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2002

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Regular
Season October
27, 2002 Detroit 17
Bills 24
Attendance: 72,710
RICK ANDERSON -- Travis Henry was on the sidelines, hoping that his latest
fumble didn't cost
the Buffalo Bills the game. With the Bills leading the Lions 24-17, Henry
was given the ball and was about to be tackled on the Bills 29 when Bracy
Walker came flying in and rammed his helmet smack into Henry's jaw,
jarring
his head 90 degrees and the ball out of Henry's grasp. The Lions recovered
and the fourth overtime of the season looked imminent for the Bills.
| Scoring
Summary |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
F |
| Detroit |
0 |
14 |
0 |
3 |
17 |
| Bills |
7 |
7 |
10 |
0 |
24 |
|
First Quarter
BUF TD, TRAVIS HENRY 5 YARD RUN (MIKE HOLLIS KICK), 11:20.
Second Quarter
DET TD, AZ-ZAHIR HAKIM 23 YARD PASS FROM JOEY HARRINGTON (JASON
HANSON KICK), 9:57.
DET TD, JAMES STEWART 2 YARD
RUN (JASON HANSON KICK), 12:00.
BUF TD, PEERLESS PRICE 59 YARD
PASS FROM DREW BLEDSOE (MIKE HOLLIS KICK), 13:56.
Third Quarter
BUF FG, MIKE HOLLIS 33 YARD, 3:51.
BUF TD, TRAVIS HENRY 5 YARD RUN
(MIKE HOLLIS KICK), 12:58.
Fourth Quarter
DET FG, JASON HANSON 35 YARD, 11:53.
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"I don't know what happened,"
said Henry. "All I know is that the play was called to go to the
right. I already knew, 'two hands on the ball, two hands on the ball.'
Next thing you know I got hit on the mouth and the ball came out."
Now it was up to the defense. Lions quarterback Joey Harrington got a
8-yard
pass completion to Germane Crowell after the Bills stuffed James Stewart
on first down. Harrington went to Stewart on with a sideline pass and it
appeared as if Stewart got beyond the first down marker. However, the refs
ruled he got an elbow down before the marker and the Lions were faced with
a 4th and half a foot. Once again, the Lions went to Stewart to keep the
drive alive, and once again the Bills D stuffed the run. London Fletcher
was the first to greet Stewart, slowing down his progress right at the
line of scrimmage. Eddie Robinson was also hanging onto Stewart, but the 6
foot 1,
224 pound running back was winning the law of momentum and was starting to
fall towards the yardage he needed to make first down. In came Cory Wire
and
he slammed into Stewart with as much force as Walker had hit Henry. That
pushed Stewart behind the line of scrimmage and the Bills took over on
downs.> there, the Bills ran out the clock and won their third game in
a
row, 24-17.
"It was a huge play," declared Fletcher. "Who knows what
happens if they are
able to convert that down."
For the second game in a row, the Bills defense came up huge and saved the
day. For the second game in a row, the offense, while doing what they
needed
to do to win, but it had to rely on the defense to make the lead stick.
The Bills D Gets Stingy
What was the most porous defense in the league is suddenly coming together
at the best time of the season. Stewart, who had 172 yards the week
before,
had his total cut in half by the Bills run-stuffing D. Overall, the Lions
only got 282 yards. Harrington completed 20 out of 42 for 199 yards
and one
touchdown.
Harrington's one strike was a fluke at best. It was more like a volleyball
play as his toss to Bill Schroeder was hit by not one, but two Bills
defenders and finally came down in the awaiting hands of Az-Zahir Hakim
for
a touchdown in the second quarter to tie it up at 7.
The Bills gave it right back to the Lions when Charlie Rogers couldn't
hang
onto the ball during the kickoff and the Lions recovered at the Bills 22.
The Lions drove down into the red zone and Stewart made it over from two
yards out. From that point until Jason Hanson kicked a 35 yard 4th quarter
field goal, the Bills D shut down the Lions offense.
Fletcher, who has finally started to play a more dominate role in the
defense, says it has been a growing process with the defense.
"We knew we would have some growing pains early in the season because
we
have such a young defense," said Fletcher. "Since that Houston
game, we felt
like we have gained some confidence collectively. Today's game, we wanted
to
be out there from a defensive standpoint. We didn't care what the offense
did. It was an opportunity to play football. 'Let's go out here and make a
play."
Henry On The Hotseat
Ever since Henry's last crucial fumble resulted in a touchdown, there has
been a great debate on whether Henry should even be playing. While
fumbling
6 times in 8 games, Henry is a definite risk. Like hot stocks traded on
the
open market, Henry's worth has to be examined closely. Last week against
the
Dolphins, he had 132 yards and he had a 159 yard game and two touchdowns
the
week before in Houston. Two of Henry's fumbles were returned for
touchdowns.
Two others led directly to touchdowns after his key turnovers gave the
ball
deep into Bills territory.
After Henry's crucial fumble against the Lions had given them a glorious
opportunity to tie the game. The Bills defense came out and saved Henry
from
even more embarrassment. Now he owes the defensive squad a night out on
the
town.
"I was relieved because that could have cost us the game,"
admitted Henry.
