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James Cook named AFC Player of the Week
Doc Brown replied to Chandler#81's topic in The Stadium Wall
It's obviously complicated but they rolled over $63m from last year into this year so their adjusted salary cap of about $341m. 340m-317= approximately $22m in cap space. -
Will we see Hairston "shadowing" Worthy on Sunday??
JerseyBills replied to Special K's topic in The Stadium Wall
thought Lewis was the dimeback? -
Will we see Hairston "shadowing" Worthy on Sunday??
NewEra replied to Special K's topic in The Stadium Wall
No -
Will we see Hairston "shadowing" Worthy on Sunday??
starrymessenger replied to Special K's topic in The Stadium Wall
Yes because nobody else can run with Worthy. Should be an interesting matchup. -
I agree with Nephilim17's reply, and I'd add that we've made an intentional shift to multiple TE/HB offense which by default is going to de-emphasize boundary WR somewhat. That said, low returns on Keon, Samuel, and Palmer (and arguably even Shakir for what we extended him) means results are mixed at the very least. Injuries to Kincaid and Palmer haven't helped. But my original point was that we do in fact have a perception problem in addition to a (boundary) receiver problem because of the manner in which this stuff is being discussed (i.e. very agenda driven, lacking context from the standpoint of personnel groupings and offensive philosophy, and intentionally excluding discussion of our biggest investment in order to make a biased point.). This all comes back to people wanting to see Josh do well first and the team do well second. The whole dynamic reminds me so much of Lebron fans and it's getting really old fast.
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So of course we won’t run PA that often or throw out of heavy sets.
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Who ya got for a big day against KC?
starrymessenger replied to Billsfed1's topic in The Stadium Wall
Could/should be Kincaid. But I'm looking for big plays from Cook or Johnson - not so much in the run game but out of the backfield at intermediate depth on the boundaries or between the numbers. -
Gilliam and Hawes. KC is good at stopping the run, but Buffalo now has, not only a monster OL, but TEs and FBs that can block too. That's an advantage. More guys that can put a hat on a hat. It also is an advantage because the Bills can pass out of the 12 and 13 personnel. TEs are going to be active. Cook will be active. Shakir will be active. Going to be a lot of crossing routes and a lot of rushing. Anyone who thinks the Bills aren't going to lean on the running game is mistaken. The only time Buffalo has not been successful running the ball, is when Cook is not on the field going into last year. KC can try to stop the run, but they won't. They will still have to keep people in coverage and won't be able to sell out to stop the run as many think. Buffalo is dangerous throwing to the TEs in these formations too. Wouldn't be surprised if Cook catches a couple too.
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They will have to win in shootout style. Defense and goalkeepers are weak. Should finally be entertaining to watch. Last year was dreadful.
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If that were the case, they'd be on a steady diet of fresh fish.
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The fan base has had pitchforks and torches out for three years and the Bills are their current most hated foe. They’re aware of the whole “Allen’s your daddy, meme.”. Nothing, and I mean nothing, of value is coming to Buffalo. Generally, I am not a “never trade in the division, or conference” guy. Miami can’t afford to unless it completely disregards the fan base. Of course, the fan base isn’t exactly priority one when deciding a trade’s value. I just don’t see a brand new, or interim, GM sending talent to Buffalo during his first week.
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I was making the point that they rarely have full-contact practices anymore during the season.
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Thank you. Your statement that tens of millions of children are hungry is a false premise. Go back to your idiotic “does truth exist” thread and ask yourself why you are engaging in such.
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I agree our LB’s are a lot like big(ish) safeties, but we generally only play a couple of them at a time. Ed is not a big guy, but not shockingly small for a 3T. I don’t think size is Ed’s problem, he’s the opposite of those guys who just never get hurt I mentioned earlier. We do play an extra DB a lot (which is not uncommon), but other than that I think we are a mix like most teams. .
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I had joined there originally around 2003, but do not remember that! Man sounds amazing. I thought of this name because of the poster The Undertaker and thought that was such a good name
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Think you nailed it In the 70's 80's players were like a reliable corolla Now some of these guy are like a nitrous fueled dragster. You can only push the human body so much I don't seem to recall a lot of non contact injuries back in the day They seem very common now Lot of torque changing directions when you run that fast + carry more bulk Not football but look at explosive NBA guys like Zion Always in the shop Human body not designed to be 260 lbs and propel/land from 48 inches Same with cutting , stopping on a football field
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I mean we used the Sammy Watkins decoy thing for years to say why he's not putting up stats lol just wasn't what we thought And the bills throw to 8 different guys.. end of the day they have the same stats I think Coleman has more 100-yard games in the regular season 2 after a year and a half in the NFL
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Your 2025 Democrat Party - the New Red Guard
Big Blitz replied to Big Blitz's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
- Today
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The record this year is irrelevant. He has shown the team is improving and the defense embarrassed Syracuse and their freshman QB last night. In two years this could get interesting.
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Patriots rookie RB Robert Edwards went to the Pro Bowl following his rookie, 1,100+ yard rushing season in 1999. Part of the week's festivities included a flag football game in which Edwards injured his knee so badly doctor's considered amputation. Edwards returned to the league, but not until 2002, where he managed just 20 rushing attempts in 11 games for Miami. The Pro Bowl doesn't have flag football games anymore.
