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2002

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Regular
Season November
17, 2002 Bills 16
Kansas City 17
Attendance: 77,951
RICK ANDERSON -- All the ingredients were there. It was only a matter of
piecing them all together to produce a victory. Unfortunately for the
Buffalo Bills, they could not solve the puzzle and the resulting 17-16
loss to the Kansas City Chiefs put a serious dent in Buffalo's playoff
aspirations.
| Scoring
Summary |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
F |
| Bills |
0 |
13 |
3 |
0 |
16 |
| Kansas City |
7 |
3 |
0 |
7 |
17 |
|
First Quarter
KC TD, PRIEST HOLMES 4 YARD RUN (MORTEN ANDERSON KICK), 11:58.
Second Quarter
BUF FG, MIKE HOLLIS 23 YARD, 3:26.
BUF FG, MIKE HOLLIS 33 YARD,
6:18.
KC FG, MORTEN ANDERSON 38 YARD,
8:20.
BUF TD, ERIC MOULDS 7 YARD PASS
FROM DREW BLEDSOE (MIKE HOLLIS KICK), 14:28.
Third Quarter
BUF FG, MIKE HOLLIS 27 YARD, 12:31.
Fourth Quarter
KC TD, TRENT GREEN 9 YARD RUN (MORTEN ANDERSON KICK), 10:07.
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The play of the game came late in the
fourth quarter when Drew Bledsoe's pass to Peerless Price was intercepted
deep in Chiefs territory by cornerback Eric Warfield. That put the nail in
the coffin for the Bills comeback hopes.
The Bills had the right mixture to win, however the pieces fell apart at
the most crucial time, dropping Buffalo out of a first place tie and back
to .500. The Bills offense churned up 344 yards and the defense came up
big most of the game. Undisciplined play resulting in 139 yards in
penalties along with using up their timeouts early in the second half
helped do in the Bills.
Defensive Showdown
In what was supposed to be shootout, the game between the league's top two
offenses turned into a defensive struggle instead. The Bills defense came
up with one of its biggest games yet in face of the mighty KC offense. For
three quarters, the Bills D shut down Priest Holmes and prevented him from
ripping them apart. However, the Chiefs stuck to their game plan and
continued to run Holmes until he was finally able to take over the game in
the fourth quarter.
Holmes, who was held in check for most of the first half, really cranked
it into gear in the fourth quarter. Homes ripped off runs that not only
helped produce the winning touchdown, but also kept the Bills offense off
the field in the last 3 minutes of the game. Holmes ran for 104 yards on
31 carries.
The Bills could have blown this game wide open if they had converted on
all 4 of their trips into the red zone. However, three times the Chiefs
put the brakes on Bills drives and Buffalo had to settle for 3 field goals
by Mike Hollis. The only touchdown came when Bills quarterback Drew
Bledsoe connected with Eric Moulds on a 7-yard pass for a score. The Bills
thought they had another Moulds touchdown, but the Bills receiver got his
second step on the chalk line and the play was ruled out of bounds on a
challenge by the Chiefs.
Henry Assault
The Bills during their bye week decided that it would be advantageous to
run Travis Henry a lot more than they had during their loss against the
New England Patriots. Henry not only gained 126 yards on 24 carries, but
he was used as a receiver coming out of the backfield. Henry caught 4
passes for 38 yards and is quickly becoming a double threat in the Bills
arsenal. The only problem is that the Bills decided once again to abandon
the run in the fourth quarter.
An example of how the Bills overlooked Henry when they should have
employed their most effective weapon was in the second quarter. After a
Bledsoe pass to Josh Reed gave the Bills a first and goal at the KC 5, the
Bills decided to air it out in a futile attempt to reach paydirt. A couple
of misdirected Bledsoe tosses forced Hollis to kick a 23-yard field goal.
This was clearly a case where the Bills should have given Henry a couple
of cracks to score. <p>
Penalties Kill
The Bills killed themselves with penalties in this one. They had a total
of 13 for 139 yards. Meanwhile, the Chiefs only had 5 penalties for 34
yards.
