Albuquerque Journal

Bills, McCoy accept challenge of Broncos

Buffalo running back offers no excuses, expects more from himself and his team

- BY JOHN WAWROW

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — LeSean McCoy wouldn’t be topping 9,000 career yards rushing if he spent time wilting at the prospect of facing defenses stacked against him or deflecting blame after a bad outing.

And the Buffalo Bills running back isn’t about to start now.

Stopped in his tracks by Luke Kuechly and the Carolina Panthers last weekend, McCoy expects much more from himself with Von Miller and the Denver Broncos coming to town today.

“In this league, you’ve got to deal with it. Too much complainin­g. Too many excuses,” McCoy said, shoulderin­g the blame for being held to 9 yards on 12 rushes — a career low for a game in which he has more than seven carries — in a 9-3 loss to the Panthers .

“The problem with this league is a lot of players

don’t take accountabi­lity, and I do,” he added. “I will get it right this week.”

He’ll need to for the sake of an offense that appears rendered ineffectiv­e without a ground game. Buffalo managed 10 first downs and never had a snap inside Carolina’s 25.

The Bills (1-1) insist the Panthers didn’t provide any type of blueprint on how to stop them.

“It was a lack of execution all around,” center Eric Wood said. “There’s no one to blame for that but ourselves.”

The challenge doesn’t get easier against Denver (2-0) and a bucking Broncos defense that held Ezekiel Elliott to a mere 8 yards rushing in a 42-17 win over Dallas.

For Denver, Miller says there’s no carryover from last weekend, and notes the Broncos’ retooled defense still has much to prove a year after finishing 28th against the run.

“It’s only been two weeks,” Miller said. “I’ve been in the National Football League for seven years now, and you’ve got to continuall­y do it each and every week.”

Rookie Broncos coach Vance Joseph doesn’t need any reminder of McCoy’s potential after spending last season as the Miami Dolphins defensive coordinato­r. In sweeping their AFC East rival, Miami allowed Buffalo 267 yards offense in the first meeting, but 589 yards in the rematch.

“When I watch Buffalo’s offensive football team, I see a group that’s coming together,” Joseph said, referring to a unit featuring an entirely retooled receiver group and new coordinato­r Rick Dennison. “The first year, you’re going to have some ups and downs. But if you watch it in cutup form, you can see that it’s going to be an explosive offense. And it starts with LeSean McCoy.”

The Broncos’ five-year playoff streak ended last year with a 9-7 season that was done in by poor run defense and a bad rushing offense once C.J. Anderson blew out a knee at midseason. This year, they’re third in the NFL in stuffing the run behind nose tackle Domata Peko. And they lead the league in rushing behind a healthy and re-focused Anderson, who biked 15 miles on his off day this week without working up a sweat.

“Now, I’m back to playing undrafted,” declared Anderson, who’s second in the league with 199 yards rushing.

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