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Posted: Tuesday September 23, 2008 12:49PM; Updated: Tuesday September 23, 2008 1:51PM
Don Banks Don Banks >
BANKS' SHOTS

Bills lead charge in new-look AFC

Story Highlights
  • Current division leaders are Bills, Ravens, Titans, Broncos
  • Bills getting it done by spreading the ball around on offense
  • Quarterback situations in Houston, Cleveland are ugly
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Marshawn Lynch has rushed for 218 yards and four touchdowns this season.
Marshawn Lynch has rushed for 218 yards and four touchdowns this season.
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No matter how long you stare at them, the AFC standings after three weeks just look a bit off kilter, don't they? Not upside down per se, but refreshingly out of order, and jumbled to the point where our customary quick glance can't take it all in.

It makes for some great early season buzz in the conference that has been owned by the Patriots and Colts the past five or six seasons. If the playoffs started today, the AFC postseason bracket would be a snap to figure out because there are only six teams with winning records in the conference.

The division winners would be Buffalo (3-0) in the AFC East, a division nobody but New England has won since 2002; Tennessee (3-0) in the AFC South, a division nobody but Indianapolis has won since 2002; upstart Baltimore (2-0) in the AFC North; and surprising Denver (3-0) in the AFC West, where San Diego has claimed three of the past four division titles. The two wild cards would be New England and Pittsburgh (both 2-1).

For strangeness, nothing compares to the sight of seeing the Bills at 3-0 for the first time in 16 years, the first team other than New England to be atop the division since Week 4 of 2005. Buffalo hasn't made the playoffs since 1999, the AFC's longest active drought, and hasn't won the division since 1995, the year the Bills got a league-leading 17½ sacks out of NFL Defensive Player of the Year Bryce Paup (yeah, that's how long ago it was).

There wasn't a thing pretty about the Bills' latest win -- that 24-23 last-second nail-biter over visiting Oakland -- but the resilience Buffalo displayed in mounting its second consecutive fourth-quarter comeback victory should serve Dick Jauron's team well later this season when the stakes are even higher. The Bills scored 17 points in the game's final eight minutes, overcoming a host of miscues, missed opportunities and bad field position in a game that previous Buffalo teams would have routinely found a way to lose. The week before, at steamy Jacksonville, it was a 10-point fourth-quarter rally that got the job done.

You can see this thing building week by week in Buffalo, and Tuesday morning I asked Bills offensive coordinator Turk Schonert if the victory over the Raiders might be the kind of game that convinces Buffalo it's both good enough to win even when it doesn't play it's best game, and not so far along that it can take any opponent for granted? Every young team on the rise needs to learn both of those lessons along the way.

"No doubt about that,'' said Schonert, the Bills' first-year coordinator. "It was one of those days on Sunday where nothing seemed to be going our way. There was a lot of adversity we had to overcome, but nobody panicked and they all stayed the course. Our confidence on offense is growing.''

Down 16-7 late in the third quarter, the Bills and starting quarterback Trent Edwards put that new and improved resilience on display for all to see, driving 96 yards (actually 106, thanks to a 10-yard penalty) on 17 plays, in a clock-grinding 8:55. Running back Marshawn Lynch's 3-yard touchdown run capped the marathon march, and even though Oakland re-established its nine-point lead later in the fourth quarter, Buffalo had assumed control of the game and was in the process of exerting its will on the fatigued Raiders' defense.

"That drive took a big effect on them,'' Schonert said of Oakland. "It took a lot out of them, because we had the ball for most of the second half. They only ran 17 snaps in the second half. Our defense was fresh, and it showed in the fourth quarter. The Raiders couldn't generate the same pass rush as they had in the first half, and we felt we were in better shape than they were.''

What you have to like about these Bills so far is they're very democratic in their offensive approach. Edwards, with his fourth fourth-quarter victory in 12 career starts, is rapidly proving why Buffalo felt the third-rounder out of Stanford was the steal of the 2007 draft, but he's far from the whole story. It's the running/receiving of Lynch and backup tailback Fred Jackson, the pass catching of Lee Evans, Josh Reed, Roscoe Parrish and tight end Robert Royal, and the play-calling of Schonert, who has imbued the Bills with a willingness to take chances and seize the momentum in a game.

"Everybody's getting involved for us, and the players are seeing that,'' said Schonert, whose offense ranks 9th overall in points, with 26 per game. "It's not just a one-man show any more, throwing to Lee. We're using everybody, and everybody's making plays. When that happens for a team, everybody gains confidence and starts believing.''

With this week's game at St. Louis, where the Rams are 0-3 and either at or near the bottom of the league in most major statistical categories, the unbeaten Bills will now take their act back on the road, where another potential lesson in the dangers of overconfidence awaits.

"You try and temper them a bit right now,'' Schonert said. "Obviously they haven't started this well around here in a long time, and with a young team, it can get a little giddy some times. A little caught up in the hype. But this team is pretty focused, pretty level, because Dick really pounds that into them. The Raiders game taught us that it wasn't the 2007 Raiders we were playing. They're improved. We're improved. That's why you have a new season every year. I think our guys get that and have bought into it.''

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