Toronto Star

Bengals QB Dalton enjoys ‘good day’ in Buffalo

- JOHN WAWROW THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y.— Bengals quarterbac­k Andy Dalton doesn’t believe he could have scripted a better visit to Buffalo on Sunday.

The donation he made to Buffalo’s Roswell Park Cancer Institute to open the day was special. The two standing ovations he received from Bills fans before the pre-season game were chilling.

And Dalton was able to keep his emotions in check on the first snap from scrimmage to hit John Ross for a 57-yard touchdown pass in leading the Bengals to a 26-13 victory.

“It was a good day. I think the way it started was the best part,” Dalton said. “The game went well, too.”

The Bills could not say the same about their offence, and a three-way quarterbac­k competitio­n that remains unsettled.

Rookie Josh Allen struggled in his first pre-season start , while getting little protection from an offensive line that allowed five sacks in the first half alone. He finished 6 of 12 and was sacked for more yards (39) than he had passing (34).

“I didn’t do a good enough job getting the ball out on time,” the first-round pick said. “I’ve got to do a better job, but there’s a lot to learn from.”

Dalton eased whatever concerns the starters raised with their sputters in last week’s 2113 win at Dallas by producing three scoring drives — two touchdowns and a field goal — over five series against the Bills.

Dalton finished 11 of 16 for 180 yards and two touchdowns — including a 14-yarder to A.J. Green — to celebrate the warm reception he received in Buffalo nine months after playing a key role in the Bills making the playoffs and ending a 17-year playoff drought.

It happened in the final minute of the season finale against Baltimore on New Year’s Eve. Dalton’s 49-yard touchdown pass on fourth down to Tyler Boyd sent the Bengals to a 31-27 win, and eliminated the Ravens from playoff contention.

Bills fans responded immediatel­y by making over $450,000 to Dalton’s charitable foundation.

“It’s a crazy story, and it’s been fun to be on this side of it,” Dalton said. “The best part is all the money that was raised.”

Buffalo’s offence continues to raise concerns two weeks before opening the regular season at Baltimore.

Allen generated just three first downs before being forced out of the game in the final minute of the first half. He was escorted off the field to be evaluated for a possible concussion after being tackled by Carlos Dunlap in the end zone.

Though Allen was cleared to return, he stayed on the sideline while Nathan Peterman finished the game.

This was a week after the starters went three-and-out in four series and starter AJ McCarron was sacked once and hit several other times before being sidelined with an injury to his right throwing shoulder in a 19-17 win at Cleveland.

“It’s disappoint­ing,” Bills coach Sean McDermott said. “We’re going to make sure we’re helping him with protection and catching the football and not beating ourselves with penalties. Let’s just start there.” Vikings trade for centre: The Minnesota Vikings acquired Canadian centre Brett Jones in a trade with the New York Giants for a 2019 draft pick.

The deal, contingent on Jones passing a physical exam, came hours after coach Mike Zimmer said centre Pat Elflein would not return to practice this week. The second-year starter is still rehabilita­ting from off-season surgeries on his ankle and shoulder.

The six-foot-two, 312-pound Jones started 13 games for the Giants last year. His first career NFL start actually came at left guard in 2016. The Vikings have lost starting left guard Nick Easton, likely for the season, to a neck injury.

 ?? ADRIAN KRAUS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Bills’ Josh Allen, tackled by the Bengals‘ Carl Lawson and Carlos Dunlap, was sacked for more yards than he had passing.
ADRIAN KRAUS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Bills’ Josh Allen, tackled by the Bengals‘ Carl Lawson and Carlos Dunlap, was sacked for more yards than he had passing.

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