Revisiting 5 Bills to watch at the Seahawks

Revisiting 5 Bills to watch at the Seahawks
Buffalo Rumblings Buffalo Rumblings

Buffalo traveled across the country to lay the wood to the Seahawks

The Buffalo Bills blasted the Seattle Seahawks this past Sunday, winning 31-10 in a game where the Bills were in control from start to finish. After shutting down Seattle’s offense on the first drive, Buffalo’s offense took over, scoring on its first possession. The Bills never trailed, and while Seattle was able to put together some good drives, they continued to make critical mistakes that prevented this one from ever being in real doubt.

Our five players to watch were a bit of a mixed bag this week, but they all contributed in some fashion. Sure, I built in a few vague ones so I could cheat, but that’s one of the perks of writing the article. I can make up the rules as I go!

With that, here’s how our five players to watch at Seattle played on Sunday.


RB James Cook

After ceding the spotlight to rookie Ray Davis for a couple of games, it was back to Cook for the Bills this week. Seattle’s abysmal run defense was clearly a point of emphasis for Buffalo in practice, and the Bills just dominated the Seahawks up front from beginning to end. Cook carried the ball 17 times for 111 yards and two touchdowns, one of which involved him lowering the boom onto linebacker Ernest Jones IV. Fun fact: Jones IV became the first person since Herschel Walker in 1989 to play against the same team in two consecutive weeks after having been traded (Walker played against the Green Bay Packers while with the Dallas Cowboys and then again with the Minnesota Vikings after he was traded). Cook added three receptions for 22 yards in the game, but it was that angry run where Jones was the recipient of the hit that stuck with me after this game.

TE Dalton Kincaid

It wasn’t so much a day where quarterback Josh Allen hit his tight ends and backs, as he opted instead to feed his top two wideouts in Khalil Shakir (10 targets, nine catches, 107 yards) and Keon Coleman (seven targets, five catches, 70 yards, one touchdown). Kincaid saw seven targets of his own, though, catching five passes for 31 yards and a touchdown. The score came on a nifty route where he worked outside, saw Allen stepping up in the pocket, and then came back inside to give Allen an easier window in which to throw. I don’t think it was the intended route, but Kincaid made himself available for his quarterback, and then he delivered the score.

DE Casey Toohill

Defensive end Dawuane Smoot was able to play, and he started once again, so Toohill didn’t see many snaps. He made a big play, though, when he was able to deflect a screen pass that was then intercepted by defensive tackle Austin Johnson. That was Toohill’s one mention in the stat sheet. Smoot, for his part, had two quarterback hits and...