Week 14.

Since the first day of spring workouts, White has operated as the starting cornerback every day up until he suffered a groin injury on Aug. 21. If White is able to play on Sunday without restrictions, I’m fully expecting him to take his place in the starting lineup. Should White struggle, and if Hairston is not ready following his return from injury, the option is always there to go to Strong in the future — but it’s likely too early for that. The good news for the Bills is that they likely have a lot more confidence in their depth options once they saw how Strong handled such a massive game in his NFL debut.

What to make of the Taron Johnson and Greg Rousseau injuries​

Along with Oliver and White, Johnson and Rousseau on the injury report is another challenge for a Bills defense in search of a far better output this week against the Jets. The team shut Johnson down completely on Wednesday due to a quad injury. He was not visible on the practice field, or in the locker room after the session. Johnson told The Athletic that he had started to feel the injury on Tuesday morning when he was coming to the facilities to work out — a bit delayed after the game Sunday. He said he didn’t know when it happened, and called the injury a bit “weird,” but was steadfast that he was not going to miss Sunday’s game, which is a promising sign for them.

As for Rousseau, he was walking a bit slower than usual off the field on Thursday following the team’s walkthrough, sporting a sleeve on his right knee.

“I’m alright, I’m solid,” Rousseau told The Athletic. “I should be good by Sunday.”

Rousseau said that he went knee-to-knee with someone during the Ravens game, though he believes it’s just a temporary issue and not one that will linger during the season. As long as both don’t have any setbacks, it appears they are trending toward playing on Sunday.

Week 2 Bills projected practice squad elevations: DT Zion Logue

Week 2 Bills projected inactives vs. Jets: WR Curtis Samuel, OL Chase Lundt, DE Landon Jackson, DT Ed Oliver, CB Ja’Marcus Ingram, S Jordan Hancock
(**Subject to change following Friday’s practice)

Prediction: Bills 33, Jets 26​

From how it looked Sunday against the Steelers, it doesn’t seem like these are the same old pushover Jets. Especially if the Bills have to play without Oliver, this game has the makings of a potentially high-scoring affair for the Bills, as it was in Week 1. The Jets are an excellent rushing team, and unlike what they’ve put on the field for years, the 2025 offensive line looks like one of the better units in the league, given how they played against a talented Steelers defensive line.

That, along with a multi-faceted rushing attack that challenges the edges and between the tackles because of mobile quarterback Justin Fields and running back Breece Hall, the Bills will need to prove they can stick with their keys much better than they did last weekend against the Ravens. If there’s one area that the Bills can force more stops and get off the field, though, it’s through the air. Fields is nowhere near as talented a passer as Jackson, and the Jets’ receivers, aside from Garrett Wilson, are a downgrade to Baltimore’s group, meaning forcing third-and-medium to long will be critical.

On offense, the Bills will have to contend with a good interior defensive line and the blitzing Jets, though the Bills’ offensive line is more than equipped for the challenge. As the Jets are likely to play more man-to-man coverage under head coach Aaron Glenn, this could have the makings of a big game for receivers who specialize in separation like Joshua Palmer and Khalil Shakir, with some deep ball 50-50 throws to Keon Coleman to keep the Jets honest.

Although they may give up another high point total, I think the Bills’ defense will put up some resistance to the Jets’ offense. When paired with some exploitable matchups for Josh Allen and the passing attack, they should be able to put up enough points to win, despite the defensive concerns.
 

37.1​

The Jets threw the ball on 37.1% of their snaps in Week 1, the lowest rate among any NFL team. They rushed for 182 yards and three touchdowns on 39 carries, with running back Breece Hall gaining 107 yards on 19 carries. If this is a close game Sunday, New York can lean on the run the way it did in its 34-32 loss to the Steelers.

1757850913736.png
New York Jets quarterback Justin Fields started six games for the Pittsburgh Steelers in 2024.
Noah K. Murray, Associated Press


9.2​

Jets quarterback Justin Fields averaged 9.22 yards per pass attempt, tied for the highest mark in the NFL in Week 1, according to Next Gen Stats. Fields completed 19 of 22 passes for 218 yards, including a 33-yard touchdown to his top receiver, Garrett Wilson. Fields had just one throw travel more than 20 yards, a trend that the Jets would like to continue. Fields has above average arm strength, but the coaching staff wants to give him shorter throws to sustain long drives.

