Toronto Star

Dominating defence helps Bills KO Colts

- JOHN WAWROW THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y.— Rex Ryan lamented there was only one thing missing in making his Buffalo Bills coaching debut complete.

“I think we would have gotten a shutout,” Ryan said following a 27-14 season-opening win over the Indianapol­is Colts on Sunday. “But when you’re playing the Colts, that’s not going to happen too often.”

The Bills showed signs of unveiling the bully Ryan had vowed to build in Buffalo when he took over in January after Doug Marrone stepped down abruptly.

Karlos Williams and Boobie Dixon each rushed for touchdowns as part of a ground-and-pound attack that combined for 147 yards. Quarterbac­k Tyrod Taylor was efficient in his Bills debut, as he completed1­4 of19 for195 yards, including a 51-yard touchdown pass to Percy Harvin and added 41yards rushing.

And Buffalo’s dominating defence put the clamps on Andrew Luck and what was one of the NFL’s best offences last season.

The Colts managed just nine first downs and148 yards of offence in the first half, which ended with usually reliable Adam Vinatieri missing a 52yard field goal wide right.

Luck finished 26 of 49 for 243 yards, and two touchdowns — a twoyard pass to Donte Moncrief’s twoyard catch and Dwayne Allen’s sixyard score — and two intercepti­ons.

“They beat us pretty bad,” Luck said. “You don’t let one game necessaril­y define you, but that doesn’t make it any easier of a pill to swallow.”

The Bills grabbed the momentum by capitalizi­ng on Luck’s first INT.

Rookie cornerback Ronald Darby timed his leap perfectly to intercept Luck’s deep pass intended for T.Y. Hilton. Five plays later, Taylor dropped back in the pocket and hit Harvin in stride to open the scoring.

“It’s a game-changer,” linebacker Nigel Bradham said of how the offence capitalize­d on the turnover. “Any time you get a situation like that where the offence just goes down and puts it in for us, we’re going to sit back as a defence and be happy, with smiles on our faces.”

Buffalo proceeded to score on its next three possession­s, capped by Dixon’s one-yard run in the third quarter to build a 24-0 lead six minutes into the second half.

It was a hole far too deep for the Colts to overcome.

“They threw everything but the kitchen sink at us,” Colts coach Chuck Pagano said.

Actually, the Bills’ defence was playing minus tackle Marcell Dareus, serving a one-game suspension. And Buffalo then lost its senior defensive back, safety Corey Graham, who sustained a possible concussion while tackling Frank Gore on the first play from scrimmage.

For Indianapol­is, Hilton didn’t return after bruising his left knee late in the third quarter. Colts owner Jim Irsay said preliminar­y tests were negative, but added it’s too early to determine whether their top receiver will miss any playing time.

The Colts’ offence was hardly in synch even with Hilton, who finished with seven catches for 88 yards. Gore struggled finding holes in his Colts debut — and also missed a series because he cramped up. He finished with 31yards rushing on eight carries and had two catches for zero yards.

 ?? GARY WIEPERT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Bills’ Nigel Bradham zeroes in on Colts’ Andrew Luck on Sunday.
GARY WIEPERT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Bills’ Nigel Bradham zeroes in on Colts’ Andrew Luck on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada