Houston Chronicle

Veteran says things are different

- By John Wawrow

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — Bills linebacker Lorenzo Alexander acknowledg­es how Buffalo’s playoff appearance two years ago might have been a fluke.

“That 9-7 team that made the playoffs?” Alexander said, recalling how the Bills had all the tiebreaker­s go their way — including Baltimore losing to Cincinnati on Tyler Boyd’s last-minute touchdown catch — before sneaking in as the AFC’s final seed. “We probably, talent-wise, shouldn’t have been there, but we found a way to get it in.”

This year, the 13-year veteran said, is far different. “We’re legit,” Alexander said. How legitimate remains the question as the young and still developing fifth-seeded Bills (10-6) travel to face AFC South champion Houston Texans (10-6) on Saturday.

Though the Bills clinched their playoff spot two weeks ago and have their most wins since an 11-5 finish in 1999, it’s difficult to determine how much Buffalo benefited from a soft schedule.

Buffalo went 9-2 against opponents who failed to make the playoffs, including a 13-6 season-ending loss to the New York Jets on Sunday, when the Bills rested a majority of their starters. Otherwise,

they were 1-4 against playoff teams, including a pair of losses to New England, with Buffalo’s lone win coming against Tennessee in Week 5.

That didn’t deter Alexander from suggesting the Bills aren’t afraid of any opponent.

“We’re not scared to compete or see anybody in the playoffs,“he said.

The confidence stems from how the Bills performed down the stretch in both wins and losses. Buffalo raised eyebrows by beating the Cowboys in Dallas on Thanksgivi­ng Day and clinching a playoff berth with a Sunday night win at Pittsburgh.

And the Bills are buoyed by how each of their losses to Baltimore and New England over the past month weren’t decided until the final 70 seconds. Both times, the Josh Allen-led offense failed to produce a game-tying touchdown inside the red zone and instead turned the ball over on downs.

The second-year quarterbac­k has made strides in various areas, including winning five games this season with Buffalo trailing or tied in the fourth quarter.

And yet, Allen has overseen an offense that has been held to under 20 points eight times and limited to scoring two or fewer touchdowns 11 times — not including the meaningles­s season finale. Overall, the offense finished 24th in yards gained and 23rd in points scored in the NFL.

The inconsiste­nt production places an emphasis on Buffalo’s defense to continue effectivel­y containing opponents. A unit that returned 10 starters from a year ago finished this season ranked third in the NFL in yards allowed and second in points.

Two years ago, Tyrod Taylor was Buffalo’s quarterbac­k, and the offense came up short in a 10-3 wild-card loss at Jacksonvil­le.

The Bills made the decision the following offseason to start over at quarterbac­k by dealing Taylor to Cleveland and accumulate draft picks to trade up to eventually draft Allen with the No. 7 pick.

As a rookie, Allen and the Bills gave the Texans a scare at NRG. The Texans led only 10-6 late in the third quarter when Allen went out with an injury. Buffalo took the lead early in the fourth, 13-10, but the Texans won when Johnathan Joseph returned an intercepti­on of Allen’s backup, Nathan Peterman, 28 yards for a touchdown with 1:23 remaining.

Allen’s performanc­e and his health Saturday will provide an indication of how far the Bills have come in two years — or, perhaps, how far they still need to go.

 ?? Michael Reaves / Getty Images ?? Bills linebacker Lorenzo Alexander (57) says his team is “legit” after reaching the playoffs as a fifth seed. That legitimacy will be tested by a wild-card matchup against the Texans on Saturday.
Michael Reaves / Getty Images Bills linebacker Lorenzo Alexander (57) says his team is “legit” after reaching the playoffs as a fifth seed. That legitimacy will be tested by a wild-card matchup against the Texans on Saturday.
 ?? Brett Carlsen / Getty Images ?? The performanc­e of Bills QB Josh Allen (17) will be an indicator of how the team has come since its last playoff appearance.
Brett Carlsen / Getty Images The performanc­e of Bills QB Josh Allen (17) will be an indicator of how the team has come since its last playoff appearance.

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