3​

After using a sixth offensive lineman more than any other team in 2024, the Bills deployed their jumbo package for just three plays in Week 1. Offensive coordinator Joe Brady explained that their 12 second-and-long plays, and they were out of rhythm in the first half, as reasons. Alec Anderson's usage will vary week to week, Brady added. Last season, the Bills averaged 5.06 yards per carry in their jumbo package.

1757850956792.png
Bills wide receiver Keon Coleman makes a catch against Ravens cornerback Jaire Alexander on Sunday at Highmark Stadium.
Derek Gee, Buffalo News


54.5​

Of Bills receiver Keon Coleman's 11 targets in Week 1, 54.5% were 10-19 yards from the line of scrimmage, according to Next Gen Stats. He caught five passes for 88 yards and one touchdown in that area of the field. During his rookie season in 2024, just 28.1% of Coleman's targets were in that range, as he caught 10 passes for 217 yards and a touchdown. It's a trend to watch Sunday afternoon, when Coleman may be covered by Jets top cornerback Sauce Gardner, who's dealing with a groin injury.
 

JAY SKURSKI​

The Jets' defense has given Bills quarterback Josh Allen trouble in the past, but not so much since Joe Brady took over as the Bills' offensive coordinator. Buffalo is 3-0 against New York with Brady calling plays, and has averaged 31.7 points per game in those wins. While the Jets' offense was better than expected last week against Pittsburgh (32 points scored), the defense couldn't contain Aaron Rodgers. That's bad news with Allen coming to town. Bills, 35-21.

1757851097671.png
Running back James Cook and the Bills will look to improve their winning streak over the Jets to four straight games Sunday.
Harry Scull Jr., Buffalo News


KATHERINE FITZGERALD​

I think Aaron Glenn has long-term potential at the helm of the Jets, but it's too early for that to truly take root. The Bills offense has too many answers for the Jets defense. I don't think the Bills will take as long to get going as they did last week against the Baltimore Ravens. If they can avoid early three-and-outs, this could get out of hand. On the defensive side, the Bills took a hit with the news that they won't have defensive tackle Ed Oliver. That gives other players a chance to make a splash. The Bills win the takeaway battle again, and the game. Bills, 31-21.

LANCE LYSOWSKI​

This version of the Jets is different. Justin Fields is a mobile quarterback with above-average arm strength and his offensive coordinator, Taylor Engstrand, showed in Week 1 that they are not going to ask Fields to do too much. Their 394 total yards were tied for fifth-most in the NFL. Running back Breece Hall was excellent against the Steelers' defense, racking up 145 yards on 21 touches. They are not built to keep up with the Bills' offense, though. Aaron Rodgers threw four touchdowns against them last week. Plus, the Jets committed seven penalties. It's a team on the rise under first-year coach Aaron Glenn, but Buffalo's defense will get enough stops, even without Ed Oliver. Bills, 35-27.

STEVE TROSKY​

The Jets' rushing game was impressive against the Steelers, racking up 182 yards on 4.7 yards per carry. While Breece Hall did the majority of the damage, quarterback Justin Fields rushed for 48 yards and two touchdowns. With Ed Oliver out, it's important for T.J. Sanders and the rest of the defensive front to step up. It's important to remember that the Jets lost last week as Aaron Rodgers threw four TD passes. Josh Allen is better than Rodgers, and the Bills' run game is better than the Steelers. Bills, 38-21.
 

4 keys for the Buffalo Bills to beat the New York Jets​


1. Keep it clean. Bills quarterback Josh Allen has had 18 turnovers against the Jets in his career, which is the most turnovers by an individual player against one opponent since 2018. But last year, Allen was clean against the Jets, making it through the two meetings without a turnover. If he can keep up that streak, it bodes well for the Bills, who did not have any turnovers last week against the Baltimore Ravens. Allen has made a concerted effort to keep the ball out of opponents’ hands, but the Jets defense is always a test. Allen can’t let past games get in his head, and he should be in a much better position to keep the offense on the field.

1757851243983.png
Bills quarterback Josh Allen didn't turn the ball over last week against the Ravens. He needs a repeat performance Sunday vs. the Jets.
Joshua Bessex, Buffalo News


2. Slow the run game. The Bills got gashed last week by the Ravens, who picked up 238 yards on the ground. “And no one in the defensive room thinks anything of that nature was acceptable,” said Buffalo defensive coordinator Bobby Babich. “… So we need to get those things corrected, and we will.” Of course, no other team in the NFL boasts Lamar Jackson and Derrick Henry, but the Jets still present a unique challenge. They had 182 rushing yards last week against the Pittsburgh Steelers. Jets running back Breece Hall had 107 yards on 19 carries last week, his most since Week 6 last year against the Buffalo Bills, when he picked up 113 rushing yards on 18 carries.

