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Thanks to all you guys for your service. Go Bills!!!!!
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These were all the heroes I grew up idolizing thank you all The veterans
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That's a beautiful dalmatian there. Dawg on, brother!! To repeat, since you already saw this before I edited it: Oh, and Shakir is being target a good eight yards further across the field. He is almost in front of the defender, who at that angle is a ton closer to Khalil than he is to Coleman on the other play. Khalil is on the left hash, with the defender around two yards left of the hash. On Coleman's play, though, Keon is a good two yards outside of the right hash, while the defender is on the left hash. The hashes are 18 and a half feet apart, and the defender is also five yards downfield. Keon is going to have a lot more time than Shakir got. More, Shakir has been forced to flatten his route, he's got a Bills crosser a yard or two downfield of him. Coleman ... um ... does not. Sorry, your idea that these two plays are comparable in this way is just ridiculous.
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The Worthy Trade Keeps Looking Worse and Worse
Buffalo716 replied to Bills Costa Rica's topic in The Stadium Wall
The only saving grace is that they are both ineffective rn The draft is a crap shoot because there are so many external factors even with talented football players -
The Worthy Trade Keeps Looking Worse and Worse
BillsFanForever19 replied to Bills Costa Rica's topic in The Stadium Wall
I saw this today and laughed. While Bills fans still can't get over us giving the Chiefs Worthy - the Chiefs are just as disappointed in Worthy as we are in Coleman. -
I see, so a different pass to a different guy on a different play says more about a play than just watching the actual play does? Living in NeverNeverLand must be nice, dude. You're right I don't have to take your word for it. I just look at the actual play. His feet, in your freeze-frame, are equally as far downfield. That does not happen when a guy is running sideways. When a guy is running sideways, if he's running left and his left foot lands on the 30, his right foot will land 8 - 12 inches downfield. If he's running directly cross the field the same thing will happen all the way across. But that's not what's happening. He's running left and his left foot is just as far downfield as his right. That shows that he's running at an angle ... upfield. Shakir's feet on the other hand are not both on the ground, but they indeed look as if when they both are, that bowlegged as he is he'll still have his right leg further downfield than his left. Oh, and Shakir is being target a good eight yards further across the field. He is almost in front of the defender, who at that angle is a ton closer to Khalil than he is to Coleman on the other play. Khalil is on the left hash, with the defender around two yards left of the hash. On Coleman's play, though, Keon is a good two yards outside of the right hash, while the defender is on the left hash. The hashes are 18 and a half feet apart, and the defender is also five yards downfield. Keon is going to have a lot more time than Shakir got. More, Shakir has been forced to flatten his route, he's got a Bills crosser a yard or two downfield of him. Coleman ... um ... does not. Sorry, your idea that these two plays are comparable in this way is just dumb.
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Bills need to start using Samuel and Moore more in the actual passing game and less Coleman.
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again, if you don't want to take my word for it...maybe look at when we threw the exact same pass to Shakir. same drag, same spot...we don't even have to guess at the result. here guess where he ended up? this time w only two defenders instead of three? and shakir who's much better w the ball in his hands? probably at least a five yard gain you say😂😂 oh wait tackled for no gain
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To ALL VETERANS - Please sign in!
Disgusted ills fan replied to DeepPass's topic in The Stadium Wall
US Navy - 1983-1989 -
You have neanderthal Americans booing the Canadian anthem in arenas/stadiums across the country. But Toronto fans are the classless ones. Okay there.
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Hate to say this … but the Pats are effing good
Billsfanatic8989 replied to dave mcbride's topic in The Stadium Wall
I'm still convinced Maye will be a good, but not great QB. They will need alot of talent around him to ever win a SB. He can't dink and dunk. He escapes the pocket too quickly. Runs recklessly. -
Were We Running Into a Stacked Box?
