Toronto Star

Off-season upgrades have McDermott in a good mood

- JOHN WAWROW THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sean McDermott didn’t mind being put on the spot when asked whether the Buffalo Bills have a roster that’s built to win now.

“You’re beautiful, man,” McDermott said, referring to a reporter during a video conference call earlier this week. “Throw the fastball high and inside. Chin music.”

And yet, he wasn’t ready to swing away in addressing the media for the first time since the Bills upgraded their roster in free agency and acquired receiver Stefon Diggs in a trade with Minnesota in March, before shoring up secondary needs in the NFL draft last weekend.

McDermott would only go so far in acknowledg­ing the Bills’ current roster is the deepest it’s been since taking over the job three years ago.

“Listen, we’re definitely further along than where we were when I got here,” he said. “And that’s part of the goal, you want to be able to say that.”

The proof, however, is still months away given the challenges he and the rest of the NFL faces in wondering when teams will be allowed to begin practising because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. And there are still games to be played.

What’s not in question, on paper at least, is the Bills finally resembling a contender based on a variety of factors for a team coming off its second playoff appearance in three years.

Buffalo’s roster features continuity, with all but four regulars returning from last season. And whatever holes there might have been, were shored up through a series of off-season additions, including defensive end Mario Addison, defensive tackle Vernon Butler, linebacker A.J. Klein and cornerback Josh Norman.

It’s enough for some to regard the Bills as the chic pick to supplant the New England Patriots atop the AFC East standings following Tom Brady’s departure.

Diggs’ acquisitio­n alone was important because it has the potential of improving a Josh Allen-led offence that had difficulty scoring. Buffalo failed to top 21 points 11 times last season, including a 21-18 overtime playoff loss to Houston.

“We need to score points, and that’s been an emphasis and a theme that we’ve talked about since the end of the season,” he said of a team which had 10 games decided by seven points or fewer.

“I would love to take a seat on the bench in the fourth quarter of one of these games and maybe eat an orange slice or drink a Gatorade instead of having my heart go a million miles an hour,” McDermott added.

Concerns still abound, with one of his biggest involving the lack of practice time to develop Buffalo’s passing game.

McDermott said the offence spends about 70 per cent of their spring practices working on passes, with the focus turning to the running attack once players are allowed to wear pads. He also wondered how long it might take for Allen to build chemistry with Diggs.

“I am concerned about it, but I guess not worried at this point,” McDermott said. “What you do is try to adjust and adapt, and like we said before, our theme this off-season has been: ‘Find a way.’ ”

 ??  ?? Sean McDermott says the Bills’ roster is the deepest it’s been in his time as coach.
Sean McDermott says the Bills’ roster is the deepest it’s been in his time as coach.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada