The Record (Troy, NY)

LLEN HAS BILLS OFFENSE HUMMING IN THIRD SEASON

- By JOHNWAWROW AP Sports Writer

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) » The way Josh Allen and Buffalo’s offense is humming, the Bills appear better equipped to overcome the deficienci­es in their two most recent oneand- done playoff exits.

Allen’s 3,403 yards passing rank fifth in the NFL and already place him eighth on Buffalo’s single- season list. The Bills’ 333 points scored through 12 games already match their total in 17 games, including playoffs, last year.

And the third-year quarterbac­k continued his upward trajectory during a 34-24 win over the San Francisco 49ers on Monday night.

Allen finished 32 of 40 for 375 yards with four touchdowns and no intercepti­ons for the AFC East-leading Bills (93), in wowing teammates and opponents alike.

“You’ve got to give him credit, man,” 49ers cornerback Richard Sherman said. “He played a freaking fantastic game.”

This certainly isn’t the plodding Tyrod Taylor-led offense that produced 263 yards and crossed midfield three times in a 10-3 wild- card playoff loss at Jacksonvil­le in January 2018.

And it doesn’t resemble the Allen-led hot-then- cold attack which managed just two field goals on its final seven possession­s, and squandered a 16- 0 third- quarter lead in a 22-19 OT wild- card loss at Houston this past January.

Rather than having to lean

on its defense to limit scoring opportunit­ies, the offense is forcing opponents to keep pace.

From 2012 through last season, the Bills were 8-58 when allowing 21 or more points. They’re already 6-3 this season, and scored 30 or more points six times, the same number Buffalo managed in its previous three years combined.

It’s much the result of Allen. He’s topped 300 yards passing six times, one short of matching the team’s single-season record. And he’s accounted for 33 touchdowns (26 passing, six rushing and one receiving), one short of matching Hall of Famer Jim Kelly’s franchise record set in 1991.

The offensive eruption is a testament to a defensivem­inded coach in Sean McDermott placing his trust in the strong-armed quarterbac­k, who has been let loose by coordinato­r Brian Daboll’s innovative attacking approach.

And it’s a credit to general manager Brandon Beane, who refused to sit still this offseason in addressing what he considered to be the Bills’ biggest flaw in saying they needed to score more points.

Beane boldly delivered by giving up a first-round draft pick to acquire Stefon Diggs in a trade with Minnesota to provide the Bills a trio of establishe­d receivers rounded out by John Brown and Cole Beasley. Beane didn’t stop there and selected Gabriel Davis in the fourth round.

Diggs is tied for the league lead with 90 catches and ranks fifth with 1,037 yards receiving. Beasley is coming off a career- best outing with nine catches for 130 yards and a touchdown against the 49ers. Davis, who has taken on a larger role with Brown on injured reserve (ankle), now leads Buffalo with five touchdowns after scoring on Monday night.

Add it up, and Buffalo has finally entered the NFL’s modern-day era by playing an entertaini­ng and, more important, winning brand of football that has the team in position to clinch its first division title since 1995.

Allen brushed off the attention and references to Kelly.

“It’s obviously cool to be mentioned in the same sentence, but my focus is doing what I can do to put this team in the best situations to win football games,” Allen said. “That’s all that matters to me.” WHAT’S WORKING Finishing drives. After being stopped on downs and losing a fumble on its second possession, Buffalo scored on six consecutiv­e drives before having to punt. The Bills have punted just 29 times this season, tied with the Carolina Panthers for the fewest in the NFL.

WHAT NEEDS HELP Defending against the deep ball. The Bills have allowed a 40-plus-yard completion in four straight games, including Brandon Aiyuk’s 49-yard reception on a drive that ended with Kyle Juszczyk scoring on a 6-yard catch, cutting Buffalo’s lead to 27-17 in the final minute of the third quarter. STOCK UP Beasley took advantage of the Niners focusing their coverage on Diggs to finish with nine catches on 11 targets.

STOCK DOWN Rookie RB Zack Moss. After nearly losing a fumble at the San Francisco 7 on the opening drive, he botched a handoff in his own end zone on Buffalo’s next possession, with the fumble recovered by the 49ers at the Buffalo 3. Moss was benched for much of the next three quarters, with McDermott saying: “The reason you didn’t see him is because you can’t put the ball on the turf.” INJURED

Moss, RB Devin Singletary and RG Jon Feliciano all returned after being treated on the sideline. KEY NUMBER

16 — Number of secondhalf career intercepti­ons Tre’Davious White has after picking off Nick Mullens’ attempt to Jeff Wilson at the Buffalo 2 with 6:55 left.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Buffalo Bills quarterbac­k Josh Allen (17) throws against the San Francisco 49ers during the second half of an NFL football game, Monday, Dec. 7, 2020, in Glendale, Ariz.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Buffalo Bills quarterbac­k Josh Allen (17) throws against the San Francisco 49ers during the second half of an NFL football game, Monday, Dec. 7, 2020, in Glendale, Ariz.
 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Buffalo Bills quarterbac­k Josh Allen (17) scrambles as San Francisco 49ers defensive end Kerry Hyder (92) pursues during the first half of an NFL football game, Monday, Dec. 7, 2020, in Glendale, Ariz.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Buffalo Bills quarterbac­k Josh Allen (17) scrambles as San Francisco 49ers defensive end Kerry Hyder (92) pursues during the first half of an NFL football game, Monday, Dec. 7, 2020, in Glendale, Ariz.

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