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BADOLBILZ

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Everything posted by BADOLBILZ

  1. Yep, and this was the guy with the the two greasy, stinky bags on the flight to Charlotte after every Bills home game his first 3 seasons.
  2. Straight up? No. They'd have to eat most of Hopkins 2023 salary to consider a second round pick. When you start talking about higher than comp-pick level value I think you start looking at adding later pick swaps or maybe expanding the deal to include Isaiah Simmons($1M cap hit) for a bit more.........a player they are not going to pick up the 5th year option on, IMO. But if they release Hopkins outright they have to eat none of that $19M+. This is why most in the NFL think he will be released. Hopkins agent can talk all he wants about re-working his contract but either way it's going to cost the acquiring team at least $34M...........I can't see him taking some big pay cut after he just had a very productive partial season last year. Maybe NEXT year he has to take a big pay cut but not right now.
  3. I hadn't considered it...........but the Bills would not if they thought it was just a dumb mistake and not a result of a potential gambling problem. The Lions might. They traded TJ Hockenson which made even less sense. The Bills did have a star receiving back in the 1980's........Ronnie Harmon........who had been accused of throwing a Rose Bowl game with 4 fumbles............and then later had a pass go thru his hands at the end of the 1989 wildcard game in Cleveland which cost the super-talented Bills a victory..........and he was dropped like a bad habit weeks later with zero compensation. Harmon went on to catch nearly 400 more passes for San Diego with a remarkable 10+ yards per catch average but nobody in Buffalo ever lamented his loss for one second. Players who are a gambling risk are pretty worthless regardless of talent. https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-06-29-sp-25-story.html
  4. If you are drafting to fill holes like that you are probably about to have a bad draft haul. Getting a new 2023 left tackle before another season of decline from Dawkins........and then moving him to guard..........would be great. But getting a league average starting LT right away isn't likely to be happening from this draft. Expecting rookie guard and RT prospects to be better than Bates, McGovern, Edwards and Brown is also unlikely.........but yeah they should be drafting players to develop the next couple of years at some of those non-premium OL positions. The one position they could gain the most from with just ONE player is a stud WR..........and good rookie WR's are often up to speed and making plays by mid-season.........but also not worth reaching for and botching your draft. Needs change FAST in the NFL.
  5. Well I guess the Eagles need to draft defensive lineman with much bigger feet don't they? Because they didn't play the run well either.........while the Chiefs defense played on the same turf and shut the Eagles run game the f*ck down while the gimpy Mahomes was much more effective on the ground than Hurts. If not for about a half dozen of those sketchy Bush-pushes prolonging drives for the Eagles the game would have been over much sooner. A gimpy ankled Mahomes leading a team that was outmanned everywhere else except TE to victory was a case study in the importance of being built around an elite passer.
  6. Oh I see.........because the other recent, generational, top 10 talent RB's like Saquon and McCaffrey and Fournette have all lived up to their pre-draft hype with HOF type careers in this "post RB" era of football. You are a prisoner of the draft moment Inigo. There hasn't been a RB to go in round 1 and live up to the hype since the 2007 draft. Then 2010 happened..........the rules were changed so QB's could barely be touched in the pocket and WR's couldn't be hit over the middle. The following season 7 QB's had top 25 all-time passing yardage seasons. At this point the entire league is built exclusively around players who were developed in a style of game that was born in 2010..........including the old man Aaron Rodgers for whom(along with Roethlisberger) the rules changes were specifically designed to protect and empower. Since then, mother's and father's haven't been allowing their babies to grow up to play RB...........those special types now play positions that matter like WR or edge rusher or CB. It's not a coincidence that there aren't any 1st round RB's out there stringing together dynamic 1,000 yard seasons like the last generation of Peterson and Lynch. Those days are over. Your best RB's today are the backups of yesterday. Saquon and McCaffrey and Fournette have all failed to be those types but you say Bijan is just that different. Not likely.
