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2021 Buffalo Bills season
The 2021 season was the Buffalo Bills '62nd in the National Football League (NFL), seventh full under the ownership of Terry and Kim Pegula, and their fifth under the head coach/general manager tandem of Sean McDermott and Brandon Beane.
| 2021 Buffalo Bills season |
|---|
| Terry and Kim Pegula |
| Brandon Beane |
| Sean McDermott |
| Brian Daboll |
| Leslie Frazier |
| Highmark Stadium |
| 11–6 |
| 1st AFC East |
| Won Wild Card Playoffs(vs. Patriots) 47–17Lost Divisional Playoffs(at Chiefs) 36–42 (OT) |
| SS Jordan Poyer (1st team)FS Micah Hyde (2nd team) |
| OT Dion Dawkins WR Stefon Diggs |
The 2021 season was the Buffalo Bills '62nd in the National Football League (NFL), seventh full under the ownership of Terry and Kim Pegula, and their fifth under the head coach/general manager tandem of Sean McDermott and Brandon Beane.
Although unable to match or improve on their 13–3 record from the previous season, the Bills clinched the AFC East for a second straight year, their first consecutive division title since 1991. They finished the regular season at 11–6 to obtain the #3 seed for the playoffs, also marking their third consecutive postseason berth and fourth in five years. Statistically, the Bills had the No. 1-ranked defense, as well as the highest point differential and margin of victory. All of the team's victories were by multiple possessions, but with the exception of their week 11 loss to the Indianapolis Colts, they lost every game that was within one possession.
The Bills defeated their AFC East rival New England Patriots in the wild card round, a game marked by them becoming the first NFL team to score a touchdown on every offensive drive. Facing the Kansas City Chiefs in a Divisional Round matchup, the Bills lost amid a quarterback duel between Buffalo's Josh Allen and Kansas City's Patrick Mahomes. Although the Bills were able to take a three-point lead with 13 seconds remaining, the Chiefs scored a game-tying field goal on their following drive and won in overtime, with Josh Allen and the Bills' offense never getting to touch the ball in overtime. The defeat marked the second consecutive year the Bills were eliminated by the Chiefs.
The season also saw Pittsburgh-based health insurance company Highmark purchase the rights to the Bills' stadium, resulting in it being named Highmark Stadium.
| Round | Selection | Player | Position | College | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gregory Rousseau | DE | Miami (FL) | Opted out of the 2020 CFB season while at the University of Miami | ||
| Carlos Basham Jr. | DE | Wake Forest | |||
| Spencer Brown | OT | Northern Iowa | |||
| Tommy Doyle | OT | Miami (OH) | from Las Vegas | ||
| Marquez Stevenson | WR | Houston | from Washington via Las Vegas and Miami and Houston | ||
| Damar Hamlin | S | Pittsburgh | from New Orleans via Houston | ||
| Rachad Wildgoose | CB | Wisconsin | |||
| Jack Anderson | OG | Texas Tech | from Carolina |
Notes
- The Bills received a fifth-round selection from the Las Vegas Raiders in exchange for wide receiver Zay Jones.
- The Bills got a conditional seventh-round selection from the Carolina Panthers in exchange for offensive tackle Marshall Newhouse.
