Buffalo Bills culture appears rooted in motivation, not morality
There's also an opportunity for a bad culture. But as much as we acknowledge its existence as a concept because we have experienced it, culture remains simultaneously hard to define and yet also ubiquitously discussed in the sports world.
Advertisement
In the offseason, every new NFL head coach brings with him stories from the players about how 'this year is different' and the team's culture has been overhauled. I'm not proposing the idea that everyone professing such a phenomenon is lying; only that for as much as we discuss the ideas of 'good culture' and 'bad culture,' we don't seem to be able to construct an effable statement on what makes culture good, despite coaches doing their best to explain it in press conferences over and over again.
Perhaps, like 'obscenity' in the landmark Jacobellis v. Ohio United States Supreme Court case, 'culture' is something that we could never attempt further to define, but we know it when we see it. Or maybe we can do a better job defining it.
Buffalo Bills head coach Sean McDermott made a statement that resonated throughout the sports commentary landscape after four regular-season games in 2018. The Bills were 1-3 and rookie quarterback Josh Allen was getting his feet wet in the NFL as a raw prospect who looked exactly that. McDermott issued the following quote:
'The culture to me trumps strategy. That's what I believe in whole heartedly. It doesn't mean we have choir boys, it means we have guys that love football and do things the right way for the most part. I understand that. We're trying to build something that does take time, but overall, guys have to be committed to the process.
That means staying mentally tough in moments like this where we start a season 1-3 and it hasn't always been easy. I've been through this before, I can tell them that. Those of us that have been around this league long enough have been through it before. If you do things the right way and continue to do things the right way, the long-term success when you make the right decisions, those things will take care of themselves.'
'Culture trumps strategy' was a hotly debated topic and the sound bite du jour after that press conference, but it's McDermott's clear attempt to define culture that likely carried more weight. He rejected the idea that morality is the fundamental building block of culture by overtly saying the team wasn't looking for 'choir boys,' but specifically called out players who 'love football' and 'do things the right way.'
Advertisement
Figuring out how loving football works to improve the culture of a football team seems easy enough. But what is 'the right way' to do things? The vagueness of that term leaves room for a number of different definitions and explanations.
I have a theory I'll attempt to explain here that I believe can help determine what 'the right way' to do things is. At the risk of being completely cheesy, it lines up with the quote from Peter Gibbons in the classic workplace comedy 'Office Space' — it's about motivation.
Peter was having a conversation with workplace consultants when he described his own lack of motivation, saying that if he works his (expletive) off and his employer 'ships a few extra units, (he) doesn't see another dime.' He goes on to explain that his only real motivation is to not be hassled by the eight different bosses he has alongside the fear of losing his job.
This is the crux of the issue. 'The right way' immediately leads us to believe that the answer is a 'how' interrogative. The method by which an action is taken will become our focus as we search for the answer of what 'the right way' actually is. But I would argue that it's not about the 'how.' It's about the 'why.'
Advertisement
Motivation is not a simple concept. There are a multitude of reasons why people do anything. People get up in the morning and go to work because they want to receive the money the get in exchange for their labor, for certain. In fact, that's likely the majority of the reasoning for many people.
But people also may want to interact with their coworkers and/or might enjoy the mental engagement they experience while working. In addition to this, they might be ambitious individuals who see their current work as a bridge to future opportunities, whether through a promotion at their current job or some other path to what they believe is a better life.
These motivating factors are not exclusionary. You don't just have one of them and not any of the others. There are a significant number of them (only a few potential ones noted above) and each of them could have a percentage assigned to them from 0% on up, but it's highlight unlikely that one of them is 100% and all the others are blank.
But essentially all motivating factors can be put into one of two buckets:
Advertisement
The 'so I (future)' bucket
The 'because I (past/present)' bucket
Lumping each factor into its appropriate bucket is as simple as placing it into narrative conversational form.
'Why did you go to work today?'
'So I can get paid.'
(I recognize that you can be tricky and convert the response to 'because I want to get paid,' but if we try to get response in its shortest form, it'll help bucket them appropriately.)
The future-facing statement about doing an action so that a future desired outcome is achieved falls into the 'so I (future)' bucket. Whereas a present or past referencing statement like 'I went to work today because I love my job' falls into the 'because I (past/present)' bucket.
