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I didn't remember Mack running the wrong routes or dropping many passes in crucial situationsđ
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Mack Hollins posted 57 catches for 690 yards in Las Vegas 2 years ago. He had 378 yards in Buffalo in 13 starts. Not to slight Mack at all, but we have evidence of what Gabe did with Josh and what Mack did with Josh and itâs not close.
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TJ Watt Speculation after Pickens trade (Nothing Official)
CSBill replied to SCBills's topic in The Stadium Wall
He doesn't even start for his college team. -
Now he looks fatđ
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đđđđ Don't!!
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Huh? Mack didnât even have the best year of his career here. And his year wasnât comparable to Gabeâs years with Josh.
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Jags fans were done with him after 1 year đ
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Democrats are lost. They arenât fascist like maga has become but when you canât define what a woman is or think borders should be open or everyone is racist it opens the door for really messed up idiots to come into power. No one in this country can think clearly
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Shakir - Mr. Reliable Coleman - Will grow as a pro and improve immensely Kincaid - Gets back to his effective role as a hybrid WR / TE that creates match-up problems Palmer - Revives his career under Josh Samuel & Moore - Equally Situational contributors, good options, but not great Knox - Mostly a blocking TE or injury "next man up"
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The ballots for the first round were burned. Voting will resume tomorrow morning at 9:30 am Rome time tomorrow (3 am Eastern time) .
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First things to look for when the schedule comes out
Ridgewaycynic2013 replied to Charles Romes's topic in The Stadium Wall
Should be the torrential rains that follow a hurricane, sound about right for Baltimore in Baltimore? -
Not one RB drafted or undrafted FA signed
Mister Defense replied to ElMarko's topic in The Stadium Wall
An important topic, as to me it was the seminal reason the Bills became a legitimate Super Bowl contender--and will be the reason they win it all. But, okay, sorry I was not more specific in my response to your first post. Hard to do it briefly, so here it is, (and then I will eventually respond to your new post!): 1. To your point that thereâs a âhuge black spotâ on the Cook orange and that the Cook orange costs â$500â. First, there is no âbig black spotâ on Cook. He has been a great teammate to his team members, according to them, and quiet, humble, never seeking the spotlight as a player, ever, except in his (wish he didnât do it), summersaults in the end zone after scoring sometimes. I assume you are calling his publicly calling for $15 million a year that âbig black spotâ. But he is just trying to get paid what he thinks he is worth as a young elite back in the NFL. If Beane signs him before the season to a contract in which one or more of the years is for @15 million, I can almost guarantee you that next off season that will look like considerable bargain, as the running game continues to grow importance, and so the running backs. And Cook clearly gets better, noticeably better, each year. He will do so again this year. And the Bills know what they have, and will use him more, both running and catching. And most oranges cost about $1.00, maybe $2 for the bigger, premium ones. But your analogy is that it would be like paying $500 for this Cook orange. So, letâs split the difference; say the real price is $1.50, and that means that the Cook orange in your analogy costs 333 times the going price. I think most reasonable folks would say that is at the very least a slight exaggeration, really undermining your pointâshowing that extreme, over the top exaggeration is the only way to support what you are saying, in this case. (I find that is true with so many who say, âLet Cook walkâŚ.â, not that you are saying that, and flippantly discount his value to the Bills.) 2. Referring to my words you say: that in 2021 that when they lost to Tampa and then, according to you, they âran more than any other team becoming the best running team in the league. They did not lose again.â You say: Thatâs an extremely clear case of letting a pre-judgment deeply twist your conclusions in ways the evidence just doesnât support. Not even close. I donât remember the exact stat but I remember hearing that again and again after that Tampa game, as the season progressed, something such as the Bills ran the ball a higher percentage of times in their offense after that game than any other team in the league, or perhaps it was they ran for more yards than any other team for the rest of the season. (I am not good at using stat sites to find more complicated stats, such as who led the league in rushing percentage or yards for the last 4 games of a previous season, but I clearly remember that being said, over and over. And that the Bills became much more focused and committed on the run. And clearly ditto for the other two years I mention.) A lot was made of this, as until that point it was more of a running back by committee, with Moss and Singletary. I wanted more of a featured back approach, with Singletary, as he seemed to become better and better as the game progressed if he was the guy. And I was angry that the running game was not getting more play in general, believed The Bills would not be hovering around a 50% win rate if they ran the ball more, and took that part of the game much more seriously. As the yards per carry at that point indicated that they would be very successful in doing that if they ran more, would have a more balanced and productive offense. Meaning: a much easier time for Josh, less hero ball, less running for his life⌠In fact, as you know, there was quite a bit of talk at that time that it was a philosophical difference between Daboll and McD, and that the head coach wanted the Bills to be much more committed to the run and that Daboll was not on board. And the Bills did exactly that, focused on the run more, made Singletary the featured back, and then they did not lose again for the rest of that season. It is a sport, you can believe what you want, but hard to argue that when a team does what they did, with the intention to turn their season around, and with fans like me calling for exactly that, and then the changes that they and the head coach wanted pay off as they did, as those calling for this expected it would, that it was not a vital reason for the much better team and no losses. The head coach won, much to the chagrin of those who (comically, ignorantly) hated the words âcomplimentary footballâ, and the Bills did not lose another game that season. I believe that post season was when they lost to the Chiefs in KC that year, very late in that wild game. 3. I did not come to my points after the Bills committed to the run and became a more successful, more difficult to beat team in any of the three years I point to. I was screaming from the rooftops, at games, on this forum, in my living room, and at sports bars as I watched Daboll drop the ball and then, much