Bills hammer humbled Vikings

Buffalo quarterback Josh Allen ran for two touchdowns and threw for another in the Bills’ 27-6 victory over the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday.
Buffalo quarterback Josh Allen ran for two touchdowns and threw for another in the Bills’ 27-6 victory over the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday.

BILLS 27, VIKINGS 6

MINNEAPOLIS -- Josh Allen played with the poise of a well-seasoned quarterback, hustling to give Buffalo an early lead in his first NFL road start.

Then, the Bills turned their defense loose on Kirk Cousins and delivered a stunningly lopsided victory over the Minnesota Vikings.

Allen accounted for three touchdowns, making Cousins look like the raw rookie as the Bills beat the Vikings 27-6 on Sunday as 16½-point underdogs.

"This is a tough place to play. That's a good Vikings defense," said Allen, who became the first Bills rookie quarterback to record at least one rushing and passing score in his first career road start. "It just solidifies the trust that I have in my teammates."

Cousins had three turnovers. He lost a fumble on a third-down sack inside Minnesota's 20-yard line on each of the first two possessions, and Buffalo turned those recoveries into 10 points. The Bills built a 27-0 lead by midway through the second quarter as the crowd at U.S. Bank Stadium, where the Vikings had won 10 of their last 11 games including the playoffs, began booing with increased intensity.

"Great defense, well-coached, great scheme," Cousins said. "They have legitimate players at a lot of different positions."

The Vikings (1-1-1) allowed the Bills (1-2) to become only the sixth 16-plus-point underdog winner in the NFL's last 81 point spreads of that size. According to ESPN research, the last such winner was Washington over Dallas on Dec. 3, 1995.

"I don't think we took them too lightly," Vikings Coach Mike Zimmer said. "I think they came out and kicked our butts."

After being outscored 75-9 over their first six quarters of the season, the Bills have enjoyed a 41-9 advantage over the last six periods.

"We really don't pay attention to what people think about us," linebacker Lorenzo Alexander said. "It's all about internal belief and confidence. If you listen to outside noise, we'd never win a game because nobody respects Buffalo at all. We have to continue to go out and earn that respect."

Allen certainly earned some with this performance.

The seventh overall pick in the draft out of Wyoming who took the job earlier than expected in relief of a struggling Nathan Peterman in the opener, completed 15 of 22 passes for 196 yards. That included a 26-yard touchdown pass to wide-open tight end Jason Croom.

Though Allen took three sacks and fumbled three times, the Bills were able to recover all of them. He put together a mini-highlight film with his feet while injured running back LeSean McCoy watched in a sweatsuit -- with a big smile -- from the sideline.

Allen dived to finish a 10-yard run by beating Anthony Barr to the pylon to finish the game's first drive. Later, on third-and-9, Allen hurdled over Barr to land past the first-down marker. He capped that possession with a 1-yard touchdown leap over the goal line on fourth down for a 24-0 lead early in the second quarter.

"He was decisive early, and that's important," Coach Sean McDermott said. "It looked like he played with a clear mind."

With running back Dalvin Cook (hamstring) inactive and the score so lopsided, the Vikings set a franchise record for fewest rushing attempts with six. Cousins, who took four sacks, finished 40 for 55 for 296 yards and a late touchdown to Kyle Rudolph.

Sports on 09/24/2018

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