Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

SAINTS RUN SCORE UP over pourous Bills.

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SAINTS 47, BILLS 10

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — Mark Ingram and Alvin Kamara are so in sync, the New Orleans Saints running back duo is now finishing sentences for one another.

“Listen, it’s fun whenever we’re scoring at will,” Ingram said, before sounding like Oprah on a giveaway episode following a 47-10 victory over the Buffalo Bills on Sunday.

“Drew [Brees] got a touchdown. AK [Kamara] got a touchdown. Trey [Edmunds] got a touchdown. Man, that’s what we work for, so everybody eats.”

That’s when Kamara interjecte­d by noting to Ingram, “You don’t want to say you got three touchdowns,” before the two broke into a fit of laughter.

Ingram had 131 yards rushing and scored three times, and the Saints won their seventh consecutiv­e in producing one of the most prolific running performanc­es in franchise history. The six touchdowns rushing set a franchise record, and New Orleans’ 298 yards rushing were the third highest in team history.

“We came out and wanted to impose our will,” said Kamara, who scored once and added 106 yards rushing. “We were in the locker room and said, ‘We’ve got to put pressure on them to break their neck.’ ”

Ingram set a career high by scoring twice from 3 yards and another from 1 yard. Kamara scored on a 5-yard run, while Brees scrambled in from 7 yards. Edmunds capped the run of rushing touchdowns with a 41-yard scamper.

The Saints never punted by scoring on 8 of their 9 possession­s, not including 2 mean-nothing drives to close both halves in a game they finished with 482 yards and 32 first downs.

The Saints (7-2) became the second team in the Super Bowl era to win seven consecutiv­e after starting the season 0-2, joining the 1993 Cowboys, who went on to beat Buffalo in winning the Super Bowl.

The Bills (5-4) so completely unraveled on defense, linebacker Preston Brown didn’t know what hit them.

“That felt like the longest game of my life,” Brown told The Associated Press. “Every time they ran the ball: 8 yards. Every time they passed the ball: 15, 20 yards. Nothing worked today.”

It marked the second consecutiv­e game the Bills defense has caved after allowing 194 yards rushing in a 34-21 loss to the New York Jets on Nov. 2.

“It’s two straight times where you get embarrasse­d,” Brown said. “And it has to change or we’ll be five and what, 5-11, if we don’t make a change.”

Buffalo fell to 4-1 at home and squandered an opportunit­y to win 6 of its first 9 games for the first time since 1999.

The offense was hardly better.

Buffalo managed 198 yards, and 10 first downs. And five of those first downs came on Buffalo’s meaningles­s final drive that ended with backup quarterbac­k Nathan Peterman hitting Nick O’Leary on a 7-yard touchdown pass.

After Stephen Hauschka capped a 9-play, 57-yard opening drive with a 37-yard field goal, the Bills never crossed midfield over their next 8 possession­s.

The most notable cheer came with 4:53 remaining when Peterman replaced Tyrod Taylor and then immediatel­y hit Deonte Thompson for a 10-yard reception along the right sideline.

Kelvin Benjamin, like much of the rest of the Bills offense, was rendered invisible in making his debut after being acquired in a trade with Carolina on Oct. 31. He finished with three catches for a team-best 42 yards.

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