BILLS PLAYERS DON’T WANT TORONTO

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. – Bills receiver Stevie Johnson has a bone to pick with the NFL schedule maker.

With temperatures dropping and snow piling up outside the team’s facility, Johnson wondered who had the bright idea to have Buffalo (4-7) “host” the warm-weather Atlanta Falcons (2-9) inside the climate-controlled confines of Toronto’s Rogers Centre on Sunday.

“Yeah, they must have fixed the schedule or something out there in Atlanta. It’s supposed to be out here at the Ralph,” Johnson said Wednesday, referring to the Bills home, Ralph Wilson Stadium. “Who put the schedule together to have them come to Toronto?”

Johnson and his teammates are finding themselves at a sudden disadvantage as Buffalo prepares for its annual trip north of the border to resume the “Bills in Toronto” series, which was first established in 2008 and renewed for another five years in January.

The Falcons have been eliminated from playoff contention. The Bills come off their bye week still on the fringes of the AFC post-season hunt. They’re 3-3 at Orchard Park, including a decisive 37-14 win over the New York Jets on Nov. 17.

“It is what it is,” Johnson said. “We can’t really make excuses for it. We can’t complain about it. We just got to go out and try to handle business.”

An added wrinkle to the game is news that Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment – the company that controls the Leafs and NBA Raptors – has aligned itself with New Jersey rocker Jon Bon Jovi to make a push to bring an NFL franchise to Toronto. One logical option would be the Bills.

In establishing the series, the Bills turned to their neighbours to the north in a bid to expand their region.

The deal provides the Bills a much-needed boost to their small-market franchise’s revenue base by essentially leasing out a home game to Canadian communications giant, Rogers Communications.

What the Bills lose, however, is a distinct late-season edge they would normally get playing in the cold and blustery conditions in Buffalo.

“Yeah, we’d love to get them outside in the elements. That would definitely be an advantage,” centre Eric Wood said. “But this is a deal we’ve got to embrace. It’s important to our franchise. You can’t go up there with a bad attitude.”

Like it or not, the Bills are resigned to knowing they have no choice when it comes to making the two-hour trek to Canada’s largest city and financial capital.

It’s a metropolis of more than 5 million residents, where the NHL’s Maple Leafs dominate the sports pages, and a place better known these days for Mayor Rob Ford’s various attention-grabbing troubles.

Wood drew headlines of his own last year after Buffalo’s 50-17 loss to Seattle at Toronto.

Unable to make the trip because of a sprained right knee, Wood grew frustrated watching on TV and seeing the lack of support the Bills got from the crowd.

He called it “a joke,” and added: “Those non-Bills fans that go to the game are just cheering for plays as opposed to cheering for a team. And that kills you.”

First-year Bills coach Doug Marrone said it’s up to his team to generate an edge.

“In order to create that advantage, you have to go up there and play well,” Marrone said. “I think we do have some fans in Toronto. And I think if we play well, we’ll create more fans.”

(Canadian Press)

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Anonymous
Anonymous
11 years ago

The greedy hands on the controls of this caboose are getting exactly what they deserve.

Anonymous
Anonymous
11 years ago

This is stupid beyond belief. You can't gauge support bringing in a neutral team to a neutral sight. There are curiosity fans and some of those who think they only deserve NFL. Much like the Blue Jays and Raptors, the fan support would dwindle in no time at all. If your not winning Super Bowls nobody will warm up to the team.

Rogers is doing this to establish support for a franchise that will fail. The Bills are doing this to make the money it needs to survive. Both are losing situations.

Anonymous
Anonymous
11 years ago

If I was a Bills fan…well, I wouldn't be. I'm sick of everything Toronto, every thing that hints of Toronto.

Anonymous
Anonymous
11 years ago

Rogers/MLSE should stop wasting their money on this NFL pipe dream. They're Canadian groups, why don't they help a Canadian franchise in the Argos. I know…that's an even bigger pipe dream.

Anonymous
Anonymous
11 years ago

The only true fans of the NFL in Toronto are the Toronto Media,a handful of diehard NFL fans and Mr Rogers.They have been trying to create the illusion that Toronto would support an NFL relocation franchise.
Of course the Toronto NFL fans cheer plays.They have no home team. Most cheer for other teams not the lowly Bills plus they are the least knowledgeable football fans on the planet.