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  2. Prayers to your daughter, you and your family. Wish the best for her!
  3. Whiteclaw, absolutely devastating lol. lmao, even.
  4. I know about the old cup, but guys might think about adding a visor too with Wilkins around.
  5. This shouldn't be at all controversial. By the GM's own admission they did a "horrible job" putting things around Allen in 2018.
  6. the Lions are also the team that just went 15-2 whereas the Bears were 5-12 iirc @BringBackFergyis the same guy who would clown on Ben Johnson for losing that game while at the same time thinking McDermott taking Rex Ryan's 7-9 squad to 9-7 is grounds for sainthood
  7. I largely agree with this but where I do give Brian Daboll (and to be fair McDermott to an extent) some credit is they let Josh Allen fail without ever getting gun shy and I do think that was part of his development. The absolute worst thing you could with young Josh Allen was take the ball out of his hands (because if he got out of rhythm the bad habits crept back into his throwing motion) and Daboll and McDermott definitively did not do it. I'm not saying but for that Josh Allen would of been a failure, or anything of the sort, but can I imagine other coaches who would have turned him into a Shanny style game manager, heavy play action pass - don't worry about full scale reads, dial it all back? Yep, I can and I think it would have taken longer for Josh to reach full elite. You can be more balanced or even run heavy with Josh now, and it's fine. He can play literally any type of game you want him to play. But in 2019, 2020, 2021 not sure that was true.
  8. Just going off my experience from coaching high school football. The kids all want to wear visors, and they end up removing them by half time.
  9. I think you're partially right, but there's a lot of subtlety that may be at play here. You can see the difference in the aggressiveness with which 44 attacks the hole in the two plays. The slight hesitation on the Cook run allows Cook the space for the initial jump cut and for Torrence to get a block on him. On the other hand, 44 attacks the hole without hesitation and clocks Davis. Is this just a case of 44 playing the Davis run better, or is the hesitation on the Cook play because he fears and respects (or probably even coached to be prepared for) Cook's explosiveness and slipperiness such that he takes that tenth of a second to breakdown in anticipation of Cook's change of direction? Whereas, no fear of that with Ray Davis?
  10. Of course they all matter. Cincy was one of the best teams in the league late last season. Does anyone think that opening-game loss to a terrible NE team didn't matter? They would have made the playoffs if they had won it.
  11. I am more worried about Achane’s backup who will come in around the 2nd quarter when he is injured again.
  12. The moment you step out into the stadium from the concourse and suddenly the whole field is in view...really take that in, because it'll be something you never forget.
  13. The difference is that the trigger man in Chicago isn’t close to being as good as the trigger man in Detroit. Yes the Lions also have had a significantly better offensive line but the weapons are closer than people think even though the Lions hold the edge there as well. Defensively they are going to have good games and bad games that’s just how the NFL is now but they don’t have a QB whole lot of can win them a shootout
  14. i think this is exactly what happened with the last election. people were just so sick of the nonsense on the left that we had a pendulum swing, which i agree that was needed. trans going into the opposite bathroom, curriculum in schools, the massive letting of free money, etc. i'm good with the change. depending on how this administration fairs, you may see that swing back in the other direction. i don't think it will happen that quick, but no more defunding the police and all of the other nonsense that came with it.
  15. Coming to your neighborhood soon big guy! Keep those doors locked!
  16. I think Miami more or less has to have really talented skill position players because Tua isn't good enough to make average ones better if they want to be an offensive juggernaut. They're in "QB Purgatory " because they paid Tua like a 1st tier QB, and he's not that. I think they miscalculated about how far a pass heavy offense could get them. Cincinnati, OTOH, is getting exactly what Mike Brown wants: an exciting team to put butts in the seats and sell lots of merchandise with an escape clause if/when his first tier QB gets sidelined for weeks/months/season. Nobody's going to remember that Cinci's defense can't stop anybody. Many very intelligent people's brains work significantly faster than they can speak, so the ideas just spill out. It can be corrected if the person works at it, but I think McDaniel has other priorities. Not everyone can be Sean McVay.
  17. I don't think it works that way with void money (someone can feel free to correct me), but my understanding was that all of that bonus money gets front loaded in a void year.
  18. But that's only part of the problem....
  19. Charlie Kirk Did It All the Right Way By Christopher F Russo He exposed the lies at the heart of radical left-wing ideologies—and paid the ultimate price for telling the truth. Like almost everyone in my circle, I have spent the better part of the last week in a stupor. The news of conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s assassination has left all of us who counted him as a friend or colleague in a state of shock and sadness. I did not know Charlie Kirk well. But I had met him in various green rooms, appeared on his radio program, and worked with him to find capable staffers for the Department of Education. He was always genuine, idealistic, and dedicated to the cause. I’m still astonished by all that he accomplished in such a short period of time. He built an enormous organization, turned himself into a media star, advised the president of the United States, and built a beautiful family—all by age 31. When we are in the fray of day-to-day politics, it is easy to get consumed by each new headline and triviality. But Kirk’s death marks a pivotal moment, requiring deeper reflection. His life, and tragically his death, reveal some profound truths about the man and about America. First and foremost, Charlie Kirk did it all the right way. He was a conservative willing to wade into controversial territory. But he was always guided by the idea that debate is the great clarifier and that, in a democratic society, persuasion is the primary means of political change. He set up tables on campus. He debated his opponents. And he believed he could win through the ballot box. Kirk’s death, and the subsequent reaction to it by the radical Left, underscored the arguments he had made during his time on the stage. For nearly ten years, Kirk had argued that transgender ideology, especially when paired with experimental medical procedures, would result in disaster. From the reports now emerging, it appears likely that the alleged assassin, Tyler Robinson, was radicalized online into anti-fascist and transgender politics. In their most extreme forms, both lines of thinking advocate a nihilistic embrace of violence—the antithesis of Kirk’s approach. https://www.city-journal.org/article/charlie-kirk-assassination-debate-ideology
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