 |
|
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. |