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wardigital

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Posts posted by wardigital

  1. I just speak the truth junior. I don't whine. I just tell it as it is.

     

     

     

    The fact that they play more than 1 or 2 games on turf and had a high powered offense gives them the right to be called that.

     

    OK. Let's just call ourselves "THE GREATEST OFFENSE IN THE ENTIRE UNIVERSE."

     

    It'll be just as true as "The Greatest Show on Snow." :rolleyes:

     

    Again, and without hesitation, you don't get to decide at what threshold something is true or isn't true. You are nobody important.

  2. What has Chan Gailey not accomplished in his coaching career that you would like to have seen him accomplish? Are we saying that only Super Bowl winners are worthy of admiration, praise, or anything other than cynicism and paranoia?

     

     

    Chan made the team more fun to watch last year. When you're winning 4 games or 7 games, that's worth all the gold in Tut's tomb.

     

    This year is make or break for Gailey. Not saying the Bills have to make the playoffs or anything but he was given 2 drafts, 2 off-seasons, and a full regular season to guy, evaluate, and shape the team. There has to be a substantial improvement and development of the team. I think 7 or more wins with a lot of player development is a good measuring stick.

     

    Adding 3 or more wins to this team is a good improvement that I think that this team could make with the talent it currently has.

     

    Why are we presuming that 2 drafts and 2 off-seasons is enough to turn any struggling team around? This essentially sounds like impatience.

  3. They played HALF their games on turf. Probably even more considering they probably played at least another game or 2 on someone else's turf. How many games do we play in the snow? Not even half. Not even 40%. Probably not even a quarter.

     

    Read the sig. I'm always right.

     

    But they don't play all of their games on turf, and I have absolutely no interest in pretending that you're an authority on anything. Because, you know, you're not. There is no rule that defines when a catch phrase does or doesn't make sense, especially not one written by "DreReed83".

     

    We don't really circle wagons either, oh if berman read this he would back hand you

     

    They're not even actually all dead Bison hunters named Bill, either! Why are they not the "Orchard Park Black and White and Asian and Other Tall and Short and Fat People Who Lose Sometimes and Win Other Times, Too" of Anaheim.

     

    Dre should get right on this.

  4. This makes no sense. How are we going to be the greatest show on snow if we only play like 1 or 2 games a season in snow? Are we gonna be the greatest show on snow for 2 games a season? i don't get it.

     

    The Rams didn't play every game on turf, either. Hockey isn't actually "the coolest game on ice". Do you understand the purpose of a catch phrase?

  5. does this site really work for bills games?? like can i cancel my sunday ticket package for it? i'd really love to know from anyone who's watched games there in the past, because i got laid off this summer and would love to save the extra cash. thanks everyone!

     

    It works but it's somewhat unreliable. Feeds cut off, get disrupted for copyright, they tend to stream a minute or two behind the actual action, etc etc. If you don't mind switching 3 or 4 times per game and missing a half a quarter of the game as a result, then it should be good. If you're the kind of fan who needs to see every play start to finish, you'd probably want to stick with your NFL Ticket.

  6. The bottom line is that you don't see 228 lb linebackers even in college football. Being such a light LB will get you killed in the NFL.

     

    If I'm the Bills, I'm evaluating plan B. Why they still insist on keeping him at LB baffles me. Try him at another position or release him.

     

    What is the mysterious "other position" that he can play? He was drafted as a DE. Already pushed back to LB. He doesn't have the speed for the secondary or wide receiver. He isn't strong or physical enough to block or own the middle of the field as a tight end.

     

    Do you want him just to be the world's tallest, most expensive full back?

     

    LB is the only spot for him. Either it works or it doesn't.

  7. Whether or not Buffalo is a pit, it is probably 28th or 29th in terms of the quality of city of the NFL. There are simply better options. And people who read that and get so blindly upset. It is not just the quality of the city. Obviously Green Bay is a bit of a pit too. But they have franchise stability and a quality roster. The Bills do not have either. Players value those things, because it impacts their job security.

     

    Look at P. Hillis with the Browns. He said just yesterday that he wasn't that upset with Denver anymore because their organization did not seem very stable anyway. And that's Denver. The problems with Buffalo are immeasurable compared to that. Also, we did not sign Drew Bledsoe, we traded for him.

     

    Additionally, it is hard to properly measure the quality of Marv Levy's GM tenure because Jauron was coaching, which probably had a severe impact on some players development. His tenure could have both been fantastic or awful in different circumstances. His big error was hiring Jauron, which doomed him from the start.

  8. The Bills failed to hold an informal auction for his services. They look stupid and have a choice of A.) confirming that they failed to maximize value or B.) flat-out lie about activities, or C.) say something ambiguous about how they called around the league and this is what was on the table.

     

    Since none of those sound good, saying nothing is probably best bet.

