Jim Kubiak: Josh Allen's best friend is the Bills' newfound rushing attack. Take a look

HipKat

Administrator
Staff member

Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills advanced to the divisional round of the AFC playoffs with their impressive 31-7 victory over the Denver Broncos, scoring 21 unanswered second-half points. And Allen’s performance was nearly flawless, as he completed 20 of 26 attempts for 272 yards with two touchdowns and zero interceptions.

Some anticipated that the Broncos’ defense – ranked seventh in the NFL in total defense, first in sacks and third in scoring defense (18.3 ppg) and average rushing yards allowed (96.0) – would help the Broncos upset the Bills.

Offensive coordinator Joe Brady’s answer was a power approach, negating the sack-leading pass rush of the Broncos by running right at them.

Teams cannot rush the passer if they are forced to stop the run, and Brady executed this formula to perfection. The Bills rushed 44 times on 72 plays, racking up a staggering 210 net rushing yards.

This philosophy also led to a lopsided time of possession, 41:43 to 18:17, allowing the Bills to run 30 more offensive plays while minimizing the time their defense had to be on the field.

1737110080243.png
Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen (17) hands off the ball to running back James Cook (4) during the first quarter at Highmark Stadium on Sunday, Nov. 3, 2024. (Joshua Bessex/Buffalo News)
This 2024-25 Bills' newfound rushing ability is doubly dangerous to opponents when coupled with Allen, as he added another 272 passing yards for a total offensive production of 471 total yards.

As the wild-card game wore on, the Broncos’ defense was slowly suffocated under the continuous pounding, the third-down conversions (8 of 15) and Allen’s remarkable efficiency.

Allen played in only seven offensive possessions Sunday before being replaced with Mitch Trubisky to finish out the game – a testament to Brady’s power philosophy. The Bills stayed multidimensional, while the Broncos lacked the balance and ultimately the fortitude to catch up.

Here's how it all went down.

FIRST QUARTER​

Play selection: 20 plays (nine passes, 11 runs)
Allen: 6 for 9 passing, 49 yards; three carries for 19 yards
Performance grade: 90%
Score: Broncos, 7-3.

The Bills’ defense took the field first and gave up a long touchdown pass almost immediately to fall into an early hole 7-0.
Allen’s first drive of the game was impressive as Brady’s balanced attack (six runs, five passes) chewed up 5:29 of game clock on 12 plays. The result of the drive was a field goal as Allen was brushed in the pocket and missed this opportunity on second-and-7 from the 8-yard line.

1. Second-and-7: Josh Allen brushed in the pocket​


The Broncos’ pass rush did an excellent job on this play of making Allen uncomfortable as they collapsed the pocket to the point that Dion Dawkins and Connor McGovern both brushed Allen as they were protecting him.

Both offensive linemen were able to keep their bodies between Allen and the rush, but not without giving up enough ground to bump into him.

This was excellent poise by Allen not to immediately leave the pocket. Watch as he looked left and then came back across the field to the right as the scramble began. The contact in the pocket definitely made Allen uncomfortable, and as he stepped up and to his right, he found a tiny hole just inside of Cody Barton. Knox could have had this had he settled, but he kept moving, anticipating that Allen would throw him open toward the inside of the field. On most days, this disconnect would have been a touchdown, but the uncomfortable nature of the contact, in my opinion, caused the hiccup.


Allen followed with a high incompletion on the next play, and the Bills settled for a 27-yard field goal to make the score 7-3.

The Bills’ defense forced a punt, and Allen had the ball back in his hands with an opportunity for the Bills to take their first lead of the game. Allen led a monstrous 13-play drive that continued into the second quarter and devoured 7:35 from the game clock in the process.

This drive-starting play was brilliant by Brady and perfectly executed by Allen. Watch as the tight end traded motion from one side to the other, and then the orbit-action by Curtis Samuel influenced the defense.

2. First-and-10: Josh Allen tight end delay to Dalton Kincaid​


This is how to help a great quarterback such as Allen be efficient. This may look like an ordinary play, but it is not. With the tight end trade, Dalton Kincaid changed the strength of the formation. Next, Brady creatively used "11" personnel (1 running back, 1 tight end) to make it look like "21" personnel (2 running backs, 1 tight end) with Curtis Samuel in the backfield.