Peerless Price is going to be a free agent after this season. After this
game, a lot of Bills fans won't be too upset if the goes. Price made some
critical infractions that could have cost the Bills the game. During the
same third quarter drive, Price wiped out a 9-yard Henry run when he was
called for holding. Two plays later, he nullified a nine-yard pass that he
caught at the Kansas City 32 when he decided to push off on a Chiefs
defenseman after the play was over. He was charged with unnecessary
roughness and 15 yards.
"The guy grabbed me and I shoved him off of me," explained
Price. "You're going to call that when there's a lot of other stuff
that goes on? If that's a personal foul, then this game has gotten real
soft."
Two back-to-back interference calls on the Bills helped the Chiefs score
the winning touchdown in the fourth quarter. The Bills stopped the Chiefs
on third down on the KC 37 when Trent Green threw an incompletion.
However, Eddie Robinson was charged with interference, giving the Chiefs a
first down. On the very next play came yet another flag when Green threw
deep to Eddie Kennison and it was broken up by Chris Watson. It was ruled
that Watson bumped into Kennison and that resulted in a 36-yard pickup to
the Bills 21.
"That's just the call the ref made," insisted Watson. "I
can't sit here and dwell on it. I thought I looked back on it. I saw the
ball. But I could have played better. I have to go back and work on how I
can play better."
The Chiefs got down to the Bills 10 and the defense stopped Holmes on a
third and one. However, Kansas City went for it on 4th down and Holmes
made the first down with 2 yards to spare. With a third down at the Bills
9, Green went back to pass and decided to take up the middle and he strode
in untouched for the score.
"A lane opened up, so I took off,'' Green said. "Then I saw
those guys closing hard. So I just closed my eyes and dove as hard as I
could.''
Bledsoe Off Target
Through the first 7 games, Bledsoe was the talk of the league. The Bills
were scoring over 30 points a game. However, the last four games, the
Bills put up only 23, 24, 7 and 17 points. Defenses have caught up with
Bledsoe and Kansas City, which had one of the weakest defenses in the
league, was able to limit Bledsoe to the short passing game.
"They kept playing so much Cover Two and just trying to keep us in
front of them," Moulds said about the Chiefs defensive scheme.
"We just kept giving it to Travis until we got some one-on-one
situations and we try to make some plays that way. But the Chiefs played
well and came in with a good scheme."
The three trips into the red zone were a prime example of how Bledsoe
could not finish the job. His passes were not on target on the first drive
the Bills had deep. Overall in the red zone, Bledsoe completed only 5 out
of 11 attempts. That simply is not good enough if this team wants to
advance to the playoffs.
"We've got to make those plays," commented Moulds. "Those
guys did some things schematically to try to take away the fade routes. We
just have to get better and come up with something different to throw
teams off a little bit."
The most crucial mistake was when Bledsoe threw his only interception with
4:14 remaining in the fourth quarter. With the Bills on the Chiefs 40, the
call came in to throw deep. Bledsoe thought he had Price open, but
Warfield leaped up and grabbed the slightly underthrown pass for the pick.
"Instead of trying to make a break earlier, I let Drew think he had
the lead on me," said Warfield. "Right at the last minute, I
just broke underneath. He thought he thought he had a step on me. Yet he
didn't.''
"I kind of knew his speed from covering him throughout the game,''
Warfield continued. "I didn't figure he would run past me. That's
when I gave him the step.''
Bledsoe agreed that Warfield's play was the game-breaker.
"I should have brought Peerless across the field more than I did,
rather than taking him straight up the field,'' Bledsoe said. "That
guy made a great play on the ball.''
Part of the blame for the loss has to go to Bills offensive coordinator
Kevin Gilbride. When the Bills had a first and goal at the Chiefs five,
the Bills should have continued to employ the great running of Henry.