Sierra Foothills replied to st pete gogolak's topic in The Stadium Wall
He was by fare the last person to move... how do even explain that? He didn't know the snap count? -
If you have an agenda against bad takes, your agenda should preclude your from making this post. Keon simply isn't going horizontal here, you can see that as the play continues, and that's factual, not opinion. His left foot is as far downfield as his right foot in this freeze-frame. Which does not happen if he were going sideways, it only happens if he is pointed at an angle downfield. If Josh gets him the ball at that moment, Coleman catches it and has one or two steps before being tackled and falling forward. Yes, he'll be hit quickly. But it's probably a five yard gain. Early in the season when the offense was humming, Josh was taking those short gains and extending drives. Not so much now. And while that's certainly not the whole reason for it, it's legitimately a part of it.
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USMC 1986-1995
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Neither of those throws would have had to be "miraculous". Good, accurate throws? Yeah. Which is what you expect from elite NFL QBs. In the first, Keon has stacked the guy. Not completely, but effectively, and he's blocked the DB from the whole inside of the field. That's what you want the WR to do. QBs are expected to make throws when the WR stacks the DB, and particularly when you can lead him inside and away from the DB. If Josh throws that not outside, and not straight downfield, but instead over close to the numbers, it's not that difficult a throw, and it's a high percentage chance at a completion. The second was a harder throw, requiring about two to eight feet more distance and even better if he'd put it about a yard or two further outside. Yes, this did require a very good throw. Far from "miraculous," though. Josh makes throws that accurate all the time. Josh and Kincaid for whatever reason just seemed out of phase last year. This year they're reading each others' minds. This seems like a bit of the same problem with Coleman this year.
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Air Force, Colorado Air National Guard, Air Force Reserve. 1980-2005. Never in combat. All credit to those who served in war.
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Coaches are heavily implying that Coleman isn’t trying on the field
Herc11 replied to Roundybout's topic in The Stadium Wall
https://www.facebook.com/reel/1479642013325576?s=yWDuG2&fs=e&mibextid=Nif5oz -
USMC (the only branch of the military started in a bar) 1976- 1977. Peacetime Marine. Boot camp in San Diego (proud Hollywood Marine) Armed Forces School of Music Norfolk VA 1st Marine Air wing Band in Iwakuni Japan Hats off to all veterans who served in war. You have my ultimate respect.
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im not checked out but let’s say im not intense like in years of the past. I feel like McD has coached the dawg out of this entire team. We used to get “playoff caliber” “championship caliber” or “Super Bowl caliber” and things like that. We used to get talk of champions from leaders on this team. One quote that I have heard 3 times from Allen this season that sums it up for me how the season is going was something like “ there are no expectations this year, it’s not Super Bowl or bust. We are just going to play football.” that is loser talk. That is talk of people throwing in the towel. You can hear it in their words. You can see it in their unfired up mopey sideline posture. You can see it in their faces. Most importantly you can see it in their play. No dawg. No fight. I will say there was one drive from Allen against Miami where he was total dawg and gave it everything while the rest of his teammates were still just going through the motions. Unfortunately that ended in a turnover and the rest of the team kept playing like all they cared about was collecting a paycheck and going home. im not checked out but it sure feels like the team is.
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Well, if "it all" you mean that McDermott says that every player out there has moments like that, and that that does include Coleman, then yeah, that does indeed say it all. To repeat McDermott's exact words .... "There are times just like any player or any performer where it is exactly where it needs to be, and there are times where when it's not, and then we have to address it." So yeah, he does have moments like that. Like every player. Perfection is unattainable. The question is whether Keon is doing this at a higher than normal, concerning percentage of the time. He certainly has, as his benchings attest. But McDermott doesn't address whether that is still a problem. I'm not saying it's not. I'm just saying we don't know, and certainly not from McDermott's words here.
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The Worthy Trade Keeps Looking Worse and Worse
gobills404 replied to Bills Costa Rica's topic in The Stadium Wall
Can’t believe the Chiefs drafted Worthy over Cole Bishop