The magic here goes beyond that, however, as the protection was a play-action that pulled left guard David Edwards. These elements made the play feel like a run to the Broncos' pass rushers – but here is where it got good.

Brady used the right running back, Ty Johnson, to run a go through the hole Edwards vacated and down the field, clearing the path for Kincaid’s tight end delay. Kincaid blocked for a two-count before he released across the field and underneath Johnson. The Broncos’ defense was effectively tricked into thinking it was a run, then was overloaded with two right-side receivers flooding an area to Allen’s left.

This was an unusual, creative, and highly effective design for Allen to help the offense build momentum on the first play of the drive.

Two plays later, on another first-and-10, Brady called this power running play from "21" personnel (2 backs, 1 tight end).

There was no play in this game that personified the Bills’ will to win and their desire to impose that will than this Herculean effort by the entire offensive line to carry James Cook for an additional 14 yards after he had been stopped. It was almost unreal to watch as a pile of linemen pushed, fought and carried Cook across midfield. The Broncos’ defense could not stop the avalanche of rushing power and the refusal to go down.

This set the tone and established a dominance that was projected for the remainder of the game.

Pass rushers can be virtually erased from the game when they are being overwhelmed with a power rushing attack.

3. James Cook and the offensive line display the will to win​


Cook is a tremendous inside runner, with the electrifying ability to pick his way in traffic and accelerate through the smallest of openings. Here, Reggie Gilliam blocked linebacker Nik Bonitto as he came off the edge, and O’Cyrus Torrence pulled around and up into the hole for Cook.

The Broncos had 10 players at the line of scrimmage to stop the run, but they were overwhelmed by a ferocious Bills mindset to pound the football with raw power. Nothing fires up offensive linemen than a play like this, when they break the spirit of the opponent who cannot stop the momentum.

As the clip gets toward the end and Cook goes to the ground, watch the emotion of Spencer Brown. This was an important motivational point in this game with the Bills behind 7-3.

One could feel the tide about to turn in the Bills’ favor.

There were other key plays by Allen on this drive, including a 9-yard scramble, a third-and-3 run and a smart third-and-5 completion that all highlighted the theme of this game: patient, smart, power football.

Allen protected the football and never reached for more than what the defense was giving. The result was, like a heartbeat, the consistent thumping of the defense all the way down the field.

SECOND QUARTER​

Play selection: 15 plays (three passes, 11 runs)
Allen: 3 for 3 passing, 24 yards; 3 carries for 16 yards; 1 sack
Performance grade: 100%
Score: Bills, 10-7.

As the second quarter began, Allen continued this prolific, signature Bills drive with this smashing quarterback sweep on third-and-3.
The Broncos, whose pass rush was a concern coming into the game, were thinking about stopping the run.

4. Josh Allen QB sweep​


Allen ran this sweep with abandon, and the Brady scheme and the overall execution was outstanding. The Samuel motion forced an adjustment that made it easier for Edwards and McGovern to seal the inside defenders. This gave Allen a great cutback lane, and he reacted to it.

Dawkins pulled as Mack Hollins cracked down on the edge rusher, Bonitto. This was a play that demonstrated Hollins' physical play, as well as the athletic ability of every player on the Bills’ offensive line. They win at the point of attack and climb to the linebacker level, making it possible to gain the first down.

In general terms, running the quarterback gives the offense an advantage of all 10 remaining players as blockers, opposed to nine potential blockers if the quarterback hands off. This is what the “wildcat” philosophy is about – using a running back as the quarterback and gaining one more blocker. Using Allen in these situations, within reason, made the Bills’ rushing attack nearly unstoppable.

Watch as Allen delivered a blow to Justin Strnad, who is 6-foot-3 and 235 pounds. Allen was bigger and stronger than Strnad and hammered him as he tried to make the tackle. Allen is as fearless and ferocious a runner as there is in the NFL.

Cook ran for the Bills’ go-ahead touchdown on the next play to take the lead 10-7. This drive – only the Bills' third offensive possession of the game – took the wind out of the sails of the Broncos’ defense as they were physically dominated.

The Broncos later faked a punt for a first down, extending their possession. This could have been a turning point in the game. The Broncos' drive stalled, and as a result, the Bills had to start on their 1-yard line.