worse, watched the incompetent clueless dorsey neglect the running game, causing our superstar leader to revert to old, fly by the seat tactics, running for his life, with a running game that scared no one, trying to do anything he could to pull games out of his kiester. In each of those three examples, three different years, I knew if the Bills were more committed to the run they would become much more dangerous, almost unstoppable. Check my posts on this forum. In fact, it was the main reason I was calling for dorseyâs firing, in my real life and on here. For him, the running game was an afterthought, though they had the horses to do it very well even then. Go and read my OP on his firing the week before Bradyâs first game, and my thoughts in that thread on the running game. It was a seminal reason for wanting a new OC. And I predicted Brady would oblige and do the clearly needed thingârun like hell. So my thoughts did not change, are not 20/20 hindsight when it comes to the importance of the running game, but were what I saw as the most important change they needed to make, which were then clearly supported by the evidence after the commitment came by the Billsâall three times. 4. I notice you donât say a word, not one, about the other two big examples I give, the year Brady replaced dorsey, and the Bills again became the most run centric or running yardage team in the league after that, with only their one loss to Phili in overtime, for the rest of the season. In a season that before that fundamental change, was clearly slipping away. And you donât say a single word, on what happened last year when the Bills became a much more run centered team from the outset-- and had their best offensive year ever, breaking a Billsâ scoring record and scoring more points than any team in the league for the entire year. And the first time in NFL history, running for 30 touchdowns and passing for 30. (That last stat was not just happenstance, but because of a clear, sharp change, commitment to the runâagree with that?) But I would not mention those two other main examples, two other years I point to either, if I was going to end my post saying: âPretending that they did really well down the stretch of that season because they ran a lot? Flat-out ridiculous.â Rather, I think it makes perfect sense, and that the facts support it, as much as they can in something as subjective as sports analysis. I wanted it, I was saying why the lack of commitment to the running game was undermining our team and our quarterbackâs great potential. I got what I wanted each of the three times, and the team was almost unbeatableâall three times, with the new found commitment to the running game, supported with concrete evidence. Clearly, the biggest and most obvious changes each time. And this coming year, I am calling for even more of a commitment to the running game, with maybe the 3 best back combo in the league now. As on offense it is all about the running game, as with a superstar quarterback in place, once the Bills have added a better running game they became a powerhouse. This year, with an elite running game, there for the taking if they want it (and I hope they will), it makes sense that the Bills are even better than last year. And that they take the next step. It is the very least a clear pattern. At least you would agree with that, I hope. But most importantly, I am shocked and confusedâyou are an impostor! Not the real Thurman. Unacceptable. -
Whoâs your defensive surprise of the year?
Ridgewaycynic2013 replied to Billsfed1's topic in The Stadium Wall
Beane. * Really put Jeremy and Sneaky Joe back on their heels. -
Whoâs your defensive surprise of the year?
Whites Bay replied to Billsfed1's topic in The Stadium Wall
With that speed? I'll be looking for his first pick-6. -
Disney to open theme park in Abu Dhabi after abandoning diversity push. Disney is to open its first Middle Eastern theme park in a country where homosexuality is illegal after the US media giant watered down its diversity policies. The company has unveiled plans to open a new resort in Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates, which it said will be âauthentically Disney and distinctly Emiratiâ. Disneyâs decision to build a resort in the Arab country suggests a significant change in outlook at the entertainment giant, which has long prided itself on its LGBTQ+ friendly stance. Homosexuality is outlawed in the Emirati capital and punishable by up to 14 yearsâ imprisonment. In 2022, the UAE banned Disneyâs animated Buzz Lightyear film from cinemas over a same-sex kiss. https://archive.is/ET8mL
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Whoâs your defensive surprise of the year?
blacklabel replied to Billsfed1's topic in The Stadium Wall
I'll take a big swing and say we'll be pleasantly surprised when Maxwell Hairston picks off a pass in his first NFL game. -
Please let him sign with another team, preferably a good team with a great qb, so he can drag them down a notch too
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First things to look for when the schedule comes out
Whites Bay replied to Charles Romes's topic in The Stadium Wall
I'm thinking they're going to play in Dublin, and I want to make sure I'm in front of the TV on time. -
First things to look for when the schedule comes out
CSBill replied to Charles Romes's topic in The Stadium Wall
I may be one of them. And/or, the game in Atlanta. There's a big Bills Mafia presence there as well. -
Random Political Thoughts Inc.
Joe Ferguson forever replied to T&C's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
Well, not really. He's a rather bright guy. The rest of the story from 5 years ago (You guys really dig for this marginal stories. He's not a threat. He had to be persuaded to run again). âThe first African Americans sent into the English colonies came to Point Comfort in 1619. They were slaves, they had been captured against their will, but they landed in colonies that didnât have slavery â there were no laws about slavery in the colonies at that time,â Kaine explained. âThe United States didnât inherit slavery from anybody. We created it. It got created by the Virginia General Assembly and the legislatures of other states. It got created by the court systems in colonial America that enforced fugitive slave laws.â In a statement to National Review, Kaine attempted to clarify his remarks â which were much longer than the prepared speech released by his office. âThere was no law mandating slavery on our shores when African slaves came ashore in 1619. Did slavery already exist in the world? Of course. But not in the laws of colonial America at the time,â Kaine explained. âWe could have been a nation completely without the institution. But colonial legislatures and courts, and eventually the U.S. legal system, created the institution on our shores and maintained slavery until the 13th Amendment. As I said, we didnât inherit it. We chose to create it.â -
Elijah Moore is easily capable of becoming exactly what John Brown produced for Josh. Both are around 5-10 and both ran a 4.34 40. I just don't want to see us bring back retreats like Davis, Diggs, Cooper. They had their chance and it's time for fresh faces and motivation.
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they can't ...and they hate the "tds" moniker because they know its so accurate.