  7. I gave you an eyeroll because the same could have been said when they selected the then-spectacular Clyde Edwards Helaire. We keep hearing that combining an elite RB with an elite QB is SOMEDAY going to lead to........apparently.........a RB who runs for 8 yards per carry........therefore not leading to less production per attempt than an elite QB throwing the ball on those plays. And then that RB will also catches passes and produce just like a wide receiver so you aren't sacrificing throwing to said WR. That's not how it works though. The teams that have RB's that produce both a high volume of carries AND a high average per carry are the teams who are committed to running the football. Light boxes sound tantalizing but teams that run the ball well consistently do it because that is their style of football. Teams that don't have erratic results when they try to change their style. Just too many mistakes can be made. In today's NFL.......committing to run the football enough to feed a 20+ touch per game RB comes at the expense of your passing game. It's just not the 1990's anymore where you need the run game to set up the pass. Nowadays your elite QB can drop back and throw the ball 40+ times per game and dominate..........and maybe not even get sacked or turn the ball over..........and those yards per play are significantly higher than what you will get from ANY high use RB.
  8. Oh I value pass rush. Pass rush is great..........if you can get it. Which is the point. Elite QB's with good support around them usually don't allow elite pass rushes to have their normal impact. If anything the Chiefs OL in that Tampa game and the Bengals OL in that LA Rams SB loss were exceptional circumstances. Terrible OL's usually aren't on the field in the SB. You could easily not see an OL as bad as either of those in a SB for the next 10-20 years. As for SB XLII..........that was ages ago and well before the major rules changes of 2010 that had greatly re-shaped the entire game by the mid-2010's.
  9. Wait..........so does this mean that Gibbs is the BPA after pick number 5 now or are he and Bijan now co-BPA's in the pick #6 to #258 range??
  10. @Buffalo_Stampede are you claiming inside knowledge? Both that the Bills are out on Hopkins and that Drew Sanders is the player that the Bills have decided they will pick if he is there when they are on the board? What's your new handle going to be if one of those declarations proves false?
  11. Meh.....in today's NFL sacks are largely a QB stat. If you were expecting the Eagles to maintain their 3.5 sack per game regular season pace against Patrick Mahomes then you were going to be disappointed. Mahomes was sacked just 3 times in the biggest jail-break SB game we've ever seen against Tampa when he was playing with a line of backups. The bottom line is that the weakness of the "balanced attack" teams are teams that can throw the ball every down and be effective. Even when they DON'T. The threat of getting speed-boated changes how they have to play.
  12. Why did they trade 3 first rounders to move up to get Trey Lance when they had a QB on roster who had taken them to a SB and when their system is designed to not need(or showcase) elite traits QB's? The answer is that they don't value draft picks the same way that other teams do and the way logic suggests that they should. Trading early picks for a $10M+ RB like San Francisco isn't going to make you draft and develop the way that the Niners have......that goes for players AND coaches(who then become comp picks).............which is why some of their early round draft pick lunacy hasn't burned them more. Still........how would that team stack up in the AFC? Elite QB's are their kryptonite and the fact that their system isn't designed to maximize the production of an elite QB is part of the problem when they meet up with them. Similar problem the Eagles have. And fwiw we aren't talking about the Chiefs here.......Shanahan lost the 1 SB he was in as a head coach and was the OC of the biggest blown lead in SB history for the Falcons and his system has a bizarre history of getting QB's injured despite being a heavy run team. They aren't a gold standard.
