The Record (Troy, NY)

Bills’ McCoy admires Colts RB Gore

- By John Wawrow

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. » LeSean McCoy thinks so highly of Frank Gore, he’s preparing to give the Colts’ veteran the jersey off his back after the Bills host Indianapol­is on Sunday.

From one prolific running back to another: respect.

“Sometimes I think in this league, fans, they always want the new thing, what’s hot,” McCoy said, before noting how Gore jumped into fifth on the NFL’s career yards rushing list last weekend.

“A guy like Frank, he obviously doesn’t have the yards like he used to, but the work he’s put in, it’s hard to put them type of yards up each year,” McCoy added. “For you to be fifth all-time, he deserves his respect. And I respect him.”

McCoy intends to exchange his No. 25 Bills jersey for Gore’s No. 23 following a game featuring two of the NFL’s three active rushing leaders: Gore’s first with 13,697 yards, and McCoy’s third with 9,805.

First things first, though. While the Colts (3-9) are playing out the string on the way to their first losing season in six years under coach Chuck Pagano, Mc- Coy and the Bills (6- 6) are attempting to stay in the AFC playoff picture.

“Our mindset is we can’t lose this game. We’ve got to win,” McCoy said.

Buffalo’s dropped four of five and facing questions at quarterbac­k with starter Tyrod Taylor’s status uncertain after bruising his left knee in a 23-3 loss to New England last weekend. Minus Taylor, the Bills would have to return to rookie Nathan Peterman , who threw five intercepti­ons in the first half of a 54-24 loss to the Los Angeles Chargers three weeks ago.

That places the onus on McCoy having to carry an additional load.

“Whatever it takes to win,” said McCoy, who’s managed 851 yards rushing, having difficulty adapting to a new offensive system and finding holes against defenses geared to stop him.

Gore’s production is also dropping in his 13th season. His 632 yards rushing are currently Gore’s fewest since his rookie season. Though at 34, age might be playing a factor. So is a Colts offense playing without quarterbac­k Andrew Luck, who’s missed the entire season with a shoulder injury.

Gore isn’t into excuses.

“I know the record doesn’t seem like we’re a good team. I feel that we’ve got a good team. Things just didn’t go our way,” Gore said. “I just want us this last quarter to go out there, fight and try our best to go for it in the fourth quarter. That’s my goal.”

Some things to watch as two former AFC East rivals meet for the sixth time since NFL realignmen­t in 2002:

GORE VS. MCCOY

This marks the sixth time Gore and McCoy have been on opposite sidelines since McCoy entered the NFL in 2009 with Philadelph­ia.

Gore has had the edge in production with 436 yards rushing and 107 receiving versus McCoy’s 216 yards rushing and 134 receiving. Both have scored three TDs.

They last met in Buffalo’s 27-14 season- opening loss in 2015 in both players’ first games with their respective teams.

Overall, Gore has 41 games with 100 yards rushing, one short of tying O. J. Simpson for 16th on the NFL list. McCoy is tied for 24th with 36 100-yard games.

ROAD WOES

Indy is 1- 5 on the road, its worst mark since going Buffalo Bills running back LeSean McCoy (25) runs with the ball as New England Patriots defensive end Lawrence Guy (93) and free safety Devin McCourty (32) defend during the first half of an NFL football game, Sunday in Orchard Park, N.Y. The Patriots won 23-3.

0- 8 in 2011. The numbers haven’t been pretty away from Indianapol­is. Toss out a 20-14 win at Houston on Nov. 5, and the Colts have been outscored 182- 82 on the road. They’ve allowed more than 40 points twice and 30 or more points four times.

And they’ll play their final two road games without linebacker John Simon, who went on injured reserve Tuesday.

BY THE SACKFUL

The Colts have allowed an NFL-worst 51 sacks, including 32 over the past six games.

“It’s just one of those things where people smell blood in the water,” Pagano said. “They’re going to keep coming until you stop it.”

The Colts’ defense has 20 sacks, tied for 31st with the Bills.

PLAYOFFS? PLAYOFFS?

Colts owner Jim Irsay expected to be back in the playoff hunt this season. A loss to Buffalo would officially end those chances and mark the third straight year Indy’s missed the playoffs — the team’s longest stretch since 1992-94.

Buffalo’s 17-season playoff drought is the longest active streak in North America’s four major profession­al sports.

 ?? RICH BARNES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
RICH BARNES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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