     

    What more, other than leasing some facility space and putting Marshawn Lynch on a literal auctioning block would the Bills have to do to let people know he was up for trade? The entire league knew it. The national media spent two weeks talking about it. There was literally no one in the entire football stratosphere who was not intimately aware of the fact that the Bills were shopping Lynch around and that they wanted a high mid-round draft pick for him. And what else, the Bills are either guilty of talking to the Saints and being told to call them back or not knowing what the Saints wanted and having no idea that they wanted Lynch?

     

    It is literally impossible for a rational person to find fault in the way the BIlls handled the situation. The only negligent team in such a situation is the Saints.

     

    a respected media member told us how inept buddy nix is on national television. don't you think the bills would have released a denial by now if the report was a lie?

     

    No, a "respected media member" (which is false, by the way), also said this season that it was profoundly disconcerting that Buddy Nix did not speak on the record about the failings of the team, and Nix didn't hold a public press conference for upwards of three weeks after this accusation when this happened.

     

    Regardless of whatever notion you have that the Buffalo Bills are interested in "appearing good in the eyes of the media", the multitude of evidence that suggest otherwise, that suggest that they don't care what the media thinks at all is staggering. I'm quite certain that if this was true (which it most likely is not), that even then, Buddy Nix would not care.

     

    He, like the rest of the Buffalo Bills organization, absolutely, positively do not care if you or Jay Glazer think he's inept.

  9. if it is bogus the bills would have denied it

     

    Why? They have to deny every ridiculous assertion that comes before them now, or it's true? If that was the case, all they would ever do, all day long, is deny malicious rumors about the team.

     

    They don't owe it to anyone, especially people who *think* they do, to personally deliver special denials on every ridiculous report that comes out of the woodwork.

  10. The team was remarkably well coached by Gailey this year, considering the absolute lack of talent. If Ralph does this to his coaches, it doesn't seem to have hurt Gailey very much. I don't think Gailey could have squeezed another drop out of this team. Several remarkably close games against playoff teams, a big comeback victory, beating one of our division rivals.

  11. Take all of Spiller's rookie year and compare it with the handful of games that Starks has played for Green Bay. I would say he has a point. It was a terrible pick. The best running back on this team was an un-drafted guy. Why waste a top ten pick on a running back? Especially when that running back was not touted as an all around running back coming out of college.

     

    Because he isn't going to be used as an "all around running back", and was never drafted to be an "all around running back" and for whatever reason you and the obnoxious nincompoop that is Mike Schopp seem to be judging him by that standard.

  12. Ryan Fitzpatrick was and is on some bad teams. A good quarterback on a bad team doesn't interest me, a good QB on a good team does. I'll take Billy Joe Hobert on a 11 win team before I take Peyton Manning on a 3 win team. I want to win.

     

    RFP was also on some bad teams.

     

    No matter. It will be clear after these last games whether or not he is a fluke. I have held off, but I can see already that RFP is better than average. I bet Jerry Jones would give him a boatload of money to play for Dallas.

     

    When will you jump on board, when they make the playoffs? It's only 12 games into the new staffs tenure, and they were starting from NOWHERE. Methinks you are being a bit disingenous when you compare the records. This season they have played a much tougher schedule, and have been way more competitive. And to simplify a rebuilding year strictly down to the won-Loss record is silly...anhhhhhh blahblahblah- your just a hard nut

     

    Playing Mister Hard-to-Impress is easy when a team is at the bottom, but being able to spot a team on the rise takes some insight into this game we love. That's what makes this board interesting, it's a chance to lay out some analysis.

     

     

    Seriously, find another team. Just cheer for the frontrunners.

     

    Why do I have to find another team and when I have I ever indicated that I am not willing to get Fitzpatrick a chance? I think Fitz has earned himself another full season and I want the team to win. This has nothing to do with front running. I just think it's silly and typically Buffalonian of people to take the smallest modicum of success and begin comparing Ryan Fitzpatrick to hall-of-famers and the league's top tier quarterbacks. Jump on board what? What does that even mean? I watch every game, discuss them on this board, have opinions, support the team financially. What else do I have to do to jump on board? Sit in unquestioning silence so that you feel better about your own assertions? Don't be a fool. Perhaps you should exhibit the same amount of patience and optimism with fellow posters as you have for the Bills losing.

     

    And finally, I'm not playing "Mr. Hard to Impress". The team was losing and is still losing. They're certainly more entertaining than they used to be, and I like that. And it also seems like they care and they are trying, which is what I like to see. But the goal is to win games, not to be impressed or unimpressed. Instead of getting so defensive of what I'm trying to say, why don't you try to get outside of yourself for a second and actually let it soak in. I'm not saying anything negative about Fitz that isn't true, and nothing that discounts that he's certainly the best QB we've had in a very long time. But it's still not good enough.

