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timekills17

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Posts posted by timekills17

  1. Just now, RiotAct said:

    got a Microsoft Security warning popup when I clicked your link... supplied my username and password and that seems to have cleared things up

     

    Which site?

    The only thing I have on those sites beside my videos is Google's AdSense.

    Which is awesome.

    So far in about six years I've made...$74.39

    Not bad for a site that costs >$1K/year to maintain.

    My wife is a big fan.

    Just now, Bangarang said:

    Audio didn’t work for me

    What browser?

    Works in Chrome, Firefox, Edge, and most phones I've tried.

    It's just an MP4 with AAC audio. Same as YouTube would use.

    I don't have any Apple PCs so can't confirm if it works there.

  2. 17 minutes ago, class_of_2012 said:

    So where's the video?

    ?

    There is a menu that says Bills Video; that is the page with all the Bills videos on it.

    Or, depending on which site, you can click the "continued reading" to take you the actual game page.

    I don't usually have the actual video on the main page to dissuade web crawlers from finding it as easily.

    11 minutes ago, Buffalo Barbarian said:

     

    Cool, would be cool to watch other games like that as who wants to spend 3 hrs a game on other teams.

     

     

     

    Yeah, but I do this for my fellow military buds who are Bills fans.

    They never show Bills games on AFN, so we never get to see them when we're deployed.

    I don't have enough money to pay for storage to hold the Bills games alone, much less any other teams I'm not a fan of.

    This costs me about $1200/year to do (not including the GamePass subscription) but I enjoy it, so consider it a hobby

    13 minutes ago, BuffaloBillies said:

    I already got burned once sending $15K to a stranded neighbor. Fool me once, shame on ... shame on you. Fool me... You can't get fooled again!'"

     

    This one, I'm not sure how to respond. I'd assume this is the wrong thread, but curious what the joke here is.

    (Over my head, apparently.)

    14 minutes ago, Virgil said:

    No audio? 

    The header video on timekills.info does not have audio on purpose so it's not too annoying.

    The game videos have audio.

    • Thank you (+1) 1
  3. New update: Added All-22 video to choices along with 720p and 360p condensed game play.

     

    Different Bills team...?
    I guess the defense is legit. I like the never say die attitude, even if I didn't like that they had to exhibit it.

    Original site in the signature block (https://www.timekills.org/2019/09/8-september-2019-bills-at-jets/)
    New site is https://news.timekills.info/8-september-2019-bills-at-jets/

     

     

     

    P.S. If you check out the new site, let me know what you think about the format compared to the old site.

    I kind of like the header video, and think the site is cleaner overall, but probably is a bit slower, especially for US viewers.

    • Like (+1) 3
    • Thank you (+1) 1
  4. 1 hour ago, mrags said:

    DBilz just said he was actually in an NFL Teams practice squad and did not count against the cap. I think we should take his word for it vs some eagles fan site pulling info from wherever. 

     

    Imo I believe you are both right. I think the PS does count against the cap technically but from a different pool of funds that’s built in. Idk. Either way, I’ve never heard of a team being cash strapped and couldn’t sign a PS player or needed to cut one to find room. Doesn’t make sense. I’ll go with @DBilz2500 here. 

     

    Where did he say it doesn't count against the cap?

    • Like (+1) 1
  5. 18 hours ago, Buffalo_Stampede said:

    I don't know what his responsibilities are each play, but what I see is a player that is tough to move but lacks the hands to disengage from blocks. 

     

     

    Honestly to me Oliver may be best suited as a NT, which is what Houston ultimately had him doing and was criticized for it. McDermott may use Oliver the same way. He's very difficult to move even at his size. 

     

    Quote

    https://thedraftnetwork.com/player/ed-oliver

    Hand Usage - Needs considerably work in this area in the run game. Does not create a lot of torque to displace blockers, instead simply bull drives them down the middle. Needs to utilize much better arm extension off the snap to keep blockers off his frame. Fires into his opponent's chest with good hand placement and the power to displace blockers, but can struggle to create space, gets body-to-body and fails to disengage. Does not stack-and-shed easily enough, allowing runners to slip by him. Too often gets caught up in grappling matches at the line of scrimmage and is knocked off balance as a result. On the ground too much, especially considering the lack of quality competition.

