Showing posts with label Buffalo Bills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buffalo Bills. Show all posts

Saturday, February 2, 2013

THE TECMO BOWL: Buffalo vs. Philadelphia

Many traditions are practiced on the Saturday before the NFL's Super Bowl. Day-long marathons of past Super Bowl highlights. Fasting in order to be ready to drown your stomach bacteria in nacho cheese dip. And now, the internet's version of football supremacy, the Tecmo Bowl. Last year's contest was a barn-burner between Houston and Washington, going where no other football championships have dared in the Super Bowl era: sudden death overtime. It's difficult to outdo something when the bar is set so high, but if Dan Marino can still have love children in 2013, then damn it, the Tecmo Bowl can still be an edge-sitter's dream come true.

This year, Buffalo takes an 11-game win streak into the Tecmo Bowl with a healthy and helmeted Thurman Thomas carrying the team across a playoff field of worthy contenders to sunny Phoenix, Arizona. There, they'll meet the Philadelphia Eagles, winners of 12 games and the all-around best team out of the very competitive NFC. We've already done the breakdowns and examined the minutia of this match-up, so let's head to balmy Phoenix and the Sun Devil Stadium, where Coach Marv Levy is ripping off the sleeves of his new Bills sweater with disguised anger.

Thanks to the unstoppable system of tubes called the internet, video footage of the game has already leaked to YouTube. If you're the visual type, you may want to watch highlights there. Otherwise, enjoy this supplementary text, nerd.

The Tecmo Bowl

Quarter One
A rocketing kick off the ankle of Roger Ruzek has Buffalo pinned at their own 4-yard line. The Bills, undeterred from this predicament thanks to their own potent offensive weaponry, get started with the Thurminator right away, as he takes the rock 8 yards up the middle for some breathing room. The Eagles 'D' hunkers down from this point on, forcing the Bills into their first 3-and-out since the second quarter in Week 11.

Philadelphia heads off their first drive of the Tecmo Bowl with delicious field position at the Buffalo 41-yard line. With Herschel Walker enjoying his team's Championship run from the comforts of his own hospital bed hooked up to a breathing machine, Keith Byars and Heath Sherman double-team to grind out some yardage. Randall Cunningham tries to switch things up by using his arm, though without a ball attached to throw he's forced to resort to his legs. Cunningham uses his bursting power to blow past some Buffalo defenders to get to the 10-yard line. And, apparently being too early in the game for the Bills to play strategy, Cunningham takes the exact same designed run play untouched into the end zone.

Philadelphia leads 7-0

Kenneth Davis gives his team considerably better field position at their own 40, while Thurman proceeds to cut the field in half with a 34-yard scamper on first down. It's all Carwell Gardner up in here from this point, with two short, belabored runs mixed with an under-thrown Kelly pass leading to Buffalo suddenly needing a big pick-up on 3rd down in a drive that surely saw them coming away with at least 6. Unfortunately, the Eagles defense have their acute sights set on their prey, and feast on a pitch play to Thurman that force Buffalo to send out Steve Christie for the chip shot.

Philadelphia leads 7-3

Quarter Two
Cunningham tries to keep the Bills guessing on their second drive by throwing a game of "500" to his receivers. Without adding "dead or alive" kept them from laying out for his lame ducks, however, and when he tries to go on the run and is blitzed, Philadelphia suddenly sees any momentum they had being taken from them, dead or alive.

Gardner tries his best to earn his Tecmo Bowl paycheck, but when losing two yards starts eating into his net pay, he opts to let Thurman take it on second down. Inspired by his robbery of the rushing title at the end of the season, Thomas lights up the Eagles once again with a pitch that he carries 38 yards across midfield. However, though he has his helmet, he forgot to pine tar his gloves, and the ball comes bobbling out and over to Tackle Andy Harmon who, after hustling behind Thomas for some reason, is able to return the ball back to his team's 40-yard line. And that's how you earn a paycheck.

Cunningham, unconcerned with his own pay thanks to his latest Dodge Caravan endorsement, shoots an errant dart right into the diving hands of Safety Henry Jones on first down.

With time suddenly becoming a factor in the first half, Kelly goes to the air on first down. His pass over the middle to Andre Reed proves to be a bit too saucy for the receiver to handle, so he goes back to the ground with Thurman. The Eagles, still not satiated with their last gnashing of Thomas, drop him for a loss of 1. They follow this up with a blitz of Kelly, putting the ball back in the hands of the inferior half of their team.

Philadelphia tries to get a quick drive going with under 30 seconds to play, but the potent punt from Chris Mohr has them pinned a bit too far back. By the time Pat Beach is hauling in his obligatory one reception per game, the Mighty Bomb jacks are already synchronized huffing on the NFL shield.

Halftime - Eagles 7, Bills 3

Quarter Three
Thanks to the exalting ministry of a one Mr. Cunningham during halftime, the Eagles are graced with a second chance to start the second half, where the drive gets ripping early with a 21-yard run from the preacher man to midfield. From there, Cunningham keeps his completion streak going by heaving up a ball to Calvin Williams, who leaps, pulls it down, and runs past the weary Buffalo secondary for Philadelphia's second score.

Philadelphia leads 14-3

Needing to start the catch-up process early, Buffalo goes to the only weapon that seems to be working in Thurman Thomas, who follows up an impressive 12-yard needle-threading run with a 56-yard scamper to the Philadelphia 11-yard line. Knowing that he's enraged the birds of prey, Thomas takes leave of the field to put the scoring duties in the hands of his captain, Jim Kelly. The enormous drop-off that Kelly has experienced since exposing himself (legally) to the masses is never more apparent than over the next two plays where his pass sail into uncharted territory. Even Thomas fails to cap off the large gash he tore into the Eagles front seven when he's called upon during third down, and Steve Christie marches out to the tune of 40,000 boos.

Philadelphia leads 14-6

Christie follows up his near-miss from 20 yards out with a kick off his big toe that has Vai Sikahema skirting midfield. Sherman tries his best to eat up some yardage and time, but when he eats up the yards behind him Cunningham is forced to sear the air with another of his lobs. Though his completion streak remains in tact, it falls into the forearms of the opposing Mark Kelso all the way at the Buffalo 3-yard line.

Quarter Four
With the sun setting fast in Phoenix, the Bills get started on their march to a 12th consecutive win and a Tecmo Bowl Championship with a Carwell Gardner bumble for 2 yards. Things turn around quickly, however, when Thomas takes a sure loss 18 yards out to the 23-yard line, followed up by James Lofton diving for a catch in coverage to help Kelly complete his first pass of the game. Two plays later, Thomas takes another dangerous pitch play 29 yards to the Philadelphia 26, though all his fancy footwork is, at this point, only serving to eat up precious time. The Eagles' defense, as they have all day, stand their ground after giving some away, keeping Buffalo from converting on three straight plays to force another Christie appearance. Knowing they'd need a field goal either way, Bills fans aren't too enraged with this somewhat disappointing turn of events. Unfortunately, their bad vibes stemming from the Scott Norwood experience are enough to create a strong Arizona crosswind that pushes Christie's 40-yard kick wide right. Somewhere, Norwood's fifth bottle of wine suddenly takes on a sweet, succulent flavor.