| Column 1 | Column 2 | Column 3 | Column 4 | Column 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Front office |
Owner/CEO – Terry Pegula Owner/president – Kim Pegula General manager – Brandon Beane Assistant general manager – Joe Schoen Director of college scouting – Terrance Gray Senior VP of football administration – Jim Overdorf Assistant director of college scouting – Lake Dawson Director of pro personnel – Malik Boyd Director of football administration – Kevin Meganck Director of football operations – Brendan Rowe Head coaches
Head coach – Sean McDermott Assistant head coach/defensive coordinator – Leslie Frazier Offensive coaches
Offensive coordinator – Brian Daboll Quarterbacks/passing game coordinator – Ken Dorsey Assistant quarterbacks – Shea Tierney Running backs – Kelly Skipper Wide receivers – Chad Hall Assistant wide receivers/game management – Marc Lubick Tight ends – Rob Boras Offensive line – Bobby Johnson Assistant offensive line – Ryan Wendell | | | Defensive coaches Defensive line – Eric Washington Assistant defensive line – Jacques Cesaire Linebackers – Bob Babich Defensive backs – John Butler Safeties – Bobby Babich Nickel – Jim Salgado Special teams coaches
Special teams coordinator – Heath Farwell Assistant special teams – Matthew Smiley Strength and conditioning
Head strength and conditioning – Eric Ciano Assistant strength and conditioning – Will Greenberg Assistant strength and conditioning – Hal Luther Strength and conditioning assistant – Nicholas Lacy Strength and conditioning assistant – Jason Oszvart |
| Column 1 | Column 2 | Column 3 | Column 4 | Column 5 | Column 6 | Column 7 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quarterbacks (QB) | ||||||
| 17 Josh Allen | ||||||
| 10 Mitchell Trubisky | ||||||
| Running backs (RB) |
22 Matt Breida 41 Reggie Gilliam FB 25 Taiwan Jones 20 Zack Moss 26 Devin Singletary Wide receivers (WR)
11 Cole Beasley 13 Gabe Davis 14 Stefon Diggs 15 Jake Kumerow 19 Isaiah McKenzie 1 Emmanuel Sanders 5 Marquez Stevenson Tight ends (TE)
88 Dawson Knox 89 Tommy Sweeney | | Offensive linemen (OL) 71 Ryan Bates C 79 Spencer Brown T 73 Dion Dawkins T 72 Tommy Doyle T 76 Jon Feliciano G 74 Cody Ford G 68 Bobby Hart T 60 Mitch Morse C 75 Daryl Williams T Defensive linemen (DL)
97 Mario Addison DE 96 Carlos Basham Jr. DE 94 Vernon Butler DT 57 A. J. Epenesa DE 55 Jerry Hughes DE 98 Star Lotulelei DT 93 Efe Obada DE 91 Ed Oliver DT 99 Harrison Phillips DT 50 Gregory Rousseau DE | | Linebackers (LB) 53 Tyrel Dodson OLB 49 Tremaine Edmunds MLB 54 A. J. Klein OLB 44 Tyler Matakevich MLB 58 Matt Milano OLB 9 Andre Smith OLB Defensive backs (DB)
31 Damar Hamlin FS 23 Micah Hyde SS 30 Dane Jackson CB 46 Jaquan Johnson SS 24 Taron Johnson CB 47 Cam Lewis CB 33 Siran Neal CB 21 Jordan Poyer FS 39 Levi Wallace CB Special teams (ST)
2 Tyler Bass K 69 Reid Ferguson LS 3 Matt Haack P | | Practice squad 51 Eli Ankou DT (COVID-19) 90 Brandin Bryant DT 66 Jacob Capra G 87 Tanner Gentry WR 42 Joe Giles-Harris OLB 6 Jamie Gillan P 37 Olaijah Griffin CB 29 Tim Harris CB 16 Isaiah Hodgins WR 67 Evin Ksiezarczyk T 56 Mike Love DE 38 Nick McCloud CB 85 Quintin Morris TE 36 Josh Thomas FS 7 Davis Webb QB 28 Antonio Williams RB Reserve
65 Ike Boettger G (IR) -- Bryan Cox Jr. DE (IR) 27 Tre'Davious White CB (IR) 61 Justin Zimmer DT (IR) Rookies in italics 53 active, 4 reserve, 15 practice squad (1 exempt) |
The Bills preseason schedule was announced on May 12. They opened the preseason with a 16–15 road win against the Detroit Lions.
| Week | Date | Opponent | Result | Record | Venue | Recap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| .mw-parser-output .tooltip-dotted{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}August 13 | at Detroit Lions | W 16–15 | 1–0 | Ford Field | Recap | |
| August 21 | at Chicago Bears | W 41–15 | 2–0 | Soldier Field | Recap | |
| August 28 | Green Bay Packers | W 19–0 | 3–0 | Highmark Stadium | Recap |
The Bills 2021 schedule was announced on May 12.