Advertisement
'Everyone has myriad motivations and it's not as simple as one or the other as mentioned above. Solving for culture as Sean McDermott mentioned above by finding guys who do things 'the right way' can be explained by finding out where the majority of a player's motivation resides.
Why do they play football?
'I show up to work because I love football.'
'I show up to work so I can make the Hall of Fame.'
'I show up to work so I can make a lot of money.'
'I show up to work so I can be a celebrity.'
'I show up to work because I promised my mom I would.'
'I show up to work because that's the kind of person I am.'
Most of these motivational factors will exist simultaneously in the minds of each of the NFL players the Bills, and every other team, will have on their roster in perpetuity. But which ones carry the most weight?
Advertisement
Each of the above motivating factors could be assigned a weight and placed in one of the 'so I (future)' buckets and 'because I (past/present)' buckets. When we completed that exercise for each player, which bucket would carry more weight? When rolled up to the aggregated whole, if your team is 80/20 slanted in favor of 'so I (future),' you likely have a bunch of individuals acting out of their own self interest.
While follower's of economist Adam Smith's 'invisible hand' theory might very much enjoy the idea that each person pursuing their own self-interest could lead to a better whole, we've seen in practice how that phenomenon, when unchecked and unbalanced can impact team culture. NFL players, when asked about problematic team cultures in the past, have consistently referenced putting the team above a players own self-interest as being a key component of improving and maintaining the environment.
But how does that improvement happen?
Apart from the obvious subtraction of players whose motivation weighs heavily in favor of 'so I (future)' in favor of players whose motivation weighs heavily in favor of 'because I (past),' one of the ways you can help shift and modify team culture is by making your team's motivations transparent.
Advertisement
The Bills are notorious for having their players get up and speak in front of the team about what football means to them during offseason practices. They get to tell their life story and talk about why they believe they're here. That vulnerability naturally forces everyone else in that room to examine their own motivations and potentially identify weights that might be skewed heavily to an undesirable side.
We've heard this referred to before as the balance of 'loving football' versus 'loving what football can do for them.' If you're someone with even an ounce of introspection, listening to someone tell their story that reveals their motivations as being tethered primarily to the 'because I (past/present)' bucket might help you find your own way to that majority weighting.
And so the team keeps examining free agents and draft prospects they believe bring that appropriate majority weighting to the organization, and then they allow that to refresh and cross-pollinate across the team. In doing so, they hope to maintain a group of individuals who, while still partially motivated by non-team-centric items, will consistently do thing 'the right way.'
...and that's the way the cookie crumbles. I'm Bruce Nolan with Buffalo Rumblings. You can find me on Twitter and Instagram @BruceExclusive and look for new episodes of 'The Bruce Exclusive' every Thursday on the Rumblings Cast Network — see more in my LinkTree!
More from buffalorumblings.com:

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Kevin Durant Accidentally Dissed His New Teammate In Viral Moment With LeBron James
Kevin Durant Accidentally Dissed His New Teammate In Viral Moment With LeBron James originally appeared on Fadeaway World. In a recent guest appearance on the 'Mind the Game' podcast, Kevin Durant spoke on countless subjects, including his career, the NBA, and life as a professional athlete. In one particular exchange, he spoke at length on shot selection and explained how he'd rather the ball be in the best player's hands than to pass it out to someone like Dorian Finney-Smith with the clock winding down. Advertisement Steve Nash: "The mid-range has never been more important; it just has to come from the right dudes. The court is spaced now by the role-players, what do you think they're trying to take away? Threes and layups, so the star has to be able to make mid-range shots or else the team is not gonna be able to score." Kevin Durant: "If you can't find a good shot, we should look for the good shots early. Attack the paint, try to get layups, try to get threes, but when there's 5-6 seconds left on the clock, give the ball to the best player. And if he shoots a mid-range at that point, he shoots a mid-range, but we're not gonna waste the clock trying to look for a three, two seconds on the clock, and we're giving it to Dorian Finney-Smith with two seconds on the clock. That's not a sustainable offense." Of course, Durant was just using Dorian as an