Jump to content

rant_and_go

Community Member
  • Posts

    192
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by rant_and_go

  1. WRs and CBS are a dime a dozen? Is that why guys like AJ Bouye--who has never been a starting corner, get as much as franchise LTs on the open market, and WRs easily get more than LTs?

     

    Is there any data to back up the idea that OLmen have longevity where other positions don't?

    That comes from teams believing they need that one missing piece. With Jax, it's a make or break year for Bortles.

     

    Legion of boom lasted 3 years before Maxwell was traded. Rodgers good group of 5 WRs lasted 2 years, and then were gone. I'm having a hard time thinking of any other group of WRs or CBs that a NFL team builds around and wins. At that position, it's 1 break out year, 2-3 re-living the glory days, then FAs where there are more busts than success stories.

     

    Cowboys Oline got immediate impact when they started building it, and won games for 3 years, and now entering their prime. Raiders did the same. Oline is needed before the QB. It wins games and has longevity and only needs time and coaching to build. It's a move that makes sense for the Bills. Taylor has flaws with his game that are not going to be fixed in a year. With OLB, WR or CB the Bills are just a farm club for the rest of the league, and in a few years we have nothing.

     

  2. I think we need a new right tackle but I don't think it's coming this off-season. Perhaps a late round pick to compete.

     

    Too many larger needs. We need starters at WR, WILL, CB and safety. Depth is a huge issue in the back 7 as well.

     

    While Mills isn't very good, I think he'll have to do for now. Maybe CuJo can make progress this off-season to playing on the right. Last tackle roster spot's probably a competition from a late pick or UDFA and cheap UFAs. I would think Henderson gets cut.

     

    Not ideal but could be worse.

    Hmmm I'm seeing a trend over the past 17 years. WR, OLB, CBs last about 3 years. Always rotating them out.

     

    Good linemen last decades. If QB isn't there, build the best line in the league. WR, OLBs and CBs in the NFL are a dime a dozen. And the best at those positions are vets who just end up getting the calls. The penalties, and the first down droughts make our line one of the worse.

  3.  

     

    In one year the Browns have accumulated a draft stockpile well beyond anything the NFL has seen since perhaps the Hershal Walker trade, or the Ricky Williams trade. They've used their stockpile of cap space (as well as the talent they already had) to build 4/5ths of what should be a very good offensive line, they have the basis for a good receiving corps, and adding Garrett as well as the Collins move last year puts them in position to have a strong front 7 defensively.

     

    The simple truth is this organization likely would be in MUCH better shape long term if they rolled all our cap space over this offseason, accumulated the comp picks from letting Gilmore / Woods / Brown / Goodwin / Alexander etc walk and traded any of Shady, Graham, Kyle, Preston Brown, Richie, Wood etc that would have value, before rolling pick #10 back to accumulate as much future draft capital we could. We'd very likely be very bad this year, but the basis of a foundation is there with Sammy / Glenn / Miller / Dareus / Lawson / Hughes / Ragland / Darby and a few of the younger guys we don't know much about yet that it wouldn't take long to get back into our current position only with a MUCH brighter outlook on our future, a full season of seeing if we can find any gems out of later round picks / UDFAs, perhaps Darnold to really build around, a mountain of cap space and a pile of draft picks.

     

    However, we do not have that long term outlook as we keep sacrificing future value to push the 8th or 9th most talented team in the AFC into one of the two wild card spots. How anyone thinks that's the best long term move for this franchise is beyond me.

    The Browns have done this multiple times in the past 20 years.

     

    Draft picks really are meaningless compared with leadership. Owner is the biggest. Next up is the head coach, then the front office, then a very distant is the QB who sees the field.

     

    Really not that hard to win from that scenario. Dump garbage on the rest of the league and change the rules.

     

  4. Preston could improve a bit in the new scheme. I don't get why people hate on him so much.

     

    The LBs will be fun to watch in camp

    Leveon Bell and Jay Ajayi come to mind. That Steelers game was really rough to watch.

     

     

     

    Apparently a lot of people are still high on the Bills...ranked 4th in the surprise super bowl team next year at 6.9%

    The NFL is quickly becoming a league where a QB catches and throws a 8 yard hand-off on target in two seconds.

     

    A much distant second is a defense consisting of two very tall d-linemen, an edge rusher, and then 8 coverage men.

     

    The Bills have an edge rusher.

  5.  

    I think it absolutely is!!

