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Utah John

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Posts posted by Utah John

  1. 1 hour ago, NI Bills Fan said:

    Yip, the team literally rests on his shoulders.

    Definitely the best draft signing name fun since...

     

    IMG_20240510_162522.thumb.jpg.7b7206325b71680b7ae7b85b515d7198.jpg

     

    Supreme Court Associate Justice Kavanaugh approves.  (Probably the only thing I agree with him about.)

    • Haha (+1) 1
  2. 17 hours ago, Rhyno716 said:

    bkikehluzfrknrbkxyti.jpg

    I got to be a Utah football fan while living in Salt Lake City, and there have been several Utah players I wanted the Bills to draft.  I liked the Zach Moss pick, and he's showing out with Indy.  Of course I loved the Kincaid pick and I even recommended back in January that the Bills draft Cole Bishop.  But I also held out hope that the Bills would draft Bills.  I don't know if he's an NFL-caliber player or not, but boy that jersey would be special.

    • Like (+1) 2
  3. Cam Newton had once superb season.  Josh Allen puts up superb seasons, year after year.  The biggest difference is that Newton didn't have to overcome Mahomes in the voting.  Face it, Mahomes is a great player on a great team with a great coach, and the Bills with Allen and McBeane get respect but not the top rating. If Mahomes wasn't playing, Allen would be regarded as better than Newton, but Mahomes IS playing, so Allen gets overlooked as MVP material.  

  4. 3 hours ago, Sargent Hulka said:

    His defenses in Buffalo '64 and '65 were stellar. In fairness, when he took over as Head Coach in 1966, the Bills were on the decline. After the loss to the Chiefs in the 1966 AFL Championship, the Bills won four games in "67, and only one game in '68, which is how they got OJ.

    Lou Saban left the team just as it was getting old, and Collier (I always thought his name was Joel, not Joe, but whatever) got handed the mess on the slide into obscurity.  Not his fault.  The Bills defenses were really outstanding, in part to Collier but also the front office who found players like Sestak, Maguire, Jacobs, Byrd, Edgerson, Janik, Saimes, Day, and McDole.  Sixty years later I can still remember the names of the players on that team.  

    • Like (+1) 6
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  5. 3 minutes ago, Rampant Buffalo said:

     

    As for Coleman: my understanding is that he only has two years of football experience. I expect him to improve upon his biggest weakness (route running and gaining separation).

     

    This is the part of Diggs' game we'll miss the most. Diggs is an elite route runner and that's one reason Beane brought him in from the Vikings. Route running is probably the thing that Diggs does best, out of all aspects of his game.  My point is, don't expect Coleman to have this skill, at least not to start with.  I think the Bills will be using numbers to try to get at least one of their receivers open on every play, instead of expecting someone (i.e. Diggs) to be open on almost every play. 

  6. On draft day, people were saying KC fleeced the Bills.

     

    Considering Worthy's physique, I'd say KC "flea-ced" itself, taking a junior mint version of Tyreek Hill.  Hill is NOT a slight, light guy.  He's an athlete with an athlete's body, who happens to be really fast.  Worthy will suffer with physical abuse from NFL LBs and DBs, he'll catch some long TDs and drop some others, and he won't get a second contract.  In the meantime the Chiefs waste a roster spot and the chance to draft and develop an actual NFL WR.

    • Agree 1
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  7. 23 hours ago, SoonerBillsFan said:

    Nope. And some of it should be still allowed.

    Not sure which of those plays ought to be allowed. Not the clothesline tackle, not the face mask, for sure.  Maybe not flipping a guy and driving him head first into the ground. 

  8. Every team is in transition every season.  If they're not, they're getting older and closer to a disaster.  Teams always bring in 6-10 new players for their 53, every year  Sometimes a team has more holes than other years, but every team has to be thinking about moving toward the future.

     

    Think about a car company designing its new models.  It takes several years to put a new design on the road, so the companies are thinking about what they'll be trying to sell in five years, and tailoring their strategies over the intervening years to get where they expect to be.  And if it turns out their current guess about the future isn't right, then they have to adjust as they go.  Football teams do the same thing except they have to take injuries, free agency, and the salary cap into consideration. 

    • Like (+1) 2
  9. 22 hours ago, NORWOODS FOOT said:


    Yeah, most surprising to me is McCarthy. I like him. Seems like a good dude with tenacity. But nothing that I saw at Michigan screamed franchise QB to me other than his grit. I have a hard time seeing his ceiling as anything higher than “game manager with occasional flashes”. Maybe O’Connell can scheme up ways to help him over achieve. 
     

    I have no take on Maye. Never really watched him.

     

    Maye reminds me of Josh Allen.  Big, strong, tough, lots of mechanical issues.  Josh spent his first few offseasons working with Jordan Palmer, a QB whisperer and coach, who along with the coaches on the Bills staff got Josh sorted out.  It might take Maye a couple of years to blossom.  Unfortunately he's growing in a weed patch, without much help and without a solid culture of excellence.  The Pats of today have no connection with their great teams under Brady.

