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Dark

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Posts posted by Dark

  1. I think 7 to 10 win range feels about right.  The key to this season is establishing the running game with Shady and Motor and then play action deep shots will obviate completion percentage and play to Josh's strengths.   The defense will be Top 10 and could be elite in the coming years.

     

    I think Josh will end up with something like 3,400 pass yards 22 TDs and 13 INTs with ~400 rush yards and 3 TDs, but the ability to establish the run will be the key to wins.

  2. 2 minutes ago, Figster said:

    I understand the skepticism,

     

    Supporting cast however does matter in everything a QB is able to accomplish in my humble opinion.  Josh Allen tries to make the harder throws because he can vs dumping the ball off and his completion percentege suffers because of it.

     

    Lets coach this kid up and see what happens.

     

    We already know Allen can make every throw he will be asked to make at a very high velocity.

     

    Time will tell...

     

    I think I got all my skepticism out tonight.  I hope Josh Allen has a Hall of Fame career.

    • Like (+1) 1
  3. 3 minutes ago, Figster said:

    Or playing with kids that 99% of don't make it to where Josh Allen is today.

     

    H.S. stats to make an argument, seriously?

     

    Are the stats invalid?  Or are they more valid than anecdotes like "he played with a lot of bad players at Wyoming, so his completion percentage doesn't matter"? 

     

    And the pattern of inaccuracy does matter.  The basis of the critique of those who didn't want Allen was his low completion percentage.  It has been an incredibly consistent predictor of what a QB will do at the next level.  I don't think most fans are raging against Allen because they personally dislike him or want him to fail, it's just that a low completion percentage is a BIG RED FLAG.

  4. 4 minutes ago, Figster said:

    If you subtract all the bubble screens and dump offs from the other top QB's you might find similar numbers/ completion ratio as Josh Allen.

     

    The other top prospects also had a better supporting cast.

     

    You get that right?

    joshallen.thumb.PNG.9dff9b17b743145dc5c1745f289c6ecf.PNG

     

    Has he always had a bad supporting cast or is he just inaccurate?

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  5. 1 minute ago, NewDayBills said:

    I know your type, I hate the know it all nerd types. You cannot predict the future and you're not as smart as you think. Also, if you think it's OK to call a player a bust before he even played 1 game, morally you are a sleezeball.

     

    Whoa.  "Morally a sleezeball"  for calling a football player a bust?  

  6. 51 minutes ago, Alphadawg7 said:

     

    The cost for the 7th pick and 10th pick are very different.  So try comparing to apples to apples next time.

    Here is the value of the two trades based on the commonly accepted trade value chart.  Yes, the value between 7 and 10 is different.  The Bills still got fleeced:

     

    5ae28bec3e410_BillsTrade.PNG.b65bf7c6958727e25cdace46d054cf20.PNG

  7. 3 minutes ago, Alphadawg7 said:

     

    The cost for the 7th pick and 10th pick are very different.  So try comparing to apples to apples next time.

    So if they gave up all of next year's draft for the 5th pick, we couldn't talk about the disparity because the picks are "very different".  bull ****.  The Bills overpaid.

    • Like (+1) 1
  8. 7 minutes ago, stevestojan said:

    Because:

     

     

    1) we still have 22. We didn’t trade the farm

     

    2) bust? Hahahaha. 

    1.  We gave up two second rounders in a deep draft to move up 5 spots.  The Cardinals gave up a 3rd and a 5th to move up 5 spots.  And we probably didn't even need to trade up.  That may not be giving up the farm, but damn, I'd rather have those two second rounders if we didn't need to move.

     

    2.  You argument is very compelling.  I'm worried that he hasn't completed 60% of his passes in a single season going all the way to middle school, but your "Hahahaha" has changed my mind.

     

    • Like (+1) 1
  9. 1 hour ago, YoloinOhio said:

    I continue to think Denver wants Denzel Ward

     

    I agree.

     

    I think many draft prognosticators underestimate the message sent by a team when taking a QB early.  It really defines where the organization is going and many GMs don't want to intentionally cause drama on their teams.  I believe this applies to the Giants, Broncos, and Dolphins in this year's draft of teams who are rumored to be looking at QB.

