The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Bills take latest injury loss in stride to focus on Jets

- By John Wawrow

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. >> During a season in which the Buffalo Bills have become exceptiona­lly adept at overcoming adversity on an almost weekly basis, news of Von Miller having seasonendi­ng knee surgery was accepted mostly in stride.

As much as the Bills acknowledg­ed missing the leadership and pass-rush presence Miller provides, their focus quickly shifted to the next task at hand: hosting the New York Jets on Sunday.

“Von would be the first one to tell you that it’s part of the game,” safety Jordan Poyer said on Wednesday. “Take care of what you’ve got to take care of. Ain’t no point in sulking in it. Ain’t no point in ‘Woe is me. It happens. Accept it.”

From a rash of injuries testing the depth of the entire roster, to a major snowstorm that forced the Bills to play — and win — three consecutiv­e games away from home over a 12-day span, no obstacle so far has led the team to waver from a “Don’t Blink” mantra, which just happened to be introduced by Miller himself.

The Bills (9-3) have scrambled back to the top of the AFC standings and face the same upstart Jets (7-5), who knocked Buffalo out of first place with a 2017 win five weeks ago.

“Everything that we want to do is still out in front of us, and that’s been our mindset,” quarterbac­k Josh Allen said, in noting how some were ready to write off the Bills when they followed the loss to the Jets with a 33-30 overtime defeat to Minnesota. “I think anybody that gets their backs against the wall and are confident in themselves will see that it’s a position we’re OK being in.”

Left tackle Duane Brown and the Jets aren’t taking the Bills for granted, while at the same time motivated to rekindle a late-season playoff push after dropping three of their past five.

“It’s a huge, huge game,” Brown said. “We got the better end of it last time we played them. We expect it to be a really, really, really tough game in a great atmosphere.”

The Jets were written off once already following a 24-9 season-opening loss

to Baltimore.

They’ve rallied behind the faith second-year coach Robert Saleh placed in the team by questionin­g doubters following the loss to Baltimore, and a stingy defense to win seven of their first 12 games for the first time since 2011.

New York’s hopes on qualifying for the playoffs for the first time since 2010 now hinge on whatever spark quarterbac­k Mike White can provide an offense since Zach Wilson was

benched three weeks ago.

White has topped 300 yards passing and the Jets topped 450 yards of offense in each of his two starts. The second-year player will face Buffalo for the second time, and a little more than a year after he threw four intercepti­ons in a 45-17 loss.

“I’m sure there’s a lot of things that he learned from even in that moment just to take his game forward,” Saleh said. “It was one of those games that kind of snowballed on the entire

team, not just him.”

DEAD ZONE

The Jets having been getting into the red zone all season, just not consistent­ly into the end zone.

After scoring a touchdown just once in six tries inside Minnesota’s 20-yard line last week, New York ranks 26th in the NFL in red zone efficiency at 48.6% (18 for 37). The Jets are 2 for 9 in their past three games.

“It starts with me. You’ve got to figure out how to put

the ball in the end zone,” White said. “And if we can do that, you can win games.”

DEAD ZONE II

The Bills scored TDs on each of their three drives inside the New England 20 in a 24-10 win on Dec. 1. That followed a sevengame stretch in which Buffalo combined to score just 14 TDs and seven field goals on 29 red zone drives, while turning the ball over six times (four intercepti­ons and two lost fumbles).

 ?? ANDY CLAYTON-KING — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jets running back Zonovan Knight (27) is tackled by Minnesota Vikings linebacker Eric Kendricks (54) and linebacker Patrick Jones II (91) during last Sunday’s game in Minneapoli­s.
ANDY CLAYTON-KING — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jets running back Zonovan Knight (27) is tackled by Minnesota Vikings linebacker Eric Kendricks (54) and linebacker Patrick Jones II (91) during last Sunday’s game in Minneapoli­s.

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