Guymon Daily Herald

Bills rejuvenate­d offense has Rams coach McVay’s attention

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ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) — Sean McVay knows good offenses when he sees them.

Quarterbac­k Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills — a team previously known for having a defense-first reputation — have suddenly captured the Los Angeles Rams coach’s attention as the teams prepare to play at Orchard Park, New York, on Sunday.

“A lot of mixture in personnel. A lot of different looks they can present,” McVay said. “And Josh’s ability to be able to beat you with his arms and legs and create off-schedule is a real winning edge. Man, I’ve been impressed with him the first couple of weeks.”

It’s early still, but the Bills (2-0) don’t resemble the onceploddi­ng, inconsiste­nt offensive team which ranked in the bottom half of the NFL in yards gained for all but two of the past 17 seasons, including 24th last year.

Sparked by Allen’s 729 yards passing, the Bills rank first in yards passing, third in yards gained and are tied for sixth in scoring 58 points.

Buffalo’s offensive renaissanc­e was apparent in a 31-28 come- from- behind win at Miami last week, when Allen had 417 yards passing and four touchdowns in becoming the team’s fifth player to top 400 yards.

In making up for an injury-depleted defense missing two starting linebacker­s, the Bills snapped a 38-game skid going back to 2011 when allowing 28 or more points.

“He’s a lot more comfortabl­e back there, he’s locked in,” running back Devin Singletary said of Allen. “He’s that general we’re looking for.”

The Rams, off to their third straight 2-0 start, are no pushovers on offense, either.

They’ve finished a season ranked no worse than 10th in yards gained since McVay took over in 2017, and have topped 400 yards in each of their first two outings.

ALLEN

RAMSEY

Allen dismissed questions about a feud he’s had with Rams cornerback Jalen Ramsey, who was with Jacksonvil­le in 2018 when he called the quarterbac­k “trash” in

VS a magazine article. Ramsey questioned Allen’s abilities coming out of Wyoming.

A year later, Allen signed a picture for a fan by writing, “Hey Ramsey ... Am I still trash?” to which Ramsey posted “Yes” on his Twitter account.

“That was so long ago in my opinion, and it’s really a nonfactor,” Allen said Wednesday.

McVay wasn’t aware of the taunt, but hoped Ramsey has changed his outlook.

“I can’t speak for him, but I would say that one of the things that I really trust about Jalen is that he’s got a great feel for the game,” McVay said. “And I don’t think there’s any denying what Josh has put on tape.”

HIGH ON HIGBEE

Tyler Higbee’s hot hand has McVay questionin­g why he didn’t get the tight end more involved earlier last year.

Higbee has combined for 51 catches for 616 yards and five touchdowns — half the fifth-year player’s career total — in his past seven games, going back to last season. He had a career-best three TDs in a 37-19 win at Philadelph­ia last weekend.

“I should’ve done it a lot sooner,” McVay said. “You’ve just seen him continue to grow.”

WRESTLING WITH DONALD

Bills coach Sean McDermott has a theory as to why Rams star defensive tackle Aaron Donald has been so disruptive in his six-plus NFL seasons.

“I think it’s really one line: he was a wrestler,” McDermott said, noting how Donald uses leverage to make up for his relatively small 6-foot1, 280-pound frame.

McDermott, who might not break 200 pounds, was a championsh­ip wrestler in high school, and joked he was relieved he wasn’t in someone like Donald’s weight class.

ROB RETURNS Rams receiver Robert Woods has spent his entire life in Southern California except for his four-year stint with the Bills, who drafted him in 2013. He was a steady, productive receiver for Buffalo, and grew to love the fans’ passion while learning to thrive in cold weather.

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