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2002

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Regular
Season December
1, 2002 Miami 21
Bills 38
Attendance: 73,287
RICK ANDERSON -- Suddenly the sky opened up and unleashed a tidal wave of
snow. The 73,287 lifted their hands to the heavens and rejoiced. It was
party time and the Miami Dolphins felt like unwelcome guests. With the
winds swirling the blinding snow in circles around Ralph Wilson Stadium,
the Buffalo Bills were circling the wagons.
| Scoring
Summary |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
F |
| Miami |
14 |
0 |
7 |
0 |
21 |
| Bills |
3 |
14 |
14 |
7 |
38 |
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First Quarter
MIA RICKY WILLIAMS 45 YARD RUN (OLINDO MARE KICK), 3:49.
BUF FG, MIKE HOLLIS 39 YARD,
8:59.
MIA TD, JED WEAVER 1 YARD PASS
FROM RAY LUCAS (OLINDO MARE KICK), 14:54.
Second Quarter
BUF TD, DREW BLEDSOE 2 YARD RUN (MIKE HOLLIS KICK), 11:23.
BUF TD, PEERLESS PRICE 20 YARD
PASS FROM DREW BLEDSOE (MIKE HOLLIS KICK), 14:49.
Third Quarter
MIA TD, RICKY WILLIAMS 55 YARD RUN (OLINDO MARE KICK), 9:27.
BUF TD, PEERLESS PRICE 73 YARD
PASS FROM DREW BLEDSOE (MIKE HOLLIS KICK), 10:25.
BUF TD, ERIC MOULDS 57 YARD
PASS FROM DREW BLEDSOE (MIKE HOLLIS KICK), 12:59.
Fourth Quarter
BUF TD, TRAVIS HENRY 1 YARD RUN (MIKE HOLLIS KICK), 4:30.
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With the help of Old Man Winter, timely
Dolphin penalties and an aerial circus by Drew Bledsoe, the Buffalo Bills
came from behind and upstaged the Dolphins 38-21 before frozen and
delirious Bills fans. The thousands of Dolphins fans in the stands left
with a further reminder of how cruel playing December games in Buffalo can
be for opponents.
This was a wild and wacky game reminiscent of old AFL shootouts. There
were enough game-breaking plays for an entire season. The Dolphins opened
up the game as if they were going to blow the game wide open. Ricky
Williams had a career and a Dolphin record-breaking game by galloping 228
yards before he had to leave with a leg injury.
Williams was on pace to break the NFL single game record of 278 yards
until Nate Clements put him out with a helmet to the thigh collision.
Williams broke a Dolphins single-game franchise record and broke the team
record for most yards in a single season 1,284 yards. All that glory went
for not as the Bills took advantage of timely Dolphin penalties, turnovers
and the snow to stage a miraculous comeback.
4th and 4 Backfires On Fish
The turning point of the game came late in the first half. With the
Dolphins up 14-10 and facing a 4th and 4 at the Bills 36, Miami coach Dave
Wannstedt decided to gamble and go for it. Instead of running Williams
through the porous Bills line, he put in a passing play. Ray Lucas went
back to pass and when he brought his arm back, the ball slipped out of his
hands backwards. As the ball rolled around for what seemed to be ages,
Chidi Ahanotu finally picked it up and was able to lumber all the way down
to the Dolphin 31.
Bledsoe hit Moulds at the 20 for an 11-yard gain. Then he hit Price as he
got free in the right corner of the endzone and Bledsoe's pass hit the
mark. Suddenly, the Bills have climbed back to take the lead after being
down 14-3. The momentum had swung the Bills way and more was about to
come.
Wannstedt tried to defend his choice to pass on that fourth down.
"You know when you're on the road you're going to have to score
points against Buffalo," said Wannstedt. "You could just feel it
out there. The momentum of the whole thing obviously swung into their
favor, and that's what you've got to try to prevent.''
