Sold out. That could technically describe the house at Toronto’s Rogers Centre on Sunday. Although there were patches of fans disguised as empty seats, all the tickets had been officially accounted for.
But that’s not the definition of “sold out” we need to talk about here. What we’re discussing is how the Buffalo Bills organization sold out its fans, its players and, in a way at least, the National Football League.
Sunday was the first regular season game of the Bills’ five-year Toronto series played north of the border. It was played indoors, in a retractable dome that was closed because it was a little cold and windy that day. While the Bills had said they were happy to be out of the elements, their opponents, the Miami (as in Florida) Dolphins were absolutely thrilled.
Now this was supposed to be a home game for Buffalo. Home games in December in Buffalo are tests of will and endurance. I’ve stood on the photographers’ deck at Ralph Wilson Stadium in mid-December with the temperature in the mid-teens and the winds blowing in the mid-30 mph range while 17,000 hardy fans watched the Bills take on the Baltimore (yes, Baltimore) Colts. Pleasant? No. It was more than that. It was us.
What you witnessed on television Sunday evening was not Bills winter ball. It was some weird event, similar to the game earlier in the season in St. Louis at their dome there. Only this was supposed to be a home game. It wasn’t.
The normally reserved Canadian fans lived up to their billing. There was little cheering when the Bills took the field. There was only tepid enthusiasm for the home team. Even the Bills players said the usual 12th Man, the fans who cheer the team on, was AWOL on Sunday. While that might not have made a difference in their terrible performance on the field, it did nothing for what should have been the team’s home field advantage.
And, adding insult to injury, most accounts said that there appeared to be at least as many Dolphins fans as there were Bills backers. That borders on blasphemy at, again, what was supposed to be a home game.
Gazette Sports Editor Tim Schmitt observed that Bills fever was something less that contagious in the lead-up to what was supposed to be a historic contest. Tim said, “The front page of the Toronto Star’s sports section did have a story about the Bills, but it was a tiny strip on the bottom of the front page.” And it focused on a marginal player from Canada being put on the Bills’ roster. The big story: The National Hockey League’s Toronto Maple Leafs losing Saturday night to the Washington Capitals. Hockey will always be king in Canada.
But the Bills and the NFL got what they wanted: Cash. The folks in Toronto give the Bills more than $9 million per game to play there. That’s said to be about two or three times what the team rakes in for a game played in Orchard Park.
So for all that silver and gold, the Bills and the league got a bland game with no character witnessed by fans who didn’t particularly care about the home team and added nothing to the team’s morale or performance.
To someone who has followed this team for its entire existence, listening to its first exhibition game in 1960 on a tinny transistor radio to witnessing Sunday’s travesty on television, it’s as if the soul has been sucked out of the Buffalo Bills. Granted, it’s hard to tell how much the team’s poor play on the field had to do with the disillusionment. But a listless crowd, a terrible team and the knowledge that it’s all driven by the dollar (Cdn.) are nearly enough to discourage the best of Bills fans from enjoying the team.
While Sunday might have been a corporate and financial success for the Bills and for the NFL, it might have been an even bigger loss: The loss of the emotion that ties us to the team. And if that continues, that would be a loss for the team, the league and for those of us whose lives have been intertwined with the Bills for nearly half a century.
Dick Lucinski is the managing editor of the Niagara Gazette. His columns appear on Wednesday and Sunday.
Columns
LUCINSKI: Toronto game was a sell out
- Columns
-
-
HAMILTON: The SPCA and the pineapple upside-down pie
It is said that, as free Americans, we often get the things for which we ask; we also often get exactly what we deserve. Sometimes it works out to our good, and sometimes it doesn’t.
-
GLYNN: Slim chance now for a real thick ice bridge
If you’re not convinced about the unpredictability of Western New York weather, consider that this area was experiencing temperatures in the mid-40s on the 100th anniversary of the ice bridge tragedy in the gorge.
-
BRADBERRY: Is Black History Month Still Relevant?
I am uncomfortably recovering and slowly recuperating from a relatively minor, but medically necessary procedure which has kept me out of circulation, out of touch and essentially on my back for a lot longer than I have personally believed was justifiable; however, in this case my opinion matters not; the doctor’s diagnosis and promising prognosis trumped mine, so here I lay almost completely befuddled, nearly unable to pen a clear sentence.
-
CONFER: Time to end the NFL’s blackout rule
Long ago, in a much simpler time, ticket sales accounted for the majority of revenues for professional football teams.
-
CITY BEAT: Stuck on traffic
Sometimes I feel like the traffic signal reporter in Niagara Falls.
Traffic signals have been making a lot of news around here lately. There’s the whole flap about what to do to improve public safety near the Como Restaurant in the 2200 block of Pine Avenue. -
HIGGS: Discussing crime and punishment in the Falls
Have to take a detour off Pine Avenue in 1956 this week to report on an event held by the Niagara Falls Block Club Council for its member clubs and other interested citizens.
-
GLYNN: Hotel Niagara plan exciting for the Falls
It all sounds like a re-run of a TV program you’ve seen a dozen times. This time, however, there is every reason to believe that the landmark Hotel Niagara on Rainbow Boulevard will be restored to the splendid atmosphere that guests enjoyed for decades.
-
HAMILTON: BOE and kids, or the SPCA dogs?
There is example after example of otherwise qualified Niagara Falls’ board of education members and staffers lending their time and efforts to organizations outside of the school district’s core business.
-
GLYNN: Trust in SPCA shelter must be restored
Stories about the operations at the Niagara SPCA shelter shape the image of sickening and disgusting treatment of animals.
-
BRADBERRY: Old medicine and new challenges
Having suffered and recovered from my fair share of illnesses and injuries over the years, I have come to believe that sometimes the treatment and the cure of my condition can seem to be far worse than whatever I may think is ailing me at the moment.
- More Columns Headlines
-