3. Gel quickly on special teams. The Bills brought in a new punter this week after they were not pleased with Brad Robbins’ performance in Week 1. Now, it’s up to Cameron Johnston to punt and hold. He joined the Bills on Tuesday, so he’s had a little more time to acclimate than kicker Matt Prater did last week. Prater is now officially on the 53-man roster. He had previous experience practicing with Robbins from their respective Michigan days, which helped seal the game-winning kick last Sunday. Now, the Bills will have to hope that Prater and Johnston build rapport with long snapper Reid Ferguson quickly ahead of a game that could come down to the margins.

4. See who makes an impact on the defensive line. Defensive tackle Ed Oliver is out this week with an ankle injury, a blow to the team after his dynamic season-opening performance. With Oliver sidelined, the rest of the defensive line will have to step up in his absence. The group is already thin with ongoing suspensions for defensive tackle Larry Ogunjobi and defensive end Michael Hoecht. Rookie T.J. Sanders, who played 16 snaps last week, has “attacked this week,” according to veteran DaQuan Jones. Jones also said Oliver “can’t be replaced,” but “everyone knows what we have to do: We have to pick up our game a little bit more with Ed being out.”
 
Balls:

James Cook, he had himself a day
Josh, didn't need to be pefect today but got some clutch passes and showed toughness.
Trubisky. I never like seeing a backup qb except in victory formation but when Josh had to miss some plays he kept a drive going helping to keep momentum
Defense. The Bills shut down an offense that gave fits to the Steelers all game last week and recovered from last week's disastrous 40 by only yielding 10.
Prater, McD put Bass Pro Shop on IR for the rest of the season, we have our kicker

Goats:
Jets defenders, I know football is a violent sport, but they were trying to hurt Josh
Dawson Drops
 
Odd bills win a game by 20 and Josh threw 0 TDs.

Can’t really find any goats.

Bosa had a big game. Sack and if not mistaken caused 2 fumbles (1 recovered by Bills)
 
Milano was all over the place. Trubisky had one pace for 32 yards which is 5 yards more than fields had for the game
 

1757899593141.png
  1. Bills run over, and run it up, against division rivals. There was no post-Sunday Night Football thriller hangover for Buffalo. Josh Allen and Co. dispatched the upstart Jets with ease, scoring points on six of eight drives with the starting QB under center. Allen set the tone with a 40-yard scamper on the first march, and James Cook hammered home the message with 132 yards (second-best of his career) and two touchdowns. Against a Jets team that put up big offensive numbers in Week 1, Buffalo played keep-away with ease, dominating the time of possession battle with 25 first downs in over 38 minutes on offense. Everyone ate – 10 skill-position players logged touches – and Elijah Moore, a former Jet, had a healthy helping of revenge (31 receiving yards, rushing TD). Even when the Bills were bloodied, they were never even close to beaten; Allen missed just two plays in the first half after significant bleeding from his nose. Buffalo will enjoy this laugher with a short week coming up before its second straight AFC East test in five days against Miami.

  2. For Jets offense, sequel not as good as original. Justin Fields' and Tanner Engstrand's debuts came as welcome shocks to the system in Florham Park. For the first time in what felt like forever, the Jets had themselves a quarterback and an offensive coordinator working in perfect harmony … which made Sunday's performance all the more discordant. Fields and the Jets offense were lifeless in Week 2, averaging 4.7 plays per drive and 3.3 yards per play. Buffalo keyed in on the run after New York rumbled over Pittsburgh in Week 1, and it worked. Breece Hall was bottled up (29 yards on 10 totes), and Fields was held at bay (49 yards) after running all over the Steelers. With the run game stalled and penalties frequently pushing the Jets back, the passing attack, nonexistent as it was, struggled. Fields was just 3-of-11 passing for 27 yards before exiting in the fourth quarter, deep into a blowout, to be evaluated for a concussion. New York didn't convert a single third down (0-for-11) on the day and didn't reach the end zone until a Tyrod Taylor-to-Jeremy Ruckert strike with less than four minutes to go. Was the Jets' Week 1 jumpstart for real or just an aberration? New York's first road test in Tampa Bay next week will be telling.

