All Activity
- Past hour
-
Coleman slightly beat White. Looked to stumble getting one hand on ball but fell incomplete. His body language shows he’s not happy with himself
-
A Sign That This Is The Year For Our First SB Win
JP51 replied to Peace Frog's topic in The Stadium Wall
Oh I know... for sure... we have been on the other end of those "good matchups" as the team that was being matched up. I remember beating Dallas in Dallas first game of the season in that matchup after the SB... I am like why couldnt we have done that in Feb!... Then again Emmitt was holding out... -
One thing I think of every year at this time, probably one of the first couple of years the camp moved to Rochester, they'd include some photos of the players arriving and they'd always have one showing an offensive lineman carrying in one of these early day HD TV's that was about thew same size and weight of old tube TV's. Forget what they called that style but the player would be carrying in around a 32 inch model and for him the weight was probably like me carrying in my lunch bag.
-
Benford again with great coverage on Coleman
-
I guess what do you mean pissing away money? Playing but not being worth the contract is different than being a health scratch. Im not gonna disagree that LO could suck and its a wasted contract. But i would be shocked if hes a health scratch for > 33% of his available games (not counting the playoffs which could make it as high as 50%). It sorta doesnt make sense to sign him to a multiyear deal if you have him behind Carter is my thought. The only example i could find of a health scratch UFA DT was Poona Ford. Everyone else they pay they do play, but not gonna disagree that there performance has been lack luster. Thanks for explaining btw. I dont see him as a healthy scratch but if you think he could suck then I wouldnt try to dispell you of that.
-
No. A quick glance at the author's other articles reveals her bias. She is taking the worst case scenario to it's limit. As I wrote earlier, Rural hospitals have been closing for decades for a multitude of reasons, overregulation by the government being a large part. But you want need it to be President Trump's fault. We all know it. .
-
Dude likes pancakes for breakfast.
-
Codrington and hamler fielding punts in 11 on 11
-
The Bills have instantly become a defensive juggernaut!
-
uh oh. Just joined the Navy active, medical corps….at 62!
-
The Bills better wear the new helmets or I am out of there...
-
People seem to forget that he got paid for a reason. I’m happy to hear that getting paid didn’t result in him slacking off, and he showed up ready to ball.
-
Russia Was Not a Democratic Hoax
B-Man replied to WEATHER DOT COM's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
. -
Quick reminder that Benford is very, very good, him NOT having sticky coverage would be more concerning with respect to his expected performance for the season
-
Keon with a drop. Benford with good coverage
-
Defense has always been good, postseason moments excluded.. perhaps that was the first sign we should have paid attention to that last years defense would struggle. Whether it’s Tre and/or Hairston, if we get solid play opposite Benford, the potential for the effectiveness of our new DL massively increases. Loving what I’m hearing about those two on Day 1 thus far.
-
First team offense can’t get anyone open
-
A nice summary of the expected fallout from Medicaid cuts.. B'man, do you agree? https://www.usnews.com/news/national-news/articles/2025-07-21/rural-hospitals-brace-for-fallout-from-medicaid-cuts Analysts say the cuts will further strain the financial stability of rural hospitals and clinics that have already been operating on thin margins. Alan Morgan, chief executive officer of the National Rural Health Association, says 45% of the nation’s rural hospitals are already operating at a loss. “More than 300 are at risk of closure already. So you've got thin margins, in many cases negative margins. So obviously, when you remove $155 billion over the next 10 years, it's going to have an impact,” he says. Rasmussen says that hospitals are now seeing “a very dim light at the end of the tunnel” as they evaluate how to adjust for the loss in funding. “Some will choose to make adjustments very quickly, some will wait it out and hope that maybe the next Congress will rescind some of these cuts,” he says. “But I think you're going to see more communities step up and say, ‘We're just going to bite the bullet on this one and we're going to shut down obstetrics,’ ‘We're going to shut down physical therapy,’ or, ‘We're going to close the following clinics to make sure that we are making our debt payments to our local banks and we're holding on to as many employment opportunities for the people in our small town.’” “This will affect all of us as the cost of this uncompensated care leads hospitals and care providers to charge paying customers more to cover their costs. Some hospitals and providers, especially those in rural and underserved areas, will be unable to make up for these unreimbursed costs and will be financially threatened by these changes.” We're starting to see this even in a relatively afffluent rural community: Rasmussen notes that hospitals tend to be the employers that provide some of the highest compensation in rural communities. “In order to be able to appropriately recruit a physician or a nurse or a pharmacist, you have to pay market rates because you're competing with urban communities. When you lose that talent, it is extremely difficult to get them to come back,” he says.
-
Last year the offense looked better than the defense on the first day