example to illustrate his philosophy when it comes to team scoring. Durant always looks for the best shot, and he isn't like other stars in that he'd rather go iso in the mid-range over passing it off to one of his teammates. Unlike LeBron, Kevin is a shoot-first player, and he believes he's the best-equipped to get his team a bucket on demand. Compare that to LeBron James, who likes to look for the open man and the cleanest shot on every possession, and it's clear how their priorities differ on the court. In the case of Dorian Finney-Smith, Durant said he's better off watching the play than taking the final shot himself. What Durant didn't know at the time was that he'd end up being teammates with Finney-Smith. Days after Kevin's trade to Houston, Finney-Smith agreed to a deal with the Rockets for four years and $53 million. He and Durant will join Alperen Sengun, Jabari Smith Jr., and Fred VanVleet on a stacked roster. Advertisement Funnily enough, it's going to be Durant working with Dorian Finney-Smith now, and he'll be making more than a few passes to him on the three-point line, where he made 39.8% of his threes last season. With the Rockets, they intend to compete for a championship and help build their momentum after capturing the second-best seed in the West in 2025. Next season will be the hardest test yet for Durant, who will be tasked with leading the Rockets to a title at 36 years old. If he plays his game and stays healthy in the process, the sky is the limit for this Rockets team. Of course, their success will also depend on guys like DFS accepting their role and learning to play within the flow of the game. Related: Rockets Guarantee $122 Million Contract To 6'10 Big; Still Have $80 Million Space To Extend Kevin Durant This story was originally reported by Fadeaway World on Jul 1, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Eric Gordon inks new 1-year deal with Sixers
Eric Gordon inks new 1-year deal with Sixers originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia Eric Gordon is officially still a Sixer. The 36-year-old guard has signed a new contract, the team announced Tuesday night. Before the moratorium ends (July 6 at 12:01 p.m. ET), teams are allowed to formalize one-year, minimum-salary deals. Advertisement Gordon declined his player option but always appeared likely to remain in Philadelphia. As PHLY's Derek Bodner detailed, hitting free agency and then re-signing will slightly raise Gordon's 2025-26 salary while also decreasing his cap hit. In a career-low 19.7 minutes per game last year, Gordon averaged 6.8 points, 1.7 assists and 1.2 rebounds. He shot 40.9 percent from three-point range on 3.5 attempts per contest. Though Gordon is clearly past his prime, the Sixers still see his outside shooting as useful. 'Eric is a prolific shot maker whose ability to space the floor will serve our rotation well,' Sixers president of basketball operations Daryl Morey said in a team press release. 'He's been a great fit on and off the court with this organization and we're fortunate to have him back.' Advertisement The Sixers should have several much younger guards in the mix next season, including Tyrese Maxey, Jared McCain and Gordon's Bahamian teammate VJ Edgecombe. Earlier Tuesday, the Sixers signed Edgecombe and Johni Broome to their rookie contracts and inked Hunter Sallis to his two-way deal. All three practiced at the Sixers' summer league minicamp, which is set to run through Wednesday ahead of the team's trip to the Salt Lake City summer league.
Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Hornets continue to build, bringing back veteran guard
The Charlotte Hornets appear to be putting together the right pieces around LaMelo Ball to make a playoff push in 2025-26. On Tuesday, they retained the services of a veteran guard to put around Ball in Tre Mann. The former Florida Gators star signed a three-year, $24 million deal with the Hornets, according to ESPN NBA Iinsider Shams Charania. The 24-year-old Mann was drafted in the first round by the Oklahoma City Thunder in 2021 after becoming a five-star recruit in high school. He was a first team all-SEC selection with the Gators, where he spent two seasons. Advertisement Following two-plus years with Oklahoma City, Mann was dealt to Charlotte in 2024 alongside Davis Bertans, Vasilije Micic and two second round picks for Gordon Hayward. He saw his scoring jump from 3.8 points per game to 11.9 with the Hornets, and the momentum carried over into this year. Mann posted a career-high 14.1 points per game, shooting 91 percent from the free throw line and 40 percent from the 3-point line in 13 games after suffering a back injury in November. The injury, a herniated disc, put him on the sidelines for the duration of the season. Charlotte will likely insert Mann into a backup role behind Ball at the point guard position, pairing him with Josh Green, Grant Williams and Jusuf Nurkic on the second-line. The Hornets drafted Kon Knueppel in the first round of the NBA Draft and also have Brandon Miller and Miles Bridges.