ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — Like it or not, Bills coach Sean McDermott has come to terms with tolerating the imperfections of Buffalo's patchwork and injury-depleted defense for however many games left in the season — including the likelihood a playoff berth.
It's not so much McDermott lowering his standards, but rather taking a cup half-full approach in defending a unit often criticized for its flaws rather than celebrated for its resilience.
A case in point came last week, when McDermott was reminded of how coordinator Bobby Babich used the word ''disgusting'' in referring to Buffalo allowing a season-high 246 yards rushing in a 35-31 win over New England.
Acknowledging the run defense has been a season-long concern, McDermott proceeded to outline how the unit has responded in the clutch.
He credited his staff and players for stepping up by saying: ''It's what you do when the moments are the brightest.''
''I know you want to focus on the negative,'' McDermott added. ''I'm going to stay focused on both ends of the spectrum, because that's the perspective I have to have, and how you get things corrected.''
The bad and the good were once again apparent in a 23-20 win over Cleveland on Sunday.
It was a game in which the Bills allowed 160 yards rushing — the seventh time this season they've allowed 150 or more.