Divisional Round: Bills at Donkeys


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Josh Allen and the Bills are down and out from the playoffs after a divisional-round loss to the Broncos. Matthew Stockman / Getty Images

Over the years, there have been many versions of postgame Josh Allen after a gut-wrenching loss. Sometimes the Buffalo Bills quarterback is respectfully defiant. Other times, he seems like a plastic bag floating through a gusty day and barely even there.

Last year in Kansas City, with the Bills falling just short in the AFC Championship Game, Allen ethereally glided to the locker room as if no one else was around. That was the worst we’ve seen him take a loss to that point.

But this scene in Denver, following the Bills’ 33-30 overtime loss to the Broncos that eliminated them from the playoffs, was different from all the rest.

Usually wanting to get his postgame media responsibilities done immediately, Allen was unusually late by his standards on Saturday. A member of the Bills’ public relations staff emerged from the locker room into the news conference area, but Allen didn’t quickly follow like usual.

That’s when Allen lost it, away from the public eye for a few more seconds, preparing to actually speak in real time about the game and the outcome that ultimately broke his heart. Allen stayed tucked around the corner to compose himself just enough to take the two steps through the door, and the several more up the stairs to get in front of the awaiting media.

He adjusted his winter hat with tears in his eyes, wiped his red face with two hands and sniffled to clear just enough. As the first question came in, Allen took one deep breath and blew out the air — his last-ditch effort to be normal in an anything-but-normal situation.

He sniffled one more time before his voice broke during his first answer.

“It’s extremely difficult,” Allen started, shaking his head in disbelief. “I feel like I let my teammates down tonight.”

Six straight years to the AFC divisional round at least. And six straight years ending the same way. The Buffalo Bills are on the outside looking in on the Super Bowl once again. Allen will officially end his 20s without a single Super Bowl berth.


“I hate how it ended and that’s … that’s going to stick with me for a long time,” he said.

It was pure dejection in every sense of the word. Much of the news conference went the same way, without Allen looking a single person in the eyes. But once Allen exited stage right and went back to the locker room, the flood of emotions were only beginning.

Tucked in the back right of the visitor’s locker room, just three stalls from the corner, Allen sat. He sported four separate lines of red from his in-game punishment on his left shoulder, some thick, some skinny. Both elbows were completely red.

He shared no words with anyone for more than 10 minutes. At times, he stared 100 miles forward. He grabbed a fistful of hair and looked down. He picked at his fingers a few times. He didn’t pour himself into his phone to scroll as he’s done in past losses.

He just sat there and felt every ounce of the weight he willingly bears of Buffalo’s hopes and dreams for a Super Bowl victory. The weight that will have to wait at least one more year.

Allen wasn’t the only one. Tight end Dalton Kincaid was visibly upset for minutes on end, first biting a towel to try and ease the pain, but then placing it over his head. Left tackle Dion Dawkins had to turn away from the end of his scrum because of how upset he was. Defensive end Joey Bosa walked through with welled-up eyes, too.

It was like this almost everywhere you looked in that locker room. The only murmurs heard were soft attempts at comfort between teammates and the low-volume words of players who agreed to interviews.

The pure devastation in the air was thicker than a band of lake effect snow.

For the vast majority of Allen’s playoff exits, he was not the one ultimately responsible, even if he believed that to be the case. And while he did his fair share to help right the ship on Saturday in Denver, more than that at times, one mistake too many ultimately might have been what did the Bills in.

Maybe if he hadn’t fumbled the ball away at the end of the first half to set the Broncos up with a field goal, the very margin of victory for the Broncos. Maybe if he spotted the safety as he targeted Curtis Samuel deep, only to be intercepted. Or, maybe if he put a more accurate throw to Dawson Knox on third-and-10 at the end of regulation, that could have been a touchdown to end the game.

Perhaps all of it provided a cumulative yield, resulting in his atypical flood of emotions after the game.

There were other culprits throughout the game. James Cook fumbled when the Bills looked like they were about to go into cruise control early, which gave the Broncos new life. The defense, despite being spectacular in keeping the Bills in it through all those turnovers, couldn’t get out of its own way in overtime and took multiple penalties to set up the Broncos for an easy field goal. Even injuries worked against them, with the Broncos capitalizing on Darnell Savage’s third snap in place of the cramping Cam Lewis for a touchdown, and another on Dane Jackson’s first snap for a temporarily injured Tre’Davious White.

And, given the tone taken by head coach Sean McDermott, they were less than pleased about both the ruling on a controversial Brandin Cooks non-catch interception and the way the officiating crew and league handled the enormity of that play in that moment. To the Bills’ credit, it did look like a catch, and it was handled poorly given the stakes.

Regardless of who is at fault, the simple fact is that the 2025 Bills’ season, that began with such promise and an opportunity to get through a playoff field without the likes of the usual AFC playoff mainstays, is over. Even with a road-warrior postseason path, Allen and the Bills looked like they could beat anyone left despite their flaws.