Bledsoe Finally Gets Rolling
Maybe it was the snow. Some say it was the presence of Jim Kelly on the
sidelines cheering the Bills on. Whatever it was, after Bledsoe hit those
two straight completions right before halftime, one could tell that the
Bledsoe of the early part of the season was back. For the month of
November, Bledsoe was only average at best. He was held under 300 yards
every game and the offense, which had been averaging over 30 in the
previous 2 months, had stalled and sputtered. Now it was kicking and alive
again.
Bledsoe finished completing only 15 passes out of 27. But with Henry
running as well as he did, Bledsoe was able to go deep on numerous
occasions and find his two favorite receivers. He got over the 300 mark by
6 yards and had 3 touchdown passes. Not only that, he scored on a
quarterback sneak from the 2 yard line for the Bills first touchdown. That
play was controversial as it appeared as if time ran out on the play clock
and Wannstedt challenged the call to no avail. The play clock cannot be
challenged and the Dolphins lost a time out as a result.
In the second half, Bledsoe took to the air again, hitting Price over the
middle and the did a 180 degree spin to shake off Arturo Freeman and had
nothing but snow in front of him. He outraced all the Dolphin defenders
for a 73-yard touchdown and the Bills were going for the kill. At that
time, it was 24-21 Bills. The Dolphins would not score again.
"That was huge," said Bledsoe about Price's score. "It
really got us going again."
Randy McMichael tried to stretch to reach a first down (he was still 5
yards short) and Kendrick Office knocked the ball out of his hands.
Antoine Winfield plopped on the ball and the Bills were in business again.
Bledsoe, who is a consummate professional, knows that it is best to go
long right after a huge turnover like that. He threw deep to Moulds, but
it appeared as if the Dolphins were going to intercept when Sam
Madison leaped up for the ball. It bounced off his hands and up in the
air. Moulds took his right forearm and brought it into his chest, making a
sensational catch. He turned it into a 57-yard score and the Bills were up
by 10.
In the fourth quarter with the winds swirling and the snow coming down so
hard that it made visibility difficult, Bledsoe hooked up with Moulds
again, this time on a 47-yard pass down to the Dolphins 3. On 3rd and 1,
Henry slammed up the middle and got into the endzone standing up. That
finished the scoring as the Bills had a 38-21 lead and finished the Fins.
Run Ricky Run
Williams put on a show for the fans at the Ralph. Such a performance was
like what O.J. Simpson used to have back in the early 70s, when then Rich
Stadium was still new. In fact, Williams 228 yards was the second most
yardage by a running back in a losing effort. The record goes to Simpson
himself, who had 273 against the Detroit Lions on Thanksgiving in 1976.
It happened quickly. After the Dolphins pinned the Bills back deep in
their territory on the first drive, the Dolphins started off at the Bills
45. One play and Miami was on the board. Williams went around the left
tackle and was gone. The Bills didn't lay a glove on him.
The next time Williams got the ball, he almost went all the way again. He
was finally brought down after a 17 yard gain. In the third quarter, it
was Williams once again breaking free up the middle and he romped 55
yards for another touchdown. He had 228 yards early in the fourth quarter
when he got hit in the leg with the Clements' helmet and was played
sparingly after that.
For being Williams first real game in winter conditions, he blossomed in
the cold and the snow.
"I had been preparing for it, checking the forecast on my phone,
looking on the computer every chance I got," remarked Williams.
"I was a little nervous about it. It wasn't bad, you know. It was
just cold. Once you get past the mental part of it being cold and you
being miserable, then it's just football."
Henry Sparks Bills Offense
Williams' counterpart, Travis Henry, had his moment in the snow also.
Henry's 151 yards on 35 carries helped take the heat off of Bledsoe and
the air game. In fact, it was the most carries Henry has ever had in the
NFL and allowed Bledsoe to cut down his throws to just 27.
Henry also caught 2 passes for 27 yards, so his all-purpose yardage of 178
is very comparable to one of Thurman Thomas' big games. Henry's increased
role in the Bills offense pleases him and also Bledsoe. Henry broke the
1,000 yard mark, as did receivers Moulds and Price.
"It is a lot of fun to be a part of," Bledsoe said about his
1,000-yard trio. "To have two spectacular receivers like we have to
have them both go over a 1,000 yards and then have a 1,000 yard rusher on
offense is a credit to those guys and also to the guys up front blocking
for them."