With a first recognized world football championship in their sights, the Eagles opt to make things interesting by calling a pass in the flat that is inevitably intercepted by Nate Odomes at Philadelphia's own 29-yard line.

Kelly keeps his chemistry with Lofton alive with a throw on first down that finds the charismatic receiver wide open on the sideline. Buffalo scores their first touchdown, though time appears to not be on their side in more ways than one, with the option for 2-point conversions in the Tecmo Bowl still being debated somewhere on a message board in the Midwest.

Philadelphia leads 14-13

The Eagles wisely start things a little more conservatively on their next drive, though Buffalo comes at them with a renewed sense of what's at stake, with two straight blitzes knocking Philadelphia back near their own end zone. Needing a first down to seal the deal, Cunningham once severely underthrows a receiver, this time being Fred Barnett. The young receiver makes a heroic effort on the national stage, coming back for the ball and pulling it in for a first down. Philadelphia continues to drive out from under the shadow of a humiliating comeback defeat, though Cunningham fittingly ends the game by fumbling as time expires on the 1992 Tecmo Bowl season.

Final Score: Eagles 14, Bills 13

Yes, somehow this was a game featuring the two best teams from a 28-team field in this year's Tecmo Bowl season. Whether they were both out of gas from dominating their respective conferences during the regular season, or they were just there to prolong the party from the night before, both teams put on a rather pathetic showing in the game of the year. Thurman Thomas was the most skilled player on the field, though even he committed a very costly mistake that remains one of the many turning points in this close-fought contest to give the Championship away. That Buffalo couldn't pull out a win after three Cunningham interceptions and a fumble says a lot about the legs of this team, which appeared infallible after a dominant 11-game win streak. The MVP of this game is a rare collective one, given out to the Philadelphia defense for not only saving their offense's ass, but also exposing Buffalo's greatest weakness: their chew-spitting, gun-toting, uncomfortable with the limelight quarterback, who only completed two passes--both coming after about three and a half quarters. Congratulations, Philadelphia, you've got your first football championship. Now go home before anyone notices.


The season may be over, but our head writer, Butt Douglas, will be defending his own 1-2 record at the next Madison, WI tournament: Tecmo IX: Marino Royale. If you're not signed up, you can still go and cheer him and the rest of the 200+ competitors on and keep the exciting Tecmo momentum going!

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Looking Ahead: The Tecmo Bowl, 1992

Another turning point, a Pete Metzalaars stuck in the road. And now, we're grabbing you by the wrist to force you to watch just one more game this season: the 1992 Tecmo Bowl. There were plenty of turning points and places where this season could have veered off the road, however their has always been just one, predestined game to cap it all off. Buffalo versus Philadelphia. Chicken versus Steak. Super Bowl ineptitude versus Super Bowl absence. It all ends here.


Despite the fact that football teams in the National Football League take the field against another team each and every week, the road to a football championship is a long and lonely one. Each team must find their own way. They must fight their own battles and find ways to keep their own fans at bay. After losing four Super Bowls in a row, Buffalo had to figure out a new formula. And after winning just 4 games in their first 9, Buffalo fans were getting out the Formula 409 to wipe their team off the grid. The Bills answered their fans' challenge, however, and since their 10th game they haven't lost. They haven't even come close. Buffalo has controlled the road to their championship behind a Top 5 Defense and the best running back in the league, Thurman Thomas. They went up quickly on Pittsburgh, then held them off before laying waste to the AFC's best in Houston and San Diego. And though Jim Kelly has seemingly forgotten his role since losing the 'QB' before his name, he's kept enough poise and leadership to make sure his team doesn't lose sight of their goal.

Philadelphia is a city filled with proud sports fans, though their football franchise has certainly left them with little to be proud of. Participants in only two Super Bowls spaced a quarter century apart, the Eagles have lost both without much of a fight. Philadelphia may be the host city to Rocky Balboa, however the level of fight they routinely bring to the big show is lacking. This year, things are different. Philadelphia took the road well-travelled, and it made all the difference in their ability to plow through their division en route to the Number 1 seed in the NFC and a walk through the playoffs. If Philadelphia is set to wear the choke collars during the Tecmo Bowl, they haven't let on as of yet. Their talent isn't spoken to in their numbers, with mediocre offensive and defensive rankings, though they carry the ultimate X-Factor: the ex-QB Eagles, Randall Cunningham and an athletic ability that has him soaring each week as high as his aptly-named mascot.



        Buffalo                           Philadelphia
                           11-5      Season Record        12-4
                            3-0      Featured Games       2-1
                            2-2      Same Opponents       3-1
                        402/310          PF/PA            409/327
                     25th (2338)      Pass Ranking        19th (2583)
                      3rd (2222)      Rush Ranking        4th (2041)
                            9th      Overall Offense      8th
                     18th (2934)      Pass Defense        20th (2949)
                      1st (1064)      Rush Defense        15th (1535)
                            5th      Overall Defense      18th
 
                            5.1      QB 40-yard Dash      Less than 12 parsecs
 
     Soldier, Showman and                Mascots          Predator, Pilot and
     record-breaking bison hunter       Known For         record-making rock band
 
                 The "Queen" City        Cities           City of "Brotherly Love"
        Next to big body of water        Known            Big bodies filled with water
                        Hot wings         For             Hot air


And now, the lonely roads of both teams are about to get a little more crowded, as the numbers 1 (Buffalo) and 2 (Philadelphia) ranked teams in our final Power Rankings fittingly meet here in a game of destiny. Meet us next week at the Sun Devil Stadium in Phoenix, Arizona where Randall Cunningham returns to a popular site during his college heyday while playing with UNLV. Also, Jim Kelly played for the USFL Houston Gamblers, so traveling all night from Sin City to the Tecmo Bowl isn't necessarily out of the question.

Sunday, January 20, 2013

Conference Championship Weekend

28 teams started, and now only 4 remain. Are they the best of the best? That's hard to say. Like a quiet rebel, many good teams have fallen before their time. The one thing that separates those teams from these four, however, is the one simple fact that they couldn't win in the big game. Today, we'll see one team that was on the outside looking in halfway through the season, and then railed off 9 wins in a row (including 2 in the postseason). Another never knew the meaning of calm, tussling with two other teams for a division crown until the very last week. There's a squad that's new to late January football, outside of their quarterback that was so close to a gold ring last year. And finally, a team that's always played the quiet character roles in the playoffs but never saw the fireworks and jet fighters in February. It's all going to be settled right here, right now, on Conference Championship Weekend.

AFC Championship
4 Buffalo (13-5) at 3 San Diego (12-6)

Quarter One
Sometimes, one gets the feeling for how a game's going to go even within the first minute or two. It could be the look in a player's eyes. It could be the electricity in the air. Or it could be Kenneth Davis returning your team's kick to your own 7-yard line, setting up a direct snap to Thurman Thomas for his first touchdown of the day.

Buffalo leads 7-0

The Chargers didn't get this far by making things easy on themselves, however. And that was never more evident than when, after two quick plays put them in scoring position, Stan Humphries lobbed up a flea-flicked pass into the end zone that's easy-'pickin's for Henry Jones. The Bills start with a little less-favorable field position at their own 20, but find it pretty easy to flip the field with Thurman Thomas and Andre Reed. James Lofton brings down a 15-yard pass to get back inside the red zone, the only place Thurman Thomas visits more than Mount Cavalry Baptist church. And just as Derek Schaul, the 1995 Illinois State Tecmo Champion, proclaimed all those many years ago, "Ain't no stoppin' me...Ain't no stoppin' Thurman T!"