  3. Glenn might need to send another message. After Xavier Gipson fumble turned the tide of the Jets' loss to Pittsburgh, the first-year Gang Green head coach quickly sent him packing. Glenn denied Gipson was waived for his costly cough-up, but the message was sent: Unforced errors will not be tolerated. After Sunday's shellacking, there are too many culprits on the Jets for New York to field a roster next week. Micheal Clemons was the most notable offense on Sunday after his unnecessary roughing the passer penalty on a third-and-19 in Jets territory on the Bills' first drive set Buffalo up for the game-opening TD. Clemons' foul was one of five on the day for 35 yards. Errors similarly riddled the secondary for the second week in the row, with Bills receivers easily beating the Jets secondary on crossing routes. Who, if anyone, will incur the wrath of Glenn this week?
Next Gen Stats Insight from Bills-Jets (via NFL Pro): Jets QB Justin Fields finished with a -41.6% completion percentage over expected, the lowest in the NFL (minimum 10 passing attempts) since at least 2016.

NFL Research: Sunday's game was the first time in the Super Bowl era that the Jets allowed four-plus passing TDs (Week 1 against Steelers) and 200-plus rushing yards (Week 2 against Bills) in consecutive home games.
 

1 What did we learn?
James Cook still has it. The Bills’ running back logged 132 rushing yards and two touchdowns on 21 carries. He did all that even though his day was done with 8:23 left in the fourth quarter. His 44-yard touchdown run was electric: He all but disappeared into a group of bodies before reappearing and scampering downfield. His other touchdown, a 1-yard run on the Bills’ opening drive, got the rout going. Throughout the day, Cook was dependable, minus one fumble that right tackle Spencer Brown recovered. It was the eighth time Cook ran for 100 or more yards in a regular-season game.

2 What’s trending now?
The Bills defense is trending up. At the end of the game, a number of backups took the field, as starters like linebackers Matt Milano and Terrel Bernard and cornerbacks Christian Benford and Tre’Davious White all got a deserved rest. The Bills defense held the Jets to just 154 total yards, about half of which was in garbage time. The Jets were a dismal 0-for-11 on third down. After tons of (deserved) questions about their run defense following that Week 1 game against the Ravens, the Bills clamped down. The Jets didn’t move the ball until the game was out of reach.

3 What happens next?
The Bills have a short week to get ready to host the 0-2 Miami Dolphins. The Bills will wait to see if they can get back nickel cornerback Taron Johnson (quadriceps) or defensive tackle Ed Oliver (ankle), who had to sit out Sunday. But the defense proved it can win big without those two starters. Defensive end Joey Bosa stepped up big with two forced fumbles. The Bills have won the turnover margin in back-to-back weeks, and they will look to continue that streak against the hapless Dolphins, who started with an embarrassing defeat to the Colts and played better against New England on Sunday but still lost 33-27.
 

Report Card: Buffalo Bills' dominant run game paves way to easy win​


Grading the Buffalo Bills in their 30-10 victory over the New York Jets on Sunday at MetLife Stadium.

Running game: A+​

It started with a bang, as Josh Allen’s 40-yard scramble was the third longest of his career in the regular season and his longest since Week 15 of the 2022 season, a 44-yarder against Miami. From there, James Cook took over, piling up 132 yards on 21 carries and scoring two touchdowns. Remember all that talk about Cook being expendable as he campaigned for a new contract this offseason? Yeah, not so much. No. 2 running back Ray Davis gained just 24 yards on nine carries, while Ty Johnson had 6 yards on two carries. Cook is far and away the best running back on Buffalo’s roster, and showed why Sunday.

1757938103404.png
Bills running back James Cook cruises into the end zone for his second touchdown of the game Sunday against the Jets.
Harry Scull Jr./Buffalo News


Passing game: C-​

Allen was penalized for intentional grounding twice, which doesn’t happen very often. The offensive line struggled at times to give Allen enough time to throw. “They just have a good front,” right tackle Spencer Brown said. “Every time you play the Jets, you know it’s going to have to be a protect-the-quarterback kind of game. … It took us a little bit there to get that under control and get used to what they were doing and get our hips under us.” Dawson Knox had a tough game, finishing with just two catches on five targets for 19 yards. Knox had at least one drop – maybe two depending on your grading scale.

