Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Bills-Steelers moved to Monday due to weather

- By John Wawrow

BUFFALO, N.Y. — The Buffalo Bills’ wild-card playoff game against the Pittsburgh Steelers that was scheduled for Sunday was moved to Monday amid a forecast for dangerous winter weather, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul announced Saturday.

Hochul and other officials said they were making the change for safety’s sake. “We want our Bills to win, but we don’t want 60,000 to 70,000 people traveling to the football game in what’s going to be horrible conditions,” Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz said at a news conference in the Buffalo suburbs.

Officials advised residents to stay off the roads starting at nightfall on Saturday, with a driving ban taking effect at 9 p.m. The game will now be played at Highmark Stadium at 4:30 p.m. Monday instead of 1 p.m. Sunday.

Hochul said she started talking with the NFL on Thursday about the possibilit­y of having to reschedule the game. From her hometown of Buffalo, she closed her news conference by saying, “Go, Bills.”

The NFL and Bills issued a statement citing “public safety concerns” as the reason to push back the game by a day.

The forecast for the Buffalo area called for heavy snow and winds gusting as high as 65 mph (105 kph) Saturday, with 1 to 2 feet or more of snow eventually piling up. The National Weather Service issued a winter storm warning lasting through 7 a.m. Monday, saying that “travel will be very difficult to impossible at times,” with the combinatio­n of snow and very strong wind causing nearzero visibility.

Much of the storm was expected to be concentrat­ed in a narrow band of lake-effect snow hovering over Buffalo’s southern suburbs, which includes the Bills’ home in Orchard Park.

The Steelers have pushed back their travel plans and will now head to Buffalo on Sunday.

The Bills are familiar with weather-related schedule changes. In 2022, a lake effect storm led to Buffalo’s home game against Cleveland being moved to Detroit in November. A month later, a massive blizzard forced the Bills to delay their trip home, forcing them to stay overnight in Chicago on Christmas Eve.

FIRST DIGGS

Stefon Diggs can’t speak to how Buffalo’s opening-round playoff opponent turned around their season and secured the AFC’s seventh and final playoff berth on the final weekend.

The receiver, though, can sure discuss witnessing the Bills’ resolve as they won their final five games to clinch their fourth straight AFC East title and the conference’s No. 2 seed.

“Four more” is what Diggs whispered into quarterbac­k Josh Allen’s ear on Sunday, after the Bills capped an unlikely run by beating Miami. And Diggs believes winning four more games — which would include the Super Bowl — is achievable for a team he considers battle-tested entering the playoffs.

“I’m not going to say we got hot at the right time, but we started winning at the right time,” he said. “Things happened throughout the season that kind of shows you the will to win is real. And we’re going to continue to be resilient. We don’t really have a choice at this point.”

Buffalo (11-6) is the hottest team entering the playoffs following a lateseason push that began after it squandered leads in the final minute of regulation and overtime in 37-34 loss at Philadelph­ia on Nov. 26.

Pittsburgh (10-7) endured a three-game skid before winning its final three games, capped by a 17-10 victory at Baltimore, which rested many of its starters with the AFC’s top seed already clinched.

“Just smiling in the face of adversity,” Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said. “That’s been the elephant in the room that we’ve talked about and hopefully that experience shows — that urgency, that consistenc­y

of urgency shows in our play.”

The Steelers’ run coincides with Mason Rudolph replacing Kenny Pickett at quarterbac­k.

The fourth-year player, who had 10 career starts entering this season, settled the Steelers’ offense by going 53 of 71 for 716 yards with three touchdowns and no intercepti­ons in the three victories. The Steelers’ ground game improved, with Najee Harris and Jaylen Warren combining for 444 yards rushing and five TDs during those games.

The 28-year-old Rudolph is 8-4-1 as an NFL starter. His previous postseason experience came in college, when he led Oklahoma State to a 30-21 win over Virginia Tech in the 2017 Camping World Bowl.

“Shoot, each game you get to play in the NFL is a freaking playoff game,” Rudolph said. “As a backup quarterbac­k most of my career, you’re very urgent. There’s a sense of urgency whenever you get to play, so that’s the approach.”

The Bills had an inconsiste­nt start to their season in which their injurydepl­eted defense had difficulty holding leads, their offense hit a rut and their special teams cost them two wins.

Coach Sean McDermott believes the Bills discovered their identity as they found ways to overcome mistakes and win close games. After starting the season 2-6 in games decided by seven or fewer points, Buffalo finished 6-6 in such contests.

“I think it got to a certain point a year where it’s just like, ‘Hey, this is the way it’s going to be so it’s time to buck up and get the job done,’” McDermott said. “I think it says a lot about who they are and how important things are to them.”

REPLACING THE IRREPLACEA­BLE

The Steelers will have to find a way to make Allen uncomforta­ble without Pro Bowl outside linebacker T.J. Watt. The NFL’s sack leader and Defensive Player of the Year candidate is out with a left knee injury sustained in the season finale against Baltimore.

Since Watt’s rookie season in 2017, the Steelers are 1-10 without him, including a 38-3 loss at Buffalo in 2022. Rookie Nate Herbig and veteran Markus Golden will have the responsibi­lity of filling in for one of the league’s most electric players. The duo combined for seven sacks this season. Watt had an NFL-high 19.

WILLIAM & MARY TIES

The meeting features coaches who were college teammates at William & Mary in 1993 and ‘94.

“I’ve got the utmost respect for coach Tomlin,” said McDermott, who at 49 is two years younger than Tomlin. “We’ve played each other before. I’m sure we’ll play each other again. But just happy for the school, happy for the recognitio­n it’s going to get.”

McDermott is 3-1 against Tomlin.

Bills interim offensive coordinato­r Joe Brady played receiver at William & Mary while Steelers special teams coach Denny Smith was an assistant at the school.

LONG TIME COMING

Pittsburgh has gone seven years without a playoff victory, the franchise’s longest streak without a postseason win since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger. While guard Isaac Seumalo, linebacker Elandon Roberts and safety Eric Rowe have Super Bowl rings, Steelers 13year veteran Cam Heyward does not. And the clock is ticking.

“I think, for the group, we’ve made mistakes throughout the season, but for us, it’s just winning one game at a time,” said Heyward, who has hinted that he could consider retirement at the end of the season. “It’s single eliminatio­n. Right now, your record doesn’t speak for itself anymore. It only speaks for setting up the tournament.”

 ?? Matt Durisko/Associated Press ?? Buffalo Bills wide receiver Stefon Diggs during a game on Dec. 31 in Orchard Park, NY.
Matt Durisko/Associated Press Buffalo Bills wide receiver Stefon Diggs during a game on Dec. 31 in Orchard Park, NY.

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