If the Bills’ offense had faltered in this backed-up situation, it could have resulted in a safety and possession change. This was a well-played strategy by Denver coach Sean Payton, but Allen, Brady and the Bills’ offense handled it beautifully and powered their way on 11 plays, chewing up 6:36 of the game clock.

The Bills punted, leaving the Broncos with only 1:52 in the quarter from their own 7-yard line. This was due to an excellent punt by Sam Martin and coverage by Hollins.

Through a poised and prepared offensive strategy, the Bills took what could have been a game-changing situation and flipped the script. Allen and Brady took a starting position on the 1-yard line and gave it back to the Broncos on their 7 while draining more than 6 minutes off the clock. This was a reflection of Allen’s growth as a player, understanding exactly what his role was in surviving the adversity.

The Broncos missed a long field-goal attempt before halftime, which kept the Bills' lead at 10-7.

There were no turnovers in the game to this point. Allen completed 9 of 12 attempts for 69 yards and was without a touchdown or interception, but his management and execution were nearly flawless.

The Bills’ offense ran 11 more plays (35 to 24), nearly doubled the time of possession (19:40 to 10:20), and outrushed the Broncos 128-44. The game was closer on the scoreboard than it was on the field as the Bills were consistently exuding the power and strength that would eventually make the difference.
 

THIRD QUARTER​

Play selection: 18 plays (seven passes, 10 runs)
Allen: 6 for 7 passing, 85 yards, 1 touchdown, 1 sack; 1 carry for 7 yards
Performance grade: 94%
Score: Bills, 21-7.

The Bills began the third quarter and picked up right where they left off with a potent and physical drive down the field. Cook rushed two times in a row before Allen connected on this first-and-10 completion to Dawson Knox.

5. 1st-and-10: Josh Allen play-action 20-yrd gain to Dawson Knox​


This was a breathtaking design by Brady on first-and-10.

The Bills had been dominating the Broncos running the football, and they used this play-action pass to slow down the rush. Kincaid and Knox were in three-point stances to Allen’s left and were running what first appeared to be a post-dig route combination – until Knox bent his route back to the outside.

This was brilliant planning, as Knox was inside of Kincaid and drew a linebacker, Barton, in coverage. Kincaid, who was outside, drew matching coverage from cornerback Pat Surtain II. Surtain followed Kincaid across the field, and Barton was surprised. He could not follow Knox as he turned back to the outside.

This took time, and Brady used the least likely of all Bills’ personnel – Khalil Shakir, who is listed at 6 feet and 190 pounds – to chip defensive end Jonathon Cooper, who is 6-4 and 257. The combination of the play-action to Cook and the chipping on the edge rusher, Cooper, was enough to slow the pass rush down for Allen to have the time to find Knox.

This was, in my opinion, a state-of-the-art offensive curveball that was brilliantly executed. The pass rush was again affected by the design of the play, the chip, the fake run and the surprise outside move by Knox.

This drive was halted and reduced to a field goal, but kept the momentum in the Bills’ favor as they increased their meager lead to 13-7.

The Bills’ defense held again and forced another punt.

This was the point in which the dam finally broke.

Allen took over with 8:40 to go in the third quarter as the Bills were poised to break the game open.

6. Fourth-and-1: TD pass to Ty Johnson​


In nine plays, Allen and the Bills’ offense marched from their own 27-yard line down to the Broncos’ 24.

It was here that Bills coach Sean McDermott made the aggressive move to go for it on fourth-and-1, giving up on the more likely field goal. In reality, a field goal or a touchdown would have made it a two-score lead. The field-goal scenario would have put the Bills ahead 16-7. The touchdown scenario for the Bills was obviously better, putting the Bills at 20-7 after an extra point.

McDermott did it one better, getting the touchdown on fourth-and-1 and then capitalizing on the momentum with a 2-point conversion. The dam had broken on this play, and the Bills finally jumped into a commanding 21-7 lead.

This play was unique in that Allen is known for surging forward on quarterback sneaks for first downs of this distance. Here, Brady lined up in an empty formation, which was a surprise. Brady is so good at using personnel groups in different ways. Here, he used the same personnel, "11" (1 running back, 1 tight end), with an empty formation, with Knox in a three-point stance and the running back as a wide receiver.

Johnson lined up as the most outside receiver to the right, then motioned to be the No. 3 receiver in the backfield to the left, then free-released on a wheel route to become the most outside receiver to Allen’s left. This was all on one play.