Run defense: B+​

Tackles for loss were the name of the game for the Buffalo run defense. Matt Milano started the party with one of those for a 3-yard loss by Jets running back Breece Hall on New York’s second play from scrimmage. The Jets got a little bit going on the ground on their third possession, but then Christian Benford dropped receiver Arian Smith on a botched reverse for a loss of 10 yards. Tre White also had a tackle for loss. The Jets did get 49 yards on the ground from quarterback Justin Fields, but the Bills will take that total. “Stop the run,” nickel cornerback Cam Lewis said of the defensive focus. “We struggled with that last week against the Ravens, so this week, we just wanted to stop the run first and then let our game play off of that, and I feel like we did that.”

Pass defense: A​

Fields could do absolutely nothing through the air, finishing 3 of 11 for just 27 yards. Old friend Tyrod Taylor went 7 of 11 for 56 yards and a garbage-time touchdown after Fields left with a concussion. The Bills sacked Fields three times, with Joey Bosa and DaQuan Jones bringing him down. Zion Logue and Greg Rousseau shared the other sack. Cole Bishop also had a sack of Taylor. The Bills defended three passes – one each from Logue, Rousseau and Dorian Williams. The Bills limited the Jets to 154 yards of offense, the fewest on the road in a game since 1990 by a Buffalo defense. The Jets did not convert a single third down. The Bills have only done that twice since 1991, with the other time also being against the Jets in the 2023 season.

Special teams: A-​

Matt Prater, the ageless wonder, kicked a 52-yard field goal and remains perfect with the Bills through two games. The operation with long snapper Reid Ferguson and new punter Cameron Johnston, who is also the holder, looked smooth. Johnston punted three times, averaging 39.7 net yards. More importantly, he placed two of those three punts inside the Jets’ 20-yard line. The star on special teams was safety Sam Franklin. He made a pair of tackles and looks like quite a find by general manager Brandon Beane as a coverage ace. The one negative was returner Brandon Codrington had a bit of a quiet game, as his four punt returns gained just 22 yards. At least a couple of times, it looked like Codrington might have been better off taking a fair catch instead of risking getting hit and possibly fumbling.

Coaching: B​

There were a couple of hiccups for the offense. A run on second-and-10 and a run on third-and-4 directly into the line of scrimmage were very easy to second-guess on the part of offensive coordinator Joe Brady, assuming it was him who made those calls. There are always going to be calls like that in a game, but the assumption here is that Brady and head coach Sean McDermott won’t be particularly pleased with the effort despite scoring 30 points. The good news is the defense turned it around in a big way, even without defensive tackle Ed Oliver and slot cornerback Taron Johnson. It’s a good bet that unit was challenged by McDermott and defensive coordinator Bobby Babich in Week 1, and it came through. The next challenge for the coaching staff will be getting the team ready for a short week with Miami coming to town in Week 3.
 

Upon Further Review: Joey Bosa's addition is paying early dividends for the Bills​


Joey Bosa is making the type of impact the Bills didn’t get from Von Miller over the past two years.

That’s one of the main takeaways from the Bills’ 2-0 start to the season.

1758029163356.png
Bills edge rusher Joey Bosa has forced an NFL-high three fumbles through the first two games.
Harry Scull Jr., Buffalo News


Bosa was a beast Sunday in the Bills' 30-10 win against the New York Jets, finishing with two tackles, one sack and two forced fumbles. He did that playing just 26 defensive snaps, which was 55% of the team total.

It felt like Bosa was on the field more than that, which speaks to the impact he made. It started early: On the first play of the Jets' second series, Bosa made a picture-perfect punchout of the football against quarterback Justin Fields, and A.J. Epenesa recovered. That led to a Bills field goal and a quick 10-0 lead.

“Joey's been great since he got here,” coach Sean McDermott said. “He loves to play football. He prepares. He's a true pro. He's been a really good addition. I think like anything, this is just Game 2 for all of us right now.”

In other words, McDermott didn’t want to get too far ahead of himself in discussing Bosa’s impact. There is reason to be excited, though.

Heading into Monday night’s doubleheader, Bosa was the NFL’s highest-graded pass rusher, according to analytics website Pro Football Focus. His pass-rush grade of 92.7 (out of 100) is elite.

