Terry Pegula fired Sean McDermott minutes after the Bills’ overtime loss in Denver, telling reporters he saw a “playoff wall” the franchise can no longer run through with the same staff—and that Josh Allen will help choose who breaks it down next.
The Moment It Ended
According to Pegula, the trigger wasn’t the controversial interception that erased a potential game-winning drive in Denver. It was the silence inside the visitors’ locker room when he found Josh Allen sobbing, head down, unresponsive.
“I walked over to Josh. He didn’t even acknowledge that I was there,” Pegula said. “That image stuck. I looked around and asked myself, ‘Where do we go from here?’”
Playoff Ghosts, Not One Call
Pegula rattled off a horror reel of postseason collapses—13 seconds in Kansas City, missed field goals in Baltimore, the “catch that wasn’t” in 2025—insisting the pattern, not a single flag, doomed McDermott.
- 2019: Houston comeback from 16-0
- 2020: 13-second defensive meltdown vs. Chiefs
- 2021: OT loss in Kansas City after 36-second drive
- 2022: missed 47-yard FG vs. Bengals
- 2025: disputed INT in Denver OT
“We hit the proverbial playoff wall, year after year,” the owner said. “At some point the wall wins.”
Allen Exempt From Blame, Not From Input
Pegula stressed the move was his alone; Allen never lobbied for McDermott’s exit. Still, the quarterback will sit on the hiring committee, a first for the franchise.
“The starting quarterback will be part of the team to help select a new coach,” Pegula confirmed. “His feelings stay private—this can’t live in his head going forward.”
Coaching Carousel Already Spinning
Within hours of the announcement, NFL insiders ranked the Bills opening No. 2 on the desirability board, behind only Dallas. Pegula claims his phone “started ringing before the plane landed” and that he’ll move “fast but correct.”
What’s Next for Buffalo
- Candidate list: Lions OC Ben Johnson, Ravens DC Mike Macdonald, and ex-Titans coach Mike Vrabel lead early speculation.
- Roster edge: Allen, Stefon Diggs, and a top-10 defense remain in win-now mode with all 2026 draft picks intact.
- Cap health: Buffalo projects $38 million in space once the new league year opens, per USA TODAY’s salary database.
Bottom Line
Pegula gambled that nine years of close calls under McDermott have maxed out. By handing Allen a voice in the next hire, he’s linking the franchise’s future to its franchise quarterback more tightly than ever. If the new coach can’t bulldoze that playoff wall, the owner may find himself out of bricks to throw.
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