     

    Quote

     https://www.sbnation.com/nfl/2019/2/21/18232987/nfl-draft-2019-ed-oliver-buffalo-bills-scouting-report-breakdown-pass-rusher

    When teams made the mistake of trying to block Oliver one-on-one, he was routinely able to rock that blocker back by getting good hand placement inside on their breast plates, getting full extension with his arms, and exploding out of his hips

    ...

    In addition to his power and quickness, another thing I was impressed with was how active and effective Oliver was with his hands. A lot of guys with his physical tools are good college players, but end up failing on the next level because they never work on escaping off blocks. It’s simply too easy for them to make plays in college most weeks, so they never really hone their technique. I see it every year from a prospect or two that I do a breakdown on, and it is never not infuriating to watch.

    In Oliver’s case, however, he generally did a really good job of using his hands to keep blockers off of him. He was also really good at using escape moves like rips and arm-overs to get off of the blockers once it was time for him to try to make a tackle.

     

     

    Quote

    https://www.nfl.com/prospects/ed-oliver?id=32194f4c-4929-0385-df1c-0f8e40559b5a

    • Forced to work excessively at disengaging from blocks
    • Failed to convert explosiveness into impressive sack totals
    • Rush attack is more predictable than diverse

     

    Quote

    https://nfldraft.theringer.com/

    On inside runs, Oliver uses his hands to discard blocks and grows roots at the point of attack; he’s rarely pushed back at the snap, even when double-teamed. 

     

    Quote

     https://www.cbssports.com/g00/nfl/draft/news/2019-nfl-draft-an-early-introduction-to-nine-of-the-potential-top-defensive-linemen/?i10c.ua=1&i10c.encReferrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbS8%3d&i10c.dv=20

    • Good, not overwhelming power and decently active hands
    • At this point, he's better getting into the pads of an offensive linemen then springing off him to make an impact play against the run than he is deploying an intricate pass-rushing move to get to the quarterback. Sometimes, his lack of weight leads to him not playing with tons of power.

     

     

    So...he's great with his hands. He's not very good with his hands. He's impossible to block. He get's caught up in blocks.

    Gee. It's almost like it depends on what game they watched, the day, the blocker, the play, and the scheme made a difference in how he was assessed.

  6. I realize the last thread the video went down for a few minutes after I put it up. I have to re-remember how I do it each year when I do this.

    Those that know me on this site (and others) know I've done this for years for my brothers-in-arms who are deployed. (Side note, I am also deployed, again, at the moment. That's why it sometimes takes a while to fix the issues, as internet access in Afghanistan is not great, to put it mildly.)

     

    Anyhoo...

     

    https://www.timekills.org/bills-video/

     

    That's the link to the main page with the last few years of games, but it is in reverse chronological order so the most recent game (Colts - Bills preseason) is at the top.

     

    To clarify - no, there is no account creation required. No, there's no money required. No, I'm not a "side journalist", just a fan, Soldier, and tech guy who enjoys it.

    If this is against TOS now (it hasn't been in years past, or at least it's never been addressed) then you can lock this thread too.

     

    Oh - not really relevant, but if someone has a question about the low number of posts, etc., I was just "timekills" but somewhere along the way I couldn't remember my password and I have no idea what email address I used to use to unlock the old account. And never got anyone to help me with that. So now I look like a newb.

    It's okay - it's the only place where I look like a young/new guy.

    • Like (+1) 2
    • Awesome! (+1) 4
    • Thank you (+1) 11
  7. 7 hours ago, Da webster guy said:

    This is the stuff that bugs me about front office/pr people.    We support the team through thick and thin, but when something as critical this comes up, there should be more communication with the fans regarding the prognosis, his history w concussions, treatment protocol etc.

     

    Morse is it for us this year.  We can't have Bodine getting steamrolled into Josh on every other play like last year.  We don't have depth at center, this isn't a minor thing.   Guys younger than Mitch retire over this condition.