Instead, they tried to air it out and Bledsoe's passes failed to reach
their mark. The late interception should not have been thrown at all. With
over 4 minutes remaining, the Bills should have tried to take time off the
clock and gotten in position for at least a field goal. Running Henry
would have done the trick. Instead, Gilbride once again wanted to get it
all in one flick of Bledsoe's wrist.
Bills Talk
The Bills were trying to express their shock over losing a game they
should have won.
"It's hard to find something to hang your hat on after a loss like
this," mentioned Ruben Brown. "We had the momentum and we lost
it. It's a tough loss at this point and time of the year. I've been around
long enough to know a game like this can come back to haunt us. Hopefully,
we'll dig ourselves out of this situation."
"It feels like one got away," admitted Chidi Ahanotu.
Larry Centers looked at the scoreboard and used that as the bottom
line.
"Ultimately, we didn't outplay them," said Centers. "But we
felt we had the better football team, and we didn't make the most of the
opportunities."
As for 4 trips into the red zone producing only one touchdown, Gilbride
said, "To our credit, we gave ourselves a lot of chances, but winning
teams take advantage of those chances. We didn't."
Bledsoe wish he had some of his passes back.
"We had our shots," said Bledsoe. "One time I had
Eric on a slant for a touchdown. Another time Eric almost made a
spectacular catch but apparently didn't quite get his foot down. It's just
one play here, one play there in the red zone."
Talking about his interception, Bledsoe said, "It was an outstanding
call by Kevin (Gilbride). It was something we had talked about at
halftime. We felt like we could get Peerless deep. Peerless broke
open on the post and I turned it loose. I really thought I might have
overthrown it. In retrospect, I should have brought Peerless across the
field more than I did rather than taking him straight up the field. I
didn't know exactly where the backside safety was, so I tried to keep it
up the field. The guy came in and made a great play on the ball."
As for the penalties, Williams was none too pleased.
"Yes, some of them were costly," admitted Williams. "We
overcame many of them. We emphasized that coming out of the bye week. It's
disappointing. We have to do better than that. We got to improve in that
area"
With Henry having another outstanding game, the Bills are getting more
balanced in their attack. What they have to do is to balance their game
plan to use the running game more often, especially in the red zone.
Ruben Brown had all compliments for Henry.
"When we give him the opportunities, he steps up," said Brown.
"That's the thing about him. He wants those shots and the offensive
line wants him to have those shots. That speaks highly of him and the type
of player and competitor he is. He did a great job today and all
season."
Thinking over the bitter defeat and how the Bills should have won, Brown
said, "It's tough. We did some good things today, especially running
the ball. We just have to figure out a way to do enough to win."
| Game
Breakdown |
|
BUF |
KC |
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 |
21
7-13
344
64
5.4
133
26
5.1
211
24-36
5.6
2
14
1
3
42.0
13
139
0
0
31:41 |
22
4-11
320
58
5.5
128
37
3.5
192
12-20
9.1
1
5
0
2
35.0
5
39
0
0
28:19 |
INDIVIDUAL
STATISTICS
Buffalo Rushing
Travis Henry 24-126, Drew Bledsoe 2-7.
Kansas City Rushing
Priest Holmes 31-104, Trent Green 4-19, Johnnie Morton 1-4, Eddie
Kennison 1-1.
Buffalo Receiving
Josh Reed 4-44, Peerless Price 4-40, Travis Henry 4-38, Eric Moulds
4-36, Dave Moore 3-24, Larry Centers 3-19, Jay Riemersma 1-16, Phillip
Crosby 1-8.
Kansas City Receiving
Eddie Kennison 3-93, Johnnie Morton 3-52, Priest Holmes 3-23, Tony
Gonzalez 2-17, Marc Boerigter 1-12.
Buffalo Passing
Drew Bledsoe 24-36-225-1-1.
Kansas City Passing
Trent Green 12-20-197-0-0.
Missed Field Goals
Morten Anderson (1).
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