ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. -- Dick Jauron has a theory why it's taken so long
and so many coaches to determine which position best suits Jason
Peters, the Buffalo Bills' new
starting left tackle.
"It may be the curse of unique talent," the Bills coach said Wednesday.
"Here's a guy that's so big but moves so well. ... I'm certain, all his
life, people were saying, 'Wow, imagine the ball in this guy's hands,'
or 'Imagine him playing defense.' And you can imagine all those things."
Peters has just about done them all in what is becoming a successful
jack-of-all-trades football career.
He went from playing defensive end in high school in his native Texas to
tight end in college at Arkansas. He scored his first NFL career
touchdown in 2004 as a special teams player, recovering a blocked punt
in the end zone, and his second as a tight end on a 1-yard reception
last season.
Now comes Peters' latest test. The third-year NFL veteran who, after
starting the first seven games at right tackle, will make his first
career start on the left side when Buffalo (2-5) hosts Green Bay (3-4)
on Sunday.
"I really can't describe it," Peters said. "It's been a long road."
And a winding one at that for the 6-foot-4, 328-pound player who --
perhaps, more inexplicably, because of his size and speed -- went
overlooked in the 2004 draft before signing with Buffalo.
"I know when I came in what I could do," said Peters, who spent the
first half of his rookie season on Buffalo's practice squad. "I just
kept moving up and moving up and now I'm a starter."
Peters' promotion to the offensive line's most high-profile and
demanding position comes as part of a major shuffle the Bills announced
at the start of their bye last week.
Peters replaces Mike Gandy, who moves to
left guard in place of Tutan Reyes.
Rookie seventh-round pick Terrance Pennington,
meanwhile, takes over at right tackle.
The changes are an attempt to address a leaky line that's had difficulty
protecting J.P. Losman, who has been sacked 21 times and also lost five
fumbles.
Buffalo's rushing attack is also struggling, averaging 98 yards per
game, and has only twice broken the 100-yard plateau this season.
Jauron was cautious not to finger any one player with blame in making
the switch.
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