Tyler Bass’ Hip Injury More Severe Than Thought; Headed To IR
Just when you thought the Buffalo Bills’ injury saga couldn’t get any more bizarre, the universe said, “Hold my beer.” On Friday, the team announced that kicker Tyler Bass is heading to the Injured Reserve with a left hip/groin injury. Yes, you read that right. The kicker. The one guy whose job description is basically “don’t get hurt” is hurt. He’ll be sidelined for a minimum of four games, starting with the season opener against the Baltimore Ravens.
This isn’t just a minor inconvenience; it’s a gut punch to a team that relies heavily on every single point. The timing, right before Week 1, is just classic Buffalo luck, isn’t it? One minute, you’re game-planning for Lamar Jackson; the next, you’re scrambling to find someone who can kick a football through the uprights without their hip spontaneously combusting.
What Happened To Tyler Bass?
The saga of Bass and his mysterious hip began brewing weeks ago. After being a limited participant in Wednesday’s practice, he was completely absent from drills on Thursday and Friday. Head Coach Sean McDermott, in his typical stoic fashion, mentioned that Bass had been dealing with “soreness.” Well, that “soreness” has now escalated into a four-week vacation on the IR list.
This isn’t the first time we’ve heard of this issue. Bass has been dealing with this nagging problem since late July, barely practicing for weeks. He made a brief, seemingly heroic return for the preseason finale, giving fans a glimmer of hope that the crisis was averted. But alas, the problem has reared its ugly head again, and now the Bills are in a real pickle just as the season kicks off. It’s the kind of drama you’d expect from a daytime soap opera, not an NFL special teams unit.
Can a 41-Year-Old Save the Day?
Enter Matt Prater, the man who was probably kicking field goals when some of his new teammates were still in diapers. At 41 years old, Prater is the Bills’ emergency plan. The team signed the veteran kicker to the practice squad earlier this week as “insurance,” a move that now looks less like caution and more like prophecy. To be eligible for Sunday’s game, the Bills need to elevate Prater to the active roster by Saturday afternoon, and with Tyler Bass on IR, it’s not if but when.
Is Matt Prater Still Clutch?
Let’s be real, signing a 41-year-old kicker who is himself coming off a meniscus tear feels like a massive gamble. But if you’re going to roll the dice, Prater is a pretty good bet. The man is a walking legend. He holds the NFL record for the most field goals made from 50 yards or more, with a staggering 81. He’s hit from 62 and 64 yards out. His resume is longer than a CVS receipt.
Despite his age and a 2024 season cut short by his own injury, his recent stats are surprisingly solid. In the last two years with the Arizona Cardinals, he’s converted 34-of-39 field goals and missed only one extra point. That’s the kind of reliability that makes coaches sleep a little better at night. The question isn’t whether Prater was clutch; it’s whether he still is. Can that seasoned leg still deliver the goods when the game is on the line? We’re about to find out.
The situation is dripping with irony. The Bills are banking on a kicker who’s old enough to be a kicking coach to fill in for their younger, now-injured star Bass. All eyes will be on Prater Sunday night. No pressure, Matt.
