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RealityCheck

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Posts posted by RealityCheck

  1. Brady and Belicheat are inside every opponents head, not the other way around. The Pats receivers could not be covered one on one late in the game. The Falcons new this, and their fundamental lack of confidence in their ability to stop Brady. No lead is safe is what every coach thinks. It wasn't vanity, it was a lack of confidence in using what some call conventional wisdom against the Patriots in the Super Bowl. Atlanta's execution has a lot to do with it. Besides, McDaniel called some awful series himself throughout the first 3 quarters. It was a great game.

  2. The game is entirely too fast for him. All great QBs have one thing in common. they carve up soft zones down the field with what looks like ease, and they score TDs. They do it early and often in their careers. EJ is a dump off underneath the secondary kind of guy. Everything about his game is tragically predictable and consistent. In absolute terms, sure, the things he needs to work on are coachable. However, that doesn't mean EJ can be coached up. If the Bills are going to the Super Bowl any time soon, I just don't see EJ being the reason. Ever.

  3. Schwartz got them there. Marrone gets credit for hiring him.

    Marone was very much involved in ALL of the game plans, even defense. Mario played well under Marone in terms of effort, and was actively coached up by him on the side lines of a more than a few games. The ship has sailed of course, and 2 years later, given the waste of time and money spent on new schemes and coaches, I fail to see how Pegula didn't commit to him for a new deal. 2 more years of that 9-7 team with the new talent, focused on the 4-3 of course, Shady McCoy, and Tyrod, this would likely have been a playoff year with a string of winning divisional records. Peppers was the biggest loss in my opinion.

  4. Sounds like you're the one filled with self loathing since you're saying that Buffalo doesn't deserve a winning team/coach.

    I said no such thing. The buck stops with ownership. You know, the people who have never, and will never apologize for taking your money.

  5. Marrone quitting stuck us with Rex and his large entourage and a destroyed D

     

    Lost Schwartz and a good 4-3 D

     

    Marrone walks away with a $4M pay check

     

    Rex 3 years left for $16M

     

    Roman fired another big buyout contract .

     

    Mario refused to play after Schwartz left

     

    Percy with his big contract

     

    Marrone cost the Pegulas a fortune

     

    The Pegulas cost themselves a fortune. Marrone got them to above .500 and began to win inside the division. Of course, he wasn't likable and cuddly, so he had to go... Style over substance wins the day for those who prefer losing. The self-loathing that permeates Buffalo is quite the toxic cloud these days. The only two winning seasons in Buffalo yielded HCs who abruptly quit. Surprised?

  6. I'm leaning more and more to yes. He makes some head scratching play calls at times but his unit is rolling. I wouldn't want to mess with that. Slide Kromer over to OC and keep continuity on that side of the ball. Hire Gus Bradley to be the DC and draft a big-play safety.

    I would like these moves too. Kromer as an OC and a solid 4-3 coaching staff will pay an immediate dividend. Watching the D-line neither stunt nor twist is absurd when you have such disruptive DTs who are single gap killers. Modern defenses need players to play fast within the game within the game.

  7. All that matters is winning, regardless of it's complexion. Rex Ryan's focus is on proving himself, more so than winning at ALL costs with the players he has. There is a huge difference in the psychology. Hubris anchors him to a past which isn't coming back. It doesn't mean he is not a great guy to hang out with. He'll be a talking head soon enough.

  8.  

    this is an interesting take. that approach also lets you take less...er....intelligent players and get them up to speed faster with less complex stuff involved--just playing read and react on instincts.

    Thanks. I am definitely not ragging on the intelligence of the players, nor do I hate Rex. The rules and officiating make it awfully tough on these guys too. Head banging, extreme pain, fatigue, and asking them to master a ton of alignments and keys. It's a crazy challenge for any player.

  9. In todays league, you have to run a defense that allows for players off the street to mentally check in in short order. The CBA doesn't allow nearly enough time in practice for an encyclopedia's worth of installation. With a 3-4 base, it is more specialty players in the front seven and once again, when injury strikes, they are even harder to replace. With more dynamic offenses using the hurry-up, the difficulty for substitutions for a complex 3-4 are compounded. It's a passing league and bend but don't break is not a bad approach. Rush the passer and play 2 deep safeties. Fatigue affects the mind, and the players just have to think to damn much in his scheme. Even Belicheck moved to a 4-3 and simplified the schemes, which saves some money on the defensive side and allows more money to be allocated to the offense. The CBA, injuries, spread offenses, and the no-huddle in today's NFL make Rex's approach outdated. The combine is predominately physical, not mental. Why run a defense that mitigates your tangible assets that can be measured and observed full speed just to handicap them with ancient schematic complexities with little time to practice it all.

  10. The Bills current power outage on offense is based on injuries and lack of availability. Brady without Gronk is still Brady, but the offense takes a noticeable step back. No Watkins, Woods, and McCoy and your left with a defense that simply puts a safety directly over Goodwin and loads the box. Given who hasn't played this season, I am actually surprised that they are 4 and 3.

  11. Mario requires 7 players in coverage, a running start at the QB, 2 pro bowl DTs to his left, and 3rd down to get sacks. Without Dareus, that style of defense appeared to be toothless. The current scheme seems to showcase players who are intelligent and hungry. Mario is still a great edge setter, but he is too old and big to get consistent pressure on the QB without that 9 spacing. He is still a quality DE run defender. If he were to change his name he would likely be paid less, but current expectations would be perhaps a little more realistic. I never expected the current D-line to play this well without Dareus, but then perhaps we should thank the offense for getting early leads and avoiding long stretches of having to defend against the running game? Perhaps Dareus will represent the ability to win games when the offense only scores 14?

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