Lodi News-Sentinel

Tank-talk motivates Bills in preparing for Raiders

- By John Wawrow

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — Try reminding Jerry Hughes how the Bills were supposed to be tanking in light of how deep their offseason roster purge had become last summer, and Buffalo’s top passrusher will shake his head in disgust.

“That certainly did (tick) us off,” Hughes said Thursday, recalling the overriding response after Buffalo traded receiver Sammy Watkins and cornerback Ronald Darby in separate deals on Aug. 11.

“Just to hear the outside noise, people who don’t really know this team, don’t really know us as individual­s, and they were already calling our season a tank.”

Rather than tanking, the Bills (4-2) are rolling in showing great resolve by overcoming a patchwork and thinly experience­d roster that opened the season with 29 newcomers.

And they’re following the lead of rookie coach Sean McDermott, who spent the week reminding players how they were once discounted as motivation in preparing to host the Oakland Raiders (3-4) on Sunday.

“We don’t want to be satisfied with being 4-2,” Hughes said. “We understand that the stakes have risen, and so does our game.”

The Bills are succeeding by relying on clutch performanc­es from all three phases, which was particular­ly evident in a 30-27 win over Tampa Bay last weekend.

The Tyrod Taylor-led offense scored 10 points in the final 2:28, including Stephen Hauschka’s 30-yard field goal with 14 seconds left. And the game-winning drive was set up by rookie cornerback Tre’Davious White forcing a fumble by punching the ball out of receiver Adam Humphries hands.

It marked just the third time since 2015 the Bills won by overcoming a fourth-quarter deficit, and first time they did so on their final drive.

“We’re trying to change that,” Hughes said, referring to previous struggles. “Not really too worried about the past, but how we can move forward and get better.”

The Raiders have much to prove for an altogether different reason. Pegged among the preseason favorites to return to the playoffs, Oakland was in jeopardy of extending its skid to five in a row before pulling out a 31-30 win over Kansas City on Michael Crabtree’s 2-yard touchdown catch with no time remaining on Oct. 19.

Phew, coach Jack Del Rio said.

“Never did I appreciate a Thursday night game more than that one because it came quick,” he said. “We believe in what we’re doing . ... We expect to play better football as we continue to go through the season.”

Some things to look out for as Oakland will stay on the East Coast after facing Buffalo to prepare to play at Miami on Nov. 5:

Winning starts: Buffalo has missed the playoffs the previous three times it opened 4-2 or better during the franchise’s 17-year playoff drought. That includes 2008, when Buffalo opened 5-1 before losing eight of its final 10.

The Raiders have a chance to go 4-4 or better through eight games for the third consecutiv­e season, which would mark Oakland’s best streak since a five-year run from 1998-02.

Banged-up secondary: Buffalo’s defensive backfield is limping with the status of starters Jordan Poyer (right knee) and E.J. Gaines (hamstring) uncertain. That’s a concern for a unit that’s allowed a combined 712 yards passing the past two games and facing Derek Carr, whose 417 yards passing against Kansas City were the secondmost of his career.

Mini beasts: Raiders will be without running back Marshawn Lynch. He’s serving a one-game suspension for running off the sideline during a scuffle and shoving an official. That leaves Oakland relying on a pair of smaller backs: Jalen Richard and DeAndre Washington.

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