New York Post

Buffalo gets one bright spot in trying year

- Mark Cannizzaro Mcannizzar­o@nypost.com

ORCHARD PARK — The end of an emotional year — punctuated by a particular­ly trying month — arrived for the Bills on Sunday.

It arrived far too early, a premature ending to a season the Bills and their fiercely loyal Bills Mafia hoped and believed had much more magic left in it.

The end result was one of bitter disappoint­ment, a 27-10 loss to the Bengals in the AFC divisional-playoff game at Highmark Stadium that sends the Bengals — not the Bills — to the AFC Championsh­ip game against the Chiefs next Sunday.

There was a silver lining to this dark, snowy afternoon-into-evening for the Bills, though: Damar Hamlin was in the house in what was an emotional, powerful and full-circle moment that felt more important than the result on the field.

For the 24-year-old Buffalo safety, whose heart went into cardiac arrest while making a tackle in the Bills game against the Bengals on Jan. 2 in Cincinnati, it was his first public appearance.

He visited with his teammates inside the locker room before the game and watched the game from inside a suite, where late in the first half he was shown on the jumbo scoreboard screen making his trademark heart sign with his hands.

Profession­al athletes are selfish. Most want to win for themselves. The rush of victory as a pro athlete is a legalized drug that only a tiny percentage of the population gets to experience.

But the Bills desperatel­y wanted to win this game for Hamlin. More than they wanted to win for themselves. They wanted to win a Super Bowl for him.

“Damar was in the locker room pregame and his presence was good for the guys and hopefully good for him,’’ Bills head coach Sean McDermott said. “In what I thought was a cool moment, even though the game wasn’t trending well for us, when they put him up on the scoreboard that was a good moment of perspectiv­e of where he was just a few weeks ago.’’

Hamlin was in a medically induced coma for a couple of days before making his stunning recovery.

“Just his presence was a warm feeling,’’ Bills quarterbac­k Josh Allen said. “Obviously, we wanted to play for him and continue our mission. We just ran into a team that played better than us tonight.’’

The Hamlin scare was the latest in a series of difficult times the Bills and Western New Yorkers had to endure. There was the racially motivated supermarke­t shooting and the two deadly snowstorms that took dozens of lives.

The Bills, though, powered on. They were, in a lot of ways, relief for people in this area who’ve endured the trying times.

Hamlin’s recovery felt like a positive turning of the tide. He was an obvious inspiratio­n for his teammates as they chased a first Super Bowl title for the franchise.

“Just his presence speaks volumes,’’ Bills

center Mitch Morse said. “He’s not a big rahrah guy. His presence alone, his smile, his positive energy, which he’s always had, always inject energy and good vibes with the group. It was really good to see him.’’

Hamlin had spent some time in the team facility, seeing his teammates in recent days, but Sunday was the first game he attended since the frightenin­g incident. That’s what made the loss and the end of the Bills season so devastatin­g. Because they felt like it was just beginning.

“It definitely stings a little bit more knowing that this particular group went through so much and this chapter’s closed,’’ Morse said.

“It’s devastatin­g,’’ Bills right guard Ryan Bates said. “We had very high expectatio­ns for ourselves this year to go to the Super Bowl. That was our plan. We had a great shot. And it just didn’t click today.’’

What really didn’t click was Allen passing to his star receiver Stefon Diggs, who caught only four passes for 35 yards on 10 targets.

Diggs was animated while expressing his frustratio­n during a sideline conversati­on with Allen. And, after the game, he bolted from the locker room so quickly some of his teammates were just arriving to the room from the field, still in uniform.

“He’s a fiery competitor and he wants the ball,’’ Allen said. “Whatever it was that we couldn’t get him the ball tonight, we’re going to have to learn from. Our goal was to win a Super Bowl, so everything that happened this year is kind of null-and-void in our minds. It sucks.’’

At least Allen and his teammates will have Hamlin to hang around with in the offseason, and — who knows — maybe even have the chance to play with him again.

A silver lining to a dark day.

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