The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Allen honors OC Daboll in Bills’ 43-21 rout of Washington

- By JOHN WAWROW

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) » Josh Allen will never forget the emotional support Bills offensive coordinato­r Brian Daboll provided the quarterbac­k following the loss of his grandmothe­r 13 months ago.

Allen was driven to do the same for Daboll on Sunday. Following a 43-21 rout of the Washington Football Team, he revealed Buffalo’s assistant coach was dealing with the death of his grandmothe­r.

“When you see a guy hurting, guys rally around that and they want to try to help ease that pain and that tension,” Allen said.

“It’s never an easy situation. I’ve been in that situation,” he said of learning of his grandmothe­r Patricia Allen’s death shortly before a 44-34 win over Seattle in November.

“There’s nothing you can say to help him or his family feel better. And I think throughout and over time it feels better. But to have that type of support here and to share that pain with it takes a lot off of it.”

Allen is well aware of what Ruth Kirsten, who died Wednesday, meant to Daboll. Though born in nearby Welland, Ontario, Daboll was raised by his grandparen­ts while growing up in suburban Buffalo.

In paying tribute to Daboll, Allen also quieted his early season critics and own self-doubts by throwing four touchdown passes and scoring another rushing.

Entering the game with a 56% completion rate, he finished 32 of 43 for 358 yards, while also sur

passing the 100-touchdown plateau (including TDS rushing and one receiving) in his 47th start.

It marked Allen’s fifth career game with four TDS passing and 300 yards passing, one more than the team record held by Hall of Famer Jim Kelly. And Allen’s 2-yard TD run in the fourth quarter was his 26th, breaking the franchise record for quarterbac­ks held by Jack Kemp.

Allen’s 101 touchdowns rank fourth among Bills quarterbac­ks, and one behind Kemp.

Emmanuel Sanders scored twice, starting with a 28-yard catch to cap Buffalo’s first drive. Zack Moss and tight end Dawson Knox also scored for the Bills (21) on catches of 7 and 14 yards.

“We definitely found our rhythm today,” said receiver Cole Beasley, who finished with a team-leading 11 catches and 98 yards. “The first two games we were struggling a little bit. Even the last game winning 35-0, it was hard to feel good about it. Our drives would stall a few times, but today felt a lot more like what we expect and want it to be.”

If Washington coach Ron Rivera referred to the game against Buffalo as a measuring stick, Washington is well behind the chains in dropping to 1-2.

“We’ve got a long way to go,” Rivera said. “We got our butts kicked. That’s the truth. And we’ll find out what we’re made out of. And how we respond will dictate what kind of team we’re going to be down the stretch.”

Taylor Heinicke, filling in for injured starter Ryan Fitzpatric­k, struggled in his first career road start by going 14 of 24 for 212 yards with two touchdowns and two intercepti­ons. Washington’s defense continued springing leaks a year after finishing No. 2 in the league.

Washington had already allowed a combined 815 yards in two games, and gave up 481 yards and 29 first downs to Buffalo.

Trailing 21-0, the game would have been over early if not for Washington scoring twice over a span of 2:12 in the second quarter. The surge began with Antonio Gibson catching a short pass and winding his way through the Bills defense for a 73-yard touchdown. On the next play, Dustin Hopkins recovered his own kickoff to set up Heinicke’s 4-yard touchdown run.

 ?? ADRIAN KRAUS - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Buffalo Bills quarterbac­k Josh Allen (17) looks to pass during the first half of an NFL football game against the Washington Football Team, Sunday, Sept. 26, 2021, in Orchard Park, N.Y.
ADRIAN KRAUS - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Buffalo Bills quarterbac­k Josh Allen (17) looks to pass during the first half of an NFL football game against the Washington Football Team, Sunday, Sept. 26, 2021, in Orchard Park, N.Y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States