Buffalo leads 14-0

Quarter Two
After a decent return, the Chargers finally get the gears turning behind Humphries and Anthony Miller, with Miller pulling down a 35-yard completion over the heads of two Buffalo defenders. Rod Bernstine gets his first called run of the game but hits a wall, leading to the team's previous rusher and current secret weapon, Marion Butts, grabbing a pass up the middle and running untouched into the end zone.

Buffalo leads 14-7

Buffalo's biggest offensive weapon so far this game, San Diego kicker John Carney, comes through again with a blooper kick, prompting another stellar Kenneth Davis return. It's all Thomas from there, with an 18-yard pass sandwiched by two long runs, including a 14-yard touchdown scamper that has nobody with Bolt helmets within 5 yards of him.

Buffalo leads 21-7

While the Bills are making it look easy, San Diego takes over fighting for every yard they can get. But Rod Bernstine didn't come all this way to drink his Gatorade for a small endorsement deal; he wants the whole prize package. Bernstine busts through the entire Bills' defensive line for 16 yards to cross midfield, followed up by two passes to 'Lightning' Rod that suddenly has the Buffalo end zone within sniffing distance. Bernstine falls backwards on first down, but just one play later he's back to upending defenders for a 7-yard charge up the middle to close the gap.

Buffalo leads 21-14

With just under a minute remaining in the half, Carney takes it easy with his kick, allowing the Bills a chance for one play at the San Diego 46-yard line. That's all the field Thurman needs, outracing the defenders and the clock for a wind-sucking score to put Buffalo up by 14 at the half.

Halftime - Bills 28, Chargers 14

Quarter Three
Grace is found in San Diego when the Chargers don't have to start the half behind John Carney. Instead, with Stan Humphries under center, San Diego goes on a drive that eats up an entire quarter and has them back within a touchdown after some more back-breaking runs from Bernstine and long Anthony Miller reverses, including the gutsy call on 3rd and goal from the 1 to have Miller carry the rock across the line.

Buffalo leads 28-21

Quarter Four
Though much can be said about San Diego's work ethic and heart in taking up a whole quarter to keep the explosive Buffalo offense off the field, much more can be said about that particular offense's capability to score at whim. Pete Metzalaars brings down a Jim Kelly pass on first down at the San Diego 13, and with 4 open receivers on the next play, Kelly chooses Carwell Gardner to carry the prize to extend their lead again.

Buffalo leads 35-21

After trying to replicate their methods from the third quarter, the Chargers finally realize that they don't get paid to wear Timex watches just for the endorsement deal and decide to go flea-flicker style to Anthony Miller. Humphries' pass is right on the clearly visible 'X', though only Miller apparently saw it as he's alone on the sideline and all the way into the end zone.

Buffalo leads 35-28

Playing catch-up has been fun for the Chargers, but with time running out they'll need to find a way to pull out at least 8 points from their gaudy navy and yellow jerseys in just two minutes to keep the glass slippers polished for Stan and crew. Though two minutes seems like hardly enough time to blink for San Diego, it's an eternity for Buffalo, and it's the Bills who score the next barrage of points. First, after another poor Carney kick that leads to Gardner taking advantage of the bullseye on Thomas for his second score...

Buffalo leads 42-28

...and then Kelly choosing to lob it up to a wide open Andre Reed instead of graciously taking a knee after Humphries' last pass of the season is intercepted.

Final Score: Bills 49, Chargers 28


The score indicates a Bills blowout, however outside the inexplicable late-second half touchdown run from Thomas and the even less inexplicable and unsportsmanlike touchdown pass to Reed with no time remaining, the Chargers were within a touchdown the entire game. Humphries will miss out on his second consecutive Tecmo Bowl appearance, while the Chargers, perhaps the best team in the first 3 quarters of the season for the AFC, will go home with the sour taste of Thurman Thomas' cleats in their mouths as Buffalo's 10th straight victim. 10 is a nice, round number, however it's the number 11 that remains the most important for Buffalo. Double digit wins in a row mean nothing if Buffalo can't bring home their first football championship since the merger. They've gone one step further than last year when they were a much better team. And though the Bills don't carry much sympathy with Tecmo fans, it can't be denied that the wicked stepmother of the AFC has now become the rag-wearing, pumpkin-riding princess. They were left for dead halfway through the season, and now they're in the Tecmo Bowl.



*************************************************************************************** 


NFC Championship
2 Atlanta (13-4) at 1 Philadelphia (13-4)

Quarter One
Like they have all season, the Falcons provide the firepower right off the bat, as Chris Miller spreads it out to his receivers, from Harper Lebel to Andre Rison, to have Atlanta on the board after running it in himself. The Eagles may have earned their title as best in the NFC heading into the playoffs, but Atlanta didn't contend and conquer the best division in football without making fools out of a few defenses.

Atlanta leads 7-0

Vai Sikahema takes his team on his back, keeping the trend of outstanding returns alive by breaking a tackle at his own 30 and then running untouched to the Atlanta 32-yard line. The favorable field position sets up for the most dynamic quarterback in the game to find Calvin Williams after faking a run.

Score tied 7-7

The first quarter of this NFC Championship comes to a close with the score tied, but Atlanta driving behind the arm of Miller, who even makes a receiver out of 'Sub-Par' Steve Broussard with a 49-yard completion.

Quarter Two
The Philadelphia defense, one of the hardest hitting in the game, stands their ground over two plays to keep the Falcons at bay at the 2-yard line. Miller's a hard guy to deny, however, and when his arm can't do the job, his legs find a way and he's in for his second rushing touchdown of the game.

Atlanta leads 14-7

While the Eagles are contending to keep it a game, Norm Johnson is contending for worst kickoff on the day against John Carney by botching one to the Eagles' 40-yard line, allowing for Sikahema to cross over to the Falcons' 43. Heath Sherman is the ball-carrier for a 35-yard run along the sidelines to the 8, though it's Cunningham, who's aura is so strong, that appears to dissolve any defenders in front of him to score. The rushing touchdowns by a quarterback margin has now reached a more stable -1 for the former Mr. Eagles.

Score tied 14-14

The Falcons have controlled the pace of the game for the most part to this point, but a few close calls have them treading dangerously along the Dan Marino line after Tony Smith nearly fumbles the kickoff and Miller is saved by the cement block hands of Eagles cornerback Otis Smith. Despite these myriad miscues, Atlanta manages to break their way down to the Philadelphia 15. Unfortunately, the inevitable was only delayed when Smith finally coughed the ball up and over to John Booty at the 7-yard line.

The long field ahead of him isn't long enough for Randall Cunningham to even the series to two-a-piece, with his 93-yard scamper as the half expires not only stunning the Atlanta fans in attendance, but completely switching the momentum over to the less-dirty but still slightly dingy birds to set up the second half.

