MVike28
right around the ACC
Mario Williams casts doubt on his future with Bills after loss
LANDOVER, Md. -- With the Buffalo Bills' defensive struggles this season making the possibility of releasing defensive end Mario Williams during the offseason more likely, Williams on Sunday seemed to rule out the chance of him taking a pay cut from his $19.9 million salary cap number next season, expressing frustration with coach Rex Ryan's defensive scheme.
With the Bills eliminated from the playoffs for a 16th consecutive year, Rex Ryan faces a make-or-break offseason as pressure from ownership, players and fans is likely to mount.
"If this is the turnout of our defense, how does [a pay cut] even sound right?" Williams said in the locker room after the Bills' 35-25 loss to theWashington Redskins. "Like I said, you can change. People are scared of change and so forth. I'm all for it, because at the end of the day, if it works, so be it. Because I don't need to sit here and say: 'Yeah, I wish Jerry [Hughes] had 15 sacks. I wish Marcell [Dareus] had 15 sacks. I wish I had 15 sacks,' across the board.
"If we win and we're 10-4, or whatever, hey, hats off. But if it don't work, yeah, there needs to be a different change. So if one person is singled out as that needs to be done, then so be it. That's not my decision."
Bills coach Rex Ryan told his players after Sunday's loss, which eliminated Buffalo from playoff contention for the 16th consecutive season, that there will be "drastic changes" unless his 6-8 team gets better, adding that players and coaches "have two games to prove that we belong here."
"This is the NFL," Ryan said. "It happens. Everybody's evaluated in this league. You can read between the lines."
Asked if he felt he had something to prove over the final two games of this season to Bills owners Terry and Kim Pegula, Ryan said: "Well, no. Well, I guess, yes," he said. "Everyone has to."
Ryan's defense has come under fire this season from Williams and other players who have questioned the complexity of adjustments at the line of scrimmage and the lack of a consistent pass rush.
"You saw the game, and you're trying to switch personnel as they're coming out of the huddle," Williams said after the game. "I don't know who in the world is calling, saying what personnel they're in or whatever, or how is that confusing. But apparently it is.
"My mindset is, if you're an attack defense, you don't let anything else dictate what you do. We're gonna put who we're gonna put out there, and then we're gonna execute and make plays with the guys out there. I don't care -- I don't need to wait on you to make a decision. And whoever seems to be missing personnel, so that we're actually trying to switch. So we're trying to switch men. It's not like we're trying to switch plays. We're trying to switch men as they're coming out of the huddle.
After allowing the NFL's fourth-fewest yards and tallying an NFL-best 54 sacks last season under defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz, the Bills entered Sunday ranked 19th in yards allowed this season and 30th in sacks.

LANDOVER, Md. -- With the Buffalo Bills' defensive struggles this season making the possibility of releasing defensive end Mario Williams during the offseason more likely, Williams on Sunday seemed to rule out the chance of him taking a pay cut from his $19.9 million salary cap number next season, expressing frustration with coach Rex Ryan's defensive scheme.
With the Bills eliminated from the playoffs for a 16th consecutive year, Rex Ryan faces a make-or-break offseason as pressure from ownership, players and fans is likely to mount.
"If this is the turnout of our defense, how does [a pay cut] even sound right?" Williams said in the locker room after the Bills' 35-25 loss to theWashington Redskins. "Like I said, you can change. People are scared of change and so forth. I'm all for it, because at the end of the day, if it works, so be it. Because I don't need to sit here and say: 'Yeah, I wish Jerry [Hughes] had 15 sacks. I wish Marcell [Dareus] had 15 sacks. I wish I had 15 sacks,' across the board.
"If we win and we're 10-4, or whatever, hey, hats off. But if it don't work, yeah, there needs to be a different change. So if one person is singled out as that needs to be done, then so be it. That's not my decision."
Bills coach Rex Ryan told his players after Sunday's loss, which eliminated Buffalo from playoff contention for the 16th consecutive season, that there will be "drastic changes" unless his 6-8 team gets better, adding that players and coaches "have two games to prove that we belong here."
"This is the NFL," Ryan said. "It happens. Everybody's evaluated in this league. You can read between the lines."
Asked if he felt he had something to prove over the final two games of this season to Bills owners Terry and Kim Pegula, Ryan said: "Well, no. Well, I guess, yes," he said. "Everyone has to."
Ryan's defense has come under fire this season from Williams and other players who have questioned the complexity of adjustments at the line of scrimmage and the lack of a consistent pass rush.
"You saw the game, and you're trying to switch personnel as they're coming out of the huddle," Williams said after the game. "I don't know who in the world is calling, saying what personnel they're in or whatever, or how is that confusing. But apparently it is.
"My mindset is, if you're an attack defense, you don't let anything else dictate what you do. We're gonna put who we're gonna put out there, and then we're gonna execute and make plays with the guys out there. I don't care -- I don't need to wait on you to make a decision. And whoever seems to be missing personnel, so that we're actually trying to switch. So we're trying to switch men. It's not like we're trying to switch plays. We're trying to switch men as they're coming out of the huddle.
After allowing the NFL's fourth-fewest yards and tallying an NFL-best 54 sacks last season under defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz, the Bills entered Sunday ranked 19th in yards allowed this season and 30th in sacks.