Though the blame goes well beyond just Saturday in Denver, everyone is at fault in one way or another.

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Tre’Davious White is one of several players who were in the final year of their contracts.Ron Chenoy / Imagn Images

Whether it was Allen and the players, the way certain pieces of the roster were built by general manager Brandon Beane, in-game decisions by McDermott during the season, borderline stubborn offensive play-calling at times from coordinator Joe Brady or defensive coordinator Bobby Babich taking a bit too long to bring it together, they all share something in the unraveling of what could have been, or maybe should have been, a Super Bowl season.

All of that will undergo an understandably thorough review as the Bills shift into their offseason discovery phase. Even with their flaws, the Bills had a team that could have pushed for the goal that has eluded them since Allen, Beane and McDermott arrived. The uncomfortable truth moving forward is that the seasons of Patrick Mahomes, Joe Burrow and Lamar Jackson were over before the playoffs even began.

The most glaring issue staring the Bills in the face is that unlike the start of the 2025 season, with most of their key players signed and ready for another go at the title, this roster is very likely to see substantial turnover in several key areas.

The offensive line that has been together for multiple seasons and made the offense go when the receivers couldn’t gain any separation down the field might need to figure out two new starters. Left guard David Edwards and center Connor McGovern are free agents. Given their excellent play the last two seasons, their markets are likely to be pretty good.

The only proven and substantial piece under contract at defensive end is Greg Rousseau, with both Bosa and A.J. Epenesa heading to free agency. DaQuan Jones, one of the Bills’ most important defensive tackles, is also out of his contract come mid-March.

At linebacker, both Shaq Thompson and Matt Milano, who helped rescue the defense over the last couple of months, are both free agents. The only holdover, Terrel Bernard, is coming off his worst season as a pro, and now there’s concern about whether he’ll be a dependable starter moving forward.

White and safety Jordan Poyer are on expiring contracts, too. And the Bills will need to do a massive overhaul of their woefully unequipped boundary receiver room.

Plus, they’re projected to be $11 million over the 2026 salary cap. Suddenly, there’s a high degree of difficulty to get back to this point, given the team and path they just squandered.

If there is one spot of good news, it’s that Allen remains one of the best players in the world, and with him, anything remains possible. But sometimes, Superman will run into kryptonite. The over-reliance and burden on Allen can, at times, be their undoing.

Allen has been steadfast in his determination to deliver Buffalo the championship he so believes the city and fan base deserve. As he enters his age-30 season in 2026, the time in his prime will tick with increasing volume, as will the anxiety of the fans.

There will be tough questions and, perhaps, tougher answers. The Bills deserve all the time they need to figure out how to turn the overwhelming sense of devastation Saturday into one of euphoria, that perhaps even leads to a parade through the snow in Western New York.

As Allen returned from trying to wash away all his emotions in the shower, he still sported the same watery glaze in his eyes from the immediate aftermath of the Bills’ loss.

At this point, the only thing he, his teammates and the fan base can do is hope that one day it will finally be their turn. That all the work they’ve put in and all the pain they’ve endured will have been worth it.

A Bills team that only knows heartbreak will again have to watch another team celebrate the very thing they covet.

Maybe next year.
 
Babich and Brady MUST go.
Training staff MUST go - the number of injuries this year is inexcusable!
McD - sorry pal, thank you for your service - might survive, but we need a coach who inspires players, not a coach who is inspired by his players. That's why Chicago and New England took massive steps this year - dynamic motivators.

Beane has had us in cap hell for years! Next year again, we are projected to be 11 million OVER the cap??
WHAT THE FUCK!

Allen is getting too old to be part of a rebuilding year(s), so this team better get real fucking creative, real fucking quick
 
New England and Chicago aren’t paying franchise QBs. New England had like 55 million for free agency and a non first place schedule. No knock on Vrabel but that played apart.
 
It was a fucking catch
Animated GIF
 
With the McD firing this seems like its not needed but for tradition's sake here it goes



Goats

Sean Michael McDermott. Another failed opportunity. 8 years and counting. Once again his D came up short. Gave up near 30, never pressured the QB, gave up 50% of the 3rd downs it faced to fucking Bo Nix, outcoached, relinquished a lead very late in the game and he once again made an absolutely ******** coaching decision by being "aggressive" with 16 seconds, no time outs, about 45 yards away from a FG try with a 40+ year old kicker on a so so leg. I know Allen is the one that fumbled it. But that play never should've happened. We lost by 3. Bye Sean.

Bad Allen. No blame on the strip sack and the 2nd int that never was. But he did fumble before the half even if that never should've happened and he did underthrow Samuel on int 1. He was on and off this game and it cost us.

Cook. The spiral started on that fumble. From most likely 14-3 up to 10-7 down. The league leader in fumbles did it again.

Pass rush. What pass rush? 8 years and counting. This is a Sean McDermott sentence.

Refs. Pointless to go over this one. I said it last week that we needed to keep it out of Cheffers hand because it given the chance he would fuck it up. He's a bottom 3 ref and he proved it. I hope he fucking dies. There I said it. Groan my post.

