In week 3 of the season, the Bills broke a 15-game losing streak that the team had accrued against the
New England Patriots that dated to opening day of the
2003 season; Buffalo defeated the Patriots, 34–31. In doing so, the 2011 Bills became the only team since before 1950 (when comprehensive statistical record keeping began) to win two consecutive games in which they trailed by at least 18 points; they overcame a 21–3 deficit to
Oakland in Week 2 and a 21–0 deficit to
New England in Week 3. Incidentally, Buffalo's loss to the
Cincinnati Bengals the following week was the Bills' first loss to Cincinnati since the
1988 AFC Championship game; that streak had been the longest winning streak by one team over another after Buffalo snapped their losing streak to New England. The Bills started the season with a 5–2 record, positioned to make the playoffs, before losing eight of their final nine games, eliminating them from the playoffs. Wide receiver
Stevie Johnson set a franchise mark as the only receiver in Bills history to record two consecutive 1,000-yard seasons. No other Bills receiver – including
Andre Reed,
James Lofton,
Eric Moulds or
Lee Evans – had done so. Buffalo's offense only surrendered 23 sacks all season, the fewest in the NFL.
Strong start, weak finish The Bills were looking to make the playoffs for the first time since 1999, and enjoyed a 3–0 start, including a 21-point comeback against the
New England Patriots in week 3. However, after a dominating Week Eight shutout win over
Washington in
Toronto (their only victory north of the border, as their Toronto Series was cancelled after the 2013 season), improving the team's record to 5-2, the remainder of the Bills' season was plagued by injuries to key starters. As a result, Buffalo suffered a seven-game losing streak to the
New York Jets (twice),
Dallas Cowboys,
Miami Dolphins (twice),
Tennessee Titans and
San Diego Chargers, with the Week 14 loss to San Diego eliminating the team from postseason contention. With the
Detroit Lions earning a playoff spot in Week 16, and the
Houston Texans winning the
AFC South in 2011, the Bills took sole possession of the
NFL's longest current playoff drought, at 12 and counting. The 2011 losing streak was eventually broken by defeating the
Denver Broncos on Christmas Eve, a game that was blacked out in
Western New York due to poor ticket sales. In the first seven games of the season (of which the Bills won five), the Bills had a +9 turnover differential (18 takeaways, 9 giveaways); from Week 9 until the end of the season, the Bills gave the ball away 21 times, with only 12 takeaways. Quarterback
Ryan Fitzpatrick started the season strongly, posting a 97.8
passer rating and a 14/7 touchdown-interception ratio through the first seven games; in the final nine games, Fitzpatrick threw ten touchdowns and 16 interceptions, with a 66.5 quarterback rating in that span. His 23 total interceptions were the most thrown by any quarterback in the league in 2011. He threw only 5 interceptions total in the Bills' six wins and 18 in their ten losses. Bills wide receiver
David Nelson stated that Fitzpatrick was injured by Redskins linebacker
London Fletcher in Week 8, the last win before the losing streak began. Said Nelson, "A lot of people don't know, but Fitz during the Washington game actually cracked a couple of ribs. So after that, he was playing hurt."
Key injuries Notable injuries included linebacker
Shawne Merriman, center
Eric Wood, cornerback
Terrence McGee, star
nose tackle Kyle Williams (as well as backup
Torell Troup) and star running back
Fred Jackson, all of whom were placed on
injured reserve to end their respective seasons. The Bills also lost two wide receivers that did not contribute significantly during the 2011 season,
Marcus Easley and
Roscoe Parrish, to IR (the former missing his second full season, the latter coming off a strong 2010 season) and two kickers, incumbent starter
Rian Lindell and replacement
Dave Rayner; the Bills were compelled to sign a third-string kicker,
Brandon Coutu, for the final game of the 2011 season against New England. Rookie
Marcell Dareus also admitted to playing much of the season with numerous injuries, but continued to stay on the field out of a personal obligation to the team. Starting quarterback
Ryan Fitzpatrick also sustained an undisclosed injury as stated above, but was never listed on the injury report (nor was the injury ever specified) and Fitzpatrick continued to play the rest of the season. ==Offseason==