"It's a great accomplishment," acknowledged Henry about going
over the 1,000 mark. "I give credit to my offensive line. Those guys
were hyped up before the game. Without them none of this would be
possible."
Bills Talk
It was like old times. The good old days when the Dolphins had to face the
Bills late in December and post season play in January. Just like in the
Bills 4-Super Bowl years, the Bills rose up when the weather got nasty.
Bledsoe liked the snow, as he had played in some miserable weather in
Washington State and in New England.
"I have played in the cold weather for a long time now, from high
school on and it has never really been a big factor to me as far as
throwing the ball," remarked Bledsoe. " The only affect really
is from the wind. If it's real windy then sometimes it will affect the
ball a little bit."
Having Kelly on the sidelines was also motivation for Bledsoe, who faced
Kelly a number of times.
"It was awesome and it is fun to have Jim around," said Bledsoe.
"Obviously, he is a legendary figure around here and he is to me as
well. To have him on the side is good for our team. He gets people pumped
up, gets the crowd going and anytime we can have Jim Kelly around it is
nothing but good for our team."
Ricky Williams reflected on his great game and how it still wasn't enough.
"It doesn't really mean anything," said Williams about his
record-setting game. "My job is to help this team win, and I didn't
do a good enough job."
Williams gave credit to his O-line for great blocking.
"We did a good job up front," admitted Williams. "The
offensive line's been playing great. Teams know we're going to run the
ball, and they still give me a chance to pick a hole and find a lane. I've
also got to give credit to Norv (Turner, Miami's offensive coordinator).
He did a wonderful job calling the game."
Wannstedt could not believe that Williams could run for so many yards and
they still lost.
"That's the thing that just tears your heart out," Wannstedt
said. "We gave up way too many plays. It's a shame. When you come up
here and you know it's going to be windy and cold and snow, and you think,
if we can run the ball, you'd like to think we had a chance. We ran the
ball. Unfortunately, because of the big plays and the turnovers, it wasn't
good enough to win.
"That's the disturbing thing. We ran the ball, thinking we could hold
on to it. We just didn't make enough plays."
The Big-2 receivers for the Bills, Moulds and Price, put in an outstanding
game. Moulds caught 5 for 130 yards, while Price had just two receptions,
but both went for scores as he had 93 yards.
"It may seem like we're being selfish but at the same time, we're
trying to help the team win," remarked Moulds "We feel so
confident in our abilities that we want a chance to help the team win.
That's the main objective. Peerless and I talked about it. We spent some
time together and challenged ourselves to go out and make plays."
"I think we were the aggressor today," pitched in Price.
"Coach Gilbride said that regardless of what they play, we're going
to get back on track and that's exactly what we did. We didn't worry about
the elements, we didn't worry about what the defense was giving us. We
took our shots and we made plays."
| Game
Breakdown |
|
MIA |
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 |
14
4-11
300
56
5.4
270
34
7.9
30
11-20
1.4
2
25
1
4
30.3
5
38
3
2
27:19 |
21
8-15
431
68
6.3
161
37
4.4
270
15-27
8.7
4
36
0
3
30.0
7
56
0
0
32:41 |
INDIVIDUAL
STATISTICS
Buffalo Rushing
Travis Henry 35-151, Larry Centers 1-8, Drew Bledsoe 1-2.
Miami Rushing
Ricky Williams 27-228, Travis Minor 4-34, Ray Lucas 3-8.
Buffalo Receiving
Eric Moulds 5-130, Peerless Price 2-93, Larry Centers 3-35, Travis
Henry 2-27, Dave Moore 1-8, Jay Riemersma 1-8, Josh Reed 1-5.
Miami Receiving
Jed Weaver 2-18, Chris Chambers 2-17, Dedric Ward 1-11, Ricky Williams
4-7, Randy McMichael 2-2.
Buffalo Passing
Drew Bledsoe 15-27-306-3-0.
Miami Passing
Ray Lucas 6-11-40-1-0, Jay Fiedler 5-9-15-0-1.
Missed Field Goals
Mike Hollis (1).
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