Halftime - Eagles 21, Falcons 14

Quarter Three
Sikahema can't find his way into Falcon ground, though his run out from his own end zone to the 30-yard line is still quite commendable. Cunningham can't get anything going over the air, so he turns to his underrated ground force in Sherman and Keith Byars. The Heath-Keith tandem also struggles to move the chains, and the first punt in this Championship series is seen sailing into the second-tier dining porch.

Atlanta's defensive stand effectively yanked the carpet from beneath Philadelphia's cleats, though it was the 80-yard throw from Miller to Rison that effectively swung the momentum wheel back around to the carrion feasters.

Score tied 21-21

The Eagles begin again with decent field position, though for the second time in a row they're stalled when Cunningham's on-target throws are dropped by the receivers. On 3rd-and-10, a Jessie Tuggle sack is enough to push Philadelphia back far enough for the cameras to come out to another Jeff Feagles appearance.

Quarter Four
After two sacks of Miller push Atlanta to inside their own 5, Rison saves the day with a 23-yard completion to move the chains. Unfortunately, the air suddenly takes on a frosty chill when their next series is stalled due to the usually sure-handed Harper Lebel unable to bring down two on-target Miller throws in a row.

With time playing the twelfth man for Philadelphia, they get going on a drive that sees effective running from Sherman and nice, short passes to Williams and Fred Barnett. When suddenly faced with a 3rd down situation, however, it's the unsung hero, Pat Beach, making just his 3rd reception of the year to convert the first down and get Philadelphia within striking distance. Cunningham races for a couple more first downs, setting up the famous juke-and-jive throw to a wide open Barnett in the corner of the end zone to take the lead with just over a minute remaining.

Philadelphia leads 28-21

Though perhaps just 1:08 remains in Atlanta's season, there's nobody Coach Glanville would want under center than Chris Miller. After a huge Smith return to the 47, Miller calms the nerves of his offense just long enough to get them into a 4th and 21 situation with just 31 seconds remaining. The probable last play of Atlanta's tumultuous season has Miller throwing to perhaps the only player capable of calming the nerves of Falcons' fans, though he doesn't make it easy when his heel is nearly caught at the 1-yard line before high-stepping it into the end zone for an overtime-forcing score.

Score tied 28-28

Overtime
At this pace, the winner of the toss comes out with the clear path to victory. Perhaps that was the cause behind the unorthodox onside kick call from Atlanta after losing the toss, though they did come close to turning the game around with a recovery. Though Atlanta held the Eagles two drives in a row, it's the calm and collected play that Cunningham has exhibited all year that has him finding Barnett with the same play that killed Atlanta just a series ago that has Philadelphia flying into their very first Tecmo Bowl.

Final Score: Eagles 34, Falcons 28 (OT)


Some may argue that the best team in the NFC won't go on to represent their conference now in the Tecmo Bowl. However, Philadelphia's quiet dominance over their schedule, along with their shellacking of our Tecmo Bowl favorite in Dallas last week has the Eagles as a clear contender to take it all home. Atlanta won the hearts and eyes of many who had written them off at the season's beginning, though it's clear that this is a team that's just a few steps behind Philadelphia. After a start that would have killed many teams, the Eagles stood strong and came back, separating themselves from the vanquished Falcons with nothing else than a 93-yard scurry from the most dynamic quarterback in the game. Philadelphia takes quite a bit of their own dynamite into the Tecmo Bowl with the Bills in a game that's sure to see plenty of explosions even after the initial 4-hour opening ceremonies.

Monday, September 24, 2012

Monday Night Football: Buffalo vs. Indianapolis

Heading into the season, there was just a short list of things we knew about the Indianapolis Colts. Now, after just two games, we now know that Jeff George is the league's most prolific passer, while Jessie Hester is by far the best receiver at levitating footballs. Apparently he's pretty good at catching them too, leading the league in receiving yards and touchdowns after the first two weeks. Tonight, they'll meet up with divisional rivals in the Buffalo Bills, a team that was chewed up and spit out last week by the San Francisco offense. It will take a few more weeks to make believers out of anyone, but the Colts can make a big statement on the national stage if they can continue to click offensively while making sure to kick Jim Kelly and his boys around while they're down. Let's head out east where the only things rising earlier than the sun are Jeff George's botoxed eyebrows.

Quarter One
The Bills win the toss, eliciting Dean Biasucci to crawl out from his burrow and boot one Kenneth Davis. Davis gets a nice return to the Buffalo 45-yard line, where Jim Kelly and Thurman Thomas get to work. Thomas takes two straight pitches for 32 yards, then feigns another one to allow Kelly to drop back and launch it to a leaping Thurman in the end zone. Oh hey, Bills, nice to see you finally decided to show up this year!

Buffalo leads 7-0

Clarence Verdin won't be Verdancing on his first return of 2 yards, giving the Colts unfortunate starting position on their first drive of the game. Anthony Johnson makes the best of his immaculate abilities by busting loose for 11 yards on the first play from scrimmage, but George goes 0-for-3 on the next three plays to force audiences to be subjected to the name 'Rohn' showing up on their television sets.

Kelly finds Andre Reed wide open along the sideline for a 49-yard run and catch, surprisingly just their second such connection of the season. Two plays later, and Carwell Gardner is in for his first touchdown.

Buffalo leads 14-0

Verdin fares slightly better with a 35-yard return, though the quarter is destined to end with a deafening thud after Johnson runs into his own offensive tackle and George overthrows Jessie Hester by a country mile.

Quarter Two
Though if the Colts could only turn back time, they'd repeat the end of the first quarter endlessly to avoid the soul-crushing and drive-killing Jeff George interception in the end zone, the first of his season.

Thomas meets resistance for the first time in the game on the next two plays, losing a total of 6 yards. On 3rd and 16 and at the precipice of their own doom on the 1-yard line, Carwell Gardner hitches up the Bills' offense and avoids certain death with a 10-yard run. Of course, Chris Mohr is still rolled out to punt, but the constant derailing of the Colts' chances at scoring are sure to nab some sadism points.

The Colts begin their third drive of the game near midfield, picking up just their second first down with a Johnson run into Bills' territory. Two plays later lead to a 3rd-and-1 situation, where Rodney Culver avoids a Buffalo blitz and gains a valiant 4 yards and a fresh set of downs. His martyrdom will be honored and revered in Indianapolis for quite some time for his willingness to lay down his body for this rare opportunity, and for that we honor him with the screenshot you see on the right. Okay, now that we're done with that, we should probably tell you about Johnson's fumble over to Phil Hansen just as the Colts appeared to have something going. What's that? Rodney...who?

With just a few seconds left on the clock to get into field goal range and put this game effectively out of reach, the Bills opt instead to go with the "Hey, what a surprise, Reed's wide the f@ck open again" play along the sidelines that leads to his first touchdown of the season, a beautiful 51-yard mudhole stomp.

Buffalo leads 21-0

Halftime - Bills 21, Colts 0

Quarter Three
Indianapolis can take pleasure in knowing they've got a fresh start in the second half, and if it's believed that Ted Marchibroda delivered one of his inspiring speeches at halftime, then the Colts can still make some magic happen. And sometimes, the magic behind the act isn't always clear. So while most of us were groaning after Johnson's gain of 0 and Jeff George's passes to the moles living in the RCA Dome, the real believers knew the magic of Rohn Stark was just about to begin.

