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2001

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Regular
Season September
30, 2001 Pittsburgh
20
Bills 3
Attendance:
72,874
Rick Anderson -- It gets bleaker by the game. The Buffalo Bills, once the
proud and the mighty in the AFC, have fallen off badly since they cleaned
house early this year. The Pittsburgh Steelers embarrassed the Bills 20-3
in their own stadium to give Buffalo an 0-3 record and sole possession of
last place in the AFC East.
| Scoring
Summary |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
F |
| Pittsburgh |
7 |
3 |
0 |
10 |
20 |
| Bills |
0 |
3 |
0 |
0 |
3 |
|
First Quarter
PIT TD, DEWAYNE WASHINGTON 63 YARD FUMBLE RETURN (KRIS BROWN
KICK), 14:56.
Second Quarter
PIT FG, KRIS BROWN 30 YARD, 11:49.
BUF FG, JAKE ARIANS 23 YARD, 14:34.
Fourth Quarter
PIT FG, KRIS BROWN 52 YARD, 6:04.
PIT TD, CHRIS FUAMATU-MAAFALA 22
YARD RUN (KRIS BROWN KICK), 11:18.
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When Tom Donahoe and Gregg Williams were
brought in as the new GM and head coach respectively, Bills fans thought
the team was headed in the right direction. After an 0-3 start, they are
now wondering if Bills owner Ralph Wilson made the right choice in
selecting Donahoe and Williams to replace former GM John Butler and coach
Wade Phillips. Wilson himself may also be scratching his head about his
selections after this humiliating defeat.
It was a perfect day for football, and with a patriotic sellout crowd
waiving their American flags, the atmosphere was festive. Too bad the
Bills didn't show up and give the kind of performance the fans have come
to expect from their team.
The Bills figured that coming back home and facing a team like the
Steelers offered them a good shot to win their first game of the season.
As it turned out, is was almost a carbon copy of the preseason game in
which the Steelers blanked Buffalo 20-0.
Once again the Bills could not generate any offense. They did come close
once when Bills quarterback Rob Johnson engineered a drive that got the
Bills down to the Steelers' 1-yard line. Starting from their own 30,
Johnson connected with passes to Jeremy McDaniel for 15 and 22-yards, and
a dump off pass to Larry Centers who made it to the Steelers 8. Feeling
lots of pressure, Johnson scrambled down to the Steelers one. But that's
when a penalty on the next play took it back to the 6 yard line and
Johnson couldn't hit his receivers on the next two passes. Kicker Jake
Arians was forced to kick a 22-yard field goal for the only Buffalo points
of the game.
For the rest of the game, the Bills played like they did in the preseason
meeting with the Steelers. One of the biggest handicaps the Bills had was
their weak offensive line. They entered the game minus two starters on the
O'line, veteran John Fina and Jonas Jennings. Kris Farris took over for
Fina and he too suffered a broken right leg and was replaced by Jon
Carman, whom Williams had brought in off the practice squad for some
depth. Carman never played an NFL game before and it certainly showed.
Johnson, who threw 22 passes and completed 13 for 104 yards, played a
gritty game when considering the fact that he didn't have an offensive
line in front of him. He was often forced to scramble and get rid of the
ball to avoid a sack. However, the Steelers were able to sack him 4 times,
bringing his total to 14 sacks in just 3 games. At this rate he'll be
sacked 75 times by season's end, if he lasts that long.
Johnson had to leave the game late in the fourth quarter when he reinjured
his hip. Alex Van Pelt came in and was 3 of 5 for 44 yards. He threw an
interception to Chad Scott, who galloped all 62 yards to the Bills 15. The
Steelers could have easily added 7 more and really made it a blowout, but
decided to run the clock out and not really embarrass the Bills.
The first touchdown of the game came when the Bills were actually driving
into Steeler country. Travis Henry had the ball stripped from him and it
was recovered by Pittsburgh cornerback Dewayne Washington, who scooped it
up, avoided a tackle by Johnson and sailed down the field for a 63-yard
touchdown. That turned out to be the winning score of the game.
The Bills defense did put some pressure on Steeler QB Kordell Stewart, was
as ineffective as Johnson, throwing 22 times and completing 15 for only
197 yards. The Bills D had a tough time stopping "The Bus"
Jerome Bettis, who plowed for 144 yards on 21 carries.
In a nutshell, the game could be summed up on two plays. The one where
Johnson scrambled to the Steeler one and could not get in and the Travis
Henry fumble that produced the 63-yard Dewayne Washington fumble return.
The Bills not only were minus John Fina, Jonas Jennings and Kris Farris,
but also lost the services of veteran Phil Hansen on defense, Jeremy
McDaniel, Tony Driver and Leif Larsen. Hansen and Larsen were listed with
shoulder injuries, McDaniel had an ankle sprain and Driver dislocated his
shoulder.