| Week | Date | Opponent | Result | Record | Venue | Recap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| September 12 | Pittsburgh Steelers | L 16–23 | 0–1 | Highmark Stadium | Recap | |
| September 19 | at Miami Dolphins | W 35–0 | 1–1 | Hard Rock Stadium | Recap | |
| September 26 | Washington Football Team | W 43–21 | 2–1 | Highmark Stadium | Recap | |
| October 3 | Houston Texans | W 40–0 | 3–1 | Highmark Stadium | Recap | |
| October 10 | at Kansas City Chiefs | W 38–20 | 4–1 | Arrowhead Stadium | Recap | |
| October 18 | at Tennessee Titans | L 31–34 | 4–2 | Nissan Stadium | Recap | |
| Bye | ||||||
| October 31 | Miami Dolphins | W 26–11 | 5–2 | Highmark Stadium | Recap | |
| November 7 | at Jacksonville Jaguars | L 6–9 | 5–3 | TIAA Bank Field | Recap | |
| November 14 | at New York Jets | W 45–17 | 6–3 | MetLife Stadium | Recap | |
| November 21 | Indianapolis Colts | L 15–41 | 6–4 | Highmark Stadium | Recap | |
| November 25 | at New Orleans Saints | W 31–6 | 7–4 | Caesars Superdome | Recap | |
| December 6 | New England Patriots | L 10–14 | 7–5 | Highmark Stadium | Recap | |
| December 12 | at Tampa Bay Buccaneers | L 27–33 (OT) | 7–6 | Raymond James Stadium | Recap | |
| December 19 | Carolina Panthers | W 31–14 | 8–6 | Highmark Stadium | Recap | |
| December 26 | at New England Patriots | W 33–21 | 9–6 | Gillette Stadium | Recap | |
| January 2 | Atlanta Falcons | W 29–15 | 10–6 | Highmark Stadium | Recap | |
| January 9 | New York Jets | W 27–10 | 11–6 | Highmark Stadium | Recap |
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.
Despite a 10–0 halftime lead and a strong performance from the Buffalo defense, the Bills' hopes for a third straight Week 1 victory were dashed after Pittsburgh scored 20 unanswered points in the second half, including a blocked punt returned for a touchdown. The Bills were also hurt by several penalties throughout the game. With the loss, Buffalo began the season 0–1 for the first time since 2018.
Buffalo rebounded from its loss the prior week with the most dominant win over division rival Miami in franchise history. Despite another mediocre performance by quarterback Josh Allen, a strong performance from running backs Devin Singletary and Zack Moss, as well as the defense, allowed the Bills to win 35–0. Dolphins quarterbacks Tua Tagovailoa and Jacoby Brissett were sacked six times, with Tagovailoa leaving the game in the first quarter after a rib injury.
Josh Allen and the Bills' passing game enjoyed a strong performance, as Allen accounted for five total touchdowns and surpassed 300 passing yards for the first time in the season. Aside from a 73-yard scoring reception by running back Antonio Gibson and two scores from quarterback Taylor Heinicke set up by a Buffalo special teams gaffe and garbage time, respectively, Washington's offense struggled against the Bills defense. With another win, Buffalo improved to 2–1.
Buffalo faced Houston for the first time since a 22–19 overtime loss in the 2019–20 NFL playoffs. Despite an early interception, Allen completed two touchdown passes to tight end Dawson Knox and led the Bills to 33 points before backup Mitchell Trubisky was substituted on in the fourth quarter. The Bills defense limited the Texans' rookie quarterback Davis Mills, filling in for former Bills starter Tyrod Taylor, to just 87 passing yards and intercepted him four times. The Texans finished with just 109 total offensive yards. With the 40–0 victory, their second shutout win of the season, the Bills improved to 3–1.
The Bills returned to Arrowhead Stadium for a Sunday night rematch of the previous season's AFC Championship game looking to avenge a 38–24 loss; in that same season, the Bills had also lost in the regular season to Kansas City. In a game nationally anticipated as a potential bellwether for AFC contention, the Bills scored 38 points, and they were dominant on both sides of the ball throughout the game. While Allen earned a 139.1 passer rating and threw for 315 yards (averaging 21 yards per pass completion), the Bills defense sacked Patrick Mahomes twice and forced him into three turnovers, with one being returned for a touchdown. The game was affected greatly by weather conditions, as a rain delay extended halftime by over an hour, and by numerous penalties, as the two teams combined for 158 penalty yards.
This was Buffalo's first win over Kansas City since 2017 and their first win with Mahomes as the Chiefs' starting quarterback. The win improved the Bills to 4–1.
The Bills attempted to avenge a 42–16 loss to the Titans from the previous season, which was rescheduled several times due to a COVID-19 outbreak in the Titans organization. In the final moments of a back-and-forth shootout on Monday Night Football, in which the lead changed seven times, the Titans defensive line stopped Josh Allen on a fourth-down quarterback sneak at the Tennessee 3-yard line, and Buffalo narrowly lost 34–31, falling to 4–2 ahead of its bye week.