    • Agree 1
  10. 14 hours ago, BuffaloBillies said:

    Not world-beaters, but slightly better than average. With Josh and our RBs, that seems to be adequate for now. Would like one/couple no-doubt monsters ready to fill in next year or two. 

    I think last year's O line was the best the Bills have had for many years.  Maybe that's still slightly better than average, or maybe it's better than that, but it was quite solid last year.  Cook's rushing numbers are evidence.  (But don't forget our O lineman playing WR, Gabe Davis.  We'll miss his downfield blocks this year.)

    • Like (+1) 1
  11. 13 hours ago, gonzo1105 said:

    A couple of years out?

     

    LT- Dawkins

    LG- McGovern

    C- Van Pran

    RG- Torrence

    RT- Who knows (I think Spencer Brown gets transition tagged then is traded or gone)

    A couple (two) years out -- that looks right, unless one of the starters gets seriously injured, or Van Pran doesn't work out. 

     

    Four years out, we'll have a new left tackle and possibly a new left guard. 

     

    Beyond that it's impossible to speculate.

  12. The thing is, there's a lot that goes into a player's success than the player himself.  Take a great athlete with superior football IQ and amazing toughness, and put him in the wrong situation and he'll look like a bum.  OJ Simpson did nothing his first few years until Saban returned and built the offense around him.  Was Simpson a bust?  That description would be a tad harsh for one of the very best players ever in the league. (off-field crimes notwithstanding)  Bruce Smith didn't do all that great in his first year or so, then he woke up, started taking training and preparation seriously, and turned into a monster on the field.  

     

    Or take a moderately talented, not very athletic guy who gets into the right situations and has a long and happy career.  Ryan Fitzpatrick, I'm looking at you.  Kaiir Elam is an outstanding athlete and could well be a top-notch CB if playing in a different system, but he's gone nowhere with the Bills with their coaches and their system.  Zach Moss looked like a good player coming out of college, didn't do much when with the Bills, and has flourished with the Colts.  

     

    And always there are injuries, some career-ending, but many just bad enough to keep the guy from playing to what used to be his potential.  

     

    There are so many variables that go into a player's success, and most of them aren't anything the draft evaluators can take into account.  You just hope for the best, and try not to do anything really stupid (Boogie Basham instead of Creed Humphrey or Torell Troup instead of Rob Gronkowski).

  13. 22 minutes ago, KDIGGZ said:

    Half of these draft picks might not make the team at this point

    We'll see.  Some of the players on the 2024 initial roster will be lost to injury, and others will reach the end of their contracts and be released or lost as FAs.  Churn is normal, particularly for top teams.  It's usual for 6-9 draftees to be part of the 53 each year.

  14. A low-round draft pick gets the encouragement that an NFL team thinks he's got a chance, and the realization that he'd better be working his butt off to make his lifetime dream come true.  Most draft picks do make either the final roster or the practice squad (which can be a ticket to a roster slot somewhere else) but not all do.  So they have the carrot and the stick both dangling in front of them.

     

    A UFA just feels desperate.  The carrot feels a long way away.

    • Agree 1
  15. Ray Davis's real name is Re’Mahn Walter Zhamar Jamar Davis.

     

    The center we drafted is named Sedrick Van Pan-Granger.

     

    The center's jersey will probably be wide enough for all the letters but the RB will probably have to use two lines if he wants it all there.

     

     

  16. If there's a center out there that looks like he could develop into a starter, I think the Bills will take him.  Note -- I just typed that and then saw they drafted a center.  That name of his though -- doesn't sound like someone who likes to get muddy.

  17. Well if the Bills could have two Allens at QB last year, why not let the Broncos have two Wilsons?  

     

    RW is still a viable QB but is not nearly as good as he used to be.  I think being around him will help ZW settle in, learn the position, see what works and what doesn't, and turn out to be a reliable backup QB.  ZW certainly has a good arm, he just has no clue how to read defenses or respond to pressure.  These are things he can learn by watching, which is what he should have been able to do if the Jets had a brain (similar to what the Chiefs did with Mahomes as a rookie).

  18. Anyone who thinks they could play or coach at this level should watch J. T. O'Sullivan's video.  The degree of expertise, on-field adjustments in the blink of an eye, and athletic ability that all players have to have, is amazing.  Even if you played HS or college ball, watch that video and tell me you could do what those guys do.  

     

    The only job I could have with the Bills is as a third-level minion.  No way I have the knowledge or expertise to balance all the factors that go into Beane's everyday decisions.  

    39 minutes ago, RobbRiddick said:

    Cheerleader

     

    p-1-taking-the-field-FA1118CHEE001.jpg

    You know, at the college level, there often are male cheerleaders, or at least there used to be.  Ronald Reagan did that.  Back then he was quite the hound, and getting to be on a team with the pretty girls on campus was just what he would have wanted.

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