     

    It's naive to think these guys still don't sell out to get the job done. They're all junkies of some sort -- ego, adrenaline, fame, fortune, winning, etc. Have a certified Bills official sit in a room with players one on one and offer them a better performance on the field through a powder, pill, needle, or whatever, and most players will jump at the opportunity. When it comes to adults making their own choices, I'm okay with steriods. It would be better if the medical field invested resources in safer steroids, instead of just saying, "They're bad." Players still gonna do what players do.

    It forces people who don't want to die of liver cancer out of the game, or into drugs.

     

    It encourages children to do drugs. NBA went away after Jordan because parents didn't want their kids acting like Sprewell.

     

    It wipes out all the past history. Everyone forgets about Joe Namath because he wasn't a 300 lb roided dolt. NFL is just starting to b uild a history like MLB.

     

    No longer is the game about skill, or discipline, or team work, or will, or knowledge but it turns into a drug arm race.

     

    It dehumanizes people and the game looses even more individuality. Teams look the same, and people who have families turn into a pack of race horses.

  6. Its got zero to do with TT. Why are you trying to make it about that.

     

    Thinking about Cardale on his own merits, he is not a starting caliber quarterback at this point in his career. If he was, he would have been lighting up the Jets in garbage time in his last performance. And maybe he would have lit things up in preseason. Those are the only times we have got to see him. And based on those performances, it is blatantly obvious he is not good enough to start in the NFL at this point in his career.

     

    Maybe he becomes good enough. But right now I would say he isn't close. And I explained that he couldn't even beat out EJ for QB#2 on the Bills. That means he is bad, bad. because EJ is very un-special. Whaley knows all of this.

     

    He threw over the middle.

     

    He ran a touchdown.

     

    For the Bills, that's a QB lighting it up.

     

  7. 1998!? Two years after they played GB in the Super Bowl? 1998 sounds like prime years for Bledsoe and Ben winter Coates. Once Bledose was drafted and the uniforms changed the Pats rise began.

    Nope. They had problems with getting a new stadium, and the news was for about a week they were going to dissolve the team.

  8. Same reason Bernard Hopkins and Floyd Mayweather are so good at boxing, they ruin it for everyone. 20 years ago, football was a lot of fun. You could win a lot of different ways. Running game, good defense, good oline, a hot WR.

    In 1998 the Patriots were about to be dissolved. Not relocated, just gone. They were closing down the old stadium and the fans were going to storm the MNF booth and beat Dan Dierdoff to death with Al Michaels body. 9/11 happened. Refs looked the other way while Ty Law raped Issac Bruce, and Brady dinked and dunked his way to the Super Bowl.

    Tom Donahue signed Lawyer Milloy, and Bellichek saw the power of knowing the play before the snap.

    Now it's just QB, and a coach who teaches his players how to get away with holding. The game is suffering. It's horrible to watch. Ratings are down. People are not playing it

  9. The league is awful right now. No truly great teams aside from New England so games don't feel big.

     

    In Montana's day you had the Cowboys and Redskins.

     

    Peyton vs Brady was always fun but that's over. Now it's Brady vs whoever and it's just not a good product. Nobody is up to the task of stepping up.

    Cowboys were just getting rid of Landry. Big teams then were the Giants, Bears, Dolphins, and Skins at the tail end of Riggins career.

     

    What happens is locker room veterans. A lot of times I saw where someone could just kill Brady. He was running downfield, or on a turnover. No one did it because they would be cut by their own GM, and their own vet team mates, (like Gilmore), would banish them.

     

    The other way is rich owners. They run a scheme on other naive owners, dumping player contracts on them, or staff, or getting them to buy highly paid consultants who recommend law and construction firms.

     

    There are only two teams in the NFL, insiders and outsiders. Outsiders get screwed big. Fans are just a mass of cattle.

  10. Lombardi died tragically while coaching the Redskins. I think that's the big reason they have the name.

    Best coach in history? Paul Brown. Built two NFL teams from scratch. Advanced the league in professionalism and a lot of the tradition, like weekly schedules, breaking down tape, rules and even equipment come from him. He also transcended the game and uplifted the society around him by fighting against segregation. A lot of the league today is taken directly from Paul Brown.

    Bellichek wins but at the expense of the game. Kicking the ball to stop Kelly's no-huddle, or teaching how to hold without the refs seeing, or changing eligible wide receivers. When he got there, the NFL was fun. Exciting games almost every week. After he's done with it, it's boring television filled with spoiled players looking at refs asking for a flag.

×
×
  • Create New...