The Hamilton Spectator

Bills coach McDermott may put Peterman back out there

- JOHN WAWROW

Bills coach Sean McDermott isn’t going to be rushed into choosing a starting quarterbac­k after his decision to go with rookie Nathan Peterman backfired.

McDermott on Monday said he’s still evaluating whether to give Peterman another start or return to Tyrod Taylor for Buffalo’s game at Kansas City this weekend.

Peterman unravelled in a 54-24 loss at the Los Angeles Chargers on Sunday by throwing five intercepti­ons in the first half before being replaced by Taylor with the Bills down 40-7.

Buffalo (5-5) has lost three straight, with McDermott being roundly criticized for taking what he called “a calculated risk” to switch starters while his team is in the playoff race.

“I own the decision and, as I said yesterday, I don’t regret the decision. I do regret the result, and there’s other hands also in the result,” he said.

“You go back and you learn from it. I learn from it as a head coach, and I expect all to learn from and we grow and we move forward.”

Others questioned the move, including Hall of Fame coach broadcaste­r Tony Dungy.

“For the life of me, I don’t know why they did it,” Dungy said during NBC’s Sunday night broadcast.

Seattle Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman went to Twitter in questionin­g the decision during the game by writing: “So they bench my guy @TyrodTaylo­r and the guy they bring in has already thrown 2picks with 10mins left in the 1st. Great decision.”

McDermott refused to be swayed even when acknowledg­ing the quarterbac­k switch failed to provide much spark to what had been a sputtering offence. He instead maintained confidence in Peterman, a fifth-round draft pick who split his college career at Pittsburgh and Tennessee.

“One game is not going to define Nathan or Nathan’s career,” he said. “Young players go through it. And you saw some of it yesterday, and I put that back on myself.”

McDermott most notably praised Peterman for a 20-yard completion to Kelvin Benjamin on Buffalo’s opening drive, noting the pass was on time and thrown in a crowd over the middle.

Taylor, who has a 20-18 record, has been knocked for being too conservati­ve with his passes, and hesitant to throw over the middle.

Taylor has at least been efficient, having thrown just three intercepti­ons.

McDermott said he’s not going to make any snap decisions on his quarterbac­k. The first-year coach also reiterated he’s sticking to a bigpicture vision on how to transform the Bills into a winner beyond this season.

The loss to the Chargers was among the Bills’ most painful during a 17-season playoff drought that stands as the longest active streak in North America’s four major profession­al sports.

Peterman went 6 for 14 for 66 yards over seven first-half possession­s and became the first quarterbac­k since 1970 to throw at least five intercepti­ons in the first half of a game, according to Elias Sports Bureau. He did oversee one touchdown drive, which had him hand the ball off twice to running back LeSean McCoy for a 37-yard gain, followed by a 27-yard touchdown run.

Otherwise, Peterman threw intercepti­ons on four of Buffalo’s first five drives, and then another one to close the half. The turnovers accounted for the Chargers scoring 24 points, including Korey Toomer returning one 59 yards for a touchdown to open the scoring.

The Chargers’ pass rush rattled Peterman into throwing at least two intercepti­ons. The first one, however, wasn’t entirely the quarterbac­k’s fault. His pass hit off the hands off fullback Patrick DiMarco and deflected into Toomer’s hands.

Taylor mopped up, going 15 of 25 for 158 yards with a touchdown passing and one rushing, while also losing a fumble that was returned for a score.

Taylor was abruptly benched after he went 9 of 15 for 56 yards and the Bills managed four first downs through 55 minutes in a 47-10 loss to New Orleans on Nov. 12.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Los Angeles coach Anthony Lynn, right, talks to Buffalo coach Sean McDermott after the Chargers whipped the Bills, 54-24, on Sunday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Los Angeles coach Anthony Lynn, right, talks to Buffalo coach Sean McDermott after the Chargers whipped the Bills, 54-24, on Sunday.

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