  13. So was their pass rush. Until the Super Bowl. Playing against an elite QB does those things to teams.
  14. Baker Mayfield was the #1 overall pick. That should be enough said but where someone was or "almost" was selected in your hypothetical has nothing to do with BPA..........which is your sales pitch for the Bills selecting Bijan Robinson later in the discussion. You said that Barkley has justified a top 10 selection with his play. I don't know how you can expect to go from there to saying anything rational. That is just a ridiculous take. His overall production has been middling. You might want to shelve that take. Every year there is a new "great" RB......sometimes 2 like the dynamic duo of Najee and Etienne a couple years ago........that gets people trying to rationalize why they should be selected in round 1. And in recent history it has, in fact, always turned out poorly for that team. Considering that the first round generally produces 40%-50% of players who justify good second contracts.........taking a RB in round 1 has proven to be a consistently poor decision regardless of their hype. That's what matters. Not whether this ONE TIME might be the extreme outlier.
  15. But who was the BPA at the time? Josh Allen coming off an unspectacular career in a lowly regarded conference.......or SAQUON BARKLEY.......coming off 3800 total yards in a major conference the prior two seasons? This is where people who try to sell the logic of "BPA" as the reason to select Barkley stray far off target. You literally do that further down thread while out of the other side of your mouth calling the Giants morons for taking Barkley instead of a QB. The reality is that without positional value BPA is an irrelevant distinction. As for your last statement..........what is the great advantage to being RIGHT about selecting a RB in round 1? If you think the middling career Saquon Barkley has had justifies a top 10 selection you are dead wrong. But even if he strung together 5 seasons where he was always a top 5 RB...........what's that juice worth as an organization? Saying it's not "always wrong"........especially when it almost always is and defnitely WAS in Barkley's case.........is hardly a reason to just do it!
  16. The system had everything to do with Purdy's success. He's a perfect fit. There is no hesitation in his game and he makes all the throws the offense asks of him very well. If he had 2018 Matt Breida he would have done just as well or better...........and he'd have been fine if they had just kept Jeff Wilson........who, as I illustrated, was a bigger threat running the ball. Anyone who thinks that Purdy is some sort of creation made possible by McCaffrey just doesn't know what they are watching. Not sure how some of you as Bills fans..........who have literally watched the Bills refuse to put a 3rd LB on the field regardless of the situation..........don't realize that NFL defenses prefer you to take the short 4.7 yards per rush and 8-9 yards per reception gains of a good RB rather than being beaten for 10+ yard pops in the pass game. If the Bills are regularly a top 5 defense and they do it that way.........then why do you think other teams are suddenly hyper-focused on stopping an opposing RB? Just because they have a big name? It's a figment of your imagination. The modern defensive logic is very simple: the more plays you make an offense run........the more likely they will make a mistake on offense that undermines their drive. Small-bite, RB-centric game plans are loaded with opportunity for mistakes. Again........this is not 1990. The rules favor the downfield passing game immensely now and you don't have 7 years of control over players on their first contracts any longer and practice time is limited so it's a very different looking running game.
  17. Individual RB's don't have much impact on the overall running game of teams. As mentioned in the data that the OP orginally posted and objected to........first round RB's don't tend to average more per carry than those taken later. Case in point..........you're RB standard of Saquon Barkley. Not once since Devin Singletary entered the league has Barkley averaged as many yards per carry as Singletary. Most of that time it's not even been close. As for Robinson as a slot receiver........NOBODY is a better receiving RB than Christian McCaffrey..........he literally could have chosen to be a receiver instead of a RB........... and he's just a meager career 8.5 yards per reception player. That doesn't cut it in the passing game of today. Throwing to the RB is almost a gimmick now and there are always players who can catch the ball from the RB position kicking around cheap in UFA. ACTUAL slot receivers have replaced the receiving back in the passing game. Cole Beasley in 2020, for instance, averaged 11.8 yards per reception. Ideally you are getting 11-15 yards per reception from your slot receiver depending on your style of offense. That's a whole lot more production than the 6-9 yards per catch that most RB's are capable of.
