Sean McDermott went down fighting for Buffalo, both at the postgame lectern in the Mile High City and from 35,000 feet on the flight home, insisting over and over that it was a catch and the Bills should be the ones moving on.
Denver coach Sean Payton, however, contends that the Broncos' 33-30 overtime divisional playoff victory should have ended on a safety eight snaps earlier, in which case Bo Nix wouldn't have broken his ankle on Denver's winning drive.
Brandin Cooks had a step on his defender and was hauling in Josh Allen's 44-yard pass at the Denver 20 when Ja'Quan McMillian wrested the ball from the wide receiver's grasp as the pair tumbled to the ground.
McMillian came up with the ball and the NFL ruled it an interception, which set up Denver's game-winning drive and a trip to the AFC championship Sunday against the New England Patriots (16-3).
Twenty-four hours after Wil Lutz's 23-yard field goal ended Buffalo's season short of the Super Bowl once again, McDermott was out of a job, the 10th head coach to join the NFL's crowded unemployment line.
After angrily disputing the call at his post-game news conference, McDermott called Jay Skurski of The Buffalo News to argue anew that it was not an interception: ''That play is not even close. That's a catch all the way," McDermott told Skurski, adding that fans deserved an explanation.
Which they'd already gotten via a pool report from referee Carl Cheffers, who explained, ''The receiver has to complete the process of a catch. He was going to the ground as part of the process of the catch and he lost possession of the ball when he hit the ground. The defender gained possession of it at that point. The defender is the one that completed the process of the catch, so the defender was awarded the ball.''
McDermott couldn't challenge the ruling because of the league's overtime rules, so he called a timeout to give the officiating crew and replay officials a chance to take an extended look. The play already had been confirmed through the NFL's expedited review process in New York, so the timeout essentially just gave McDermott an opportunity to get an explanation, which he didn't like.