Keon. Fire this clown

Cooks. I know it was a catch. But you could've let no doubt with a better effort. He also stopped on the non PI call. Pretty sure that was a perfectly thrown ball. Would've been game.

3rd and 8 screen in the 4th. I know Josh floored it. But still. Predictable. I know I told my kid, here comes the stupid ass screen. And no it was not going to work. The Broncos players stopped that's why it looked like Shakir would've scored.



Balls

Good Allen. 3 touchdown throws, first downs galore with his legs. Put up 30 points despite it all. Warrior

OL. Best pass rush in the game was mostly held in check. Run game worked. The damn turnovers man.

Prater. Clutch once again

Shakir. Only guy worth a damn.

Karma or whatever it is that got Nix hurt. I got nothing against him, but I'm happy the league gets fucking Jared Stidham in the championship game. Serves them right for that refereeing effort.
 
Karma or whatever it is that got Nix hurt. I got nothing against him, but I'm happy the league gets fucking Jared Stidham in the championship game. Serves them right for that refereeing effort.
And the Fucking GLOBETROTTERS, I mean Pats get a free ride to the Super Bowl, completing another embarrassment to the Washington Bills.

#fuckthenfl
#nflisrigged
 
And the Fucking GLOBETROTTERS, I mean Pats get a free ride to the Super Bowl, completing another embarrassment to the Washington Bills.

#fuckthenfl
#nflisrigged

The Pats season is a perfect example of something most people ignore or dont want to acknowledge. Luck is so important. Much more than people realize. Pricks love to throw out the classic ...."you make your own luck" "the more I prepare the luckier I get" and similar cliches. And while they certainly hold truth. Good old plain luck is all you need at times.

Easiest schedule of the past 25 years
Herbert with a backup OL
Stroud with no Nico or Schultz
Denver with a backup QB

Preparation has nothing to do with any of that. Blind luck.
 

Brandin Cooks insists ‘it was a catch’ after Bills’ heartbreaking loss​


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Broncos cornerback Ja'Quan McMillian intercepted a pass intended for Bills receiver Brandin Cooks in overtime.
Matthew Stockman / Getty Images


There’s something Buffalo Bills wide receiver Brandin Cooks can’t shake from his mind. “You think about it every single day,” he said, reflecting on Buffalo’s heartbreaking playoff exit against the Denver Broncos.

Cooks was at the center of one of the most controversial plays in the Bills’ 33-30 divisional-round loss on Jan. 17 — a play in which Broncos cornerback Ja’Quan McMillian appeared to snatch the ball right out of Cooks’ hands in a pivotal moment in overtime.

Appearing on NFL Network’s “Good Morning Football” on Thursday, Cooks broke down the incident, and he’s still frustrated with how it played out. Bills quarterback Josh Allen launched a deep pass to Cooks, and Cooks and his defender, McMillian, hit the ground. Cooks seemed to secure the ball before he went down, but as they fell, McMillian rolled over him, scooping the ball before it touched the turf. The interception was awarded to McMillian.

“At the end of the day, it was a catch. Not just what it looked like, but what it felt like,” Cooks said. “When you look back at it, the time that was spent on it to review it wasn’t enough. Given the magnitude of that game and situation, it’s a little disappointing.”

Cooks spared no details, emphasizing his grip on the ball.

“In that situation,” he said, “knee hit, shoulder hit, back hit, whatever the case may be, my hands never left that ball. And then, so the other thing is the tie goes to the offense, but I really feel in my heart of hearts that I caught that ball.”

He described the hope he clung to when the team called a timeout: “The first thing you think about is it’s overtime, so we can’t challenge it. So when the timeout happens, I’m like, ‘OK, there’s hope here. They’re about to take a look at this thing and get it right.’ And that’s what’s going through my mind right there.”


Beyond the disputed play, Cooks opened up about his midseason arrival in Buffalo and the heavy weight of feeling like he let Allen down.

“I felt like I was there all year, and I went through everything,” he said. “And then you hear your quarterback say, ‘I let the team down.’ That triggers something for me right away because that guy has so much on his shoulders with this team, and he’s carried us all year. And to have the opportunity to be able to alleviate some of that pressure, that was going through my mind. It’s like I felt like I let him down,” Cooks said.

During the conversation, Cooks also spoke about life off the field. He highlighted how quickly he connected with teammate Keon Coleman, saying he knew from the start that Coleman was someone he’d naturally gravitate toward. He also shared his surprise at the news of head coach Sean McDermott’s firing:

“Found out through the media, on social media. My reaction was, ‘Wow.’ You talk about a great coach. You talk about a guy that’s been doing it at a high level for a long time. I think I know a little bit about some great coaches. I’ve been fortunate enough to play for some, and I’d put him in that category.”

Even days later, the sting of that playoff loss — especially the controversial ending — hasn’t faded. “A loss like this, in this magnitude, is going to stick with me all offseason,” Cooks said.
 
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