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Pride
08-30-2002, 07:53 AM
http://espn.go.com/magazine/vol5no19bills.html
August 29, 2002
Buffalo Bills
ESPN The Magazine


LAST SEASON: 3-13, 5th in AFC East
PROJECTION: 4th in AFC East




Bledsoe is hungry to show the NFL he still has it.
STRONG SIDE

QB: Drew Bledsoe's passed for 30,000 yards, played in three Pro Bowls and started a Super Bowl. Not bad. But consider he's never had the talent at wideout he has in Buffalo, that he's angry at being dissed by New England, that he's still only 30 and that he's playing in an offense geared to go downfield. No matter how bad the Bills D turns out be -- and it could really be bad -- Bledsoe will keep most games close. Take a look at last year's AFC championship game, when he came off the bench after sitting for four months and threw New England's only TD of the game. The guy's always had game. Now he's got a new reason to prove it.

WEAK SIDE

DL: Somebody forgot to put defensive line on the list of things to fix in the off-season. The front four -- Aaron Schobel, Pat Williams, Kendrick Office, Tyrone Robertson -- combined for just 13 sacks, or about two months of Michael Strahan's season. And against the run, they really stunk, allowing 133.3 yards rushing a game (26th in the league). Where's the beef?

AFC East

1. Dolphins

2. Jets

3. Patriots

4. Bills

Scouting Report Index


OTHER UNITS



RB: Buffalo's RB Committee -- Travis Henry, Shawn Bryson, Richard Huntley -- won't scare anyone into playing Drew Bledsoe honest. But pass-catching FB Larry Centers might. The 12-year vet owns the NFL record for catches in a season (101 in '95) by an RB. He could break it as Bledsoe's security blanket.

WR: In a word? Loaded. Eric Moulds caught 94 balls when Rob Johnson was his QB. Double him and Peerless Price (4.3 40) will roam uncovered 50 yards downfield. With rook Josh Reed -- who, at LSU, was college football's best receiver in '01 -- in the slot, Bledsoe won't have enough balls to go around.

OL: The good: Adding 370-pound RT Mike Williams and free agent C Trey Teague could upgrade the 22nd-ranked rushing O. The bad: Teague was Denver's most inconsistent lineman -- that's why they let him walk -- and Williams is a raw rookie. Don't count on this unit jelling for at least a month.

LB: Except for landing Bledsoe, signing ex-Rams defensive signal-caller London Fletcher was the Bills' biggest off-season move. Fletcher hasn't missed a game in four seasons. He replaces Sam Cowart, who missed 19 of the past 32 games. Given the porous D-line in front of him, Fletcher will top 150 tackles.

DB: Big-play corners Nate Clements and Antoine Winfield combined for 5 INTs and 2 TDs, plus they hit like safeties. Given that new starting safeties Billy Jenkins and Pierson Prioleau had only two starts between them in '01, Clements and Winfield will get plenty of traffic.

ST: The Bills lost four games by three points or less in '01, so they added K Mike Hollis, a career 81% guy, who nailed 92% of his kicks in '00. Picking up returner Charlie Rogers will help. He was seventh (9.8 ypr) and 11th (22.4 ypr) in the AFC in punt and kickoff returns respectively in '01.