  10. I'm not sure that I think McD is good or bad or whatever. I guess I hope for the best.

     

    To me, it seems that a franchise that is willing to clear everyone else out and hand the reigns to a first time head coach lacks a compass. By way of example, the Steelers didn't hire Mike Tomlin and hand him the keys to the franchise. Instead, they have a sense of what they are as an organization and they hire personnel to fit their formula. It smacks as desperation that we are willing to put so much responsibility at the feet of an unproven coach. What does that say about the Bills?

  11. So the gist of your argument is:
    • Good corners are valued and often overpaid after their rookie contract so it is a bad idea to get talented corners in the first round of the draft and pay them less for their most productive years?
    • Cornerbacks are overrated, yet teams commonly overpay for them in a league that has heavily shifted toward a pass heavy philosophy?
    • We have the best quarterback in perhaps the history of the NFL in our division and we should patchwork our secondary with late round picks?

     

    Gotcha. :thumbsup:

  12. I think the question of what to do with Tyrod Taylor is exceedingly difficult, and I'm glad I don't have to make it.

     

    I think there are a lot of positives. He's a supreme running threat, which matters for the type of team Rex and Whaley have built and given the late season weather in Buffalo. He doesn't turn the ball over - 11 turnovers in 25 games - which matters for the type of team we have and is probably directly attributable to his winning record as a starter. (Not coincidently, EJ had three turnovers in the two games he started last year, both losses.) He throws one hell of a deep ball, which is important when lining up Goodwin and Watkins on the outside.

     

    There are certainly negatives too. Accuracy. Seeing the open man. Getting the ball out quickly. Getting the ball moving for scores when we are trailing late in games. I'm having a hard time thinking of a late comeback authored by TT . . .

     

    So, here's my thinking: Is the defense is going to be a top 10 defense for the next several years? With the investment in Lawson, Washington, Hughes, Ragland, Dareus, the Browns, and Darby, I'd say that a top 10 defense is a better than 70% chance. If that is the case, then the window is open now for a contending team and resigning Tyrod to be the starter makes sense. Not sure what the contract would look like against our cap, but I would rather spend the money on Tyrod for the next three years than play the QB carousel that simply hasn't worked since Jim Kelly left. I would resign him even if that means we make the playoffs even once in the next three years. Through the "Tyrod Sucks" clamor, I don't hear what better option is waiting out there, so I'd continue to bring in QBs via the draft until we hit on one.

     

     

     


  13. As soon as I saw the topic the first thought that popped into my head for overrated was Cornelius Bennett. Yes, he was a two-time defensive player of the year (yet isn't in the HoF), but the attention paid to Bruce Smith freed Biscuit in the same way it allowed Bryce Paup to win DPoY in 1995.

     

    Underrated, I would have to say John Fina. He was plugged into left tackle as a late first round pick in 1992 and while he never made a Pro Bowl, he was a cornerstone on a team that made the playoffs 5 of the 10 years he was a Bill.

  14. There's a lot of talk in the article about "data" and "insider information". What data and inside information do the employees have? Does this mean they take the lineups of the must successful bettors and use them on the competing site? For all the details in the articles, this was really vague.

     

     

    The article vaguely says, "Many of these employees set the prices of players and the algorithms for scoring. In short, they make the market."

     

    Edit: Yeah, Coastie nailed it.

  15. Interesting topic. I tend to agree with those who say that it is ideal to allow a young QB to ease his way in, but they have to be talented to succeed. Sitting a young QB isn't some magic bullet to make the Aaron Rogers-level good.

     

    I think the better question is: can a truly talented QB be "ruined" by starting too quickly in the NFL? That used to be the thinking even in the late 1990s - Steve McNair and Dante Culpepper were both highly drafted players who sat their entire rookie years, for instance. Is it that being rushed lowers the ceiling while sitting for a couple years maximizes a young QBs ceiling? How much does confidence matter if a young QB has the skills? Will skills win out in the long run?

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