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2002

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Regular
Season October
13, 2002 Bills 31
Houston 24
Attendance: 70,120
RICK ANDERSON -- Travis Henry was tearing up the Houston Texans defense.
He had already scored a touchdown and was having his best game since the
opener. With the ball deep in Bills territory, Henry tried to stretch to
make more yardage on a carry. The ball came out of his hands and the
Texans recovered at the Bills 8. Henry had now fumbled in 5 out of 6
games. Two had been returned for touchdowns. This fumble would lead to
running James Allen's touchdown pass to Billy Miller, giving the Texans a
24-17 in the fourth quarter. Things couldn't have been more depressing for
Henry, but he more than made up for it in the Bills come from behind 31-24
win over Houston.
| Scoring
Summary |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
F |
| Bills |
3 |
7 |
7 |
14 |
31 |
| Houston |
3 |
14 |
0 |
7 |
24 |
|
First Quarter
HOU FG, KRIS BROWN 26 YARD.
BUF FG, MIKE HOLLIS 33 YARD.
Second Quarter
HOU TD, JABAR GAFFNEY 26 YARD PASS FROM DAVID CARR (KRIS BROWN
KICK).
HOU TD, DAVID CARR 17 YARD RUN
(KRIS BROWN KICK).
BUF TD, TRAVIS HENRY 1 YARD RUN
(MIKE HOLLIS KICK).
Third Quarter
BUF TD, TRAVIS HENRY 23 YARD RUN (MIKE HOLLIS KICK).
Fourth Quarter
HOU TD, BILLY MILLER 5 YARD PASS FROM JAMES ALLEN (KRIS BROWN
KICK).
BUF TD, ERIC MOULDS 23 YARD
PASS FROM DREW BLEDSOE (MIKE HOLLIS KICK).
BUF TD, PEERLESS PRICE 26 YARD
PASS FROM DREW BLEDSOE (MIKE HOLLIS KICK).
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Henry recovered a fumble by Drew Bledsoe
and made a long run to put the Bills in position for the tying touchdown,
which was a 23-yard Bledsoe to Moulds pass. In all, Henry had a
spectacular day except for his one costly fumble. He ran for 159 yards and
had two touchdowns (1 and 23 yard runs). It was his running and Bledsoe
finally connecting in the second half that gave the Bills their third win
of the season and put them at the .500 mark.
"The line just blocked great," Henry said. "All week we
knew we had a chance to run the ball up the middle and to the
outside."
Even though Henry had his best game of the season, there are a lot of
critics saying that he costs the Bills too much by fumbling so much. Three
fumbles in 3 games resulted in 21 points. Not good even if he were Barry
Sanders. But the coaches had confidence in him and Henry was out on the
very next series running the ball.
Bills offensive coordinator Kevin Gilbride never twice about replacing
Henry.
"No, no, no" retorted Gilbride. "That was foolish on his
part (stretching for more yardage, exposing the ball). He played so hard,
and he played so well, and he was trying to fight for that extra 6 inches
when it's not worth it. That's when he reached the ball out and they
clubbed it free. Other than that, I thought he played a terrific game in
every respect."
Texans Shoot Themselves In The Foot
The Texans had plenty of opportunities to pull off a huge upset over the
Bills. They took a commanding 17-3 lead in the first half before the
Bills came back and got a touchdown late in the first half. <p>
Crucial penalties hurt the Texans, especially in the second half when they
had stopped the Bills on third down and gave them new life.
Back-to-back major penalties by former Bills Jay Foreman gave the Bills a
first down in the fourth quarter after the Texans had stopped the Bills on
third down. Bledsoe then proceeded to direct the Bills to the tying
touchdown.
"I take full responsibility,'' admitted Foreman. "I shouldn't
have done that. I'm not even that kind of person or player... I don't know
what happened and I don't know why. I still can't believe it. That was a
selfish play. I feel real bad.''
Carr Comes Out Gunning
The Bills were caught napping when the Texans started their first series
from their own 3 yard line. The Texans first round draft choice
David Carr threw a bomb to Corey Bradford, who beat safety Chris Watson
and turned it into a 81-yard pass. The Bills D stiffened and force the
Texans to kick a field goal.
Carr kept on picking on the favorite target of NFL quarterbacks, Watson.
Carr threw a 26-yard touchdown pass to Jabar Gaffney, who decked Watson
and ran for the touchdown. Carr also avoided a sack and scrambled for a 17
yard TD, the first rushing touchdown in the history of the Texans.
Carr was ripping the Bills secondary to shreds and this had all the
makings of sequel to Rich Gannon's outing against Buffalo the week before.
Carr completed 12 of 23 attempts for 218 yards and a touchdown. He had the
Texans deep in Bills territory, but with time running down, threw
incomplete on 4th down and the Bills took over.
Defense Still In Shambles
The Bills are on pace to allow the most points in NFL history. That is a
record that Bills coach Gregg Williams would not want haunting him for the
rest of his life. But if he doesn't turn this thing around, that is
exactly what will be stamped on his resume when he goes looking for a new
job next year. Coming to Buffalo on the premise of being a defensive
genius, he has proved just the opposite. While Jerry Gray is the official
defensive coordinator, it is clear that everything has to go through
Williams and he is the mastermind of the "no-tackle defense."
