Sean McDermott had a mantra and a vision, and his relentless will to succeed was adopted by his players. The result was Buffalo’s first playoff berth since 1999.

Buffalo Bills Insider Chris Brown provides the details. Here is his report:

Team president Russ Brandon called it an anvil. The 17-year playoff hiatus for the Bills was a tangible, palpable thing that hung over the team, its fan base and the city. New head coach Sean McDermott, hired almost a year ago said he had a vision for this team, and a plan to make that vision a reality. But no one on the outside expected the vision to come to fruition in year one.

Amidst the Sunday evening celebration once the Bills had qualified for the postseason and ended their playoff absence, the kudos from players flowed about their head coach.

“You know he did an unbelievable job,” said Eric Wood. “A lot has been made of how he tried to mold this team and how he tried to bring us together. To go from tanking talk to breaking the drought feels pretty dang good.”

“First and foremost, he’s our leader,” Jordan Poyer told Buffalobills.com. “He’s a great coach. He’s one of the best coaches I’ve ever been around. Very smart, defensive-minded guy. You put that together with the morals of our team. Family, sticking together, playing together, playing for each other.”

Since 2001 six head coaches were hired by the Bills franchise prior to McDermott being named to the post. A couple came close, but none could push the Bills over the playoff hump.

McDermott knew he wasn’t part of the prior 17 years in which the playoffs were not in the cards for the Bills, but he embraced the cause and didn’t flinch in facing it head on.

The mantra was ‘Playoff Caliber’ and the vision to accomplish that was ‘Respect the Process.’ But it was built with an approach that focused on creating a family type atmosphere in the locker room.

“I think it was his whole delivery and his whole demeanor,” said Jerry Hughes. “The way he sets up a team meeting every morning. Our focus is really on family. He allowed everyone to really grow closer with one another. I found out things about my locker mates that I didn’t know before. We made it more than just football. That really hit home for us.

“It allows you to go out and sacrifice everything. You can sacrifice something for the guy next to you because you know he’s going to do the same. Coach really instilled that in us.”

But more than anything else it was McDermott’s unyielding will to succeed that helped to push his players to strive to do the same.

“It was his determination as well as his message,” said Hughes. “Just how he was able to come in during the offseason and breaking everything down and making sure everyone was on the same page. Understanding how we need to communicate not only as a team, but as a unit especially on the defensive side.

“Everything is different. Just the way he prepares us throughout the week. Just the message and trusting what he’s instilling in us and what he’s trying to start here. Everyone had written us off and told us we were tanking and couldn’t be the team we are today. He told us that’s just outside noise. I feel like we all believe in him and it’s a great feeling for everybody to buy in and believe in our coach.”

And that belief in their coach carried through to a belief in themselves as a team, even when things took a bad turn midseason.

“He made sure that guys stayed together and stayed focused and continued to trust that process,” said Lorenzo Alexander. “Obviously through the season there have been a lot of ebbs and flows. You think about that three-game losing streak and I’ve been on teams that could’ve easily fell apart. Keeping guys together along with the players leadership and not really dwelling in the negativity that players and organizations can fall victim to. That was key for us.”

Players admitted in that jubilant locker room Sunday night, that even during the low points of the season their belief persisted.

“There’s not a player in this locker room who stopped believing—we believed in each other,” said Hyde. “I came out in April and we had one common goal and we did it.”

“I believed we could make the playoffs. When I came in here, that’s what I expected,” said Poyer. “Coach preaches playoff caliber all the time. All year we’ve fought adversity, through things that didn’t go right. So just the whole mindset that he’s brought to this organization has been great. It’s been nothing but a great, great coach for us. We’re here now and we have a chance to make a run.”

McCoy x-rays negative

The Bills got a bit of good news concerning LeSean McCoy’s injured ankle suffered in Sunday’s win over the Dolphins.

X-rays were negative on his ankle so there is no break. Head coach Sean McDermott is hopeful his feature back can recover in time for Sunday’s playoff game against the Jaguars.

“He’s going to have a chance we’ll see,” said McDermott. “We’re continuing to go through the medical evaluation on that. We got some good news this morning. So, we’ll continue to monitor that as we go forward.”

Naturally, having McCoy in the lineup would improve Buffalo’s chances of pulling off the upset.

“That’d be big. He’s obviously a big part of what we do,” McDermott said. “That said I loved what we saw yesterday which is true of our entire team. You see 63 guys prepare all season long. I think that was on display against the Dolphins when (Marcus) Murphy stepped up and Mike Tolbert did as well.”

McDermott admitted that he and GM Brandon Beane have discussed potential contingency plans if McCoy’s ankle does not recover in time. Making a roster addition to the running back position has not been ruled out.

“Those conversations are ongoing with Brandon (Beane). We talk a lot about… we’ve already discussed some of that and will continue to discuss it along with other areas,” McDermott said.

Valuable experience ahead

For a Bills team that has a good number of players short on playoff experience and meaningful football at the end of the regular season, coach McDermott sees an enormous benefit for his team.

“That’s huge. I was asked last week what it would mean to make the playoffs and I said it would be another step in our development as a football team, as an organization,” said McDermott. “The experience that we got this last week of playing in that type of game, a must win game and also the experience we’re getting now going into this week, that a lot of our young players and players who have been around the NFL, but haven’t been in this situation. There have been some leadership challenges within that.

“There’s also a mindset challenge that we have to get buckled back in after (Monday) and hit the reset button so we can focus on the task at hand. But there’s so much valuable experience our players can learn and take from the last two weeks here. And we’ll see how far we go.”

Thanking the Bengals

Bills fans were grateful to the Cincinnati Bengals for their improbable comeback win over the Baltimore Ravens to help Buffalo qualify for the postseason. Coach McDermott received a call from one of his coaching colleagues in Cincinnati not long after the Bengals game with Baltimore was over.

“I was on the phone with their defensive coordinator shortly after the game, Paul Guenther. He actually called me to congratulate us, which was a class move and I thanked him,” McDermott said. “Then since that time I’ve reached out to a couple of their coaches, Marvin (Lewis) and Bill Lazor their offensive coordinator.

“I wanted to say first congratulations to them and then also show our appreciation.

“Hope comes in a lot of ways. For us it came in the last week of the season. For other teams, it comes before the last week of the season. We were thankful to get it, no doubt about it.”

Bills sign WR

The Bills brought back a wide receiver whose promising preseason was cut short by injury. Buffalo signed WR Rod Streater to a reserve/future contract Monday.

The reserve/future designation means Streater can begin training with the club at the start of the team’s offseason conditioning program this coming April. He is not eligible for any postseason games this season.

Streater was signed this past offseason and put together a strong training camp as he moved his way into a top four role in Buffalo’s receiving corps. His preseason however, was cut short in the preseason game at Philadelphia when he suffered a bad toe injury.

He never returned to the playing field and Streater and the team reached an injury settlement back in early September.

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