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Protocal69

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Everything posted by Protocal69

  1. To show Knox worth just remember what the Bills offense looked like in the games he missed last year. 2nd Dolphins game and especially the Jags game
  2. 10: Travis Kelce 9: Jalenb Ramsey 8: Patrick Mahomes 7: Davante Adams 6: T.J Watt 5: Jonathan Taylor 4) Copper Kupp 3) Aaron Rodgers 2) Aaron Donald 1) Tom Brady
  3. So a 28% response rate smh
  4. No Baker has strong arm. Not just a good arm. Its matter of opinion though so Im not trippin
  5. NFL think they trying to be funny. Ranked 13 to match 13 secs. Please let us win the Superbowl this year.
  6. If you dont think Baker has a strong arm I dont know what to tell you
  7. And course that was crazy talk. Shaq is going to earn his place vs the Ravens by himself this year
  8. Yeah he can stay. Remember his rookie year he was having just as good as a camp as Gabe Davis. As long as his injuries are a thing of a past sign me up. Bye Kumerow
  9. They said he was in at the beginning the game. I thought I saw in at the end of the 1st
  10. Do ya'll here Tasker talking out his ass WITHOUT reading that graphic. Taron Johnson AND SIran Neal was at the BOTTOM of that cornerback list. Great player but get him off off the mic ASAP
  11. That scoop by Bernard was very under control and professional. Small details like that are important to me
  12. Told you that you cant believe everything you read on the internet about Elam.
  13. Just getting work in. Not mad at the calls whatsoever
  14. Because they are vets and dont need to work or to earn there place on the team.
  15. Im not buying it. Elam is a man corner trying to learn how to play off coverage. Even in playing man he is going against one of the best route runners in the league. By the source logic that would mean that Levi Wallace is better than Elam at point and you can miss me with that.
  16. Wilson down on his own. Possible ACL injury. I hope that is not the case
  17. My point is that with the offensive line playing bad and the Jags not respecting the run made the recipe for the offense bad day. If the Bills had ran the ball more we win the game. Josh played like ***** that game didnt help as well mostly to the bad OL play
  18. Jacksonville just ignored our playaction game just got into depth quick. Go back in look. LB Josh Allen played that game like it was personnel
  19. So how is "If it aint white, it aint right" any different than "once you go black you never go back" and just for the record Im a black guy.
  20. To the point where they wanted you gone so bad that the team lost a 1st and 3rd round draft pick to cheat in the process
  21. Does anyone have a link to the Bills twitter space
  22. https://www.si.com/nfl/2022/08/01/steelers-transition-mitch-trubisky-deebo-samuel-dk-metcalf At the same time, when he catches highlights of his time as a Bear—and those have been hard for him to avoid—he’ll concede that he does see a different guy. He sees someone laboring to carry out his assignments. He sees someone thinking too much. He sees a robotic quarterback. That’s where his time in Buffalo was so valuable. “I would say I process quicker now. I know where I want to go with the ball,” he said. “I’m able to just trust my abilities and play a lot more free, not just go where the coach wants me to go with the football. I think it was a lot along the lines of just having a trust and being on the same page as the offensive coordinator. I felt like being in Buffalo, the quarterback had a lot more free rein to go where he wanted with the reads and go where he wanted with the ball, as opposed to Chicago. “Even if you got a completion [in Chicago], I felt like sometimes it wasn’t necessarily what the coach wanted. They put you in a box a little bit more than you wanted to be, and I think that restricts you as a player. It’s just different experiences. In the end, we still won games. It’s just different team to team.” And it’s interesting that he used the “box” metaphor there because it’s one, I’m told, the Bills’ coaches used with him. To explain how they wanted him to play, they told the story of how Bill Parcells would coach quarterbacks. “Here’s your box,” Parcells would say, and inside the box was all the quarterback’s reads and rules and fundamentals. Then, he’d say, the great quarterbacks are the ones who can step out of that box and know when to step out of that box to make it work. In bringing the point they made to life, Trubisky raised an example from Buffalo last year. “It was a touchdown,” he said. “I think it was Cover 2, and the safety was sunken inside. And he kind of just held him, and then went deep outside. It was a good two-on-one, and some coaches are like, When you get a two-high look let’s check the ball down, or get to a run. But in Buffalo, they like to be aggressive, and it’s like, Yo, if we can control that safety like Josh [Allen] does so well, and go down the field with it, why not exploit them and get a touchdown? And he got Emmanuel [Sanders] one on that.” Trubisky couldn’t remember which game the play was from. So I looked it up for him and circled back with a 35-yard touchdown throw to Sanders from the team’s October win in Kansas City. He said that wasn’t it, then sent me the one he was referencing—a 34-yard bullet in the Bills’ playoff rout of the Patriots. The mix-up only drove his point home. He called the plays “almost identical,” showing that these instances weren’t rare with Allen, and in seeing Allen make the offense his own, after his previous experiences, Trubisky felt like a kid at Disney World. “Absolutely,” he said. “It was awesome. It was definitely eye-opening to me. It made me say, Why can’t I add that to my game? And that’s what I’m trying to do.” Even better, the guys in Buffalo will vouch for that. In fact, Trubisky actually went to Brandon Beane after he riddled his former team in the preseason last year and articulated it to the Bills’ GM—who would’ve welcomed Trubisky back if the shot to start elsewhere hadn’t materialized for him. “[Brian] Daboll and [Ken] Dorsey allowed Josh the freedom, if something else is there, to improvise, and make plays and basically play free,” Beane said. “Talking to Mitch, I know he felt like, as we were getting into preseason last year, he was starting to gain confidence and trust it, and play free, too. And generally, you follow the rules. But sometimes you see something, and the last time they gave you that look and you ran something, it would’ve been there. So you come back to it.” Which is how, in a certain way, playing in Buffalo led Trubisky to start to see playing the position as an art again, rather than just a science. “The difference between my experience in Chicago and what I saw in Buffalo is they allow Josh to go out there and play his game,” he continued. “In Chicago, they wanted me to play the coaches’ game. Call it whatever you will, that’s just how it felt to me. That was my experience, from what I saw in Chicago to what I saw in Buffalo. “My experience in Buffalo, you’re not just going through progressions, you’re seeing the field. Sometimes I’d be on the sidelines, and I’d be like, He had a completion right here. But based on what the defense was doing, he also had [Stefon] Diggs on a deep post and we scored a touchdown. Those are things you’re seeing on the field that you can’t see from the sidelines, and vice versa.”
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