  13. These comparisons are always so silly. You can just as easily draw comparisons to the 2000 or 2001 Bills, for instance. This year's team is the 2010 team all over again, and next year they will be the 2011 team all over again. To heap this sort of praise on current guys is also unfair to them. We are in a salary capped era now, where assembling that sort of talent on a team is incredibly difficult if not impossible. As long as the system stays the way it is, there will NEVER be another team that can replicate the sort of success that Bills of the late 80's and early 90's had on a position-to-position basis. There will always be weak spots.

  14. I must disagree. To me the difference in the Bills is night and day from Jauron to Chan. Lack of talent? What did Stevie Johnson and Roscoe Parrish do under Jauron? There was talent. But Jauron was incapable of using it. He deserves all the scorn he gets.

     

    PTR

     

    JohnC makes an excellent point, and this is a two way road. What has the secondary done under Gailey? Why is our special teams suddenly ordinary under Gailey? What has the running game done under Gailey?

     

    And as to the perception that the only thing holding Fitz back from being a marquee quarterback is his draft status: nonsense. His QB ratings coming into this season were 58.2, 70.0 and 69.7. Two of those in seasons with double-digit games. This year he's played better, but his statistics have come back to earth. He has seven losses. The team has scored more than 20 points once in the last five weeks.

     

    We like him because he tries hard. We like the team because they are trying things in a different, more entertaining way than previous teams. But they are not any better than they were under Jauron record wise, and that in the long run is the point. Until they become a playoff team, no one at One Bills Drive deserves any credit for improvement. Maybe making the team more fun to watch, but not better.

     

    One other thing on Fitzpatrick. In 370 plus attempts in his first true look at an NFL starter with the Bengals, he threw for 1,900 yards, 8 TD 9 INT and was sacked 38 times. Last year in 10 games and 227 attempts he threw for 1,400 yards, 9 TD and 10 INT. He averaged 142 yards passing per game. Until this season, speaking statistically and including this year speaking record wise, Ryan Fitzpatrick has been almost incomprehensibly bad.

  15. Kelsay is occasionally formidable with his hand on the ground, which is where he should be. He is simply not made to be a linebacker and should not be put in that position, ever. He might be the worst athlete standing up right that I've ever seen before. With his hand on the ground and working an edge he is a bit better.

     

    And, for weeks I've been saying: If you put Kelsay on the d-line at least he is going to miss his tackle 1 yard downfield instead of 6 yards downfield, potentially saving the team 5 yards every play simply by not screwing up so far down the dang field.

     

    I would think that it would be easier for a right DE to get sacks than a left DE. Let's say the tackles are even, I would think that as most Qb's are right handed they will be able to see a LDE coming as oppose to a RDE (The blindside).

     

    LT's are generally more athletic blockers, though, and because they are coming from the blind side a QB's step motion to release the ball is away from the RDE and their escapability also caters more often to running away from the RDE than it would the LDE.

     

    Each position has its advantages.

  16. I am 100% with the "we really should have a "Marquee Quarterback". 100%!

    The cool thing is, I think RFP could very easily be one!

    I have been posting that these last games (starting with the Steelers) would be the ones that will let everyone know if RFP is the guy. Beating Detroit and Cincy is nice, but I need more evidence against some top flight teams, and there are some tough teams ahead. I am beginning to believe RFP is not a fluke. We will know by the end of the season, so it's no big deal, no need to bicker (just don't tell me you need to get a look at Brian Brohm first).

     

    I would say that if what Fitzpatrick is doing right now is what he will do for the next 3 to 5 years in his career, then he falls into the category of a Tier 2 QB, probably not top flite, but just in that next level. In other words, I think he's good enough to get you to the second round of the playoffs sort of QB, but probably not good enough to win the big one unless he's on a team with a lot of other big time weapons. So the answer for a team like the Bills is obviously: try to build around him with big time weapons.

     

    I think to consider him a possible Top 5 NFL QB is a little out of the realm of reasonable. But Top 10 isn't bad. I'll take second round exits for the next decade after the last one.

  17. I like Fitz, and if you look back over the past 20 years, several teams have won a SB without a marquis quarterback.

     

    I don't know if "several" is accurate. A look at the past 20 years of NFL Super Bowl winning QBS. Let's qualify "marquee" as top 5ish in the league or so:

     

    2010 - Drew Brees (marquee)

    2009 - Ben Roethlisberger (borderline)

    2008 - Eli Manning (borderline)

    2007 - Peyton Manning (marquee)

    2006 - Ben Roethlisberger (borderline)

    2005 - Tom Brady (marquee)

    2004 - Tom Brady (marquee)

    2003 - Brad Johnson (no)

    2002 - Tom Brady (marquee)

    2001 - Trent Dilfer (no)

    2000 - Kurt Warner (marquee)

    1999 - John Elway (marquee)

