Brandin Cooks Reopened The Bills Debate Fans Never Got Over

Brandin Cooks continues to dispute the pivotal AFC Divisional Round 'catch' ruling, fueling his drive to refine his game and ensure decisive plays in the future.

Brandin Cooks still hasn’t let go of the overtime play that helped end Buffalo’s latest Super Bowl push.

The Denver defender Ja’Quan McMillian came away with an interception in the AFC Divisional Round after Cooks believed he had secured the ball. Denver then finished the job with a game-winning field goal that pushed the Broncos into the AFC Championship Game and sent the Bills home.

In an interview with The Athletic’s Tim Graham, Cooks said the moment has stayed with him. “For a week straight, I was watching it over and over,” Cooks said.

“But I knew, as a father, that I had to put it away. If I’d have kept watching, it would have put me in some type of mood that my wife and my kids didn’t deserve.”

Cooks still says the play was a catch, and he says his view of it hasn’t changed. “I will continue to process it until I get back on the field but I think the biggest thing I can say is that I still feel like it was a catch.

After it happened, seeing some of the so-called controversial calls that were called a catch, I just had to turn the playoffs off because I’m like, ‘Yo, what is going on?’ For me, the way that my mind operates is, ‘OK, what can I do about it?’

And what I can do about it is get back on the field, continue to work on being the best that I can be and making sure next time it’s a catch-and-run for a touchdown and leave it in no one else’s hands,” he said.

He added that the play doesn’t keep him awake at night, but it still lingers. “It doesn’t keep me up or give me unhealthy flashbacks,” Cooks said. “But from a competitive nature, I still think about not winning the Super Bowl as if it happened yesterday.”

The loss carried heavy consequences for Buffalo. The Bills moved on from longtime head coach Sean McDermott after another playoff disappointment, then watched the rival New England Patriots reach the Super Bowl.

Even with Josh Allen still in his prime and plenty of talent on the roster, the sting of that missed chance remains.

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