There's no magic involved when Kelly finds Reed for a 75-yard touchdown. Black magic, maybe.

Buffalo leads 28-0

If the Colts begin a drive at their own 42-yard line, and nobody has their televisions on to see it, did it really happen? The answer is yes, though it's an answer that took lots of hard work and cost a few lives here at the Tecmo Bowl to uncover. Johnson pulls in a catch and runs it to the Buffalo 31-yard line. Jeff George throws three more incompletions as he hurtles back down through the stratosphere, though Biasucci salvages something from this mess  with a 48-yard boot.

Buffalo leads 28-3

The third quarter ticks away into the fourth with the Bills actually taking more than three plays to get into Colts' territory again.

Quarter Four
Thurman Thomas is gobbled up by an inhumanely starved Colts defense on two straight plays, eliciting Kelly to go for Reed again on 3rd-and-15. An overthrow of the wide open Reed could just be a simple miscalculation on Kelly's part or perhaps the Bills actually exhibiting sportsmanlike play by not running up the score. Yeah, we blame Kelly too. Steve Christie still gets 3 points to erase anything the Colts' previously accomplished on their last drive.

Buffalo leads 31-3

Jeff George is politely introduced to Shane Conlan on the first play of what he hopes is the last drive of his life. He decides not to prolong it by throwing it to the renowned butterfingers of Anthony Johnson, and then lobbing it out of bounds on two separate occasions, including a 4th and 13 play from his own 27-yard line. Make sure to keep those eyes pinned open, Alex. This show's not done for a long time.

Jim Kelly gets chased down by a couple of Colts' defenders on the next play, and decides to effectively sign their pink slips by scampering 27 yards for a touchdown.

Buffalo leads 38-3

With little to no time left to get his passing accuracy into double digit percentages, George opts to go for broke with a bomb to tight end Kerry Cash. Instead, the ball finds Henry Jones of the Bills, a man who has caught more George passes today than anyone on his own team.

Thurman Thomas catches his second touchdown, giving Kelly 4 throwing scores on the day to equal the amount George had previously led the league with. Lady and gentlemen, we've been hustled.

Buffalo leads 45-3

The final drive of the game for the Colts begins promising with Verdin crossing over to the Buffalo 48-yard line. As the Bills defenders leave the field to celebrate their slaughter, Anthony Johnson runs 22 yards before falling into a sinkhole while Jessie Hester refuses to catch another ball. With one second left in which to score dignity points, Hester makes his first reception of the game at the Buffalo 10-yard line before tripping over a sleeping Nate Odomes and fumbling the ball out of bounds.

Final: Bills 45, Colts 3

Some people have watched vivisection documentaries and still walked away with more innocence and naivete than those of us subjected to this horror show. Jeff George was abysmal, though his receivers weren't much help. It's almost as if members of the Bills slipped some sort of hallucinogenic terror drug into the Colts' Gatorade to make them think the football was a flying tarantula. Of course, Buffalo always finds ways to torture their little brothers of the AFC West, no matter how well Indianapolis seems to be playing up to that point. Plus, we would never imagine Buffalo to resort to such nefarious means to win a game.

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Conference Championship Weekend

We're only one game away from the Tecmo Bowl, but before we get ahead of ourselves we'll need to dive into the second-most overblown weekend of the season, Conference Championship weekend. Only the Buffalo Bills remain of the final four we predicted in our Preseason Analysis, and we're still quite confident they have what it takes to overpower the Oilers and get to the championship. The only thing Houston has to their advantage is a rare home game in the playoffs being the number 1 seed, which should make this a game that goes down to the last possession. Meanwhile, in the NFC is another game of the top two conference seeds, but between two more unorthodox teams in the Washington Redskins and Minnesota Vikings. The Redskins played one of the more exciting COM-COM games in Tecmo history, knocking out the heavily favored 49ers on the last play of the game behind back-up QB Stan Humphries. They'll face another defensive challenge against the Vikings at the stadium scheduled to hold next weekend's Tecmo Bowl. Will they be sent packing after their fluke win? Or will Washington get to book an extra weekend in Minneapolis? Let's get to the business.

AFC Championship
2 Buffalo Bills (13-3-1) at 1 Houston Oilers (14-3)



Highlight below for an analysis:
After a quarter of no scoring, this game lit up in a hurry. Ultimately, it was a big gain that Buffalo gave up before the half that led to the 3-point win by the Oilers, despite there being plenty of other opportunities for QB Bills and Andre Reed to burn Houston as they've burned other teams all year long. Houston advances to their very first championship game with a relatively healthy team after a quietly dominant season. While they rightfully deserve a spot in the final game, they're the Newt to Buffalo's Mitt, obviously leaving no real winners for the rest of the viewing public.

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NFC Championship
2 Washington Redskins (11-6) at Minnesota Vikings (13-4)


Higlight below for an analysis:
The Vikings couldn't recreate the late-game magic of their opponents, as Herschel Walker's triumphant return fell a yard short of putting Minnesota in a home-field Tecmo Bowl. It was a see-saw battle for the most part, but Stan Humphries' star shone brighter than Wade Wilson's, and the Vikings' time-consuming reverse plays and a costly Walker turnover outdid them in the end. The Redskins are a true Cinderella team, first stealing their division in the last game of the season and then beating two conference juggernauts to get into the Tecmo Bowl; however we must remember that they represent a team that actually went to their season's Super Bowl, although now they'll have to pose a mid-week cage match between Humphries and Mark Rypien, should Rypien miraculously return from what we suspect was a Joe Theismann-level injury.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Divisional Playoffs: Saturday Edition

Today we'll get to witness two games featuring the teams we predicted to clash in this year's Tecmo Bowl, Buffalo and San Francisco. One's at home, while the other has to travel across the country, but in the end we're pretty certain both should collide in the Hubert Humphrey Metrodome come February. Buffalo's had one week off, giving Bruce Smith extra time to watch videos of Dan Marino abusing his dog, and with most of Miami hobbling into the blustery white north we don't have high hopes for the Fish. San Francisco rolls into the nation's capital behind a 38-0 drubbing of a one-time dark horse in the New York Giants, but with a week off and playing at home who knows what Mark Rypien and his silent-but-deadly offense has in store for the Niners. We think they'll be okay as long as they can avoid the offensive silent-but-deadly emissions of a one Matt Millen.

4 Miami Dolphins (12-5) at 2 Buffalo Bills (12-3-1)

Quarter One
Florida native Louis Oliver does his home state proud by picking off QB Bills on the first play of the game, a deep pass to James Lofton. We've seen enough Tecmo Bills game outcomes to know it's much to early to uncork the champagne, but we'll still give props any time Buffalo is slightly humanized.

Marino's XFL tryouts didn't go so well
The Dolphins' first play from scrimmage is equally as disastrous, but perhaps with more impactful consequences when Dan Marino joins Mark Clayton and Marc Logan in getting fed through a tube. The trainers have to take two trips to carry off the pieces of Marino while Bruce Smith can see the dollars pouring into his Cayman Islands account. Miami promptly goes three and out when replacement Scott Mitchell comes in wearing his practice uniform asking what a football is supposed to look like. Thankfully Pete Stoyanovich still knows how to kick one, and he puts on 3 points for Miami's efforts.