“You see him practice, and then you're kind of just waiting for it,” defensive tackle DaQuan Jones said. “I think his mindset was just, 'I'm going to take this over.' I think he did that very early on. Just his impact and punching that ball out, just flying around out there, I think he's kind of reminding people that he's still here to play and he hasn't gone anywhere and his play hasn't diminished.”

Bosa, who turned 30 in July, has played 61 defensive snaps in the Bills’ first two games, which is 62% of the team total. After being at 69% of the snaps in Week 1 against Baltimore, defensive coordinator Bobby Babich mentioned the team would like to reduce Bosa’s snap count moving forward (Bosa missed 23 games over the previous three seasons with various injuries).

Babich was able to keep Bosa's snap count low against the Jets without a drop in production.

“They are managing me well. I just have to be honest with them,” Bosa said. “I'm feeling really good. The key when you're playing with this (Bills) offense is to stay warm on the sideline, because you're going to have long breaks in between going out there with how long they hold onto the ball and how good they are. So (I'm) feeling really good. Just have to recover the best that I can.”

That’s especially true heading into a short week with another game at 8:15 p.m. Thursday against Miami in Orchard Park.

Even in a limited sample size, the Bills have seen the kind of impact Bosa can make when he’s healthy.

“I want to impact the game as much as I can every time I play,” Bosa said after Sunday’s win. “It's one week. I'm happy with my performance. I'm happy with everybody's performance. There are still things I wish I would have had back. I think I didn't start as fast as I know I can, especially in the rush. So we watch film and move on.”

1758029227236.png
Bills defensive end Joey Bosa tries to chase down Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson during the second quarter of their season opener
Sept. 7 at Highmark Stadium. Joshua Bessex, Buffalo News


Bosa has three forced fumbles this season. Nobody else in the NFL had more than one entering Monday night's NFL doubleheader. After one of those Sunday against the Jets, he was absolutely elated on the Bills’ sideline. When a reported prefaced a question by saying he had rarely seen a 10th-year veteran that excited, Bosa responded first with some quick-witted humor.

“Backhanded compliment, calling me old,” he said. “No, it was exciting. It's fun. I'm just trying to have as much fun as I can playing football. We've beat it to death, but the last few years haven't went my way with injuries. I'm just trying to enjoy every second I can out there, feeling good and playing with the guys.”

Before a pass rusher can shine on third down, a defense has to win first and second down, putting the offense in a must-pass situation.
McDermott said Monday he’s been just as impressed with that area of Bosa’s game. (Case in point: that first-down strip of Fields.)

The Bills had a goal of stopping the Jets’ rushing attack Sunday, especially after Baltimore ran wild in Week 1, piling up 238 yards on the ground. Fields presented a similar dual-threat challenge to that of Lamar Jackson (although obviously not on Jackson’s level).

“We tried to learn our lesson and do the best we can to stop his feet and get after him in the pass, and we were able to get a few stops early, which gave us a chance to kind of rush the passer,” Bosa said. “The offense did a great job, we got a few turnovers and yeah, it kind of played out exactly how we were hoping.”

The same can be said of Bosa’s addition to the defense through two weeks.
 

We’re only two weeks into the NFL season. The most prudent thing to do with the limited amount of data we have at this point is to proceed cautiously.

But the Power Rankings won’t be doing that this week. We’re overreacting about pretty much everything from the tush push to Ben Johnson to the Super Bowl-bound Indianapolis Colts (OK, that last one was too far.).

1. Green Bay Packers (2-0)​

Last week: 2
Thursday: Beat Commanders 27-18
Overreaction: Dan Quinn shouldn’t have hired Matt LaFleur

The Packers head coach was Notre Dame’s quarterbacks coach when Quinn hired him in 2015 to be part of an Atlanta Falcons staff that included Kyle Shanahan and Mike McDaniel. LaFleur has led the Packers against a team coached or coordinated by Quinn four times since 2019. His quarterbacks have thrown 12 touchdown passes against zero interceptions and had a 144.7 passer rating in those games, all of which were wins. Some thanks, huh?

Up next: at Browns, Sunday, 1 p.m. ET

2. Philadelphia Eagles (2-0)​

Last week: 1
Sunday: Beat the Chiefs 20-17
Overreaction: It’s boring football

There, we said it. The Eagles choked the life out of the Chiefs anaconda-style. It was as tedious as it was ruthless. Philly averaged 3.7 yards per play and tush-pushed its way to its final touchdown and the first-down conversion that sealed the victory. At least A.J. Brown had five catches this week, albeit for a mere 27 yards! The Eagles are 3-0 in the last two years when passing for fewer than 100 yards.

