Английская Википедия:2005 Buffalo Bills season

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox NFL season

The 2005 Buffalo Bills season was their 46th in the National Football League. The team was unable to improve upon their previous season’s output of 9–7, instead finishing 5–11.[1] This was the sixth consecutive season in which the team missed the playoffs.

Mike Mularkey coached the Bills for his second year.[2]

Offseason

Drew Bledsoe, who had been the team’s quarterback from 2002–2004, was released by the Bills after the 2004 season to make way for backup quarterback J. P. Losman. It was the second time that Bledsoe’s team had let him go for a younger quarterback. When Bledsoe was later signed by the Dallas Cowboys, he expressed bitterness with the Bills for the move, stating "I can't wait to go home and dress my kids in little stars and get rid of the other team’s [Buffalo’s] stuff."[3]

The Bills failed to re-sign defensive tackle Pat Williams, who would sign with the Minnesota Vikings for the 2005 season. The Bills also lost starting offensive tackle Jonas Jennings to the San Francisco 49ers.

Draft

Шаблон:Main

Buffalo had six draft picks in the 2005 draft. The Bills traded their only first round pick in 2005 to the Dallas Cowboys to move up in the previous draft, a pick they used to draft J. P. Losman.

Шаблон:NFL team draft start Шаблон:NFL team draft entry Шаблон:NFL team draft entry Шаблон:NFL team draft entry Шаблон:NFL team draft entry Шаблон:NFL team draft entry Шаблон:NFL team draft entry Шаблон:NFL team draft end

[4]

Undrafted free agents

2005 Undrafted Free Agents of note
Player Position College
Brad Cieslak Tight end Northern Illinois
Liam Ezekiel Linebacker Northeastern
Jim Leonhard Safety Wisconsin

Personnel

Staff

Шаблон:NFL final staff

Roster

Шаблон:NFL final roster

Schedule

In addition to their regular games with AFC East rivals, the Bills played teams from the AFC West and NFC South as per the schedule rotation, and also played intraconference games against the Bengals and the Texans based on divisional positions from 2004.

Week Date Opponent Result Record Attendance
1 September 11, 2005 Houston Texans W 22–7 1–0 71,781
2 September 18, 2005 at Tampa Bay Buccaneers L 3–19 1–1 64,777
3 September 25, 2005 Atlanta Falcons L 16–24 1–2 72,032
4 October 2, 2005 at New Orleans Saints (San Antonio) L 7–19 1–3 58,688
5 October 9, 2005 Miami Dolphins W 20–14 2–3 72,160
6 October 16, 2005 New York Jets W 27–17 3–3 72,045
7 October 23, 2005 at Oakland Raiders L 17–38 3–4 42,779
8 October 30, 2005 at New England Patriots L 16–21 3–5 68,756
9 Bye
10 November 13, 2005 Kansas City Chiefs W 14–3 4–5 72,093
11 November 20, 2005 at San Diego Chargers L 10–48 4–6 65,602
12 November 27, 2005 Carolina Panthers L 9–13 4–7 71,440
13 December 4, 2005 at Miami Dolphins L 23–24 4–8 72,051
14 December 11, 2005 New England Patriots L 7–35 4–9 71,810
15 December 17, 2005 Denver Broncos L 17–28 4–10 71,887
16 December 24, 2005 at Cincinnati Bengals W 37–27 5–10 65,485
17 January 1, 2006 at New York Jets L 26–30 5–11 76,822

Standings

Шаблон:2005 AFC East standings

Season summary

Week 1 vs Texans

Шаблон:Americanfootballbox

  • The Bills wore throwback AFL "standing buffalo" helmets
  • J.P. Losman 1st career start

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Buffalo Bills Шаблон:Buffalo Bills seasons Шаблон:2005 NFL season by team

Шаблон:Americanfootball-season-stub

  1. 2005 Buffalo Bills
  2. Second of two total years; Mularkey would resign from the Bills after the 2005 season
  3. N.F.L. ROUNDUP; Bledsoe Rejoins Parcells, With Eye on Starting Job at The New York Times
  4. The Football Database. Retrieved 2017-Jan-01.