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Cash2Burn

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Posts posted by Cash2Burn

  1. I love this quote from Jay McKee in today's paper (obviously quoted prior to today's news)

     

    "I can assure you the players are getting stronger and stronger," Sabres player representative Jay McKee said. "There is no way a cap will ever be accepted. Gary's getting into a fight he never saw coming. He's in the fight of his life. (The players) aren't the type of guys will back away when they're pushed."

     

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    Looks like Jay got blindsided by this, just as much as everyone else:

     

    http://sports.yahoo.com/nhl/news?slug=cp-n...ov=cp&type=lgns

     

    "Still Sabres player representative Jay McKee was surprised when he heard the union would accept a cap. "If that's where we were going, I wonder why now," he said.

     

    Even Redden, also in Edmonton, wondered about the timing. "If it could have been done two years ago it could have been a lot more convenient for everyone," he said.

     

    Chicago forward Matthew Barnaby was of the same mind. "We probably could've gotten this thing done in the summertime," he said. "Am I mad? No. I want to get back to work. But at the same time, I'm just a little disappointed that it went this far to play poker and to have someone call your bluff."

  2. That being said, this is not the biggest factor that has hampered Buffalo's growth.  If this were the case, other areas with higher percentages of the population with union membership would be in worse shape than Buffalo.

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    Take a look at Table 6.1 on the URL below and tell me unionization doesn't affect job growth:

     

    http://www.uwm.edu/Dept/CED/publications/milwecon/chap6.html

     

    Buffalo had the highest level of unionization (as a percent of labor force) among the 14 major U.S. metro areas studied in 1966, 1991 and 1996.

     

    In 2004, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, among these same 14 metro areas, only Detroit had a larger percentage loss in private sector jobs (-1.5%) than Buffalo (-0.7%).

  3. no reinvestment back in to the company

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    Actually, there's been quite a bit of reinvestment by many companies. The problem is, those investment dollars went to facilites in more business-friendly states/countries, rather than WNY.

     

    Many workers (unionized or not) fail to grasp the concept that capital flows to where it can earn the best return. Given a choice between spending to renew older, inefficient WNY plants (staffed with older, high-cost labor) versus new lower-cost facilities elsewhere, companies have voted with their feet.

     

    Again, the analogy is just like the Bills opting to go with J.P. over Drew. They're betting they can go a lot farther with the kid than with Bledsoe, who's shown everything he's got and has no more upside.

     

    (How's that for turning this thread back to football! LOL!!)

  4. Pro football players, especially 10 year vets make more then enough to retire on. The blue collar worker and union guy is required to work 30 years for a company before they have a solid retirement.

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    Well, I guess it depends on what career you choose. If the barriers to entry are low, and there are many, many more applicants than there are positions available, then that may be the case.

     

    But, I guess my response would be, who forced you to choose that career track? It's not only about education. It's about marketability (that good ol' supply and demand). It's not the employer's fault that 100 applicants line up for a "good" job openning.

     

    Pro football players command high salaries for a reason--they're in short supply. When the opposite situation exists, wages adjust accordingly.

  5. your job can be done in india and the cost could be 1 qt of what you make

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    The whole point of this discussion is that the responsibility lies with the worker to make them as marketable/in demand as possible.

     

    Employees, whther at the bottom, middle or top of the food chain, are always only as good as the value they can deliver to their employer. If someone can do your job faster/better/cheaper, then it's up to you to acquire better skills, lower your price or do whatever it takes to make the employer choose YOU, over your competitor. That's the dynamic that so many people just want to ignore.

     

    It's funny that this thread is on TSW. Making a roster spot on the Bills is really about labor competition in it's purest form. If a rookie can deliver more value than a 10-year vet, so be it. We're all on board with it and say it's good for the team. When it comes to the "real world," however, the pro-union position would be to protect the vet and say adios to the rook. How does that make the team stronger?

  6. I was talking with one of the Customer Services reps, and they mentioned that the tellers are paid the least, but do most of the work at the branches.

