The Welland Tribune

Buffalo abuzz over Bills, Sabres

New quarterbac­k, NHL draft lottery win exciting for fan base

- JOHN WAWROW

BUFFALO, N.Y. — The Buffalo Bills were so dull during their lean years, comedian Nick Bakay feared his body would fuse to the couch while watching them play.

“It’s an incredibly disturbing image,” Bakay said of wasting away Sundays witnessing his hometown team sleepwalk through one loss after another during a 17-season National Football League playoff drought that ended last year.

“I never missed a Bills game. But I was always slumped on my couch. I was never sitting forward. I was never jumping to my feet,” said Bakay, who wrote “Paul Blart: Mall Cop” and its sequel, and produced and appeared on the TV sitcom

“King of Queens.”

“You sit on your couch, and your couch slowly eats you.”

No different for fans of Buffalo’s other pro sports franchise, the National Hockey League’s Sabres, who finished last for the third time in five years and extended their franchise-worst playoff drought to a seventh season.

In a shot-and-a-beer town where the winters are interminab­ly long, Buffalo sports fans ride things out on the notion of renewal always being just around the corner. And there’s a new, palpable optimism for this hearty fan base, thanks to a three-day stretch which showed potential to alter the trajectory of both teams.

First, the Bills made a pair of splashes in the first round of the NFL draft on April 26 by trading up to select Wyoming quarterbac­k Josh Allen and Virginia Tech linebacker Tremaine Edmunds.

Two days later, the Sabres won the NHL draft lottery — something Buffalo lost the previous two times it finished last — and the opportunit­y to select the projected No. 1 pick, Swedish defenceman Rasmus Dahlin.

During the NFL draft, CBS Evening News anchor Jeff Glor got dirty looks from his wife during a rare dinner date sneaking peeks at the Bills’ picks. He then yelped with excitement upon learning the Sabres won the lottery while attending the White House Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n dinner in Washington.

“I had just resigned myself to never winning it,” Glor said.

“But listen, I always have hope.”

In Buffalo, there’s a fine line between affection and affliction for hope.

“I always try to keep it in check a little bit,” said Glor, who grew up in the Buffalo suburb of Tonawanda. “Unfortunat­ely, you get conditione­d to where there are times you can be defeatist. And you try not to be. But you just don’t give up.”

Fans have little choice but to persevere in a place where nickname-worthy moments are tied to losses.

For the Bills, it’s “Wide Right,” after kicker Scott Norwood missed a last-second field-goal attempt in a 20-19 loss to the New York Giants in the 1991 Super Bowl — the first of four consecutiv­e Super Bowl losses.

For the Sabres, it’s “No Goal,” following a 2-1, triple-overtime loss to Dallas in Game 6 of the 1999 Stanley Cup final. Brett Hull’s Cup-clinching goal stood, even though replays showed his skate in the crease.

Those were the so-called glory days.

The Bills and Sabres have won five playoff games combined since 2008. By comparison, the NHL’s expansion Vegas Golden Knights have already won eight in their first year of existence.

Buffalo joins Nashville and Charlotte, N.C., as the only North American markets with two or more major pro teams to not have won a title.

The former site of the Erie Canal has been transforme­d from vacant gravel lots to parkland, a water park that doubles as an ice rink in winter, and an entertainm­ent/hockey complex built by Bills and Sabres owner Terry Pegula.

Housing prices have tripled and a medical corridor is newly bustling along Main Street, where shuttered and boarded-up buildings have been renovated or replaced by new steel and glass structures.

Buffalo still has its rust-belt blemishes as one of the nation’s poorest cities. Racial inequities, failing schools and a crumbling infrastruc­ture remain issues.

The Bills and Sabres aren’t immune to troubling headlines. Last week, the two teams’ president Russ Brandon resigned amid allegation­s of having inappropri­ate relationsh­ips with female employees.

Buffalo might never regain the industrial-age prominence it held in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when the city became a Great Lakes shipping hub as the gateway to the Erie Canal. Watching a documentar­y on former Bills running back O.J. Simpson, Bakay was reminded of the gloomy times in the 1970s when the steel mills began closing and legions of people left to find jobs.

The decline led to Buffalo investing its psyche into its sports teams as a way of remaining part of the national conversati­on.

“Our teams were the only way we could punch back and say, ‘Yeah, we’re here,’” Bakay said.

Allen and the prospect of adding Dahlin has recaptured his imaginatio­n as to what’s possible.

“It’s like all of a sudden we’ve got go-big-or-go-home talent coming our way,” Bakay said.

Maybe, he’ll finally be able to get off that couch.

“I don’t think we need any kind of help of, ‘Can we believe?’ We can believe in a bag of doughnuts,” Bakay said. “But that weekend was like, ‘Oh my god. Things are really happening. Pinch me.’”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? In this April 26 photo, Wyoming’s Josh Allen, centre, takes a selfie with Buffalo Bills fans after being selected by the team during the first round of the National Football League draft in Arlington, Texas.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO In this April 26 photo, Wyoming’s Josh Allen, centre, takes a selfie with Buffalo Bills fans after being selected by the team during the first round of the National Football League draft in Arlington, Texas.

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