"But the defense stepped it up and stopped them. We got the ball back
and
won the ballgame."
The Bills came right back with Henry running the ball on the first play
after the Bills took over on downs. They did the same when he had two
fumbles in one game. Bills head coach Gregg Williams showed his confidence
in his number one running back
"It was a huge hit (by Walker) but I think we showed our confidence
in
Travis by handing the ball to him right when he came back in," said
Williams. "Travis is our running back and will continue to be our
running
back."
Henry gained 64 yards on 19 carries. He also opened and closed the Bills
scoring by running for 5-yard touchdowns.
The fact that a fumble at the most inopportune time could have cost the
Bills the game is quite troubling, especially to Henry himself. After the
fumble, he was on the sidelines, holding his jaw and praying that the
Bills
D could stop the Lions from tying it up. His prayers were answered and he
may be able to sleep a little better tonight. But when he dreams, it may
turn into a nightmare of fumbles.
Bledsoe's Cool Under Pressure
With the Bills down 14-7, Drew Bledsoe pulled a rabbit out of his helmet.
With his protection collapsing, Bledsoe ran up close to the line of
scrimmage and tossed a bomb to Peerless Price, who grabbed it, started to
his right and decked the defender out as he reversed his field and went
left.
Price then galloped unimpeded for a 59-yard touchdown. That changed the
momentum of the game and put the Lions on their heels.
Bledsoe finished with 21 completion on 36 attempts for 302 yards. Like the
week before against Miami, Bledsoe wasn't spectacular, but did just enough
to guide the Bills to their fifth victory of the season.
Eric Moulds had his best game of the season, catching 9 passes for 123
yards. Price had 4 grabs, including his highlight 59 yarder. In all, the
Bills continued their balanced attack and it appears to be a successful
mix
of the running and passing attacks.
Bills Talk
Henry answered any and all questions about his tendency to fumble.
"I got hit pretty hard but there are no excuses," admitted Henry
about the
ferocious hit by Walker. "Everybody knows you can't fumble the ball.
I have
to do a better job. I take all the responsibility. I just have to hold
onto
it. It seems like every team we play is going after the ball and I have to
hold onto it."
Henry was asked if the fumbles are starting to haunt him.
"No," he replied. "I don't think about it at all other than
to just keep two
hands on the ball. This particular play I got hit pretty hard and just
lost
it. Most of all, though, my teammates stood beside me and the defense came
up and played great today."
Henry, like the a couple games ago when a fumble resulted in a touchdown,
was given a full vote of confidence by his coaches.
"They told me to get ready and they were behind me 100%," said
Henry.
(Offensive coordinator Kevin Gilbride) told me to get ready, that they
were
depending on me and I went back out."
Fletcher is one of the key reasons why the young defense is coming
together.
"Defensively, we had our bumps and bruises; we had our growing
pains,"
described Fletcher. "We didn't expect to give up as many points as we
were
giving up early in the season. The thing that we focused on after the
Oakland game was 'Hey, let's wipe this off. Don't worry about the first
five
games. Lets' focus on being the best defense for the next eleven games.'
That is how we have approached these games."
Fletcher's veteran status is starting to rub off on the team. Now the
defense is making key plays and finally getting some respect around the
league instead of snickers.
"It is huge the way the defense has played this week, last week, and
the
last half versus Houston. We are going to need a total team effort to win
football games. Sometimes, the offense is going to struggle a little bit.
Sometimes, the defense is going to struggle a little bit. We need everyone
doing their job to win."
Bledsoe had plenty of kudos for his two main receivers, Price and Moulds.
"Eric and Peerless, I have tremendous confidence in both those
guys," said
Bledsoe. "At times we will take some chances that I would not take if
I did
not trust them that much. When I put the ball out there I trust that they
will make a play."
"Eric is a stud," lauded Bledsoe. "I have known that
forever. Ever since he
came into the league he has been one of the premier guys in the league for
as long as I have watched him play and to be on his team and throw the
ball
to him is a lot of fun."
| Game
Breakdown |
|
DET |
BUF |
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 |
16
5-15
282
66
4.3
83
24
3.5
199
20-42
4.7
0
0
1
7
34.6
8
71
0
0
28:27 |
23
6-14
343
64
5.4
74
24
3.1
269
21-36
6.7
4
33
0
6
36.7
6
51
2
2
31:33 |
INDIVIDUAL
STATISTICS
Buffalo Rushing
Travis Henry 19-64, Drew Bledsoe 4-10, Joe Burns 1-0.
Detroit Rushing
James Stewart 24-83.
Buffalo Receiving
Eric Moulds 9-123, Peerless Price 4-101, Jay Riemersma 2-18, Josh Reed
2-18, Sammy Morris 1-16, Phillip Crosby 2-14, Travis Henry 1-12.
Detroit Receiving
James Stewart 8-53, Bill Schroeder 2-46, Az-Zahir Hakim 3-33, Mikhael
Ricks 2-29, Germane Crowell 3-23, Cory Schlesinger 2-15.
Buffalo Passing
Drew Bledsoe 21-36-302-1-0.
Detroit Passing
Joey Harrington 20-42-199-1-1.
Missed Field Goals
(None).
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