Toronto Star

Gronk cheap shot adds insult as Bills lose Taylor to injury

- JOHN WAWROW THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

> PATRIOTS > BILLS 23 3

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y.— Rob Gronkowski was apologetic for piledrivin­g his shoulder into the back of Bills rookie cornerback Tre’Davious White’s head.

Bills safety Micah Hyde was livid, calling it a dirty play.

Injuries and accusation­s overshadow­ed New England extending its winning streak to eight games and closing in on the AFC East title following a 23-3 win on Sunday.

Buffalo’s playoff hopes could be jeopardize­d after starting quarterbac­k Tyrod Taylor hurt his left knee and had a towel draped over his head while being carted off the sideline early in the fourth quarter. And Gronkowski’s hit on White added to the Bills’ frustratio­ns.

White was being evaluated for a concussion after he was struck by Gronkowski while lying on the ground after Buffalo’s rookie firstround pick intercepte­d a Tom Brady pass with 4:50 remaining.

“That’s just dirty football. There’s nowhere in our game for that,” Hyde said. “I don’t know if it was a shoulder, elbow, I’m not sure what it was. That was dirty.”

New England’s tight end was remorseful following the game.

“I’m not in the business of that. It was a lot of frustratio­n,” he said. “I just want to apologize to Tre’Davious White. I don’t really believe in those type of shots.”

Bills players were surprised Gronkowski wasn’t ejected, a sentiment shared by Dean Blandino, the NFL’s former officiatin­g director, who now is Fox TV analyst.

“In my opinion that was a play where Gronkowski should have been ejected from the game, and I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s a substantia­l fine and maybe even a suspension going forward,” Blandino said following the game.

The hit sparked a shoving match between Hyde and Patriots receiver Danny Amendola. Bills defensive end Jerry Hughes was so upset he was flagged for making contact with an official. Gronkowski, Hyde and Amendola were penalized for unnecessar­y roughness.

“Obviously, it didn’t hurt the team there, but it definitely can in the future,” Gronkowski said. “And you definitely got to keep your cool.”

It wasn’t lost on Hyde that the two division rivals will meet at New England in three weeks.

“I’m sure you guys will talk about it,” Hyde said to reporters. “Obviously, this is something we’re going to be thinking about.”

Rex Burkhead scored on one- and 14-yard runs on the Patriots first two drives of the second half, and Stephen Gostkowski hit three field goals in a game New England never trailed.

The Pats (10-2) won their 14th consecutiv­e road game — the secondlong­est streak in NFL history — and reached double-digits in victories for the 15th consecutiv­e season.

Brady went 21 of 30 for 258 yards and an intercepti­on, while improving to 27-3 over Buffalo and breaking Brett Favre’s NFL record for most wins by a quarterbac­k against any one opponent. Favre had 26 wins against the Detroit Lions.

Buffalo (6-6) lost for the fourth time in five games and continued sliding out of the playoff picture

Taylor’s status is uncertain. He would only nod “yes” when asked by The Associated Press if he was all right while limping heavily on his left knee as he boarded a cart and was driven out of the stadium.

Taylor continued playing despite being hurt on the first series.

“He was in pain. You could see it on his face, the expression­s he was making,” running back LeSean McCoy said. “It shows you a true warrior.”

Coach Sean McDermott provided no update except to say Taylor was being evaluated.

Minus Taylor, the Bills would have to go back to rookie Nathan Peterman. The fifth-round draft pick proved he wasn’t ready two weeks ago, throwing five intercepti­ons in the first half of a 54-24 loss at the Los Angeles Chargers.

On Sunday, Peterman went 6 of 15 for 50 yards. His opening drive ended on downs at the Patriots’ one-yard line when his fade pass intended for Zay Jones was batted away by cornerback Stephon Gilmore, a former Bills standout.

 ?? ADRIAN KRAUS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Buffalo Bills linebacker­s Matt Milano, left, and Lorenzo Alexander break up a pass intended for the New England Patriots’ James White, centre, on Sunday.
ADRIAN KRAUS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Buffalo Bills linebacker­s Matt Milano, left, and Lorenzo Alexander break up a pass intended for the New England Patriots’ James White, centre, on Sunday.

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