Houston Chronicle Sunday

For Miami’s defense, ‘It’s 11 vs. 1’ when facing Allen

- By David Furones SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — The Miami Dolphins have faced Josh Allen 10 times in his five NFL seasons.

That’s a lot of familiarit­y with the Buffalo Bills quarterbac­k — and familiarit­y for Allen against the Dolphins.

The stakes are kicked up a notch this Sunday as Allen and the Bills meet Miami for the first time in the postseason in Sunday’s noon wild-card-round kickoff Sunday at Highmark Stadium.

Allen, the two-time Pro Bowler, has mostly had his way with the Dolphins in those previous meetings. He’s 8-2 in his career against the Dolphins. He has thrown 27 touchdowns, compared to five intercepti­ons and completed 63.7 percent of passes for 2,684 yards.

Although Allen has Stefon Diggs, Gabriel Davis, Cole Beasley, tight end Dawson Knox and running backs Devin Singletary and James Cook to throw to, just as important will be to prevent him from reeling off big gains scrambling when the coverage is solid.

“I think you got to give him different looks,” Dolphins defensive coordinato­r Josh Boyer said. “If you sit in the same (defense), they do a very good job.”

In the Dolphins’ 32-29 loss in Orchard Park, N.Y., on Dec. 17, Allen went for 77 yards on 10 rush attempts, which was the most he had against Miami since his rookie year, when he ran for 135 and 95 yards in his first two appearance­s against Miami in 2018.

“One of the best dualthreat quarterbac­ks in the league,” edge rusher Jaelan Phillips said. “Their offense kind of revolves around him and, obviously, they got other pieces that can hit you with the home run as well, but being able to contain Josh is going to be a huge part of our game plan, for sure.”

Added linebacker Jerome Baker: “That second half last game, he really got it done on the ground. We got to limit that. We got to do different things to slow him down.”

One of those things could be to commit to a spy monitoring Allen in certain situations, essentiall­y following his movement while not blitzing or playing pass coverage, but that also comes with the caveat that the defense must leave itself vulnerable somewhere else.

“Any time that you devote a spy or someone that’s going to be on the quarterbac­k, then obviously you’re pulling him from somewhere else,” Boyer said. “So, either you’re pulling him from the rush or you’re pulling him from the coverage.”

And the ones that are rushing Allen, may need to be cautious not to overpursue because, if any one defender relinquish­es a chance to bring him down, it could be costly with the space he’ll have to run afterward.

“Is this an opportunit­y where we can get really aggressive? Or is this an opportunit­y where everybody’s got to do their job?” Dolphins outside linebacker­s coach Ty McKenzie said he’ll stress to his players. “It’s 11 vs. 1 with Josh Allen out there. He’s dynamic and he can make some big plays.”

The defense’s performanc­e becomes paramount Sunday considerin­g the Dolphins are likely leaning toward starting third-string quarterbac­k Skylar Thompson while Tua Tagovailoa remains out due to concussion protocol and backup Teddy Bridgewate­r nurses a dislocated pinky finger on his throwing hand.

 ?? Timothy T Ludwig/TNS ?? Josh Allen is 8-2 against the division rival Miami Dolphins in his career.
Timothy T Ludwig/TNS Josh Allen is 8-2 against the division rival Miami Dolphins in his career.

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