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HOUSE

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Everything posted by HOUSE

  1. I see TJ Yeldon as a lock but who knows......
  2. I watched about 2 minutes but I can't hear the question asked so its a big waste of time.
  3. I am not a slacker, I am doing the work...gimmie gimmie
  4. Thank You.....its ridiculous. I can't even watch that garbage anymore.
  5. Its a long time till training camp, I am not sure why some of these minor injuries are listed. I am not losing any sleep over this. If it was September I MIGHT worry. The only real concern is Tyler Kroft but there's still time.. ..
  6. The Jets could be as good as the Bills but the Bills would need to suck
  7. Buffalo Bills head coach Sean McDermott. (Harry Scull Jr./ Buffalo News file photo) By Vic Carucci|Published 7:00 a.m. May 28, 2019|Updated 4 hours ago Every year, there’s a discussion about the gamble NFL teams take with their September-through-January fortunes by putting players on the field April through June. With each so-called low-intensity, non-contact offseason practice, players chance blowing out a knee or breaking a bone or tearing a muscle, injuries that threaten seasons and even careers. The subject has hit home particularly hard in recent days with the Washington Redskins, who lost linebacker Reuben Foster to a season-ending torn ACL on the first day of OTA drills, and the Atlanta Falcons, who lost Buffalo-born defensive end Steven Means to a season-ending ruptured Achilles tendon on the first day of their OTA workouts. Then, there’s the Buffalo Bills. Coach Sean McDermott opened a grim news conference last Tuesday with word that tight end Tyler Kroft, a key free-agent signing, had suffered a broken foot during the first day of OTAs. McDermott wasn’t finished. We found out that center Mitch Morse, arguably the most important free-agent addition, and receiver Cole Beasley, another key pickup from the open market, are recovering from core-muscle surgeries they underwent a few weeks ago. For good measure, the coach shared that wide receiver David Sills, perhaps the most promising of the team’s undrafted free-agent acquisitions, had suffered a hamstring injury in rookie minicamp earlier in the month. Other than that, it’s been a delightful offseason, folks. https://buffalonews.com/2019/05/28/buffalo-bills-sean-mcdermott-brian-billick-josh-allen-kyle-kroft-mitch-morse-cole-beasley-nfl-football/
  8. The Bills will play two different opponents in the same stadium to open the 2019 season By Sean Murphy May 28, 2019, 7:10am EDT Share Photo by Chris Trotman/Getty Images The Buffalo Bills open the 2019 NFL season with two road games. Normally, this would be a downer for the team, as the grueling travel often associated with road games in the NFL could set Buffalo up for some early-season fatigue. However, thanks to a scheduling quirk combined with some good fortune, the Bills will face no such difficult travel. Buffalo opens the 2019 season by playing two different opponents on the road in the same stadium. They face off against their divisional rival, the New York Jets, in the first week, and then they serve as the first opponent at home for the other tenant at The Meadowlands, as they stay in New Jersey to take on the New York Giants in Week 2. While this fortuitous travel situation is definitely beneficial to the team, it gives out-of-town Bills fans looking for a great travel experience their worst road games back-to-back to open the year. Full disclosure: MetLife Stadium is a mere two-hour drive from my Hudson Valley home, so in terms of convenience, this is actually the best road travel for me personally. However, if you’re a Western New York Bills fan looking for a great road experience, these trips to East Rutherford are not that. For starters, the nearly six-hour drive is punctuated by arriving at a stadium known for its horrendous traffic patterns. The snarling traffic is accentuated by East Rutherford sitting a mere 9 miles outside of New York City, which is helpful in terms of touring the city, but not helpful in terms of driving to the stadium on game day. Tailgaiting is solid in the parking lots, though it definitely has a more “corporate” feel (it’s definitely not Orchard Park). more https://www.buffalorumblings.com/2019/5/28/18641326/buffalo-bills-worst-travel-for-fans-will-occur-in-consecutive-weeks-new-york-giants-jets-metlife
  9. “I saw that on Instagram, I saw it on social media (that they gave away Simpson’s jersey number),” Reed told The Schmo in an interview last week in San Diego. “I just don’t think, regardless of what O.J. did (off the field), you just can’t take away what he did on the field - what he meant to the NFL. I think the Bills should keep that number retired.” Simpson’s number has never been officially off limits in Buffalo because it was never actually retired. Players respected his legacy, however, and no one ever put it on their jersey. Reed understands what Simpson’s accomplishments mean in Buffalo and what he meant to the organization. Back when he was a Bill, no player even considered wearing No. 32. https://www.newyorkupstate.com/buffalo-bills/2019/05/andre-reed-on-oj-simpsons-no-32-the-bills-should-keep-that-number-retired.html
  10. Matt Milano needs a better house. Maybe a dog or something.
  11. Mat Milano lives in a cave with no running water....
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