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USA Today Sports Media Group
USA Today Sports Media Group
Sport
Robert Zeglinski

The Bills’ firing of OC Ken Dorsey had NFL fans questioning who was really the team’s problem

After going completely haywire in an epic loss to the Denver Broncos on Monday night, someone simply had to fall on the sword for the Buffalo Bills. Head coach Sean McDermott himself said he needed time to “evaluate” things after the emotional defeat. It seems he didn’t need that much time at all.

On Tuesday, the Bills officially fired now-former offensive coordinator Ken Dorsey. The assistant had been at the helm of Buffalo’s offense since the start of the 2022 season, being tasked with helping to keep Josh Allen playing at an elite level. He won one playoff game with Buffalo before it bowed out of last year’s Divisional Round. Former LSU offensive coordinator Joe Brady will serve in Dorsey’s position in the interim. (Note: some Bills defenders seemingly got what they wished for.)

With Buffalo meandering about to a disappointing 5-5 start, it now seems like Dorsey’s being scapegoated for a team with clearly deeper issues:

To be clear, it’s not as if the Buffalo offense was living up to expectations. Yes, per RBDSM.com, the Bills are third in expected points added per play. And yes, they are eighth in scoring (26.2 points per game). But Josh Allen and Co. meander about way too much on a consistent basis to add more weight to those numbers. Too often, Dorsey’s Bills would screw around for 35-45 minutes before turning on the jets in a rally that was too little too late. That is not a mix conducive to contending for a Super Bowl. Not to mention that Allen is a bit turnover-prone, but that’s the price you pay with a gunslinger like him.

All of that said, firing Dorsey now screams of wanting to throw red meat to a frustrated fanbase that thought the Bills finally turned the corner. His coordination was undoubtedly an issue, but he was more a symptom of a larger problem likely still eating away at this organization. Dorsey’s not the one calling back-to-back Cover-0 blitzes on defense with the game on the line, for example (cough, cough, McDermott). He’s also not the one failing to count 12 players on defense for a late-game substitution that gifted the other team a win. I’m just saying: McDermott does have a precedent for blaming coordinators (sorry, Leslie Frazier) after tough losses.

Maybe changing out Dorsey for Brady will work out, and this Bills offense launches into the stratosphere during a scorching-hot stretch run. Who knows? It’s certainly possible. But I have a hunch that for the NFL’s most disappointing team, jettisoning the offensive coordinator was much more about making sure this sinking Buffalo ship didn’t take on more water.

NFL fans thought the Bills were brazenly scapegoating Dorsey for the team's problems

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