The Bakersfield Californian

Matchup of unbeaten teams in Buffalo, of all places

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Not since the days of Bruce Smith, Thurman Thomas, Jim Kelly and Marv Levy has there been this much optimism about football in Western New York.

Can’t blame the folks in Buffalo, either. Through two weeks, the Bills have been dynamic on offense and defense.

“It’s super early,” says receiver Stefon Diggs, acquired in the offseason from Minnesota to enrich the offense, which he has done as the prime target for emerging quarterbac­k Josh Allen. “I’ll have another conversati­on with you after Game 16 or like Game 17. I kind of don’t really get caught up too much in that type of stuff because things can change fast.”

Not to deflate that balloon, but they did it against the Jets and Dolphins. Now comes much more of a test: the Rams, also 2-0 and riding high.

The key matchup could be Allen and Diggs challengin­g Rams cornerback Jalen Ramsey, who once called Allen “trash.”

“You’ve got to make it more like rush hour traffic than cruise control, make it more like New York City traffic than a trip on I-90 in upstate New York,” Rams defensive coordinato­r Brandon Staley says of slowing Allen. “It’s got to be more stressful for him.”

Week 3 began with Miami’s 31-13 victory Thursday night at Jacksonvil­le. Ryan Fitzpatric­k accounted for three touchdowns and became the first NFL quarterbac­k to notch six wins over the same opponent with six teams.

The Dolphins (1-2) had their first double-digit victory in 39 games, ending the longest drought in the league.

Fitzpatric­k improved to 6-2 as a starter versus Jacksonvil­le (1-2), with wins coming with Cincinnati (2008), Buffalo (2012), Tennessee (2013), Houston (2014), the New York Jets (2015) and now Miami.

CHIEFS (2-0) AT RAVENS (2-0), MONDAY NIGHT

If you consider the matchup of the past two NFL Most Valuable Players, Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes and Ravens QB Lamar Jackson as a tossup, then the Ravens probably have the edge because of their powerful defense and special teams. But let’s concentrat­e on the brilliance of these squads.

The Ravens have won 14 straight regular-season games, the league’s longest run since Carolina won 18 in a row in 2014-15.

Super Bowl champion Kansas City has won 11 in a row overall, including the playoffs. Mahomes needs 75 yards passing to reach 10,000 for his career; this is his third season as a starter.

RAIDERS (2-0) AT PATRIOTS (1-1)

The Raiders opened the season by scoring at least 34 points in the first two games for the third time in franchise history and first since 1968. That was long before the 2001 “Tuck Rule” game that no one should bring up to Jon Gruden, then and now the Raiders coach.

Cam Newton leads all quarterbac­ks with four rushing touchdowns, the most by a QB through the first two weeks of the season in NFL history.

BUCCANEERS (1-1) AT BRONCOS (0-2)

The Mile High City ranks pretty low on Tom Brady’s list of favorite places to play. The Broncos are the only team with a winning record against Brady and they’re 7-4 against him in Denver, including 3-0 in the playoffs.

Of course, Peyton Manning had a hand in some of that — and Jeff Driskel, the backup QB for the Broncos, gets this start with Drew Lock hurt.

COWBOYS (1-1) AT SEAHAWKS (2-0)

When each has the ball, it’s lights out: Russell Wilson tied a career high with five touchdown passes against New England’s allegedly strong secondary, and has nine TDs in two games. DK Metcalf s emerging as a threat everywhere, with some already comparing him to Calvin Johnson. Megatron Northwest?

Dallas QB Dak Prescott threw for 450 yards and ran for three touchdowns in a stolen victory against Atlanta.

PACKERS (2-0) AT SAINTS (1-1)

They are getting antsy in the Big Easy about Drew Brees, perhaps forgetting that his mediocre showing last week at Las Vegas was without Michael Thomas. There likely isn’t a more valuable player on any offense who doesn’t play quarterbac­k than Thomas.

