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Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports

The Buffalo Bills are certainly not known for their prowess on the ground, as they came into Week 14 with the No. 14-ranked rushing attack in the NFL. Their ground game was quite literally nonexistent in the first half against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, as offensive coordinator Brian Daboll didn't call a running back's name once.

The Bills didn't hand the ball off to a running back once in the first half against Tampa, and became the first team since 1991 that played an entire first half with no carries registered by a running back, per Scott Pioli. Quarterback Josh Allen was the only Bill who ran the ball, as he recorded four carries for 43 yards in the first two quarters.

Devin Singletary was the only Bills running back who touched the ball on offense in the first half, as he caught three passes for 22 yards. Statistically, the Buccaneers are tied in having the best run defense in the NFL, as they and the Baltimore Ravens allow an average of 84.3 rushing yards per game. Unfortunately for the Bills, their passing offense didn't fare well in the first half against the Bucs either, as Allen threw an interception and Buffalo trailed 24-3 at halftime.