Toronto Star

Bills lift a long wait off their shoulders

Buffalo loses McCoy but finally ends playoff drought that was longest in pro sports

- STEVEN WINE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MIAMI— Amid the dancing and screaming and hugs and high-fives in the Buffalo Bills’ locker room, defensive tackle Kyle Williams watched his two young sons climbing around in his stall.

“What do you think, boys?” Williams shouted. “Where are we going? The playoffs?! Yeah!!”

His sons are only 6 and 4. For their dad and most Buffalo fans, Sunday was a long time coming.

The Bills snapped the longest current playoff drought in North American pro sports, making the post-season for the first time since 1999. They avoided eliminatio­n by beating Miami 22-16, and clinched an AFC wildcard berth minutes later when Cincinnati rallied past Baltimore.

The Bills watched the dramatic finish of the Bengals game on locker room TVs, and then erupted.

“Everybody went crazy,” said Williams, who is in his 12th and perhaps final season with the Bills. “I’ve been a wreck for 10 to 15 minutes.”

His voice choked with emotion, and he wasn’t the only one.

“Well I started crying, if that’s a good reaction...” former Bills running back Thurman Thomas said in a text to The Associated Press.

Buffalo (9-7) will travel to face Jacksonvil­le and former Bills coach Doug Marrone on Sunday. Marrone resigned as Bills coach three years ago Sunday.

The Bills’ joy was tempered by the loss of1,000-yard rusher LeSean McCoy with a right ankle injury. He was carted off the field in the third quarter and was in a walking boot after the game.

The frustratio­n of a disappoint­ing season got the best of the Dolphins (6-10) with 6:21 left, when receiver Jarvis Landry, running back Kenyan Drake and offensive lineman Jake Brendel were ejected following a fight. Landry was cited for disrespect­ing an official, and Drake for throwing his helmet 20 yards in anger. Unsportsma­nlike conduct penalties were called against both teams.

The undiscipli­ned Dolphins, who came into the game with the second- most penalties in the NFL, had 14 for 145 yards.

Meanwhile, for the Bills, 17 seasons of frustratio­n ended.

“The locker room is electric, man,” said guard Richie Incognito, who finished a season above .500 for the first time in his 11-year career. “We have been working so hard for this. So much has been said about it. And now the monkey is off our back. We’re in the post-season, and we’ve got new life.”

Buffalo punctuated the memorable victory with a 1-yard touchdown run by Williams for the first score of his career.

“I thought, ‘Try not to screw it up. They’re not going to call it again if I screw it up,’ ” he said.

He and his teammates celebrated with choreograp­hed back flops in the end zone.

Golf great Jack Nicklaus wore Bills gear and a smile watching from the stands as his grandson, tight end Nick O’Leary, caught Tyrod Taylor’s 26-yard touchdown pass.

The Dolphins scored a touchdown with1:56 left and recovered the ensuing onside kick, but Jordan Poyer’s intercepti­on sealed the win.

Taylor went 19 for 27 for 204 yards and one score. In six games against Miami, he has 10 touchdown passes and no intercepti­ons.

For the Dolphins, the season finale had the feel of an exhibition game, with thousands of empty seats and David Fales giving a lengthy, unimpressi­ve audition as a potential backup quarterbac­k in 2018. Miami was eliminated a week ago and will sit out the playoffs for the eighth time in the past nine years.

 ?? MIKE EHRMANN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Bills running back LeSean McCoy rushes against the Dolphins at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens on Sunday. McCoy later left the game with a right ankle inury.
MIKE EHRMANN/GETTY IMAGES Bills running back LeSean McCoy rushes against the Dolphins at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens on Sunday. McCoy later left the game with a right ankle inury.

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