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The buffalo bills are a mess, but sean McDermott's firing was totally justifiable

In a sports landscape dominated by emotional outbursts and quarterback-centric narratives, Freddie deBoer makes a startlingly cold calculation: the Buffalo Bills' decision to fire their beloved head coach was not just necessary, but mathematically inevitable. While the fanbase mourns a betrayal, deBoer argues that the data reveals a catastrophic defensive collapse that no amount of loyalty can excuse.

The Roster vs. The Coach

DeBoer begins by acknowledging the visceral anger of the Bills' community, noting that the firing has left "team owner Terry Pegula showing his ass in a disastrous press conference" and "GM Brandon Beane looking like a snake." He validates the frustration, pointing out that the roster construction is undeniably flawed. The general manager has failed to surround the franchise quarterback with adequate weapons, trading away star Stefon Diggs only to replace him with a revolving door of ineffective players. DeBoer writes, "The list of wide receivers that the Bills have gotten for Josh Allen since they traded away disgruntled star Stefon Diggs looks like some sort of practical joke." This observation is sharp; it correctly identifies that the talent gap on the roster is a primary driver of the team's struggles.

The buffalo bills are a mess, but sean McDermott's firing was totally justifiable

However, deBoer refuses to let the general manager's failures absolve the head coach. He argues that while the roster is a mess, the coaching staff's inability to adapt to that mess is the real story. He notes that despite investing heavily in the defensive line, the team has failed to generate pressure, citing a "zero sacks in the playoff game against Denver and a near-record-low pressure rate." The author suggests that blaming the quarterback is a convenient deflection for a fanbase unwilling to face the hard truth about their defensive scheme. As deBoer puts it, "The offense has been fine; I would remind you that they just put up 30 on a Broncos defense widely regarded as one of the three or four best in the league." This framing is effective because it forces the reader to look past the emotional narrative of a "heartbroken" quarterback and examine the cold reality of the scoreboard.

Former Bills head coach Sean McDermott was hired to be a defensive guru, but in playoff losses in the Josh Allen era his defenses have given up more points per game than the single worst defense in NFL history.

The Statistical Reality

The core of deBoer's argument rests on a single, devastating statistic that reframes the entire tenure of the coach. He compares the Bills' playoff defensive performance to the historically inept 2020 Detroit Lions, a team often cited as the worst in league history. The comparison is jarring. DeBoer explains that the 2020 Lions gave up 32.5 points per game, yet in the Josh Allen era, the Bills' defense has surrendered 33.16 points per game in playoff losses. This is not a minor statistical variance; it is a fundamental indictment of the coaching strategy.

Critics might note that comparing regular-season historical lows to specific playoff games ignores the intensity and quality of opposing offenses in the postseason. However, deBoer anticipates this, acknowledging that "playoff teams to have better offenses than all teams in a regular season" but insisting the gap is too wide to ignore. He argues that the coach's specific job description was to build a defense that could win in January, and that specific mandate has been repeatedly failed. The author writes, "A defensive head coach whose defense collapses year after year after year in the postseason is just not going to remain a head coach forever in this league. Sorry." This blunt assessment cuts through the usual sports media pleasantries, reminding readers that the National Football League is a "results business."

The piece also touches on the human element of the firing, suggesting that the fanbase is in a "mourning period" that blinds them to the coach's flaws. DeBoer suggests that this emotional attachment is "understating McDermott's flaws" and is "not analytically helpful." He posits that if the coach had been retained and the team failed again, the same fans would be demanding his head. This cyclical logic is compelling, though it risks oversimplifying the complex relationship between a franchise, its local media, and its coaching staff. The argument assumes that the only metric for success is a Super Bowl, a standard that many modern franchises struggle to meet despite regular-season dominance.

The Path Forward

In the final analysis, deBoer suggests that the only way to move forward is to think big, even if it means hiring a controversial figure. He proposes a radical solution: hiring Bill Belichick, a coach whose reputation has suffered in recent years but who remains a "defensive genius for all time." DeBoer argues that Belichick has the "clout and confidence to go toe-to-toe with Beane in the event of a dispute," solving the power struggle that has plagued the organization. He writes, "So back up the Brinks truck, pay what you need to in order to hire Belichick (including paying his UNC buyout), and bring in rising offensive star Davis Webb as offensive coordinator." This recommendation is as much a critique of the current management structure as it is a hiring suggestion, highlighting the need for a coach with enough authority to force the general manager to build a better roster.

Bottom Line

DeBoer's argument is strongest in its refusal to let the emotional narrative of the fanbase obscure the statistical failure of the defense. By anchoring the critique in the point-per-game comparison to the 2020 Lions, he provides an undeniable metric that justifies the firing despite the roster's flaws. The piece's biggest vulnerability is its assumption that a single coaching change can instantly rectify years of poor roster construction, but its core thesis—that a defensive specialist must be held accountable for defensive collapse—is unassailable. Readers should watch to see if the new leadership can actually fix the roster, or if the cycle of playoff heartbreak will continue regardless of the coach's name on the sideline.

Sources

The buffalo bills are a mess, but sean McDermott's firing was totally justifiable

by Freddie deBoer · · Read full article

I’m a Chicago Bears fan, with a classic American sports allegiance origin story - my father was born in Chicago. If you’re bothering to read this post you will be aware that you Bears experienced a playoff loss recently that would be considered to be of the classic “rip your heart out” variety, except for the convenient fact that quarterback Caleb Williams just completed his second year and offensive guru head coach Ben Johnson just completed his first. That means that a potentially-gutting playoff loss feels, instead, like the start of a great adventure. I’ve been telling my Bears fans friends to try and enjoy this moment, because this situation is rare and doesn’t last long - the playoff loss that leaves you excited rather than devastated. You can find a team that long ago moved from the first category to the second in the other team I follow closely, the Buffalo Bills.

My interest in the Bills echoes past years with particular investment in the Green Bay Packers and the St. Louis Rams. You see, I’m in a semi-keeper fantasy football league (we can keep three players each year) that started, if you can believe it, in 1992, when I was ten years old. This was before any online fantasy leagues existed, so we had to hand-score games out of the box scores in the paper. For that reason, it has been and remains a scoring-only league; we only get points for touchdowns, field goals, extra points, and safeties, nothing for yards or catches. (Plays do count double if they’re more than 50 yards, though.) Such a system is so antique that most fantasy sites that develop player rankings don’t offer it as an option. But we’re old and we like it that way. And what happens in a league where you might keep a star quarterback year after year is that you become invested in his team to an unusual degree. Because of how important your quarterback is to team success in a league like ours, if you hold onto a guy year after year, his team sort of becomes your secondary rooting interest. (Conveniently, the Bears and Bills are in different conferences and rarely play each other.) That happened to me with Kurt Warner when he was an MVP-caliber quarterback, it happened to me with a decade of Aaron Rodgers, and now it’s happened with Josh Patrick ...