Up next: vs. Rams, Sunday, 1 p.m. ET

3. Buffalo Bills (2-0)​

Last week: 3
Sunday: Beat Jets 30-10
Overreaction: James Cook should have gotten more money

The Bills’ fifth-year running back had to hold in to get a four-year, $48 million contract extension. He’s fourth in the league with 176 rushing yards after a 132-yard, two-touchdown effort Sunday, including a 44-yard score in the second quarter. Cook’s five 40-plus-yard touchdown runs since 2022 lead the NFL, and he’s sixth in the league in rushing since the start of the 2023 season (2,307 yards).

Up next: vs. Dolphins, Thursday, 8:15 p.m. ET

4. Los Angeles Chargers (2-0)​

Last week: 4
Monday: Beat Raiders 20-9
Overreaction: A Greg Roman body double is calling plays

When Roman was the Baltimore Ravens’ offensive coordinator from 2019 to 2022, his team led the NFL in rush percentage (51.1). When he was the offensive coordinator for the San Francisco 49ers from 2011 to 2014, his team was second in the league in rush percentage (50). After Monday night’s win, the Chargers are 17th in rush percentage (42.1), according to TruMedia. Until midway through the fourth quarter, when the Chargers simply wanted to drain the clock, Justin Herbert had thrown 25 passes against just 17 run plays. It’s working. This team looks like a contender.

Up next: vs. Broncos, Sunday, 4:05 p.m.

5. Baltimore Ravens (1-1)​

Last week: 8
Sunday: Beat Browns 41-17
Overreaction: This team will set the NFL points record

The 2013 Denver Broncos hold that title with 606 points. Baltimore is on pace for 689 after its second straight 40-point game to start the season. It did that despite gaining only 242 yards of offense. Lamar Jackson had his 12th career game with four or more touchdown passes and is now the NFL’s all-time leader in passer rating (102.65), according to CBS Sports.

Up next: vs. Lions, Monday, 8:15 p.m. ET

6. Detroit Lions (1-1)​

Last week: 14
Sunday: Beat Bears 52-21
Overreaction: Ben Johnson’s not that great

We were all a little worried when the Lions scored 13 points in Week 1 without Johnson coordinating the offense, but Detroit made a statement by putting 511 yards and 52 points on Johnson’s new team, the Chicago Bears. Jared Goff had five passing touchdowns and a passer rating of 156, his second highest as a Lion. It’s the fifth time a Goff-quarterbacked team has topped 50 points.

Up next: at Ravens, Monday, 8:15 p.m. ET

7. Los Angeles Rams (2-0)​

Last week: 7
Sunday: Beat Titans 33-19
Overreaction: Davante Adams will top 1,200 receiving yards

The 32-year-old hasn’t reached that mark since 2022, but he looks good paired with Matthew Stafford. On Sunday, Adams had 106 yards on six catches (and 13 targets). He also had his first touchdown in Los Angeles. Adams and the defense made the Rams look like the NFC West favorites.

Up next: at Eagles, Sunday, 1 p.m. ET


Baker Mayfield led the Buccaneers on an 80-yard, game-winning touchdown drive to beat the Texans on Monday night. (Alex Slitz / Getty Images)

8. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (2-0)​

Last week: 11
Monday: Beat the Texans 20-19
Overreaction: Baker Mayfield is the toughest QB to play against

If there were an advanced stat for Opponents Aggravated per Dropback, Mayfield would lead the NFL. He is adding 4.35 expected points per game with his scrambling this year, which ranks third in the league. On Monday night, with under two minutes remaining, he scooted 15 yards to convert a fourth-and-10 on the game-winning 80-yard touchdown drive, somersaulting to the turf at the end. He has picked up first downs on 75 percent of his scrambles this year, and he’s tied for third with five passing touchdowns and ninth in EPA per dropback (0.23). Cleveland and Carolina would love to have him back.

Up next: vs. Jets, Sunday, 1 p.m. ET

9. San Francisco 49ers (2-0)​

Last week: 6
Sunday: Beat Saints 26-21
Overreaction: Mac Jones is the next Sam Darnold

Darnold’s return from The Land of the First-Round Bust started with one start in San Francisco in 2023. On Sunday, Jones was 26-for-39 for 279 yards, three touchdowns and no interceptions in his first stint since fill-in duty last season in Jacksonville, where he landed after being dumped by New England. He was eighth in the NFL in passer rating in Week 2 (113.1). The 15th pick in the 2021 draft will get another shot somewhere if he does this another time or two before Brock Purdy returns.

