‘Not enough complementary football’ | The Bills struggle on all three phases in loss to Cincinnati

If Sean McDermott’s head coaching philosophy had to be summarized in two words, they could easily be “complementary football.”

It’s a phrase McDermott has used throughout the season to describe how his team has performed. When the Bills dominated the Dolphins defense, shut down their offense and controlled the field on special teams, they played great complementary football.

In Sunday night’s 24-18 loss to the Cincinnati Bengals, all three phases struggled to play in synch with each other.

“Just too inconsistent overall,” said head coach Sean McDermott after the game. “Not enough complementary football. Turned the ball over twice, I thought the defense got off to a slow start the first drive in particular. … Too much inconsistencies in the kicking game as well as just the offense overall. Some good plays and just not enough of them.”

The first three drives of the game looked like the beginning of a shootout. Cincinnati strung together a nice drive and found the end zone. Buffalo played at a high tempo ending in a Josh Allen rushing touchdown, his sixth of the season. Joe Burrow once again picked apart the Buffalo defense and running back Joe Mixon ran for a touchdown.

On their second drive, the Bills offense couldn’t take advantage of a pass interference call that set them up near the 50-yard line and punted after running just four plays.

While the defense would only allow 10 more points after the Bengals’ second drive, the Bills offense couldn’t put anything together before halftime. On their third drive, Allen threw an interception. On their fifth, a miscommunication between Allen and wide receiver Gabe Davis turned into a surprising intentional grounding call, one that Allen said he had never seen before, that knocked the Bills out of field goal position to end the first half.

To open the second half, Allen led a drive into the Cincinnati red zone, but couldn’t connect with Davis on a third-and-9 shot to the end zone.

“We had our opportunities, didn’t score before half, didn’t get six in the first drive of the second half. That’s not complementary football, you’ve got to double dip and get the points there,” Allen said.

First appeared on www.buffalobills.com

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