Daily Press (Sunday)

Tomlin isn’t mincing words as he preps for Bills

He and former Tribe teammate McDermott again meet as coaches

- By John Wawrow

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — Buffalo Bills coach Sean McDermott wouldn’t go as far as to describe Mike Tomlin’s sometimes gruff demeanor as intimidati­ng.

“I just think he’s got a real good personalit­y and a good way with words,” McDermott said, referring to the Steelers’ coach, whom he’s known since the two were teammates at William & Mary. “He always has a way of putting a buzz on the verbiage he uses.

“I’ve always had a lot of respect for him that way.”

In noting the influence Tomlin, a team captain, had on him as a walk-on safety in 1993, McDermott reflected back with Buffalo (9-3) preparing to host Pittsburgh (11-1) in a showdown of AFC division leaders tonight.

At the very least, McDermott said, Tomlin had a way of getting his message across.

No different than this week, perhaps.

Tomlin minced no words in assessing the Steelers’ deficienci­es following their first loss of the season. Pittsburgh turned the ball over twice on downs and another time on an intercepti­on in squanderin­g a 14-0 lead in a 23-17 loss to Washington on Monday.

Tomlin called Pittsburgh’s inability to score on five attempts from Washington’s 1 as “catastroph­ic.”

He called out his receivers for dropping too many passes by saying, “They can catch the ball or they can get replaced by those who will catch it.”

And the Denbigh High graduate questioned his usually stout defense for being the “less dominants” in the second half, when Washington scored on four of six possession­s, including the last three.

Tomlin wouldn’t apologize if he came off as being blunt.

“I just try to tell the truth and identify problems,” he said. “We’ve got to get to work with fixing them. If you perceive it as blunt, then that’s the reason why.”

Expectatio­ns are high in Pittsburgh for a team in position to clinch its first AFC North title and playoff berth in three years.

It’s no different for Buffalo, where the Bills are seeking to claim their first AFC East title since 1995.

While the Steelers are accustomed to success, having won two Super Bowls and never finishing below .500 in Tomlin’s 14 seasons, the Bills were relative newcomers to late-season playoff races before McDermott’s arrival in 2017.

McDermott, along with general manager Brandon Beane, have transforme­d a franchise that was in the midst of a 17-year playoff drought — which at the time stood as the longest active streak in the NFL, Major League Baseball, the NBA or NHL. The Bills are now poised to clinch their third playoff berth in four years.

Safety Micah Hyde noted how Buffalo’s confidence has grown, with players now openly discussing Super Bowl aspiration­s for a team that’s not won a playoff game since the 1995 postseason.

“We talk about winning the Super Bowl and we mean it,” Hyde said. “Yeah, I think we’re ready to take the next step.”

For now, he’ll settle for beating the Steelers.

“I don’t really see it as a measuring stick because, at the end of the day, we want to be playing our best football going into January,” Hyde said. “But it’s December, and we want to play our best football now also.”

Prime-time rematch

The game comes a little less than a year after Buffalo improved to 9-3 and clinched a playoff berth with a 17-10 “Sunday Night Football” win at Pittsburgh on Dec. 15, 2019. The Bills forced five turnovers, including four intercepti­ons thrown by Devlin “Duck” Hodges, who started in place of Ben Roethlisbe­rger.

Big Ben is looking forward to playing this time.

“We are going to their place, looks like crappy weather, night game, cold,” he said. “All the perfect elements that come to playing playoff-caliber football teams and playoff-caliber situations this time of the year.”

’Renegade’

The Bills prepared for the game at Pittsburgh by borrowing a song from the Steelers’ playlist. The Steelers traditiona­lly play Styx’s “Renegade” before the start of the fourth quarter for motivation. McDermott had the song play constantly during the week of practice, which led to his players dancing on the sideline as it boomed over the Heinz Field PA system.

Asked if “Renegade” was on his playlist this week, McDermott laughed and said: “Good try.”

Stop the drops

Tomlin’s message regarding the Steelers’ league-high 34 drops was received loud and clear by JuJu Smith-Schuster.

“It’s motivation,” Smith-Schuster said. “If you can’t do your job, we’ll get someone to do it. That’s something he’s always said. ... He’s proven that. He’s fired people and brought someone else in.”

Banged-up D

The depth of the NFL’s thirdranke­d defense, Pittsburgh, will be tested against one of the league’s most dynamic offenses.

The Steelers likely will be without injured inside linebacker Robert Spillane (left knee) and possibly veteran cornerback Joe Haden, who suffered a concussion against Washington.

Avery Williamson, acquired in a trade with the Jets on Nov. 2, will start in place of Spillane, with Cam Sutton in line to replace Haden.

Allen stands tall

Quarterbac­k Josh Allen became Buffalo’s first player to earn his third AFC Player of the Week honor by completing 32 of 40 for 375 yards with four touchdowns and no intercepti­ons in a 34-24 win over San Francisco on Monday night.

It was the third-year starter’s sixth 300-yard outing, one short of matching Buffalo’s single-season record. His 3,403 yards passing already rank eighth on the team list.

 ?? GENE J PUSKAR/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Buffalo won 17-10 last December in Pittsburgh, with Bills coach Sean McDermott, left, getting the better of former W&M illiam & Mary teammate Mike Tomlin, right. Their teams meet again tonight.
GENE J PUSKAR/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Buffalo won 17-10 last December in Pittsburgh, with Bills coach Sean McDermott, left, getting the better of former W&M illiam & Mary teammate Mike Tomlin, right. Their teams meet again tonight.

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