Call & Times

Peterman makes first start for Buffalo against San Diego

- By GREG BEACHAM Associated Press

CARSON, Calif. — Anthony Lynn made his NFL head coaching debut last winter for one game amid the chaos of another lost season for the Buffalo Bills.

Although Lynn speaks warmly of his two seasons in chilly Buffalo, he hasn't thought much about the Bills (54) this season before their imminent arrival at StubHub Center to face his Los Angeles Chargers (3-6) on Sunday.

“I interviewe­d there, and they went a different direction,” said Lynn, who spent 2015 as the Bills' running backs coach and most of 2016 as their offensive coordinato­r.

“I didn't think I was the favorite there anyway, because how many times do you hire a guy from the staff when you fire the head coach? It doesn't happen too often. I did appreciate the interview, but I'm where I want to be.”

Although the Bills won 15 games over their two seasons, Lynn and head coach Rex Ryan couldn't figure out how to end a playoff drought currently sitting at 17 years.

Lynn's brief tenure after Ryan's firing included the awkward task of benching Tyrod Taylor for the finale without being able to publicly explain the reasoning of then-GM Doug Whaley and owner Terry Pegula for the move.

New Bills coach Sean McDermott coincident­ally made the same move earlier this week, benching Taylor in favor of Nathan Peterman . The rookie fifth-round pick will make his first NFL start against the Chargers and their phenomenal pass-rushing duo of Joey Bosa and Melvin Ingram.

McDermott's Bills are in playoff position with seven games to go, but he's also struggling to figure out how to get the most out of a team with 23 players from last season's team. Peterman is his latest attempt to generate a spark.

“I guess playing Coach Lynn, it won't be weird, because we have bigger things to worry about,” said Bills running back LeSean McCoy, who racked up 2,162 yards during Lynn's two seasons.

“Winning games, converting on third downs, running the ball, putting numbers up, putting stats up, putting drives together. We have all those things to kind of worry about, some things we're not doing. We've got to find a way to do it.”

Two teams on two-game skids are meeting at the Chargers' temporary home south of downtown LA. The Chargers, playing at home for just the second time in seven weeks, need a quick surge to have any hope of playoff contention, while the Bills control their own postseason destiny despite everything.

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