Johnson, who has not yet found a comfort zone in the newly implanted West
Coast offense, feels everyone has to step up and get better if the Bills
are to start scoring points.
"It's terrible," Johnson said about how the offense is going so
far this year. "We're not very good right now offensively. It's not a
lot of fun. We have to fix it. I think we're all frustrated."
"We have offensive personnel that should be able to put up more than
three points a game. That's embarrassing. We have to figure out what we
did wrong and start on Monday."
Johnson did his best to avoid what could have been a double-digit sack
attack for Pittsburgh by running away from would-be sackers on numerous
occasions. But when he did have time to throw, a lot of his passes failed
to hit their mark. He had trouble hitting his two top receivers, Eric
Moulds and Peerless Price.
"That's not my area," Johnson responded about his not hitting
his two prime targets. "I get the plays and run them. I'm frustrated
right there with them. They're two of our better offensive weapons and
we're struggling to get them open or find them."
Coach Williams could use all the injuries as an excuse, but refused to.
"Injuries will never be an excuse," Williams said. "For the
guy who steps in there, there is no excuse for not knowing what to do. It
wasn't a case of not knowing what to do. It was just not doing it."
To say that he was agitated with his team's performance is an
understatement. In describing his feelings, Williams said "It is not
disappointment, but pissed. Not discouraging, but pissed."
He even hinted at making a big change at middle linebacker.
"Watch #37 (Larry Centers)," said Williams. "He may be the
starting middle linebacker next week. There is a reason why #37 has been
in the league for 12 years. It is the way he plays. That guy competes at
every single snap."
"We did not play well enough in all areas," Williams said.
"We have to get back from top to bottom - from players and coaches.
We did not make plays to give us an opportunity to win this ball
game."
The longer the Bills go without a victory, the tougher it is going to be
for Williams during his press conferences. Upon being asked a question
that suit will with him, Williams replied, "I'm not going to answer
that."
Williams has dug his own grave this year. He has cut most of the veterans
that made the core of the team and has frustrated the few remaining ones
with his style of coaching. Predicting the Bills would make the playoffs
this year, Williams now has his work cut out for him to win just one game
all season.
People were joking earlier in the season about who would win the first
game, the Bills or the Sabres. With the Sabres season starting this week,
it definitely looks like the Sabres will win that contest. The Bills face
the New York Jets at home next Sunday, but with a battered staff both
physically and mentally, it will be a difficult task to get their first
win against the Jets.
NOTES (AP) - Moulds caught a pass in his 52nd
game, extending his franchise record. He's is well off last year's pace,
when he had 94 catches for 1,326 yards. In three games, Moulds has five
catches for 63 yards. ... Bettis is 54 yards from becoming the 14th player
to reach the 10,000-yard rushing plateau. He could accomplish the feat in
the first regular-season game at the Steelers' new Heinz Field, next
weekend against Cincinnati. ... The Steelers were called for 12 penalties
for 125 yards.
| Game
Breakdown |
|
PIT |
BUF |
FIRST DOWNS
3RD-DOWN EFFICIENCY
TOTAL NET YARDS
Average gain
NET YARDS RUSHING
Rushes
NET YARDS PASSING
Completed-attempted
Yards per pass
Times Sacked
Yards Lost To Sacks
Had Intercepted
PUNTS
Average Punt
PENALTIES
Penalty Yards
FUMBLES
Fumbles Lost
TIME OF POSSESSION |
16
4-12
270
4.9
170
31
100
15-22
4.2
2
7
0
4
42.3
12
125
1
0
33:10 |
14
5-13
172
3.2
52
22
120
16-27
3.9
4
28
1
6
50.7
6
57
2
1
26:50 |
INDIVIDUAL
STATISTICS
Pittsburgh
Rushing
Jerome Bettis 22-114, Amos Zereoue 4-37, Chris Fuamatu-Maafala 1-22,
Hines Ward 1-0, Kordell Stewart 3-(-3).
Buffalo Rushing
Travis Henry 17-30, Rob Johnson 2-15, Larry Centers 2-7, Peerless
Price 1-0.
Pittsburgh Receiving
Hines Ward 9-79, Plaxico Burress 2-19, Troy Edwards 2-7, Chris
Fuamatu-Maafala 2-2.
Buffalo Receiving
Jeremy McDaniel 2-37, Larry Centers 5-35, Jay Riemersma 2-35, Eric
Moulds 2-15, Avion Black 2-14, Travis Henry 2-9, Peerless Price 1-3.
Pittsburgh Passing
Kordell Stewart 15-22-107-0-0.
Buffalo Passing
Rob Johnson 13-22-104-0-0, Alex Van Pelt 3-5-44-0-1.
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