Latest Buffalo Bills Stories
Posted: Nov 17th 2009 3:54PM ET by Dan Graziano (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bills, NFL Quarterbacks, NFL Analysis

So Dick Jauron is available to paint your house this weekend if you need somebody. The
Buffalo Bills have relieved Jauron of his job as their head coach, effective immediately. And while there's nothing on Jauron's resume that's going to cause anybody to mix him up with Vince Lombardi, the other Bills news of the day makes me wonder if the man really ever had a chance.
The news of Jauron's firing comes on the same day the Bills
apparently decided to give
Ryan Fitzpatrick the starting quarterback job over
Trent Edwards (presumably because neither Rob Johnson nor J.P. Losman answered his phone). And while we all certainly wish Fitzpatrick well, let's get real. This quarterback decision is that of a team that
has no real quarterback. And when you don't have a real quarterback -- a reliable, stud, franchise-type quarterback -- well, that's when people's careers end.
Posted: Nov 17th 2009 2:40PM ET by Michael David Smith (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bills

The
Buffalo Bills have fired head coach
Dick Jauron, the team announced on Tuesday, bringing to an end a coaching tenure in Buffalo that yielded nothing but losing seasons.
The firing, which was first reported by Jason La Canfora of
NFL Network, comes in the midst of a disappointing season in Buffalo, and two days after the
Bills lost 41-17 to the
Tennessee Titans, dropping their record to 3-6.
Posted: Nov 15th 2009 11:30PM ET by Clay Travis (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bills, Titans

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- On Sunday the
Tennessee Titans beat the
Buffalo Bills 41-17. The win was the
Titans' third in a row after beginning 0-6, and the teams' 86-year-old owner,
Bud Adams, was watching from his owner's suite with
NFL commissioner
Roger Goodell. Halfway through the game, Adams was recognized on the jumbotron. Fans cheered. Adams smiled and waved from his open-air suite. Then, as he celebrated victory, Adams
decided to shoot the bird at the opposing sideline. First, Adams went with the right hand bird. Then he went left hand with the bird. Finally, he pulled out the rare, and underrated, double bird.
Presumably, shooting the bird at opposing teams violates one of Roger Goodell's NFL rules. And now Goodell finds himself in the unique position of actually witnessing behavior that he might be required to fine. In the meantime, fans are left to wonder, what longstanding beef does Bud Adams have with the 91-year-old owner of the Buffalo Bills, Ralph Wilson? Or is this simply an old man move, is the double bird an old AFL pat on the back? Video after the jump.
Posted: Nov 15th 2009 5:35PM ET by Matt Snyder (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bills, Titans, AFC East, AFC South

The
Buffalo Bills and
Tennessee Titans entered the fourth quarter Sunday knotted at 17-all. Considering what happened in the last 15 minutes of the game,
Bills head coach Dick Jauron and his team might have been better served to leave early.
When the dust settled, the Bills headed home with a 41-17 loss. They were also likely saddled with nightmares involving Tennessee running back
Chris Johnson and the rejuvenated
Titans defense.
Posted: Nov 1st 2009 4:40PM ET by Matt Snyder (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bills, Texans, AFC South

My high school coach used to say, "no back is worth two fumbles," meaning if a running back lost two fumbles in one game, he should be immediately removed. Sunday in Buffalo, Houston's
Steve Slaton didn't even get that chance. After just one carry and one catch, Slaton lost a fumble and was benched for the rest of the game. It was the seventh fumble -- losing five of them -- on the season for the diminutive back from West Virginia.
Even worse news for Slaton, and his
fantasy football owners, was what
Ryan Moats did in his stead. Moats racked up 126 yards on 23 carries and scored three touchdowns in the
Texans' 31-10 victory over the
Bills.
Posted: Oct 18th 2009 10:53PM ET by Thomas George (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bills, Jets, NFL Analysis

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. -- In a game the Jets were so sure throughout that they had won, they lost. In a game where the Bills refused to fold, they won.
In a comical, error-filled, misguided dance with futility, both teams often looked a mess.
But the beauty was in the fight.
An eyeball-to-eyeball brand of football surfaced -- as it often does when divisional rivals who long ago grew sick of each other jostle for four quarters, and just for good measure, decide to tangle for an extra one.
Buffalo grabbed the final cookie from the jar, claiming a 16-13 victory that took nearly 12 minutes of the overtime.