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    That's not the point. Wages aren't determined by how much work someone does. They're established by supply and demand. If there's a large supply of individuals willing to take $8 per hour, then that's what the pay will be, regardless of how difficult the job requirements are.

     

    I'm not denegrating tellers. They work hard for their money and almost all do a good job. But the economic value tellers deliver processing transactions pales in comparison to the revenue generated by platform sales reps, branch managers or relationship managers (whose training, education and specialized skills allow them to earn higher salaries because the profit contribution they deliver is proportionately higher).

  7. no it is not . it is worth a lot more than that , just ask a teller

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    Uh, just because YOU think it's worth more than $8 per hour doesn't make it so.

     

    I work in a bank. I know tellers personally and professionally. $8 per hour is an appropriate figure.

     

    If a teller thinks they can/should make more than that, they're free to post for another position within the bank (assuming they qualify) or go elsewhere. Ten other applicants will be waiting to take their position when they leave.

  8. IMHO the guy is classless. Couldn't he have waited until after the SB to announce his retirement? He is such a me first guy. I was at the ESPN Dan Patrick show when DP asked Jerry Rice if he planned to follow ES lead into retirement. JR says " Dan Im going to address this some other time. Right now the focus should be on NE and Philly. They deserve it and not anyone else."  Emmitts retirement announcement in Jacksonville personified his selfishness.

     

    Oh yeah Emmitt signs free autographs but only on Emmitt Inc. products. The autographs are free but the mini helmet is $125.00.  :lol:

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    Whoop-di-do. Does anybody even remember last week anymore....it's like the scene at the end of the Jim Carey movie, "The Truman Show."

  9. http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slug=ap-e...ov=ap&type=lgns

     

    What an ego on this guy retiring during Super Bowl week. He can't wait until next Tuesday to call it quits after the season is done.  Talk about trying to steal the spotlight.

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    This is the second post like this I've see this week, and I just don't get it. SuperBowl week is like the NFL's national convention and it has become someting of a forum for star players to announce their retirement at. The national media is all in one place, the country is talking NFL football 24/7 and a lot of players from around the league are in town.

     

    It's a great time/place/opportunity for Emmitt (the all-time leading rusher) to call it quits.

     

    How many more Pat-Eagles stories can we handle anyway. Good for ES, he was a great player and I wish him well.

  10. so in other words he wants to be paid market value? shocking!

     

    pay the man......he's earned his contract, we are in good cap shape, so what is the problem here?......other teams retain their good young talent by extending their contracts (i.e. LT, sheppard, ellis, sheldon brown).........why can't we?

     

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    Uh, if I'm not mistaken, there's a team playing this weekend that doesn't follow this line of thinking. Seems like it's worked out OK for them. <_<

  11. Both of them have a ways to go in order to unseat the reigning champion, Calvin Murphy (14 kids with 9 different women). <_<

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    LOL!!! You beat me too it. I'm an NU grad and, -- speaking for my fellow alums -- I want to say how proud we are of Calvin's achievements. I really think we should name a biology lab (or maybe a women's dorm) after him. :blush::blush::(

  12. ...it's a roll of the dice.  But T.O. wants to give it a go.

     

    http://www.philly.com/mld/philly/sports/fo...fl/10781628.htm

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    Thank God he'll be on the field, at least for one play. Now we can all rest easy, knowing that he won't have do anything crazy (like set himself on fire or do a strip tease on the sideline) to get the attention he craves.

     

    I'm not the biggest Pats fan but I'd love to see Harrison turn TO's lights out during the game. :D

  13. He was excellent at explaining the formations and various plays. He was just too loyal to his ex-mates and quick to cut off Murph if he made a critical observation concerning one of the Bills players. That became painfully obvious during every broadcast.

     

    I still like the guy and wish him the best.

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    I guess my response to your problem with AVP is, so what. Use your own judgement to decide if a player makes a mistake. Why rely on the "color" guy's comments? Does that somehow validate/invalidate your own opinions?