The Dolphins, who entered the game at 1–6, dominated the time of possession in the first half and limited Buffalo's offense to a field goal; however, they also squandered two scoring opportunities in the red zone, culminating in a 3–3 tie at halftime. The Bills would score two unanswered touchdowns to Gabe Davis and Stefon Diggs after halftime en route to a 26–11 win, their seventh straight over Miami.
The Bills entered this game as 14.5-point favorites over the 1–6 Jacksonville Jaguars. Nevertheless, the game was a defensive struggle, with neither team finding the end zone. Despite outgaining Jacksonville by 83 yards, the Bills lost the turnover battle 1–3, with all of their turnovers coming from quarterback Josh Allen (two interceptions and a lost fumble). Allen was sacked four times for 35 yards, and Buffalo was penalized 12 times for 118 yards. After allowing field goals on each of their first two drives, the Jaguars defense had their way with the Bills offensive line, which was missing Jon Feliciano and Spencer Brown due to injury. Notably, Josh Allen's namesake on the Jaguars sacked, intercepted, and recovered a fumble from his Bills counterpart, marking the first time in NFL history where a defensive player had done all of this to a quarterback with the same name. Jacksonville pulled off one of the biggest upsets of the season, defeating Buffalo 9–6 and winning their first game in North America since Week 1 of the 2020 season. With the stunning loss, Buffalo fell to 5–3, with their division lead over the New England Patriots shrinking to just half a game.
Buffalo rebounded against the divisional rival New York Jets, scoring six touchdowns after being held out of the endzone the week prior, with two of those touchdowns accounted for by third string running back Matt Breida. On defense, all five starting defensive backs for the Bills, namely Taron Johnson, Micah Hyde, Tre'Davious White, Levi Wallace, and Jordan Poyer, recorded a turnover off the Jets' offense, stifling quarterback Mike White. With the 45–17 win, Buffalo improved to 6–3.
The Bills defense, missing key run-stoppers Star Lotulelei and Tremaine Edmunds, struggled to contain Colts RB Jonathan Taylor, who scored five total touchdowns from scrimmage. To make matters worse, the Buffalo offense and special teams unit committed key turnovers, contributing to a 41–15 blowout loss. Buffalo fell to 6–4, also falling to second place in the AFC East as the Patriots had won earlier that week. This was the first NFL game to ever end in the score of 15–41, a scorigami.
In their second Thanksgiving Day game in three years, the Bills traveled south to play the injury-depleted Saints. Josh Allen continued to struggle with interceptions, throwing two in the second quarter, but also threw four touchdown passes, including two to Dawson Knox, as Buffalo routed New Orleans 31–6 to improve to 7–4. They also lost Tre'Davious White for the season to a torn ACL suffered during the game.
In a game affected by winds greater than 40 miles per hour, divisional rival New England ran the ball 46 times and only threw three passes, accumulating over 200 rushing yards and just 19 passing yards. The Bills also tried a run-heavy approach but relied more on the passing game late in the game despite the heavy winds affecting several of Josh Allen's passes. New England never trailed after taking the early lead with a 64-yard rushing touchdown by Damien Harris, and Buffalo finished just 1 for 4 on redzone possessions, leading to a 14–10 loss to the Patriots.
The Buccaneers raced to a 24–3 halftime lead under former Patriots quarterback Tom Brady, along with a strong first-half performance by running back Leonard Fournette and a furious pass rush that largely shut down Josh Allen and the Bills' offense, which did not hand off the ball to a running back in the first half, the first time an NFL team had not done so since 1991. However, the Bills mounted a comeback, outscoring Tampa Bay 24–3 in the second half, to force overtime. After a three and out on the first series of the extra period, a 63-yard punt from Matt Haack pushed Tampa Bay to its own 6-yard line. A controversial pass interference call on Levi Wallace allowed Tampa Bay to convert a 3rd-and-long, and the Buccaneers sealed the game minutes later with a 58-yard catch-and-run touchdown pass from Brady to Breshad Perriman, sending Buffalo to a 7–6 record with the loss. Allen became just the fourth quarterback in NFL history with 300 passing yards and 100 rushing yards in the same game, playing through a sprained ankle suffered in the fourth quarter.
With the win, Buffalo snapped a two-game losing streak and improved to 8–6.
