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Bills Win And Top 3 Things We Learned from Bills’ Dominant Win over Panthers

1 — A perfect “get-right” game for Buffalo
After the bye, the Bills looked refreshed and focused, improving Sean McDermott’s post-bye record to 9–0. Their 40 points were the most ever under McDermott following a bye, while the 9 points allowed were the fewest.

McDermott praised his team’s preparation:

“I really thought the players and staff did a phenomenal job. The process is the process.”

The Panthers, with a top-three rushing offense and a stingy defense, couldn’t withstand Buffalo’s balanced attack. Four straight touchdown drives spanning the 2nd and 3rd quarters, capped by Khalil Shakir’s 54-yard catch-and-run, broke the game wide open.

Josh Allen said:

“Coming off two losses, that lingered with us. We wanted to come out and play our best — and I think we did that tonight.”

Buffalo’s defense contributed two takeaways (Epenesa’s interception and Walker’s fumble recovery), helping the offense dominate in total yards (410–244).


2 — James Cook’s historic masterpiece
James Cook III delivered a career day with 216 rushing yards and 2 TDs on just 19 carries. Ten of those runs moved the chains, including a 64-yard TD sprint.

Cook became just the third player since 2011 to record 200+ yards and 2 TDs on fewer than 20 carries, joining De’Von Achane and Derrick Henry. The Bills are now 9–1 since 2022 when Cook tops 100 rushing yards.

“He’s playing outstanding. The more times we get the ball in his hands, the better we’re going to be,” said Josh Allen.

According to Next Gen Stats, 189 of Cook’s yards came outside the tackles and 141 before contact — a testament to the offensive line’s dominance. His 153 first-half rushing yards were the most by any player since his brother Dalvin Cook’s 2021 mark.

McDermott added:

“I value physical football — and it starts up front. Our O-line did a great job.”

Buffalo racked up 245 rushing yards and four ground TDs. Allen also added two rushing scores, surpassing Cam Newton’s all-time record for most games with both a passing and rushing TD (46). Allen and Cook became only the second QB/RB duo in NFL history to each record 2+ rushing touchdowns in the same game.


3 — Defensive ends wreak havoc
Seven different Bills recorded at least half a sack — the first time that’s happened since 2021. The DE group of Joey Bosa, A.J. Epenesa, Greg Rousseau, and Michael Hoecht led the charge.

Rousseau forced a key fumble in the first quarter, recovered by Christian Benford. Bosa ended his drought with a second-quarter sack, while Hoecht — in his Bills debut — tallied 1.5 sacks and 3 tackles.

“Hoecht was a tone setter,” McDermott said. “He’s a leader in his own way and made a difference.”

Epenesa added a highlight-reel interception — batting a screen pass, kicking it up, and catching it himself — his third career INT.

“It’s something we’ve repped so many times it’s become second nature,” Epenesa said with a smile.

With a complete team effort, Buffalo reminded everyone that when healthy and prepared, they’re still one of the AFC’s most complete teams — and next week’s clash at Highmark Stadium is shaping up to be another blockbuster.

Bills WR Officially Benched After Repeatedly Showing Up Late to Team Meetings - This Is His Fifth Time Being Late, He Was Reportedly Intoxicated
SHOCKING news out of Orchard Park: The Buffalo Bills have indefinitely benched their former second-round wide receiver after yet another disciplinary incident. Sources inside One Bills Drive confirm this marks the FIFTH time in the 2025 season the player has been late to a team meeting — and the latest offense was the final straw: he reportedly showed up reeking of alcohol. Moments after Monday’s team meeting, head coach Sean McDermott addressed the media with a tone that left no room for interpretation: “The Buffalo Bills will not tolerate disrespect toward this football team, disrespect toward your teammates, and disrespect toward yourself. We’ve given chances, we’ve had private conversations, we’ve done everything we can. At this point, enough is enough. When you walk into this building, you represent an entire city and an entire fan base. We cannot and will not accept this any longer.” That player? None other than Keon Coleman — the once-hyped Florida State product drafted in the second round of 2024 to be Josh Allen’s next big-play weapon. From “generational talent” to full-blown headache in less than two seasons: Incidents 1–2: Late to meetings → internal warnings Incident 3: Benched for two full games in November 2025 Incident 4: Seen dancing on the sideline while serving that benching Incident 5: Showed up late AGAIN… and allegedly intoxicated → indefinitely removed from the active roster Just weeks ago, Bills Hall of Famer Andre Reed spent nearly two hours on the phone trying to mentor the 22-year-old, but it now appears the message fell on deaf ears. With no Bills receiver currently on pace for even 760 yards this season and the room already paper-thin after the Amari Cooper and Brandin Cooks additions, losing Keon Coleman — even for non-football reasons — is a gut punch. Bills Mafia is LIVID. Many are already calling for the front office to cut their losses, just like they did with first-round bust Kaiir Elam and second-round flop Boogie Basham. The million-dollar question now: Is this the end of Keon Coleman in Buffalo, or will Sean McDermott and Brandon Beane give him one final lifeline? Drop your take in the comments: Keep Keon and hope he grows up… or ship him out TODAY? 👇🔥