Jessica Pegula’s on-cam “that was a catch” protest at the Australian Open became the final domino in Terry Pegula’s decision to fire the NFL’s fifth-winningest active coach—proof the owner’s daughter already showed the family how to swap good for great.
The Buffalo Bills didn’t wait for the flight home. Less than 24 hours after a 33-30 overtime loss to the Denver Broncos—a game sealed by a fourth-quarter interception so controversial it drew a public scolding from Jessica Pegula in Melbourne—the franchise fired the winningest coach in its modern history, Sean McDermott.
The move drops a 98-50 regular-season record, five AFC East titles and two conference-title-game trips into the trash—numbers every other owner would bronze. Instead, Terry Pegula copied the playbook his daughter used seven months earlier on the WTA tour: when “pretty good” stops moving the needle, burn the bridge and find a new voice.
From Melbourne to McDermott: the 24-hour chain reaction
On Sunday at the Australian Open, Jessica Pegula defeated Moyuka Uchijima, then walked straight to the broadcast camera and scribbled “that was a catch”—a viral middle finger to NFL officiating that cost her family’s football team possession in Broncos territory with 1:47 left in overtime.
Monday morning, Terry Pegula returned the volley—issuing a 38-word statement that ended a nine-year partnership with the coach who delivered eight playoff trips and turned Buffalo from 17-year laughingstock into a perennial contender. The timing wasn’t coincidence; it was mirroring.
Pegula’s tennis template: why “good” wasn’t enough

In February 2024, Jessica Pegula fired David Witt despite a five-year run that peaked at world No. 3 and three straight Australian Open quarterfinals. Seven months later she made her first Grand Slam final at the US Open under a two-coach experiment. Internal Pegula family conversations about that switch bled into football meetings, according to a veteran NFL personnel exec who has worked with the franchise.
“Terry watched Jessica bet on herself, absorb short-term noise and reach a final. That calculus—swap proven success for unknown upside—became the lens he used on Sean.”
McDermott’s Bills had the same profile: perennial top-five status, zero finals. The Broncos collapse simply provided the emotional trigger to enact a decision the Pegulas had mentally rehearsed since Jessica’s US Open run.
Allen’s playoff arc: from “can’t get there” to “getting worse”
Josh Allen’s postseason narrative flipped inside 60 minutes. Entering Denver weekend, the knock was “great regular QB, can’t beat Mahomes.” Exiting it, the storyline became “can’t beat anyone when it matters.”
- 4 turnovers (2 INT, 2 lost fumbles) vs Broncos—most in a single playoff game of his career
- 0-4 in overtime playoff games
- 1-5 in postseason contests decided by one score
The optics stung more because Allen’s primary AFC roadblocks—Mahomes, Lamar Jackson, Joe Burrow—were all eliminated before the divisional round. Buffalo’s path to Las Vegas had never been clearer, yet the offense imploded on the sport’s biggest officiating stage.

Beane survives: the roster verdict that sealed McDermott’s fate
While McDermott packed his office, general manager Brandon Beane walked upstairs with a promotion—president of football operations—proving ownership blames coaching, not construction, for the playoff rut. Beane’s recent drafts delivered:
- 6 Pro-Bowl selections since 2020 (including 2024 rookies)
- Top-10 cap health each of the last three seasons
- Continuity on both lines—a Beane mantra—ranked first in NFL snaps returned
The decision framework mirrors Jessica Pegula again: retain the support structure (fitness trainer, physio) but swap the strategic voice. Terry Pegula is betting schematic refresh—not roster teardown—unlocks Josh Allen’s age-30 sweet spot.
Market ripple: who wants the NFL’s most attractive vacancy?
Buffalo opens with:
- A top-five quarterback entering his physical prime
- A top-eight roster by aggregate value
- Four 2026 draft picks inside the first 76 selections
- $41 million in effective cap space once the new league year begins
Expect an offensive-heavy search. Internal buzz already links Ben Johnson (Lions OC), Bobby Slowik (Texans OC) and college innovator Chip Kelly—all chosen with Allen’s skill set, not McDermott’s defensive pedigree, in mind.
Bottom line: when family philosophy meets franchise urgency
Jessica Pegula proved to her parents that changing coaches at the peak of player ability can catapult a contender to the final round. Terry and Kim Pegula applied that lesson ruthlessly, turning a disputed interception into the trigger for the NFL’s most stunning January firing. Whether the parallel ends with a Josh Allen Super Bowl—or another near-miss—will decide if Monday’s gamble is remembered as visionary or impulsive.
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