Miami leads 3-0

Buffalo's second drive runs much smoother and irritatingly more predictable as the A.I. realizes which team is actually playing now and makes sure all of QB Bills' passes into double coverage meet with resounding success. Behind some sturdy running from Thurman Thomas, the Bills get down to the Miami six-yard line. Three plays later and Andre Reed's pulling a pass down in double coverage to put Buffalo up.

Buffalo leads 7-3

Quarter Two
Scott Mitchell can still taste Marino on Bruce Smith's breath when he takes a sack on 3rd-and-6 deep inside his own territory. Reggie Roby's on to punt, and if anyone makes a used-up reference about his race here we'll feel compelled to remind you that we here at The Tecmo Bowl don't see race. And in some cases, neither do the programmers in charge of our beloved 8-bit capsule of escapism.

QB Bills and his offense get to work on piling up the score, and do it in embarrassing fashion when he lobs one up to Keith McKeller, who lets defenders fall down around him in awe of his ability to run in place and still score.

Buffalo leads 14-3

The Dolphins are suddenly facing 3rd-and-20 after another Bruce Smith sack, and soon after Mitchell remains perfectly imperfect with an 0-for-6 passing day by overthrowing Fred Banks. Roby's back out on the field, the only member of the Dolphins to move the ball into opponents' territory all day.

He's got a better chance catching that cloud than a Mitchell pass
Miami can't catch a break when QB Bills fumbles on third down, as Jamie Mueller picks it up. He doesn't convert the first down, but makes it possible for Rick Tuten to make a rare playoff appearance and punt it deep into Dolphins territory with just under a minute in the half.

The Dolphins are driving, and by that we mean they racked up more than 10 yards in three tries. With only 7 seconds left at midfield, Ray Bentley stuffs comeback Scott to keep a robust lead over his divisional rivals before halftime.

Halftime - Bills 14, Dolphins 3

Quarter Three
While eleven points doesn't look like an insurmountable lead numerically, with Mitchell helming the ship it appears Miami has already hit the Bruce Smith iceberg and are sinking fast, with Tony Paige looking for a quickie in an old Model-A. This couldn't be made more apparent when the Dolphins crash and burn on another 3-and-out, even with 3 wide open receivers.

Oliver doing some 'twisting'
Buffalo stalls their run-up when Bills uncharacteristically overthrows James Lofton on third down and Tuten's on for a second consecutive punt. Meanwhile, they're putting on their coats in hell.

When Miami faces a 3rd-and-16 and decides their best option is Sammie Smith, it's more than likely an omen of terrible things to come.

The third quarter of play ends with a bright spot for Miami, when Oliver gets his second interception and keeps the Bills at bay. Unfortunately for them, Scott Mitchell didn't stay lost when Coach Shula drove him to the outskirts of west Buffalo with a blindfold on.

Quarter Four
Despite the momentum shift, the Dolphins don't get anything going on offense and soon face another third down. Mitchell gets a faceful of Shane Conlan, and on 4th-and-26 Coach Shula reaches down deep and pulls out some rather large Florida oranges when he goes for it. Mitchell goes to the air, but his pass bounces harmlessly out of Sammie Smith's hands. And now Shula's just standing around with his hands full of useless oranges.

Hey, it's a lonely world for a Tecmo Bills player
The Bills execute the famous fake to Mueller up the middle, pitch to Thomas around the left side to score on the first play, fooling everyone in a Miami uniform and nobody else.

Buffalo leads 21-3

Down by at least a trillion in reality points, the Dolphins call an aggressive round of plays that include a wild overthrow of Banks and Mitchell's first interception. While nobody could blame him for his gutsiness, mostly because he didn't have much to begin with, mostly everyone could blame him for not throwing it to a wide open Mark Duper along the sidelines. Especially Mark Duper.

Buffalo puts an exclamation point on their divisional win with a pass to Lofton in triple coverage that leads to another Reed touchdown a play later. Everyone rejoices, mainly because they've made it through another Buffalo formality playoff win.

Final - Bills 28, Dolphins 3

Miami played well enough last week to bounce out a talented Cincinnati team, but it appears that extra week of play was just enough to ravage the Dolphins' already well-ravaged team. Since neither team remembered the running aspect of the game, Bills appears to be very lucky that Marino was hooked up to an IV drip by their second drive, otherwise his 195 yards and 2 picks might actually have been a bad thing. With the season series being split this year, Buffalo wins the tiebreaker in the most meaningful spot to advance to the AFC Championship against the winner of the Oilers/Seahawks game tomorrow. So with that in mind, we can bet that they've already booked their tickets to Houston for the most bland, sterile Championship game since any BCS Bowl game, ever.


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4 San Francisco 49ers (11-6) at 2 Washington Redskins (10-6)

Before the Madden curse, there was the
"Play Against San Francisco in the Playoffs" Curse
Quarter One
Four plays in, and Mark Rypien is put on the IR. It's after this point that I was perfectly fine with walking away and warming up my soup to sit down with and watch the other-dimension Niners play the Saints on TV. Backup QB and pride of Northeast Louisiana University, Stan Humphries comes in and efficiently drives the team down for a touchdown behind Earnest Byner. Maybe this game will live up to the hype, after all.

Washington leads 7-0

The 49ers move quickly and earnestly down the field behind a few power runs from Tom Rathman, but at the Washington 36-yard line they are stalled. Mike Cofer comes on to nail it from 53-yards out, knowing points are at a premium against this number-2 ranked defense.

Washington leads 7-3

Humphries can't recapture the magic from the first drive, as the Redskins go 3-and-out. This is usually the point in a 49ers game where the tide turns like a South Beach tsunami on the opposing team, so with that picture in mind, I was all ready to put on my boots and start clearing out the snow that had started to dump on us outside.

Quarter Two
San Francisco puts together another solid drive behind Tom Rathman and the questionably healthy Roger Craig, but once again are surprisingly halted near the red zone. Cofer draws the 49ers closer with another field goal, this time from 35 yards out, calling on the doom clouds to move in.

Washington leads 7-6

The Redskins have ample time to answer with 1:47 before the half, but Pierce Holt has other plans, sacking Humphries twice and forcing Washington to punt back to his team. With 22 seconds left, Montana has more than enough time to throw the daggers he mysteriously snuck in on the flight to D.C.

The 49ers gain some yardage, but not enough before the half. Fortunately for them, they'll have another chance afterwards to cause a collective heartbreak so loud it'll be heard in Falls Church.

Halftime - Redskins 7, 49ers 6

Quarter Three
The 49ers finally score after a long Montana run, with Tom Rathman walking in from 2 yards out. They take the lead on the inevitable junk yards given up by Washington, but we'll give credit where credit is due to Montana, a man with the legs of a geriatric pole dancer, and say "way to inspire your team to remember that they like to cheat."

San Francisco leads 13-7

Some acrobatic moves by the Redskin on the 33
Byner and his Redskins answer strongly with a long, drawn-out drive of short strikes from Humphries sandwiching a 45-yard sprint from Byner. As the quarter pulls to a close, the Redskins retake the lead with a 13-yard scamper from Byner. And so where other teams caved in to the pressure of playing the 49ers in January, Washington appears to have no quit yet, even with their grand offensive wizard down for the count. They're all in for making this a game, and for that, I'm ready to let my soup get cold again and crack open another Schlitz.

