Pretty much... watch miami tape with landry too. Move him around - throw him quick passes if they line up off him. His speed and strength make it hard to bump him at the line without basically shading a safety to play over the top. If they're bumping, then its likely that there will be space. Unfortunately it's probably in the middle of the field
I think big ben was hurt in that game they lost to Miami too, but i might be mistaken. Their defense looks thinner than ours too... In some ways we're a lot like Miami.
Jarvis Landry, Devante Parker, Kenny Stills, Julius Thomas, Jay Ajayi... Decent line when everyone is healthy.
Tannehill isn't good imo... he's been given a ton of weapons and proved he is nothing but mediocre.
Both of my brothers lived there for years. My one lived mostly in Manhattan, and my other one lived in bay ridge brooklyn.
Smartphone apps make taking the trains super easy for tourists/new people FWIW.
Baseballs only tricky because the old timers actually played significantly longer than they do now. So like the 300 win threshold is sooo much tougher for pitchers now. And 3000 hits is just a gauntlet
Owens was a 5 time AP first team all-pro player. Tim Brown was a 0 time AP first team all-pro player.
That means - at no point in his career was he ever THE dominant Wide receiver in the NFL.
Warner didn't play in the NFL until 27 - and basically out of nowhere was the best player in the league. He also won 2 MVP awards in his first 3 years starting.
Certainly not for everybody. I think I could've made the jump right after college, but now I don't think I could. Wife likes the city in small doses only.
Its funny that people find this hard to believe. Everyone I know who moved there, has moved back. NY is a big lonely city, especially for transplants.
Obviously its differnet if you have close friends and family