    1998 - John Elway (marquee)

    1997 - Brett Favre (marquee)

    1996 - Troy Aikman (marquee)

    1995 - Steve Young (marquee)

    1994 - Troy Aikman (marquee)

    1993 - Troy Aikman (marquee)

    1992 - Mark Rypien (no)

    1991 - Jeff Hostetler (no)

    1990 - Joe Montana (marquee)

     

    That's 14 marquee, 4 not marquee, 3 borderline. I really think that all things considered, Roethlisberger is probably in the marquee list, or at least was during the Super Bowl seasons. But even without those 2 extra games, its pretty obvious that having one of the best QBs in the league is a significant help. Now there are other factors that help that. Montana had a great scheme, Aikman and Elway had great complimentary casts, Brady had a brilliant coach and an army of extras. Having a great team around you is in part what makes you a great QB.

     

    It does seem as though things have become a little easier without a top flite QB. I think this is because defenses have caught up and in some respects passed offenses in the NFL. We're definitely in a league right now of hyper parity where being tremendously good at one aspect of the game can put a team in contention if they get hot at the right time. I am starting to wonder if that trend is shifting back a little bit. Last year we saw a Super Bowl with teams with comparatively soft defenses to what one might consider for a championship team.

  18. At 0-6 you play for the win. That's why Chan called pass plays. It was no gimme for Lindell from where they were. Besides I know for a fact that no one would have been happy with a tie either.

     

    PTR

     

     

    I'm glad someone has a memory. :thumbsup:

     

    PTR

     

    If memory serves correctly, a field goal wins the game. And there is a difference between passing for one series unsuccessfully and passing on four different series in the same situation unsuccessfully.

  19. It must be great living in the universe of what if. The fact is Gailey was trying to go for the jugular by being aggressive through the air when the Chiefs were playing 9 in the box on first and second downs. If we would have run it and gotten nothing against a defensive alignment that screams don't run it, you would be crying about why we ran it 3 straight times against a 9 man front. Don't get me wrong, keep crying if you have to.

     

    This might be the most hypocritical post in the history of the internet, considering you started by lambasting me for living in a universe of "what if", and literally two sentences later proceeded to tell *me* exactly what *I* would have done.

     

    I'm also not crying, and I don't know why there is some sort of necessity out of you to make that implication, other than you are compensating for something else (small penis? lack of a valuable point of view in this discussion? something).

     

    If you think it is unreasonable to, in the 4 times the Bills had the ball on the KC side of the field with a chance to make a game-winning score, to try running it, for one series, then whatever universe I'm living in is a universe in which you are not invited. Here in the "We're allowed to have different opinions" universe, we don't take kindly to pithy !@#$s.

  20. They also weren't moving the ball that well on passes in overtime. They had one nice throw to Evans when Spiller drew all the underneath coverage. The other big plays were a reverse by Parrish, a scramble by Fitzpatrick for 14 yards. Fitzpatrick threw well in the fourth quarter for the most part, but exactly in overtime.

     

    It was also obvious that our defense was tiring and not holding back the Chiefs in OT. Heck, if it wasn't for one my 9-iron duck hooks on Succops FG attempt we would have lost sooner. Gailey should have put in the players hands to win the game, and his hands to assure a tie. A tie was nothing more than perhaps one running play.

     

    One running play, taking the sack, etc etc.

  21. Yeah, but you're making a big assumptions that we're going to gain five yards on a run when we hardly did all day. It wasa tough call. At the time I was also thinking at worst we get out of here with a tie. But while many of uf us fans would have been trille with a tie and counted it as a "moral victory", NFL coaches aren't playing for a tie (even a winless team) they want the win. So you needed 5 to 10 more yards for a field goal so they went for it. They were moving it pretty well with passes on that drive and the drive prior moving through the air, so couldn't totally fault them. I'm sure if they ran three plays or even two plays and gained a total of maybe five yards, and then missed the kick with time running out, people would have been ripping them for not going for the win.

     

    While I agree that one run play may have guaranteed at least a tie, considering their lack of sucess with running, can't really fault them too much as they were moving the ball better through the air . For all we know one or two of them maybe should have been a run but Fitz felt he saw something and changed to a pass.

     

    I'm not saying one run, I'm saying three runs. Run the ball three times. Jesus, you can fall forward three times after the snap and get 3 yards, which also would have made a difference.

  22. Because he is nothing special. He is not the kind of back that a team rides all day to victory. He is a nice 2nd back/backup.

     

    Who said he was anything special? The title of this thread is not "Fred Jackson is special and Chan Gailey doesn't recognize it."

     

    It's not like Jamaal Charles is special either. I think it's perfectly reasonable to wonder about Gailey's relationship with Jackson considering he did not trust him to get five yards on 3 carries, which, at 2.9 yards per carry today, he was statistically likely to do.

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