     

    I thought Alex did a great job of explaining plays, as you mention. He also had a nice, relaxed style and good sense of humor for a radio "rookie." He was a "homer" and it was kind of fun to hear him cheering when the team did well. If he didn't blast Drew from time to time, well, whoop-di-do (that's what TSW is for!).

  14. 1 (yes only 1) would have a college education

     

    Philip M. Harter, MD, FACEP

    Stanford University, School of Medicine

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    That's the scariest number of all. Not that the other 99 need a college education; but that the "one" is making all the decisions/policy that will affect their lives. Pretty low odds they'll get it right.

  15. After leafing through the two fish wraps in town --The Buffalo Snooze and the Sal & Leo Chronicle ---- today I'd have to read between the lines and say Drew is a goner in the Buff this year.

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    Of the two articles, Ralphs' comments in the D&C are most telling. I think he's looking for more "excitement" from the QB position and is willing to suffer through some growing pains, if that's what it takes.

  16. What does that have to do with my question.  A poster makes a statment that DB's passer rating is JUST under 100 for the last 12 games and I ask how they figured that out.  :)

    Sorry if I misread the tone of your post.

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    Hey, I'm on your side. I think those rating show an average (at best), if eratic, QB performance. Only four times above 90, yet the team won nine times. If you were to guess at the Bills record based on only those ratings, I doubt many people would put their money on 9-3. I know...I know, stats are for losers.

    :)

     

    Do you have any ideas about what the league-wide average QB rating is for wins versus losses?

  17. I don't know how to calculate passer rating, but here is DB's for the last 12 games per nfl.com...

     

    90.2

    30.4

    100.4

    88.8

    14.3

    108.5

    64.6

    132.9

    51.5

    80.3

    89.6

    58.9

    Could you tell me how to calculate this as a whole because looking at his individual rating for each game, it does not appear that as a whole that his passer rating is "just under 100" for the last 12 games.

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    Great research. You'd be hard pressed to guess that 9 of those games were wins, based off those ratings.

  18. You're right that the team has potential.  But at the same time, you're being far too kind to TD.  If they miss the playoffs next year, it's 5 straight.  How can anyone miss the playoffs 5 straight year given today's parity in the NFL?

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    I don't think I'm being kind to TD. Like any GM, he's ultimately accountable to the bottom line...as you say, wins and losses.

     

    My point is, a GM has to lay out the player personnel strategy and then hand the execution over to the coaches...GW was an unmitigated disaster, for which TD does not escape blame. If the current coaching staff was here for that whole run, there's no way we go 0-for-5.

     

    I'm not cheerleading for TD. But I am excited. JP is now being handed the reigns when the team's "set up" to have him take over. It's a great way to do it, and increases the chances we get the next Tom Brady, rather than the next Jake Plummer.

  19. Not making the playoffs for four years and going with a QB in year 5 who has never started an NFL game, is where TD wanted this franchise to be in year 5 of the plan???? :)  :)  :blink:  :blink:

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    Geesh...TD said from day one that he was going to try and keep the team competitive and rebuild on the fly. Year 1 he purged the roster to fix the cap mess. Year 2 he brought in DB who had a great start, kept the team competitive, but ultimately hit a wall. TD also started to build the D into the unit it is today. Year 3 we got our franchise RB and kept building the D. Year 4, the franchise WR and QB. And a competent coaching staff (I'll slam TD with the best of you over GW).

     

    TD's plan, I believe, was to have the pieces in place for a QB switch when the team had a good foundation in place, rather than throwing a young QB to the wolves before the supporting cast was ready (along the lines of what Pittsburgh did with Big Ben, and Cincy is doing with Palmer, and yes sports fans, the Pats did with TB).

     

    Again, the execution of the plan was undermined by GW's ineptitude and Drew's collapse. But look where the team is positioned now, and tell me you're not excited about the future:

     

    1.) Triplets QB-RB-WR

    2.) #2 defense (statistically, I know...there' still room for improvement)

    3.) One of the youngest teams in the league, who could potentially play together for a number of years.

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