And on the seventh day of Bills training camp a host of veterans rested. A number of Buffalo’s veteran players were given a practice off Friday afternoon including ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
“The reasoning, for some of them they just need a day off,” said Jauron. “They’ve worked awfully hard this first week. Lee and Terrell run a lot of routes and we’ve been low at the receiver position and we got a couple of guys back for this practice so we thought it’d be good to give them a break. Aaron Schobel speaks for himself and Terrence McGee always works so hard. We’ve got a good idea of what these players can do for us.”
Outside of executing hand-offs in practice ![]()
“Trent’s got a lot of throws, really more than we planned for in this first week and we just want to make sure we monitor that,” said Jauron.
Jauron said Edwards is up around 200 throws already and they only want him to throw 450-600 passes through the course of camp.
As a result a lot of reserve players got a lot more reps in the practice setting including running back ![]()
“It’s good for guys like myself,” Rhodes said. “Obviously, this is my first year in the offense and I’m trying to soak up as much as I can with this offensive line – you know, the plays. And it’s also good for guys who might need a rest because training camp is a grueling time of year. It’s a good thing in both aspects of younger guys learning and guys who are just now getting here learning and guys who just need a little rest.”
“It was great,” said ![]()
Hawthorne activated![]()
“We wanted to ease him in to some degree, but watching him practice it didn’t appear to me that he repped any less than anyone else,” said Jauron. “He said he felt good. He’ll have to ice and see how he feels tomorrow. He’s been so automatic. He’s just always out there running. It was kind of a shock when he got hurt initially, so hopefully he’s fully back.”
Lineup changes
With a handful of starters out there was some lineup juggling. ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
On the offensive line rookies ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Highlights
There was a lot of red zone work including down tight inside the 15-yard line. ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Josh Reed had the catch of the day when he leaped from behind Reggie Corner, reached his arms around the cornerback and plucked the ball out of the air for a reception along the far sideline.
And ![]()
“He’s done a nice job,” said Jauron. “Really good attitude, came in and was clearly fit, which is a big part particularly when you’re looking for a receiver to come in and participate immediately. By being fit you know he’s serious about what he’s doing. He wants a chance, he wants a chance to play and get into somebody’s camp and he got that chance. He’s taken advantage of it so far.”
On the defensive side of things, ![]()
Ashton Youboty had a pair of pass breakups including one that was intended for Justin Jenkins outside.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Four-minute drill
Much the way the two-minute drill went for the defense on Thursday, so went the four-minute drill work on Friday.
The offense had the ball and the lead with four minutes remaining and the defense had a pair of timeouts. Naturally the offense is trying to run out the clock while the defense is trying to force a punt and get the ball back, while not letting too much time on the clock run off.
On all three series the defense got the stops they needed. There was very little room provided in the run game as the defensive line and linebackers effectively stacked the line of scrimmage.
Chris Ellis had a tackle for loss forcing a punt on the second series, while Kyle Williams had a stop for no gain that led to a third and long that the offense failed to convert.
“You definitely want to stop the clock when you can and you have to go three and out and you have to get off the field,” said Scott. “Use timeouts wisely, create no penalties and get off the field and we did a good job of it today.”
Scrimmage Saturday?
Usually after the first week of camp is complete, the coaches hold a scrimmage for most of the younger players to showcase their skills in more of a game like setting, especially with NFL officials on hand. At this point Dick Jauron and his staff are up in the air on it.
“We’ll talk about it, but our numbers are so low that we have to structure it,” said Jauron. “We did it last year and we structured it, so we’ll have a discussion about it later if we’re going to do it.”
Players are scheduled to hit the field at 10:20 am.