Washington leads 14-13


Quarter Four
The 49ers take two plays to score again, behind a long catch-and-run from Jerry Rice and a John Taylor dive in the end zone. Just as I caught myself going through my normal routine of cuss words saved for this particular time of the Tecmo year, I realize that Washington still has a lot of time on the clock.

San Francisco leads 20-14

And a bad Cofer kick doesn't hurt. The Redskins start at midfield behind their new captain, Stan Humphries, a man they've been forced to accept whether they wanted to or not. He doesn't steer them wrong, humbly letting Gary Clark and Earnest Byner take the reins on two back-to-back 20+ yard runs that get Washington into the end zone and put the onus back on their defense for the final two and a half minutes.

Washington leads 21-20
The fans show disapproval with a poop-themed 'wave'

San Francisco takes a poor Chip Lohmiller kick out to the NFL shield, and from there start driving Rathman and Craig down Washington's throats. Facing a pivotal 3rd-and-6 at the 'Skins' 27-yard line, the 49ers call the Rathman off-tackle, a play that will either keep them the game or have them packing their bags in an improbable upset. Rathman takes the ball with no intention of stopping, but doesn't even face the possibility of having that concept challenged as he runs into the end zone uncontested to put San Francisco up by a now seemingly insurmountable lead at this point in the game.

San Francisco leads 27-21

Washington needs a touchdown. They need it, and the football gods above, those very same ones that would one day conceive a man they'd name 'Tebow' for his unwavering courage and irresistible smile, have decided to only give the Redskins 1 minute and 9 seconds with which to score. Because of this tense situation and all that is riding on the line, I've decided to break this drive down, in the case it later is turned into something that inspires the next Sam Spence classic.

1:09, Washington 38-yard line: Gary Clark runs a successful reverse play 10 yards, but eats up twenty seconds of the clock. The Redskins call their second time out.

:47, Washington 48-yard line: Clark pulls in a pass up the middle and dashes to the 49ers' 36-yard line. Washington calls their final time out.

:26, San Francisco 36-yard line: Humphries is massively blitzed, losing 6 yards and a few nerve endings in his tailbone.

Another classic in the making
:20, San Francisco 36-yard line: For all intensive purposes, it's the final play of the game barring a sack or a terribly called run play despite all of Earnest Byner's previous success. Luckily for us, Humphries decides to drop back. Unluckily for Washington, all of their receivers are dutifully covered in or near the end zone. Heaving it up on a wing and a prayer, the ball takes off in a wobbly lame-duck formation. And what happens next will haunt me for the rest of my years, as my finger was not on the trigger in the one time I actually needed it to be...

In all my life as a Tecmo player, I've had to hear of the rare double-jump sequence. The truth is, despite me thinking I'd seen everything there was to see, I was never certain that I'd seen this; perhaps I thought I did from all those years lying to my Tecmo peers with the hopes of looking cool, if that was a possibility. In any case, it was never really a concrete fact that I'd seen this play, the Holy Grail of Tecmo plays, so when I saw it here I nearly shit my pants, finally knowing now that it was something that I truly had never seen before and would most likely never be lucky enough to see again.

The Double Jump. A solitary war between two men--the loneliest men on the field. In this case, it was Ricky Sanders versus Don Griffin (most likely). It started with Sanders jumping as he sprinted into the end zone, something I was hoping to expect, and was ready for as I hit the 'Print Screen' button. But what followed was something so unexpected that I froze, unable to capture the moment, and so for all you know I could just be lying. But trust me, I wouldn't lie about this. Not only because it would be the lamest lie ever, but because I know that the only people who'd still be following this blog would be die-hard Tecmoers, ones that I'd have no reason lying to about something as magical as this moment.

Sanders was in the air, but now Griffin was there too, ready to do battle a la Frazier versus Ali or Hogan versus Ultimate Warrior. One set of hands reached for the ball...but whose? Would this game end in a deserved interception of a sub-par passer like Humphries? Or would Sanders fight off the athletic Griffin to pull in a ball that would not only cement Washington's place in the NFC Championship, but knock out the un-knock-outable in the San Francisco 49ers? I'll let the following screen capture give you the outcome.

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To Stan be the Glory

Final - Redskins 28, 49ers 27

This is the reason we do it, folks. The reason we go through our monotonous days at work, slaving for the man, knowing that we can come home to a cold beer and a warm Nintendo controller. We may not always get the girl or beat the Bills, but we continue to play knowing that even after twenty years there's still a flicker of magic left in that old cartridge somewhere. However, the last place I'd ever look for that flicker is in a COM versus COM game, especially with the 49ers involved in a Divisional playoff game. But there it was, waiting for me, telling me..telling us,  "you made it this far, now here are your just deserts." Washington beats San Francisco and advances to the Championship. A team filled with mettle and finesse at the same time. A team that beat out its rival in New York on the last day for the division crown. And they defended it well here, while also gaining back a measure of respect for a division that the 49ers made a mockery of last week. Even without the double jump animation, this game would have been magical; whether it be for the unwavering confidence of Stan Humphries, the heart of Earnest Byner, or the inspired play of the defense, Washington is now a team of destiny. They await the winner of Green Bay and Minnesota, two teams that must now know they're going to be in for a real dogfight in the NFC Championship.


Monday, December 19, 2011

Monday Night Football: Buffalo vs L.A. Raiders

Also a great combo: french fries and mayonnaise
Thought we'd forgotten about you sixteen Buffalo Bills fans out there, eh? Yes, it's been a while since we put the Bills in our spotlight, and during that time they've flown under the radar into prime positioning in the AFC. Out on the west coast, Los Angeles has done their best to muddle up their division, even as Jay Schroeder continues giving his coaches aneurysms. The Raiders play host to the surging Bills, and even with the playoff implications involved it still looks like a one-sided affair on paper. Hopefully L.A. will keep Bo and Marcus enticed long enough with endorsements and book deals that they'll actually bust through the porous Buffalo defense for an upset win at home.

Casualty No. 3662 in the Bills-Reed murder rampage
Quarter One
Just as we start to consider giving the Bills the benefit of Japanese programming-induced doubt, they go ahead and win the coin toss, those shitbricks. Anyway, things start looking up for Los Angeles right away as they're able to actually bat away a pass to James Lofton and stonewall Thurman Thomas for no gain on second down. On third down, or what Buffalo calls "second-and-a-half" down, QB Bills avoids an all-out Raiders blitz and finds Andre Reed at the Los Angeles 37-yard line. Two plays later, he connects with Reed again, whose souped-up skills cause his defender to freeze and fall down, letting Reed waltz into the end zone for a score.

Buffalo leads 7-0

From their own 29-yard line, the Raiders go with the popular "keep the ball the fuck away from Jay Schroeder" play by handing it to Marcus Allen, who bobs and weaves for 17 yards. They follow this up with the far less popular "meh, what's the worst that could happen?" play by letting Schroeder lob it up to two Buffalo defenders--the only two defenders that have ever simultaneously intercepted a ball in Tecmo history, at least to my knowledge.

