SIGN ME UP FOR 30 DAYS OF FRESH COFFEE
CLICK HERE

By Marc Lawrence
Weekend, Jan 24-25

Just what the hell is going on with the Buffalo Bills?

Sean McDermott is out. Brandon Beane is promoted. Urgency to reach a Super Bowl has never been higher.

Tyler Dunne of ‘Go Long’ laid it on the in his observation of the Bills current state of affairs.

Playoff losses are soul-crushing. Always. The reality that this opportunity won’t come for another 365 days — if you’re lucky — is paralyzing.

Year to year, no team in today’s NFL has experienced more agony than the Buffalo Bills.

After “13 Seconds,” to cap the 2021 season, players recall Stefon Diggs going ballistic in the locker room. “Every fu-king time!” he screamed. “Every single fu-king time!” After getting snowplowed by the Cincinnati Bengals, in 2022, the Bills were an emotionally deflated ghost of themselves.

The sight of Damar Hamlin nearly dying on a football field a few weeks prior was traumatizing. After Wide Right II, in 2023, the sensation was disbelief. After the 2024 AFC Championship? More sadness. More shock.

Dalton Kincaid was in tears after a fourth-and-5 prayer fluttered through his hands. He recalled sage vet Micah Hyde telling him to “fu-king own it,” to “fu-king suck up these tears” and face the press. He did. Everyone found a way to move on.

Yeah, a lot of ‘F-bombs’ start flying during times like these.

But the Bills playoff loss at Denver last week felt like something different.

The raw emotion from Sean McDermott’s eighth playoff loss resembled more of a finality. Joey Bosa slammed his helmet against the tunnel wall. Quarterback Josh Allen — a portrait of stoicism in pressers — broke down in tears. Dion Dawkins, upon hearing that Allen blamed himself, was quite literally speechless.

McDermott went off on the officials. One last time, he invoked his love for the city — “I’m standing up for Buffalo, damn it” — and even called The Buffalo News from the team plane to vent.

All the epitome of a coach and a team that has officially run out of gas.

It was time.

After nine seasons as the Bills’ head coach, McDermott has been fired. 

Owner Terry Pegula announced that Brandon Beane would serve as both the president of football operations and general manager

McDermott’s place in Bills history is secure. He finished 98-50 in the regular season for a sparkling winning percentage of .662, good for 15th all-time. He ended this franchise’s gloomy 17-year playoff drought and won five straight division titles.

No coach in NFL history has won more playoff games (eight) without a Super Bowl appearance. No quarterback in NFL history has also won more playoff games (eight) without a Super Bowl appearance than Josh Allen.

Pegula needs to inject new life into his franchise before it’s too late. For the first time since 2017, the Bills are looking for a new coach.

Sean McDermott was not capable of leading this team to a Super Bowl for nearly a decade, so the Buffalo Bills will now try to find someone who can.

See more on the Bills in our TRENDING TODAY section now.

Enjoy the Championship games and the best of luck, as always.

ON TODAY'S SCORECARD
From VIP to MVP

MLC

Josh Allen of the Buffalo Bills, Trevor Lawrence of the Jacksonville Jaguars, Drake Maye of the New England Patriots, Christian McCaffrey of the San Francisco 49ers and Matthew Stafford of the Los Angeles Rams have been voted the five finalists for the 2025 NFL Associated Press Most Valuable Player award.

Allen is the only finalist to have been voted an MVP, taking home the award last season. He played 17 games for the Bills this season, throwing for 3,668 yards, 25 touchdowns and a career-high 69.3 completion percentage while also rushing for 579 yards and 14 touchdowns to lead the team to its seventh straight playoff appearance.

Lawrence nearly doubled his passing yards total from 2024 with 4,007 yards and a career-high 29 touchdowns as the Jaguars won the AFC South and made the playoffs for the first time since 2022.

The Patriots' revival was in large part because of the play of Maye. He led New England led to a 14-3 record, and their first AFC East crown since 2019. The second-year quarterback posted career numbers across the board with 4,394 passing yards, 31 touchdowns and an NFL-best completion percentage (72%) and 113.5 passer rating. He also rushed for 450 yards and four touchdowns.

McCaffrey, who was a first-team All-Pro along with Stafford, recovered from an injury that derailed his 2024 season to play all 17 games for the 49ers in 2025. He rushed for 1,202 yards and 10 touchdowns and also caught 102 passes for 924 receiving yards and seven touchdowns as San Francisco finished with a 12-5 record and returned to the postseason.

No NFL quarterback had more passing yards (4,707) or passing touchdowns (46) than Stafford as the Rams finished with a 12-5 record in the touch NFC West. He was right behind Maye in passer rating (109.2) and was named a first-team All-Pro for the first time in his 17-season career. It was the first time Stafford had reached the 4,000-yard mark since 2021, his first season in L.A., and only the third time in his career he's surpassed 40 passing touchdowns.

Here are the stats of the 4 quarterbacks that were nominated in this year’s class...

2025 - 2026 season

Player

Pass Yds

Pass TD

QBRat

J. Allen

BUF - QB

3,668

25

102.2

T. Lawrence

JAX - QB

4,007

29

91

D. Maye

NE - QB

4,394

31

113.5

M. Stafford

LAR - QB

4,707

46

109.2

The NFL MVP award (officially the Associated Press NFL MVP) has been presented most seasons since 1957.

Quarterbacks are by far the most common winners, with 48 MVP awards going to QBs all-time.

The QB with the most MVPs is Peyton Manning (5), followed by Aaron Rodgers (4).