They are getting euphoric in Titletown over the Packers’ start, led by a pair of Aarons in Rodgers (six TD passes and no intercepti­ons) and Jones (a career-high 236 scrimmage yards and three TDs last week). The defense has been reliable, too.

BEARS (2-0) AT FALCONS (0-2)

The Falcons also struggle when they don’t have the ball, and their special teams were a fiasco at Dallas. Hey guys, you can pick up an opponent’s onside kick before it goes 10 yards.

Chicago is an unconvinci­ng 2-0, with wins over Detroit, needing a huge rally, and the Giants, needing to hold on late.

WASHINGTON (1-1) AT BROWNS (1-1)

Cleveland came alive in its win over Cincinnati and has had the longer layoff that a Thursday night appearance provides. The offense was balanced vs. the Bengals: 215 yards rushing, 219 passing. Nick Chubb (124) and Kareem Hunt (86) combined for 210 yards rushing and scored three TDs.

Sparked by No. 2 overall draft pick DE Chase Young, Washington’s defense leads the NFL with 11 sacks. Young is tied for the league lead with 2½ sacks.

TITANS (2-0) AT VIKINGS (0-2)

What a mess in Minnesota. Yes, it’s early, but already the Vikings are two games behind in the NFC North, 0-2 for the first time in seven seasons under head coach Mike Zimmer.

Into the US Bank Stadium comes Tennessee. Derrick Henry, the NFL rushing leader in 2019, ranks second in the league with 200 yards and has a league-high 56 carries.

49ERS (1-1) AT GIANTS (0-2)

San Francisco will be severely short-handed, most damaged on the

defensive line with Nick Bosa and Solomon Thomas out for the season with knee injuries, and at running back (Raheem Mostert, Tevin Coleman are hurt). QB Jimmy Garoppolo has an ankle issue and won’t start.

New York begins 2020 life without star RB Saquon Barkley, also gone for the year with a torn ACL.

TEXANS (0-2) AT STEELERS (2-0)

So much chatter out of Pittsburgh has focused on the things the Steelers aren’t quite doing right.

But with quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger back, the offense has balance. That defense is reviving memories of the Steel Curtain. So calm down, Steel City.

The negative vibes out of Houston are more accurate. The Texans have looked outmanned in both losses, though they were two of the AFC’s top teams, Baltimore and Kansas City.

LIONS (0-2) AT CARDINALS (2-0)

The Lions get off to good starts, then collapse. If they continue that pattern, coach Matt Patricia will be a defensive coordinato­r somewhere next year.

Arizona is the opposite, a team on the rise with excitement streaming everywhere — led by quarterbac­k Kyler Murray and wideout DeAndre Hopkins.

BENGALS (0-2) AT EAGLES (0-2)

The Eagles are reeling far more than the Bengals, who have looked somewhat revitalize­d — at least when they have the ball — with top overall draft pick Joe Burrow at quarterbac­k.

Philly is injured (again) and offstride on offense and defense.

QB Carson Wentz has made too many bad decisions, particular­ly when the Eagles have been in position to seize control.

JETS (0-2) AT COLTS (1-1)

Now they are wondering if the Jets practice hard enough? They certainly don’t play well enough, and they have no weapons on offense.

Indy’s defense has allowed a league-low 416 yards and is tied for third in sacks with seven.

PANTHERS (0-2) AT CHARGERS (1-1)

After the medical mishap with starter Tyrod Taylor, Justin Herbert gets his second straight start for LA. At least this time he knows well before kickoff.

The Panthers have a 10-game losing streak going back to last season. They have also dropped their past six on the road and will be without injured All-Pro running back Christian McCaffrey.

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY / AP ?? Bills quarterbac­k Josh Allen (17) congratula­tes wide receiver John Brown (15) after Brown scored a touchdown, during the second half of a game against the Dolphins last week.
LYNNE SLADKY / AP Bills quarterbac­k Josh Allen (17) congratula­tes wide receiver John Brown (15) after Brown scored a touchdown, during the second half of a game against the Dolphins last week.

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