On the Bills next drive, they start conservative with a Jamie Mueller run for one yard. Once again, Lofton is denied participation in Buffalo's skullduggery, and so on 3rd-and-9 he goes for skullfuckery instead with a reception up the middle for 22 yards. One play later, Bills finds Reed wide open in the end zone for some reason, and Buffalo's only up by two touchdowns on two possessions.

Buffalo leads 14-0

Los Angeles gets another shot from their own 36. Schroeder drops back to pass, but smartly turns it into a run play instead when he dumps it off to Allen, who's able to hustle it out 30 yards to the Buffalo 34-yard line. A wave of Buffalo washes over Schroeder on the next play, dropping him back 9 yards, but Allen makes that up and more with a 25-yard run to the Buffalo 18-yard line as the quarter expires.

Despite his absence, this play was all-Schroeder
Quarter Two
In a play that can only be described as "average for a normal NFL offense", Schroeder threads the football up the middle to Allen of all people for an 18-yard touchdown reception.

Buffalo leads 14-7

Mississippi State's own Don Smith is injured on the run-back for Buffalo, bringing Kenneth Davis off his all-important "towel and Gatorade" duty as the new returner. Buffalo runs a rare three-and-out play sequence, and I nearly missed it during my undressing-with-the-eyes of that cheerleader on the 35-yard line.

Tim Brown returns the punted football to the Raiders' 20-yard line, a good spot to set up the soap box derby car that is Marcus Allen. He races down field on the first two plays for 15 yards, but Coach Art Shell quickly puts on the brakes before he catches flames, and sends his quarterback some passing signals. The first one is a failed pass to Mervyn Fernandez, while the next two don't even get off the ground when Schroeder loses yardage on two sacks.

Buffalo makes things interesting with a nearly blocked punt of USFL heartthrob Jeff Gossett. Al Edwards returns the punt to the Buffalo 13-yard line with about a minute and a half to go in the quarter. Thurman Thomas does his best Jamie Mueller impression with a 5-yard run that takes up about 30 seconds as he bops a few defenders, while Mueller does his best QB Bills impression by cowering from the onslaught of silver and black headed his way. On 3rd-and-6, Thomas picks up the first down, but now there's just under a minute to go. The Raiders taste the upper eastern-seaboard blood in the water, and take charge with two straight blitzes. The second one is blown up, however, when Bills rocket launches the ball to a wide-open Thomas, who choo-choos his way down to the Los Angeles 16-yard line. With just 8 seconds left, the Bills open the gate from which Scott Norton bursts forth. Just 8 seconds later, however, something else on Norton bursts forth when his kick shanks off the right upright and Buffalo is denied a 10-point lead at the half.

Anyone else notice 'NORWOOD' is just two letters away from 'NO GOOD'?
Halftime - Bills 14, Raiders 7

Quarter Three
The Raiders get another opportunity with the kickoff, and Brown sets his team up at the 38-yard line. Marcus Allen continues to bear the load with 20 yards on two more carries. Luckily Schroeder lifts the heavy weight off of his shoulders when his pass to Willie Gault is easily picked off around the Buffalo 25-yard line.

QB Bills unpackages his gift possession with a sloppy out-of-bounds throw, followed by an 11-yard loss from a Scott Davis sack. On 3rd-and-21, Howie Long plunges his square jaw into Bills' midsection, dropping him for another 10-yards. Rick Tuten is on to punt from 5 yards inside his own end zone, and due to the help of some Kentucky Bourbon and PEDs, he's able to rack the punt for 85 yards.

How Allen made white rubber dishwashing gloves famous
From their own 37-yard line, Schroeder hitches his team up to his rotting apple cart as he throws a pass to some Japanese photogs on the sideline. He makes up for it with a 12-yard run to midfield for the first down, however, a good time to unleash Ro-Bo Jackson, who'd apparently been encountering some prior technical difficulties. Jackson takes his first carry 43 yards down to the Buffalo 7-yard line, but like a Motorola cell phone battery immediately needs to be recharged. Schroeder drops back to pass, and with four receivers open he opts for that one dude with the spikes coming out of his neck in the second row. On second down, Allen is served up the ball, and he runs it in for his second touchdown of the day.

Score tied 14-14

Doesn't L.A. know there's no kneeling in Tecmo?
The third of four quarters slowly and lazily winds down with Buffalo taking possession of the football and immediately scoring on a 72-catch and run play from Bills to Reed. Although I just wrote this sentence, I swear I am not into rape or torture. Just a little harmless BDSM.

Buffalo leads 21-14

Quarter Four
With an entire five minutes at their disposal, Coach Shell sends out his best personification of said disposal with Schroeder scrambling and getting sacked twice in a row. Marcus Allen bails him out with a run up the middle to the 50-yard line, racking up some fool-making commission along the way. The drive stalls with another batted away pass to Fernandez and a run from Bo Jackson that can't burst around the edge. Facing 3rd-and-8, Fernandez finally makes his own play happen when he runs back to an underthrown Schroeder pass and then proceeds to miraculously jog down to the Buffalo 9-yard line. One play later, and Jackson is in on the party with a run up the middle to paydirt.

Score tied 21-21

The Buffalo Bills being butthole bastards. Alliteration!
With a robust 2:22 remaining and Buffalo at prime starting position at their own-42, the world is Bills' oyster and he's ready to make some crab cakes. Los Angeles brings the monster blitz on two straight plays, which works out nicely in their favor as Buffalo suddenly faces a strange 3rd-and-10 play. With two minutes to go, Bills' pass to Lofton is handily broken up, and the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum lets out a breath of sewage-infested air when there's not a flag in sight. Of course, Buffalo opts for a fourth down play with more than a minute and a half to go. Bills goes to his go-to guy in Reed, and I'll tell you, if I ever find out who that corner is that keeps falling down, I'm going to buy him a new pair of Reeboks gosh darn it! Reed trucks it out to the Los Angeles 8-yard line, where the Raiders surprisingly stand solid on the next set of downs, despite giving up more than a minute. Norwood sneaks out of the pen and boots it in from 21 yards out, but the only one calling him a hero is his new pair of underpants.

Buffalo leads 24-21

With just 22 seconds remaining, the Raiders go for the sure thing and use up the Allen up-the-middle run. It's make or break time for Allen, and he breaks the hearts of true-blue Tecmoers everywhere when he runs into his own line for no gain. One play later, and Schroeder's pass to Jackson near mid-field is batted away as the clock winds down on another bull shit win by the Bills.

Final Score: Bills 24, Raiders 21

I promised myself to be fair and impartial in my retelling of this epic contest, but even I am not worthy of holding up promises to when it comes to Buffalo's vanquishing of teams that are admittedly inferior but would otherwise be infinitely more exciting to see in the postseason. We can take some solace in the fact that if Andre Reed were removed from the equation today, the Raiders would be paving their way to a rare position in the AFC playoffs. Unfortunately, just like the setting sun or your boss' condescending glare, Reed will always be there pulling down impossible passes from QB Bills and making defenders fall down in their own stupid intimidation. Los Angeles has made it interesting with their midseason surge, and if they can keep up efforts like Allen's, we may still see them after all in the next few weeks. Meanwhile, if Buffalo broke off and was claimed by Canada, I wouldn't mind if we also threw in some Cold Stone ice cream to sweeten the deal.