When the lights are brightest — or in this case, when the snow is most blinding — Josh Allen possesses the vision to guide his Bills to victory.
On the heels of a rocky back-half of the season and a similarly tough stretch in the third quarter, Allen led Buffalo back from a 29-21 fourth-quarter deficit on scoring drives of 75 and 86 yards to down the Miami Dolphins, 32-29, and clinch a playoff berth. By night’s end he had thrown for 304 yards and four touchdowns while leading the team in rushing with 77 yards and a crucial two-point conversion to definitively reassert the Bills as the AFC’s team to beat.
“That’s the number one thing Coach McDermott preaches is playoff caliber,” Allen told reporters after the game. “Can’t win the Super Bowl unless you make the playoffs. So that’s goal number one down. Goal number two now is to clinch the division. That’s how we’ll take it. We’ll take it one game at a time. Be ready for next week.”
Allen’s performance was more than playoff-caliber. It was a prime-time evisceration of the notion that the 11-3 Bills might not be as dangerous as originally thought back in September — a storyline that is actually complimentary of Buffalo’s perceived ceiling considering the Bills are already plenty dangerous sitting in the driver’s seat for the No. 1 seed.
Still, Saturday night’s performance was much needed for Allen, who had been slumping in the seven games since the Bills’ Week 7 bye, completing just 60.6% of his passes for 224 yards per game, nine passing TDs and seven INTs. And although he continued to be a threat with his legs during that stretch, running for 371 yards and four scores, he also fumbled five times and lost two.
Many of those errors occurred when Allen pressed for results that weren’t there. He did so on one notable play again Saturday, but the result was a magical reminder of the difference Allen can make when improvising.
On a first-and-goal from the 4 with eight seconds remaining in the second quarter, the Bills QB took the snap likely looking for a quick strike to either score or leave enough time for a field goal attempt. Instead, he was flushed out right, took the ball all the way to the sideline and fired back across his body to a tightly covered James Cook with no time remaining.
It was miraculous, it was ill-advised, and it made the score 21-13 at half.