Running backs have won the AP NFL MVP award the second-most times, 18 all-time


GRINDING OUT THE PROFITS
Super Bowl Redux

There’s a great chance we’re going to see a Super Bowl we’ve seen before. At least from a historical perspective. 

If the Patriots get to Super Bowl LX, we’re guaranteed of it. They’ve already played the Rams twice (winning both) and beat the Seahawks in their classic Super Bowl XLIX victory. Meanwhile, Seattle also played the Broncos a year prior to its galling last-minute loss to New England, winning 43–8 for the franchise’s only championship.

So, if you want a new game? Root for the Broncos and Rams. For that matchup to occur, though, both teams will need to win as underdogs.

The last time both underdogs won on Championship Sunday was ironically in 2018, when New England and Los Angeles went on the road and beat the Chiefs and Saints, respectively.

 

TRENDING TODAY
A Mafia Hit

MLC

As Buffalo licks its wounds following yet another heartbreaking postseason loss, it's worth exploring whether the early 2020s Bills — an era that officially ended with Sean McDermott's recent firing — are the best team in NFL history to never win a Super Bowl.

Consider this: The Bills are one of just four NFL teams to win a playoff game in six consecutive seasons. But while the Cowboys (1991-96), Patriots (2011-18) and Chiefs (2018-24) each won three Super Bowls during their streaks, Buffalo didn't even appear in one during theirs (2020-25).

  • They've also turned losing postseason games into an art form, becoming the first team in NFL history to lose by three or fewer points in the playoffs in back-to-back-to-back seasons.

  • And it's not like the Bills have just snuck into the playoffs, either. They've won five of the last six AFC East titles and, statistically, they've been the NFL's best regular-season team of the first half of the decade.

By the numbers: It took a couple years for the Bills to jell under McDermott (hired in 2017) and Josh Allen (drafted in 2018), but since 2020 they lead the NFL in all four major regular-season stats, boasting the most wins of any team while having the best scoring offense and defense.

  • Wins: 73 (Chiefs are second with 72)

  • Points for: 2,896 (Cowboys: 2,722)

  • Points against: 1,994 (Chiefs: 2,043)

  • Differential: +902* (Ravens: +581)

  • *First place by a mile: The gap between the Bills and second-place Ravens is larger than the gap between the Ravens and ninth-place Rams (+267).

The dynasty that never was: Unfortunately for Buffalo, greatness is measured in rings, and the Bills are one of just four teams in the history of the "Big Four" leagues to have a .600+ win percentage in at least seven straight seasons without ever advancing to a championship, joining the 1968-75 Oakland Raiders, 1981-87 Milwaukee Bucks and 2004-11 San Jose Sharks.

A different kind of sadness: This half-decade of near-dominance calls to mind the infamous "Four Falls of Buffalo," when Jim Kelly's Bills advanced to four straight Super Bowls from 1990-93… and lost all four of them. It begs the question: Is the current iteration of the team even more disappointing? It just might be.

Looking ahead: Keep your heads up, Bills Mafia. Josh Allen is only 29, and it takes only one glorious championship to forget all the past heartbreak. But you'd better get it done soon, because that kid in New England looks poised to turn your division into a gauntlet for the foreseeable future.


BETCHA DIDN’T KNOW
Charm City

The Ravens are hiring Chargers DC Jesse Minter as their new head coach.

He was hired to get Lamar Jackson to the Super Bowl.

After spending the last four years under Jim Harbaugh in Los Angeles and at Michigan, he'll now succeed Jim's brother, John, in Baltimore.

That’s a lot of Harbaugh.


QUOTE OF THE DAY

"You don't have to be great to start,
but you have to start to be great."

- Zig Ziglar



SONG OF THE WEEKEND

No. 1 song this weekend in 1972.
For all of us who were lonely,
teenage bronking bucks.


Click Here to See and Hear It Now.


STAT OF THE DAY
900

St. John's coach Rick Pitino will go for his 900th career win on Saturday. Standing in his way? Xavier, coached by none other than his son, Richard. Pitino currently ranks fifth all-time in wins among Division I men's coaches, but should soon pass Bob Knight (902) and Roy Williams (903) for third place. He still has a way to go before catching Jim Boeheim (1,116) and Mike Krzyzewski (1,202).

lock


The Coffee Club is a presentation of PlaybookSports.com
Feel free to share this e-newsletter with friends.

Online: PlaybookSports.com • follow @MarcLawrence •  email: coffee@PlaybookSports.com • Office: 954.377.8000


lock Privacy Policy
Playbooksports.com will never share or sell your information for any reason.No Spam. No Hassle. Unsubscribe Anytime.


Playbook (R) and Marc Lawrence's Preferred Picks (R) are registered trademarks of Preferred Picks Publications Inc. Copyright (c) 2025c) Playbook(R) Enterprises Inc. Contact Support: 1-954-377-8000. All information contained herein is for amusement purposes only. Any contrary of such information is specifically prohibited.
s

 

Coffee In One Hand. Confidence In The Other. The Coffee Club Way.


SIGN ME UP FOR 30 DAYS OF FRESH COFFEE DELIVERED DAILY TO MY INBOX
CLICK HERE



About Us Contact Us Log In Member Center Create An Account Privacy Policy Store

Copyright © 2025 © Playbook® Enterprises Inc.   Contact Support:  1-954-377-8000  All Logos © to their respective organizations.
This website does not endorse or encourage illegal gambling.
All information contained herein is for amusement purposes only. Any contrary of such information is specifically prohibited.