Up next: vs. Cardinals, Sunday, 4:25 p.m. ET

10. Indianapolis Colts (2-0)​

Last week: 16
Sunday: Beat Broncos 29-28
Overreaction: This is the AFC South favorite

Indianapolis has scored on 14 of its 16 possessions this season, and Daniel Jones is third in the league in EPA per dropback (0.35). And then there’s this: Jonathan Taylor had 165 yards on 25 carries against a defense that gave up 71 rushing yards in Week 1. Shane Steichen is in the way-too-early conversation for Coach of the Year.

Up next: at Titans, Sunday, 1 p.m. ET
 

After a weekend filled with last-minute wins by the Cowboys, Colts and Bengals, Week 2 of the 2025 NFL season concluded with two exciting "Monday Night Football" showdowns. How did wins for the Buccaneers and the Chargers shake up our Power Rankings? We stacked all 32 teams heading into Week 3.

In addition to our rankings, NFL Nation reporters named the No. 1 thing they've learned from the starting quarterback -- or QB situation in general -- this season. Some of those starters will change in the coming weeks as five quarterbacks deal with injuries: the 49ers' Brock Purdy (toe and left shoulder), the Bengals' Joe Burrow (toe surgery), the Commanders' Jayden Daniels (knee), the Jets' Justin Fields (concussion) and the Vikings' J.J. McCarthy (ankle). Can the backups keep their teams on track? And how have veteran QBs such as Daniel Jones and Geno Smith looked with their new squads so far?

Let's get right into it with our No. 1-ranked team. (Our power panel of more than 80 writers, editors and TV personalities evaluates how NFL teams stack up against one another, ranking them from 1 to 32.)

See previous rankings: Preseason, Week 2

1758029617000.png

Week 2 result: Beat the Jets 30-10
Week 2 ranking: 1
sw_ye_40.png

Biggest QB takeaway: Josh Allen continues to embrace he doesn't have to be Superman

Although it's sometimes necessary for Allen to put the Bills on his back, he had issues early in his career of trying to do too much on his own. That certainly still comes up sometimes, but the Bills have shown that they don't have to rely solely on Allen's arm and legs. That was on display versus the Jets, as Buffalo's dominant rushing attack led the way. James Cook finished with 132 yards and two touchdowns, and Allen didn't score for just the eighth start of his NFL career. -- Alaina Getzenberg


Somebody asked me the other day if the Kansas City Chiefs' dynasty is over.

Yeah, right.

The 0-2 start is cause for concern, but the Chiefs will find their way out of the hole. It's not like they didn't just go toe-to-toe with the Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday, a game they might have won if Travis Kelce actually caught the football for what should have been a touchdown and a 17-13 lead in the fourth quarter.

As it turned out, the Eagles intercepted the Kelce drop and turned it into a touchdown that led to a 20-17 victory that has the Chiefs 0-2 for the first time since 2014. It's also the first time Patrick Mahomes has lost three straight games since his college days at Texas Tech.

So, the cause for concern is understandable. But let's look at it deeper. The Chiefs lost a close one to the Chargers in Brazil and then did little on offense against the Eagles and still were in it in the fourth quarter.

0-2 isn't as bad as it looks.

What is bad is the lack of playmakers they have on the offense for Mahomes. They don't scare anybody.

But there might be good news this week. Speedy receiver Xavier Worthy could be back against the New York Giants, and Rashee Rice will be back in four weeks.

The Chiefs have to hold on until then. That will put more pressure on the defense to play like it did Sunday and for Mahomes and Kelce and whoever else is on the field to do enough to score more points.

Kansas City started at No. 4 in my Power Rankings this season, but now has fallen out of the top 10. The Eagles remain in the top spot.

I think the Chiefs will find a way to turn it around. With Andy Reid as head coach and Mahomes at quarterback, doesn't it seem like they always do?

The dynasty isn't dead. It's just in the ER for a bit, but my opinion is that they will be back to health in a big way come mid-October.

2They dominated the Jets and clearly have staked a claim as one of the best teams after two weeks. The defense impressed in beating New York.
 
Back
Top