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Bills Cash In, Dolphins Crash Out: Thursday Night Gut Check

Hunter Tierney 's profile
By Hunter Tierney
September 20, 2025
Bills Cash In, Dolphins Crash Out: Thursday Night Gut Check

Heading into Thursday night, this looked like it might be one of those routine games — big favorite at home, underdog trying not to get run out of the building, fans maybe checking out early. But it didn’t play out that way. Every time Buffalo jumped ahead, Miami kept swinging back, and suddenly we had ourselves a one‑score scrap that didn’t tilt until the fourth quarter. The Bills came out of it sitting pretty at 3–0, the Dolphins are still searching at 0–3, and the whole thing basically boiled down to two plays: a roughing‑the‑punter flag that gave Buffalo new life, and a Terrel Bernard pick that slammed the door.

Not a Blowout, Not a Fluke — Just a Grown‑Up Win

From the opening snap you could see the game plans laid out. The Bills wanted to keep Josh Allen upright, lean on James Cook and the short stuff, and avoid the goofy turnovers. Miami stuck to a steady script with Tua — quick throws, stay on schedule, take the occasional shot without getting greedy. For three quarters, both those plans worked, which is why the fourth quarter ended up being so dramatic.

Dolphins Punch First

Miami opened with a 10‑play, 47‑yard march, finishing with rookie RB Ollie Gordon II punching in his first NFL touchdown. The drive had the kind of balance Miami’s been searching for — some under‑center, some motion, a few patient inside runs to keep the Bills from flying upfield. It quieted things for a minute.

Buffalo didn’t blink. Allen hit Dalton Kincaid for a 20‑yard score to tie it, and the drive was exactly what the Bills wanted to be: quick, rhythmic, take what’s there, and toss in a well‑timed sprint‑out or scramble when the chains need a nudge. Later in the second, Allen flipped a little shovel to rookie TE Jackson Hawes for his first career TD — and, not for nothing, the throw that doubled as Allen’s 200th career regular‑season touchdown pass.

A Halftime Jolt

Right when it felt like Buffalo might ease into the break up seven, Miami went 16 plays in 5:55 and snuck in a Tua‑to‑Jaylen Waddle touchdown with eight seconds left to make it 14–14. That’s an identity drive: multiple third‑down conversions, no panic, and the sense that, hey, if Miami can stack a few of these, this might get weird.

Out of halftime, the Bills put the ball in James Cook’s hands and found daylight. The offensive line won double teams inside and Buffalo leaned into those to let Cook choose the crease. He capped it with a 2‑yard TD for 21–14. Not fancy, just effective.

Here Comes the Fourth

Sep 14, 2025; Miami Gardens, Florida, USA; Miami Dolphins defensive tackle Zach Sieler (92) looks on after game against the New England Patriots at Hard Rock Stadium.
Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

Miami answered with Tyreek Hill from five yards out early in the fourth to tie it, and for a little while it felt like we were settling in for one of those back‑and‑forth finishes. The stadium was tense, every third down felt like the biggest play of the night, and both sidelines knew the next mistake could tilt the whole thing. Buffalo was set up to punt, giving Miami the ball back, and you could almost sense the Dolphins starting to believe they might steal one.

And then, boom — Miami shot themselves in the foot. First came the roughing‑the‑punter penalty that wiped away a crucial stop, basically handing the Bills a touchdown drive on a silver platter. A few minutes later, when Miami still had life, Tua tried to force a throw into traffic near the red zone and Terrel Bernard made him pay with the interception. In the span of two possessions, Miami went from having a real shot at pulling the upset to watching Buffalo slam the door. That’s how fast a winnable fourth quarter turned into a long flight home at 0–3.

The Two Snaps That Flipped It

1) Roughing the Punter

Fourth‑and‑7, tie game, just over 10 minutes left. Buffalo lines up to punt from midfield. The Dolphins get the stop they need… and Zach Sieler takes the punter off his plant leg. Fifteen yards. Automatic first down. You could feel the air leave Miami’s sideline. Situational football is cruel that way — play perfect for 59 snaps, then step over the line once and hand the whole thing back.

Five plays later, Allen found Khalil Shakir on a 15‑yard catch‑and‑run, and it was 28–21 Bills with 7:17 left. You don’t need a win‑probability chart to understand what that does to a team's chances.

2) Bernard Reads It, Game Over

Miami still had a shot. They moved to the Buffalo 21 with just over three minutes left, and it felt like they were finally putting something together. Then Tua let it all slip away with one of the worst throws you’ll see in that spot. First‑and‑10, plenty of time, no reason to force it — and he fired a ball straight into Terrel Bernard’s lap. Bernard didn’t have to make a superhuman play; he just read the route, sat on it, and waited for Tua to gift wrap it.

A few snaps after that, Matt Prater drilled a 48‑yarder to make it a two‑score game inside the final minute.

Looking Ahead

Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen warms up before the Buffalo Bills divisional game against the Baltimore Ravens at Highmark Stadium in Orchard Park on Jan. 19, 2025.
Credit: Credit: Tina MacIntyre-Yee/Democrat and Chronicle / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The Bills are back home for the Saints in Week 4, and it sets up nicely for them. What worked against Miami should only look better against New Orleans. Lean on James Cook to keep the offense on schedule, let Allen take the easy stuff until a window opens, and trust a defense that doesn’t need to pitch a shutout to win the game. They bend, sure, but they’ve made a habit of stealing one possession a night that flips the script.

Add in the fact that Allen’s playing as well as he ever has, and you can see this team is just as comfortable grinding out a win as they are dropping 40. If you’re a Bills fan, that balance should feel pretty good heading into Week 4.

The Dolphins have a Monday nighter vs. the Jets staring them in the face, and it’s a gut‑check game. At 0–3, nobody wants to hear about progress or flashes — the locker room needs a win. That means cleaning up the dumb mistakes, especially on special teams, and Tua cutting out the back‑breaking throw that wipes away three quarters of solid football.

The good news? They’ve shown they can convert on third down and actually run the ball with some consistency. The challenge is putting it all together without unraveling late. Against the Jets’ pass rush and secondary, Miami will have to prove they can hit an explosive or two when the game tightens. It’s not quite season‑over territory yet, but this Monday night will tell us a lot about whether this group can stop a spiral before it gets ugly.

Bills Hold Their Nerve, Dolphins Lose Theirs

Buffalo didn’t bury Miami so much as they refused to give the game back. That’s what mature contenders do on weird, short‑week games. They win the boring downs, cash in the gift, and make the defining defensive play.

Miami was in this, and that's going to hit fans the hardest. Even if no one wants to say “moral victory,” you can’t keep ace‑ing the hard stuff and failing the pop quiz.

On a night that asked for poise more than pyrotechnics, Buffalo had it when it counted.

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