Buffalo avenged its Monday Night loss to the Patriots earlier in December, as Josh Allen passed for over 300 yards and 3 touchdowns and was not sacked during the game. Despite receivers Cole Beasley and Gabe Davis coming down with COVID-19 and missing the game, utility player Isaiah McKenzie had a dominant performance in Beasley's place. New England relied heavily on its run game again, with Damien Harris scoring 3 touchdowns, but was forced to pass more with rookie quarterback Mac Jones, who completed less than 50 percent of his throws and was intercepted twice by Micah Hyde. With the 33–21 win, Buffalo improved to 9–6 and retook the division lead from New England.
Despite Allen turning in one of the worst passing performances of his career, he and running back Devin Singletary combined for four rushing touchdowns as Buffalo overcame 3 turnovers and a Falcons lead at halftime to win 29–15, clinching a playoff berth for the fourth time in five years.
The Bills held the lead the whole way during the game, holding the Jets offense to just 53 total yards on offense and recording nine quarterback sacks en route to a 27–10 win, which assured them the division title. Had they lost, they would have needed the Patriots to lose to Miami to clinch the division. A New England loss, combined with a subsequent victory by the Las Vegas Raiders late that night, sealed the 3rd seed for the Bills, and the Patriots as their opponent for the Wild Card game.
| AFC East | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (3) Buffalo Bills | 11 | 6 | 0 | .647 | 5–1 | 7–5 | 483 | 289 | W4 |
| (6) New England Patriots | 10 | 7 | 0 | .588 | 3–3 | 8–4 | 462 | 303 | L1 |
| Miami Dolphins | 9 | 8 | 0 | .529 | 4–2 | 6–6 | 341 | 373 | W1 |
| New York Jets | 4 | 13 | 0 | .235 | 0–6 | 4–8 | 310 | 504 | L2 |
| Round | Date | Opponent (seed) | Result | Record | Venue | Recap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 15 | New England Patriots (6) | W 47–17 | 1–0 | Highmark Stadium | Recap | |
| January 23 | at Kansas City Chiefs (2) | L 36–42 (OT) | 1–1 | Arrowhead Stadium | Recap |
The Bills became the first team in the Super Bowl era to score a touchdown on each of their first seven drives of a playoff game. Additionally, they became the only team in NFL history to not attempt a field goal, punt, or commit a turnover in a single game (regular season or postseason).
After a back-and-forth first half, Kansas City took a 9-point lead in the third quarter with a Mecole Hardman rushing touchdown before Buffalo struck back on the next play with a 75-yard touchdown pass from Josh Allen to Gabe Davis. The Chiefs led 26–21 in the 4th quarter after Tyreek Hill set up a field goal with a 45-yard punt return. Allen then led the Bills on a 7-minute, 75-yard drive to retake the lead, scoring the first 8 points of 25 by both teams in the final two minutes of the game; the lead would change twice afterwards, with Kansas City and Buffalo scoring quick touchdowns within seconds of each other.
Buffalo took a 36–33 lead with 13 seconds left, but controversially opted to eschew a squib kick for a traditional kickoff out of the endzone for a touchback setting up the Chiefs at their own 25-yard-line with all three of their timeouts remaining. Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes completed a 19-yard pass to Hill that ran just 5 seconds off the clock, then threw a 25-yard pass to Travis Kelce, giving Kansas City a first down on the Bills 31-yard line after running down another 5 seconds. On the next play, Butker's 49-yard field goal sent the game into overtime.
Getting the ball first in overtime, Mahomes rushed for 4 yards and completed 5/5 passes for 50 yards, including a 16-yard pass to McKinnon and a 26-yard throw to Hardman. He finished the drive with an 8-yard touchdown pass to Kelce that sealed the win for Kansas City and eliminated the Bills from the playoffs for the second season in a row, ending their season.
| Category | Total yards | Yards per game | NFL rank(out of 32) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Passing offense | 4,284 | 252.0 | 9th |
| Rushing offense | 2,209 | 129.9 | 6th |
| Passing defense | 2,771 | 163.0 | 1st |
| Rushing defense | 1,866 | 109.8 | 13th |
| Category | Player | Total yards |
|---|---|---|
| Passing | Josh Allen | 4,407 |
| Rushing | Devin Singletary | 870 |
| Receiving | Stefon Diggs | 1,225 |
| Tackles (Solo) | Tremaine Edmunds | 70 |
| Sacks | Mario Addison | 7 |
| Interceptions | Micah Hyde | 5 |
Statistics correct as of the end of the 2021 NFL season
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