     

    Or maybe it IS minor, but we wouldn't know because there's no information coming our way.   

     

    Reminds me of Donahoe/Gregggg era.   We don't deserve to know, as long as they know.  (p.s. thanks for the one way relationship)

     

    You're complaining about the wrong people. Sort of.

    In reality, the team, including the PR who frame HOW the message gets out, not so much WHAT they're allowed to say, would prefer to release nothing.

    It's a fight between legal (HIPAA, NFLPA, NFL proper) and the gambling consortium.

     

    Gambling, big money, wants to know who's injured, the extent, etc. so they can properly assess their risk and lines.

    HIPAA has rules on what can be released reference medical information. NFL Players Association (NFLPA) have their own agreement with NFL proper as to how much/when/& what is acceptable inside the HIPAA overarching requirements. NFL proper negotiates with gambling consortium to meet gambling consortium requests while maintaining NFL's desires and messages and also staying in line with HIPAA laws and NFLPA agreement. 

     

    A public affairs team gets the info, is informed what is legally allowed to be released (based on the above HIPAA, NFL agreements and NFLPA agreements) as well as what they MUST release (again, based on NFL agreements with gambling - among others, but mostly gambling even under other names) as directed by NFL, and then they frame HOW and WHEN to release inside those directives.

    • Like (+1) 2
  8. Bruce.

     

    Thurman was the first true all-purpose back; leading the league in yards multiple years in a row.

    Jerry Rice said the best receiver in the NFL was Andre Reed, and he was the game breaking slot receiver before that was a thing.

    EMo was big with great hands (really big when he got to Houston - he was damn near a TE then)

    Jerry Butler was more dominant in his era then any of those three above.

    OJ - a running back with world class Olympic speed that was bigger than many linebackers today - he's the only one I'd have to hesitate on.

     

    But Bruce...he's the only one you literally could not game plan against.

    • Like (+1) 2
  9. That's why PPG isn't the measure of a "good D".

    The Bears' average drive starting field position  was OUR 48 yard line.

    For the season, the Bills offense is 8th in starting field position. EIGHTH. The D puts the offense in good position game after game and they STILL can't score.

    The Bills offense is #32 in points per drive, #24 in average TOs per drive, and their net yards per drive is -8.75. That minus sign isn't a typo. From a field position standpoint they would do better punting on first down. Literally.

     

    You can't blame the defense for points against when your offense allows the other team for the season to start their average drive at their 40 yard line, and every time your offense gets the ball you're actually giving the team an extra 9 yards.

  10. 1 hour ago, teef said:

    My plan is to beat them until they turn out how I want. I read a book on it. It was a short book. 

     

    That’s why I had four; two of each. Two are Bills fans, two picked their own teams. It’s my own social psychology experiment on nature vs nuture. 

     

    So far the two “pick your own” are graduating early from college magna cum laude and the other is #2 in high school class. The Bills fans...well they’re more fun on Sundays because they’re not exactly worried about school. They just trust the process. 

  11. 1 hour ago, Buffalo Barbarian said:

     

    I think we might be in the 84 era of this team except that Josh is on the team instead of the USFL and we have the right coach , unlike Kay and Bullough.

     

     

     

    So Nick Bosa will be our Bruce Smith?

    Bruce - '85, Jimbo -'86

    Of course, Jim had two years of experience in very close to NFL caliber games which JA will also have in two years...

    Hmm. I can definitely see the comparison.

    • Like (+1) 1
  12. 4 hours ago, Fadingpain said:

    The team was still very much a work in progress, however, and we went on to win a mere 4 games.

     

    Somehow, amazingly, defying the odds, Jim Kelly was not "ruined."

     

    :rolleyes:

     

    He wasn't a rookie. He'd played with professionals - NFL level - in the USFL for two years. 

    I don't think playing a QB with a bad team is going to ruin a QB either - there are plenty of examples of good to great QBs that did well. But you really can't use Jimbo's "rookie" experience in the NFL as an example.

    • Like (+1) 1
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