South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

From first to versed

Undeniable progress since Bills QB Allen’s debut start in 2018

- By John Wawrow

ORCHARDPAR­K, N.Y.— Asmuch as he’d like, Josh Allen can’t change the past when the topic of the Bills quarterbac­k’s first career start was mentioned thisweek.

“Obviously, very nervous, and things didn’t turn out so great,” Allen said, when asked to recall any lingeringm­emories of the Bills’ 31-20 loss to the Chargers twoweeks into the 2018 season.

“I should’ve, could’ve done a better job if I could go back and do it all over now,” he added. “But it did teach me somevaluab­le lessons. ... It helpedme. It reallydid, andI think youneedtog­o through some of the bumps and bruises.”

In finishing 18 of 33 for 245 yards with a touchdowni­n the final minute, and two intercepti­ons, Allen’s outing was typically reflective­of a rawrookie thrust into action after Nathan Peterman unraveled in the Bills’ season opener.

The signs of growth have become undeniably apparent some 21⁄ years

2 later as Allen and the AFC Eastleadin­g Bills (7-3) prepare to host the Chargers (3-7) on Sunday.

In playing a key role in the Bills winning at least seven of their first 10 games in consecutiv­e seasons for the first time since 1995 and ’96, Allen has shedmany of his erratic tendencies to be considered one of the NFL’s top young quarterbac­ks. His 2,871 yards passing rank eighth in the NFL, his

68.4 completion percentage stands ninth, as does his 103.2 passer rating in a season he has thrown 21 touchdowns — one more than last year — versus seven intercepti­ons.

It helps that the Bills spent the last two offseasons upgrading the talent around Allen, including this year’s addition of Stefon Diggs to fill out an establishe­d group of receivers featuring Cole Beasley and John Brown.

And yet, coach Sean McDermott said Allen deserves credit for his ability to learn fromhis mistakes.

Chargers coach Anthony Lynn has seen a difference.

“He’s grown tremendous­ly,” Lynn said.

“It’swhat youwould expect from a young quarterbac­k of his skillset and football IQ,” he added. “These guys don’t come into the league hall of famers. They get developed, and they get better every single year. This year, he’s looking like the league MVP to me.”

The Chargers, for all their flaws in blowing second-half leads, have the makings of a young, promising star of their own in JustinHerb­ert.

The first-round pick out of Oregon ranks 10th with 2,699 yards passing, and has already topped 300 yards five times, one short of matching the NFL rookie record in just nine starts. With 22 touchdownp­asses, he’s three short of becoming the NFL’s fourth rookie to reach25. Andhe’s 301 yards passing from joining Patrick Mahomes in becoming just the NFL’s second player to reach 3,000 in his first 10 career starts. What encourages Lynn is howmuch roomHerber­t still has to develop after being forced to start after Tyrod Taylorwas sidelined with a rib injury inWeek 1.

“There’s a lot he doesn’t know, and we’re still putting more on his plate every single week,” Lynn said. “I love the way he’s handling that, especially under the circumstan­ces.”

What the Ek?

The Chargers could get a big jolt to their running game if Austin Ekeler can return to action.

The running back led the AFC in scrimmage yards after three games before suffering a hamstring injury in Week4again­st theBuccane­ers. Inthe six-plus games since, the running game has been inconsiste­nt with Justin Jackson, Troymaine Pope and Kalen Ballage taking the lead at various points. Ballage has been the top back recently, topping 70 yards from scrimmage in each of the last three games.

On the receiving end

Chargers receiver Keenan Allen leads the league with 81 receptions, which is eight ahead of Diggs, who is second.

Allen has five games with nine or more receptions, including last week against the Jets when he set a team recordwith 16.

With 605 catches, he needs 18 in the next four games to pass Antonio Brown’s mark for most through a player’s first 100 games.

Forget it

The Bills had their off week to get over the disappoint­ment of a 32-30 road loss to the Cardinals, which Kyler Murray sealed with a 43-yard touchdownp­ass toDeAndreH­opkins with 2 seconds remaining.

“It’s got to be behind us,” McDermott said.

“One pass is not going to define our season. One pass, in particular that type of pass, is not indicative of who we are as a team.”

Tale of two halves

The Chargers defense has allowed a league-low average of 134.3 yards offense in the first half. The second half is another story.

The 209.7 yards allowed average after halftime is fourthwors­t.

The second-half collapses are why the Chargers have lost four games after having double-digit leads.

The Chargers had an 18-point lead in a 34-28 victory over the Jets last week.

The Jets pulled within one score late in the fourth quarter and drove into Chargers territory before Gus Bradley’s unit finally held.

Trailing

The Bills have lost four straight to the Chargers, and haven’t led at any point since a 23-14 win on Oct. 19,

 ?? RICK SCUTERI/AP ?? QB Josh Allen will lead the Bills against the Chargers on Sunday. In 2018, Allen faced the Chargers in his first NFL start.
RICK SCUTERI/AP QB Josh Allen will lead the Bills against the Chargers on Sunday. In 2018, Allen faced the Chargers in his first NFL start.

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