  18. The RB the 49ers traded to make room for McCaffrey was averaging over 5 yards per carry..........McCaffrey finished with a Singletary-esque 4.7 ypc as a 49er last season. RB's in that offense tend to average 5 ypc and 9 yards per reception. He was a step down running the ball and a step up from Jeff Wilson in the pass game but still........as with all RB's........throwing to him was less effective than throwing the ball to a good slot receiver. What "saved" the 49ers season was Brock Purdy and a weak NFC. The Chiefs absolutely speedboated them in SF despite McCaffrey's best efforts because teams that live by the run ultimately die by the pass in the NFL today. And yes, the obligation to give Derrick Henry 20 touches per game promises to undermine the Eagles offense come playoff time.......just as it has for other teams with feature RB's for a very long time now.
  19. He was an All Pro in Buffalo before Rex arrived and Terry Pegula let Todd France write a contract for Dareus with no penalty for transgressions..........but yes..........Dareus was a potential HOF'er. Would love to have seen what a talent like that would have done if he came into the league in a culture situation like the Bills have now. He was the most talented DT the Bills have ever had.......he could have been a 100 career sack guy from the interior.........and he could have been seen in the same light as Von Miller is now.
  20. Almost nothing you said is true...........much of it is utterly ridiculous. Not sure why some people are so desperate to go out of their way to deny decades of accumulated data. It's not "over-thought"..........RB's are of little consequence when it comes to winning a Super Bowl and having one who requires a lot of touches is likely a burden on SB aspirations. Hearing that Derrick Henry is headed to the Eagles.........that's a good recipe for a step back for the Eagles.
  21. I do think Bills would be out. The Cardinals don't owe Hopkins any money. The remaining $34M in salary is all unguaranteed per Spotrac. They can cut him tomorrow and owe him nothing more. They will have dead money on their cap either way.........but that's from unamortized bonus payments that were already made. If OBJ got $15M for one year then Hopkins will surely that $34M for 2 years, or more, on the open market. I can't see the Bills paying another WR $17M cap hit each of the next two years and it would be crazy to extend his deal any further than that to make a significant dent in that $34M figure.
  22. And the reported belief is that the rest of the league thinks they will release him and get nothing at all in return. Remember, McCaffrey being cut was not a consideration. If they want something for him they will have to eat money. Nobody that Hopkins will be willing to be traded to is giving up anything and then taking on a 2023 $19M+ cap hit right now or re-working his deal after the fact when they have no leverage to do so. Personally..........I think he gets cut. In which case the Bills would be out because he's going to get in excess of $15M per year and they aren't going to commit long term to Hopkins and that would be needed to re-structure his deal to fit under the cap in 2023 and 2024. But trading a draft pick purely for cap space has happened before. Brock Osweiler to Cleveland.
  23. The way is to get the Cardinals to pay most of his salary this year. Like Houston and LA Rams just did to move Cooks and Robinson. Next year is all unguaranteed money for whoever trades for Hopkins so you just release him or re-work his deal.
  24. Always said he'd be perfect for this junk-grade media sh!t. Has a totally reasonable, OBVIOUS, take that another WR would be more helpful RB............but spins it into enough controversy with a gratuitous shot at another former player to get himself and that irrelevant show he appeared on some clicks. Ultimately.........the dude is just a super-creep off the field.........and he's off the field forever now........so probably just a matter of time before he does something stupid and gets himself cancelled. But maybe all the overzealous, celebrity worshipping Bills fans who worshipped him for all the wrong reasons will wise up to their gullibility now, though.
  25. Hopefully you know better than to believe listed weights. It was an absurd comparison between guys a virtual generation apart in age in NFL terms. All but a few LT's are "listed" around 6'5" and between 310-330#. And Dawkins is about half way to the career Williams has put in. Bottom line is that Dawkins has come to camp woefully out of shape in recent years.......WAY more than 320........and has worked his way INTO shape in camp. That usually works til' you hit your physical peak around 26-27 and then those players need to start taking better care of themselves or their game falls off. That's seemed to be the case with Dawkins the past 2 seasons as his game has gradually diminished. He was pretty average at LT last year.........nowhere CLOSE to Trent Williams level of play..........and that's why people are eyeing up a replacement ASAP.
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