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In today’s NFL WRs by the end of year two now you know if they are going to be good or not, either by production or efficiency stats. For example, Shakir 2nd year he had a yprr over 2 which is very good. So he was a good player and then year 3 he just got more volume.
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Audio: Biden interview - decline was worse then we knew
Andy1 replied to Big Blitz's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
I agree. And deception of supporters happens on both sides as we are seeing with regret of many Trump voters. -
Purdy and 49’ers extension. 5 years 265 million
Kirby Jackson replied to DJB's topic in The Stadium Wall
Yeah, it’s wild. You really don’t have a choice but that’s an awful place to be. I’d much rather need a QB than pay a guy that’s just okay. I do agree on the Tua comparison. Purdy is good in that system. -
Deciphering User Name Changes and Sock Puppet Accounts
B-Man replied to BillsFanNC's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
I found Billstime/homelander -
Keon Coleman success by route - Not pretty
EasternOHBillsFan replied to DJB's topic in The Stadium Wall
None of these are really fair as Keon didn't get a full season under his belt. I think the whole comparison is totally unfair and Keon will get more opportunities to prove himself. -
A band was playing YMCA for the POTUS in an arab country!
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This is just me, but I'd rather be "still somewhat deficient in our WR room" than be "somewhat deficent" on the offensive line or in the defensive backfield. I almost always give rookies and sophomores the benefit of the doubt, especially when they've missed time due to injuries, whether they play for the Bills or another teams. You can check out my posting history if you want. I did think Peterman was trash almost from the get-go, and there are probably a few others. The jump from college to the NFL is a big ask, and very few young players, even #1 picks, start out playing at a high level. FTR, my comment was aimed at the continuous whining by some posters about things that cannot be changed. The draft is a crap shoot. Even for first rounders, only a handful are going to become game changers, and some are going to be busts.
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That's awesome! Reminded me of Cleveland's Dog Pound. https://bleacherreport.com/articles/417030-six-points-before-the-dawg-pound-was-neutered The most inventive smuggling in the history of the Pound may have been the dog house. Painted orange, brown and white to resemble a Browns helmet, it sat in the end zone on top of the hill in front of the Pound for years before security noticed it took six men to carry the dog house in and only two to carry it out. Every Sunday, the dog house was home to a keg of beer. The men who brought it in had lines running to their seats in Section 60.
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WRs with the profile of Coleman and Boldin almost never succeed in the NFL. But on the rare occasions that they do, they are among the best in the league. Boldin was such a player IMO. Personally, I always loved watching him play and think he should have already been elected to the Football HoF. I hope he makes it this year. As for comparisons, Boldin has some abilities that we haven’t seen from Coleman yet. Boldin’s hands were phenomenal, even in contested catch situations. We’ve seen glimpses from Coleman, but overall there hasn’t been much to get excited about. He certainly doesn’t attack the ball like Boldin did. It’s early, but toughness is another area when they don’t compare. Boldin was legendary for his toughness. If you think that’s hyperbole, here’s an example: September 2008, during a Week 4 game against the Jets. After hauling in a pass between defenders, Boldin took a helmet-to-helmet shot from safety Eric Smith that left him with a fractured sinus membrane and required surgery and seven plates and 40 screws in his head. Boldin missed the Cardinals’ next two games; in his first three back, he scored five touchdowns. LINK That’s a short article worth reading. Now compare that to what happened with Coleman last season. Boldin is a Gold Standard for WRs with that profile. It would be amazing to see Coleman get anywhere near that ballpark, but he has a very, very long way to go. For those who look at his RAS and wonder why he isn’t more dominant, remember RAS only uses supplied data to calculate the score. If a player doesn’t do a drill, it doesn’t get counted in any way. So you can all probably guess how many players do a drill they won’t score well at. Coleman skipped a bunch of them. Where he did score well is with size and explosion. That’s not nothing. Beane & Co were looking for a WR that could run short routes and break tackles for YAC. He can do that. They also wanted that player to be able to win downfield with at least some contested catch ability. Not great returns there yet, but I’m sure that was the thinking. Many of us saw him as a Big Slot WR (Boldin played almost exclusively on the outside, with only 16% of snaps from the slot) and he’s proven that to be correct, so far at least. The book isn’t written on the kid, but he has a very long way to go. And slot on the Bills is already crowded.
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Vic Fangio is a much better DC than Sean Desai. That is obvious. And Desai was definitely part of the regression between their very good D of 2022 and their bad D of 2023. So in that sense yes, of course Fangio made a difference. But the main thing that changed between 2022 and 2023 was their secondary collapsed they couldn't stop anyone in coverage. And the main thing that changed between 2023 and 2024 was they infused the pass D with talent. 3 new guys in the secondary and a coverage linebacker.
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Activist (Marxist) Federal Judges
B-Man replied to BillsFanNC's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
Federal Magistrate Drops Charges Against 100 Aliens Trespassing in New Mexico Military Zone Magistrate Wormuth ruled in the dismissals that the federal government failed to prove sufficiently that the illegal aliens facing charges of trespassing onto the designated military property knew they were entering the New Mexico National Defense Area. https://www.breitbart.com/border/2025/05/16/federal-magistrate-drops-charges-against-100-aliens-trespassing-in-new-mexico-military-zone/ . -
This is a great football analysis on the evolution of the game from Reed's era to today. It makes a lot of sense. Thanks for the info!
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Purdy and 49’ers extension. 5 years 265 million
RoscoeParrish replied to DJB's topic in The Stadium Wall
It’s more because they both are limited athletically QBs that have had outrageous passing stats inflated by a Shanny system and surrounding by elite/HoF level talent, which allows them to get paid as elite QB’s which then causes the team to lose that talent they surrounded them with and that’s the end of the carousel ride. -
Your writing styles and vocabulary are similar. And you both usually post at simiilar times. It’s almost as if you’re playing 2 opposing characters…
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Trump’s trip to the Middle East
leh-nerd skin-erd replied to Big Blitz's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
Oh great, now we have to deal with whether or not it’s aluminum or al-you-min-um. No thanks. -
McConkey probably isn't a starting NFL player back in Reed's prime. It took defense's getting smaller, in response to running backs like Thurman Thomas destroying LB's in coverage, for the league to take the next step and go to smaller slot-only receivers. The slot receiver of today is the 3rd down back of Reed's era. Reed could play inside or out because he was a big, physical receiver even by todays standards and the outside CB's of his day tended to be smaller and less athletic than they are now. That's a whole "what happened to all the athletes who used to play RB" evolution story, but in short, Reed is not really an apples-apples comp.
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I'm inclined that way myself, though I am admittedly biased in favor of UGA players -- unless Badol is right about Coleman's ceiling and he reaches that unlikely degree of greatness. It's true that Coleman had some reasonable early success, but he responded poorly to injury. Nothing to do but hope at this point.
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Coleman's best position could very well be as a slot guy as well. He just doesn't have the separation ability to consistently win on the outside.
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Keon Coleman success by route - Not pretty
BuffaloBillsGospel2014 replied to DJB's topic in The Stadium Wall
Does this same guy have the routes run % for Addonai Mitchell, Jalen McMilan or Ricky Pearsall (He played inside but also on the outside when they lost Aiyuk) as those would be better comparisons imo.