In this empty formation, the Broncos were prevented from blitzing six defenders as long as they kept a safety in the middle of the field. Five defenders rushed and five defenders were necessary in coverage versus the empty five-receiver set.

This gave Allen the security of knowing that the Broncos couldn’t have brought more defenders than that without vacating their safety spot.

Allen made this play on pure ability, as he read the defense and then scrambled to his right. Allen’s pass to Johnson was extraordinary, thrown with ridiculous power as Johnson ran across the field from left to Allen’s right. I don’t think there is another quarterback in the NFL, including Lamar Jackson or Patrick Mahomes, who could have made this throw.

Johnson’s catch was incredible in its own right as the ball was lower than he had expected, and he had to dig it off the turf to catch it.
The Bills took this lead 21-7 with 3:06 remaining in the quarter and never looked back.

FOURTH QUARTER​

Play selection: 14 plays (seven passes, seven runs)
Allen: 5 for 7 passing, 118 yards, TD; 1 carry for 4 yards
Performance grade: 100%
Score: Bills, 31-7
The first play of the fourth quarter was this touchdown pass on third-and-6 to Curtis Samuel.

7. Third-and-6: Josh Allen's TD pass to Curtis Samuel​


Here, Allen made an excellent read that was made easier by this Brady motion. The formation was a 4-by-1, as the Bills moved Johnson behind a bunched three-receiver set. The Broncos decided that their linebacker, Barton, would match Johnson no matter where he went.

The magic of the play by Brady was the motion, taking Hollins from the No. 1 position across and then returning. The Broncos were matching man-to-man with the 1, 2, and 3 positions of the Bills’ three-receiver set. Surtain was poised to cover the No. 3 receiver (Hollins when the ball was snapped).

Surtain moved to the outside with Hollins and then realized he had to adjust because Hollins became the No. 1 position receiver again. This hesitation allowed Samuel to cross the field, literally wide open, with Surtain trying to catch up. Allen read this perfectly and decisively delivered the strike.

Samuel made the catch and then turned on his speed and physical skills in the open field, breaking a tackle and taking it all the way for a game-breaking touchdown.

This was the second touchdown pass of the game for Allen, and came on a back-to-back series. This made the score 28-7 Bills.
The Broncos turned the ball over on downs on their next possession, giving Allen and the juggernaut offense of the Bills a chance to drain the clock and the remaining life out of the Broncos.

Allen led a 14-play drive from his own 14-yard line down to the Broncos’ 18 before Tyler Bass kicked a 34-yard field goal for the final score of the day. This drive emptied what was left in the Broncos’ tank, putting them down by four scores with only 4:37 left to play.

CONCLUSION​

More than quarterbacking, Allen's mindset and mentality was at the forefront of this Buffalo victory. Allen’s abilities were visible and impossible to stop. It starts with his efficiency: his throwaways, his runs for positive yardage, his ability to check to the right plays and his ability to protect the football. All of this together makes him a top echelon NFL player.

Then, add his rushing ability. No one seems to know how this happened, as Allen was nicknamed “Tortuga” (“turtle” in Spanish) by his baseball coaches at Firebaugh High School (he was 6-foot-2, 180 pounds and ran the 40-yard dash in 5.5 seconds).

That is laughable now. Allen’s size, strength and speed have dramatically improved as he has morphed from tortuga to NFL MVP candidate (for the record, he ran a 4.61-second 40-yard dash before he was drafted in 2018).

The final and perhaps most important tier is that Allen and this Bills team possess a deep-seated confidence. That is difficult to measure, but you know it when you see it.

It looks like a quarterback pulling up on fourth-and-1 and throwing a touchdown pass.
It is an immediate recognition of zone defense and a quick, decisive throw into a hole for a first down.

It can look like a sweep on which a quarterback barrels into defenders, looking to punish them for tackling him.

Allen’s belief and confidence is as high as I’ve seen. Together, with Brady’s game-changing motions, formations and concepts, Allen is more effective than ever before.

All four of Allen’s possessions in the second half were scoring drives. The Bills scored 22 unanswered points in succession – field goal, touchdown, touchdown, field goal (along with a 2-point conversion). They put the game away when they needed to and gave themselves another opportunity for Allen to take this team to a level they haven’t been to before.
 
Back
Top