The Hamilton Spectator

Bills can’t figure out dominant Jags D

Buffalo has its chances to advance in playoffs; instead it will be Jacksonvil­le vs. Pittsburgh

- MARK LONG

JACKSONVIL­LE, FLA. — Blake Bortles put together one decent drive all day, doing as much with his legs as his arm, and the defensivem­inded Jacksonvil­le Jaguars eked out an ugly and sometimes unwatchabl­e 10-3 win against the Buffalo Bills in an AFC wild-card game Sunday.

In the post-season for the first time since January 2008, the thirdseede­d Jaguars (11-6) advanced to play at No. 2 seed Pittsburgh on Sunday at 1 p.m.

Bortles was a big reason Jacksonvil­le won the game and a big reason it was so close.

This was far from a passing clinic. It was more like a painful exercise in overcoming poor passing.

Bortles was off most of the day, misfiring short and long, but made up for it with 88 yards rushing. He scrambled for a long first down run after fumbling the ball late, prompting a Bills assistant to slam a clipboard and Bortles with a huge grin.

“We weren’t sharp, we made some bad plays and did some stupid stuff, but we found a way to win and that’s all that matters,” Bortles said.

He completed 12 of 23 passes for 87 yards, and a TD. His TD pass to tight end Ben Koyack late in the third period was his best throw of the game. And a gutsy call on fourth-and-goal from the one.

Bortles did the rest on the ground, scrambling for first downs and helping Jacksonvil­le win its first playoff game at home since the 1997 season.

“You know, when we got beat last week at Tennessee, I didn’t run at all, so I thought we got beat without kind of shooting all of our shots, so I said it made it difficult, so let’s find some ways to move the ball and do some different stuff,” Bortles said.

The Bills had plenty of chances down the stretch, but a huge penalty against Charles Clay and then a tackle that knocked quarterbac­k Tyrod Taylor out of the game ended any threat of a comeback.

Taylor slammed his helmet hard against the ground after getting thrown down by Dante Fowler Jr. He had to be helped off the field and forced backup Nathan Peterman into the game with 1:27 remaining. All-Pro cornerback Jalen Ramsey tipped and then intercepte­d Peterman’s third pass, and the Jaguars ran out the clock. HUGE SWING Trailing 10-3 with about six minutes to play, the Bills looked as if they picked up a first down on an 11-yard pass from Tyrod Taylor to Clay. Jacksonvil­le players standing on the sideline pointed to Clay’s feet, and coach Doug Marrone threw the challenge flag. Officials overturned the completion, saying Clay was out of bounds and setting up a third-and-10 play from the Jacksonvil­le 48yard line. Linebacker Myles Jack sacked Taylor on the next play, forcing a punt. UP NEXT The Jaguars will play at second-seeded Pittsburgh next Sunday, a rematch from Week 5. Ben Roethlisbe­rger threw five intercepti­ons, and Jacksonvil­le won 30-9. The Steelers have won 10 of 11 since, the lone loss coming against New England.

 ?? STEPHEN B. MORTON, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jaguars defensive end Yannick Ngakoue, right, drew a penalty for hitting Bills QB Tyrod Taylor with helmet-to-helmet contact. Jags won, 10-3.
STEPHEN B. MORTON, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jaguars defensive end Yannick Ngakoue, right, drew a penalty for hitting Bills QB Tyrod Taylor with helmet-to-helmet contact. Jags won, 10-3.
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 ?? MIKE EHRMANN, GETTY IMAGES ?? Jaguars’ Jalen Ramsey celebrates an intercepti­on Sunday. Jacksonvil­le faces Pittsburgh next.
MIKE EHRMANN, GETTY IMAGES Jaguars’ Jalen Ramsey celebrates an intercepti­on Sunday. Jacksonvil­le faces Pittsburgh next.

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