It took almost 6 games before the Gray and Williams decided to attempt
giving Watson some help in the secondary. Most coaches would have made the
adjustment the first time that Watson got burned, not in game 6. The
defensive schemes also seem to be too complicated for this bunch of
underachievers. Time to go back to basics so at least the youngsters have
a chance of understanding what is going on.
Bills Talk
The Bills face the Miami Dolphins in the Fish Tank next week and it isn't
going to be a picnic. The Dolphins beat the Broncos Sunday night and they
will feast on the Bills inept defense. Even Moulds has a dire forecast for
that game.
"I'm not happy," declared Moulds. "If they're happy, if a
lot of guys on this team are happy, then they're in it for the wrong
reason. I'm not taking anything away from Houston, but we can't go to
Miami next week and play this way against a good team. If we go to Miami
and play like that, it'll be over by halftime.
"We wanted to come in and establish the run and get Travis some
carries. It's going to be a lot tougher to do it against Miami. We'll see
what this football team is made of next week."
Antoine Winfield wasn't happy with his team's performance either.
"We were supposed to come out here and dominate this team,"
Winfield said. "They were struggling on offense and we just kept
giving them life in the first half. It was terrible."
The Bills faced some harsh words when they went into the locker room at
halftime.
"The halftime atmosphere in the locker room was definitely vocal,
angry and emotional," described London Fletcher.
"There was a lot of yelling, and I'm too old for it, man," Bills
defensive end Chidi Ahanotu chipped in.
Williams, who talked positive in his post game interviews, defended Gray
and said that he took charge in the locker room.
"Jerry (Gray) challenged them at halftime to step up and to not lose
their confidence in their techniques," said Williams. "Both
coordinators did a good job of scheming in the second half."
Gilbride said that the way Houston was playing forced them to go to the
run more.
"Defensively, they had surprised us with how passive they played, in
the sense they were not blitzing," Gilbride described. "They
were conservative in that they were doubling outside, rolling up the
corner and playing a lot of two-high zone. In the first couple of drives,
we were saying, "Well, eventually they're going to blitz us.' Then I
realized they're committed to doing that. So I said, "Well, we're
going to have to win the game running the ball.' With the exception of
that turnover, we did a pretty good job."
Bledsoe, who had probably his least productive day as a Bills, gave kudos
to the Texans.
"The Texans had a very good game plan for us," said Bledsoe.
"They just decided, 'Hey, we're not going to let you guys beat us
with your two receivers' and they did a good job of picking away some of
our passes.
"That was an outstanding play by our offensive line. I stood back
there all day. Our wide receivers did a great job. It's a luxury to have
those two guys. We also have other weapons but those two guys are really
at the top of their game right now. They hung in there for me and they
played when it really counted."
Peerless Price gave the compliments right back to Bledsoe.
"We just have tremendous confidence in each other, and it all starts
with Drew,"said Price. "He led us back from 17-3, and with him
we knew we can win. We just have to keep believing even when we're down.
As a team we have to step up and be prepared."
Even Carr had kind words for Bledsoe.
"I watched Drew a lot," Carr said. "I talked to him a
couple of times during the offseason. I know he's a great football player
because I grew up watching him throw the football."
| Game
Breakdown |
|
BUF |
HOU |
FIRST DOWNS
3RD-DOWN EFFICIENCY
TOTAL NET YARDS
Total Plays
Average gain
NET YARDS RUSHING
Rushes
Average Per Rush
NET YARDS PASSING
Pass Completion
Yards per pass
Times Sacked
Yards Lost To Sacks
Had Intercepted
PUNTS
Average Punt
PENALTIES
Penalty Yards
FUMBLES
Fumbles Lost
TIME OF POSSESSION |
25
6-14
403
69
5.8
173
33
5.2
230
19-33
6.4
3
24
0
4
45.0
13
128
3
1
33:22 |
18
3-12
338
58
5.8
141
29
4.9
197
13-24
6.8
5
26
0
5
46.6
11
75
1
0
26:38 |
INDIVIDUAL
STATISTICS
Buffalo Rushing
Travis Henry 28-159, Larry Centers 2-16, Drew Bledsoe 3-(-2).
Houston Rushing
Jonathan Wells 12-70, David Carr 8-50, James Allen 8-21, Jarrod Baxter
1-0.
Buffalo Receiving
Peerless Price 8-121, Eric Moulds 4-56, Josh Reed 1-28, Jay Riemersma
3-24, Larry Centers 1-14, Travis Henry 2-11.
Houston Receiving
Corey Bradford 5-126, Jabar Gaffney 3-48, Jermaine Lewis 1-33, Billy
Miller 3-17, James Allen 1-(-1).
Buffalo Passing
Drew Bledsoe 19-33-254-2-0.
Houston Passing
David Carr 12-23-218-1-0, James Allen 1-1-5-1-0.
Missed Field Goals
(None).
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