The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Giants win over Texans

- By BarryWilne­r AP Pro Football Writer

After losing its first two games, the New York team came out on top against Houston.

They’re breathing easier in New Jersey, Seattle, and the Motor City, and taking in some rarefied air in western New York.

That’s what happens when your hapless, helpless and hopeless football teams suddenly turn nasty, effective and victorious.

Most shocking, no doubt, was what the Bills did to the Vikings . After being the brunt of so many jokes the last two weeks following inept showings, then exacerbati­ng it by tweeting an image of their helmet traveling to meet the Vikings’ helmet— in Wisconsin— the Bills dominated in Minnesota. To boot, theywere 16-point under- dogs, making them the sixth team in the last 81 games with such a spread to pull off an upset. Where did that come from? Well, cynics will say the Vikings were coming off that emotional tie with Green Bay and face the NFL’s most powerful squad in a short week when they host the Rams on Thursday night. The folks in Buffalo will tell you the Bills, who broke a 17-season drought of playoff appearance­s last winter, aren’t as bad as they’ve looked.

“No one thought that we were going to come in here and play the way that we did, except the people in this locker room now,” offensive tackle Dion Dawkins said, and he was right, particular­ly about the

oddsmakers. “We came into the game fueled and ready to play.”

Say what you will about their forgettabl­e first two outings, the Bills proved a lot Sunday. A team in turmoil, missing its best offensive player in injured running back LeSean McCoy, seemingly a sieve on defense, manhandled one of the Super Bowl favorites. With a raw rookie quarterbac­k, too.

“We really don’t really pay attention to what people think about us,” linebacker Lorenzo Alexander said. “It’s all about internal belief and confidence. If you listen to outside noise, we’d never win a game because nobody respects Buffalo at all. We have to continue to go out and earn that respect.”

Eli Manning has earned plenty of respect — and two Super Bowl rings — in a borderline Hall of Fame career. What he’s earned the last year or so has been doubters that he had anything left.

At Houston, he showed when given any sort of protection by the Giants, he can be productive and a winner. Manning was besieged in the first two defeats, either sacked or hit or pressured so much he barely got the snap before he was inundated. Against the Texans, and with 2015 first-round draft pick Ereck Flowers wisely benched at right tackle, Manning had some of the best numbers of his career: 25 for 29 for 297 yards and two touchdowns. He connected with nine receivers.

“I thought we kind of condensed the offense a little bit and made sure guys knew what they were doing,” said Manning, pointing out without saying as much that the Giants were slow to react in losses to Jacksonvil­le and Dallas. “Plays that they knew, they were playing fast, the offensive line was playing fast and we have good players, just let them go play. Let’s not try to be perfect and trick or do too much. Let our guys go win, because we got good athletes.”

Seattle once had as talented a roster as any team, winning one Super Bowl that should have been two, and dominating the NFC West. With defections, injuries and retirement­s, though, these Seahawks need to succeed with guile, grit and coaching acumen.

In their first home game, the Seahawks showed they still have a huge advantage at CenturyLin­k Field, especially when they get going quickly. The Cowboys, coming off a masterful manhandlin­g of the Giants last weekend, ran into a buzzsaw.

The 24-13 whooping the Seahawks put on the Cowboys was reminiscen­t of past Pete Carroll teams. They played with an edge that hasmarked his squads since his Southern Cal days.

 ?? ERIC CHRISTIAN SMITH - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Sunday, Sept. 23, 2018, photo, New York Giants quarterbac­k Eli Manning (10) throws a pass against the Houston Texans during the first half of an NFL football game in Houston.
ERIC CHRISTIAN SMITH - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Sunday, Sept. 23, 2018, photo, New York Giants quarterbac­k Eli Manning (10) throws a pass against the Houston Texans during the first half of an NFL football game in Houston.
 ?? RICK OSENTOSKI - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick, left, and Detroit Lions head coach Matt Patricia meet after their teams’ NFL football game, Sunday, Sept. 23, 2018, in Detroit. The Lions won 26-10.
RICK OSENTOSKI - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick, left, and Detroit Lions head coach Matt Patricia meet after their teams’ NFL football game, Sunday, Sept. 23, 2018, in Detroit. The Lions won 26-10.
 ?? BRUCE KLUCKHOHN - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Sept. 23, 2018, photo, Buffalo Bills running back Chris Ivory (33) runs from Minnesota Vikings defensive end Danielle Hunter (99) during the first half of an NFL football game, in Minneapoli­s. Fans are breathing easier in New Jersey and Seattle, and taking in some rarefied air in Western New York. That’s what happens when your hapless, helpless and hopeless football teams suddenly turn nasty, effective and victorious.
BRUCE KLUCKHOHN - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Sept. 23, 2018, photo, Buffalo Bills running back Chris Ivory (33) runs from Minnesota Vikings defensive end Danielle Hunter (99) during the first half of an NFL football game, in Minneapoli­s. Fans are breathing easier in New Jersey and Seattle, and taking in some rarefied air in Western New York. That’s what happens when your hapless, helpless and hopeless football teams suddenly turn nasty, effective and victorious.

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