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Inigo Montoya

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Posts posted by Inigo Montoya

  1. The strength of our offense in the passing game.  The Bills need to come out and start throwing and play to our strength.  If the Pat's defense can shut the pass down, then we can adjust to the run.  No reason to go away from what has been working for us. 

     

    You can over think things at times.  You don't see Andy Reid game plan to minimize Mahomes.  Why would he ever take the ball out of Mahomes' hands unless he absolutely had to?  I think we are now in the same situation with the Bills.  Why take the ball out of Josh's hands?  He is the engine that drives this offense.  Maybe New England can stop him.  If so they'd be the first to do it in quite a while.

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  2. 1 hour ago, BADOLBILZ said:

     

    Yes as I said the Bills are NOT averaging 30+ points per game and they came into the game just 10th in the NFL in scoring. 

     

    Yeah speaking of running backs.....the current Bills backs are probably the worst receiving RB group in the NFL......there is zero screen game and forget throwing downfield to them.

     

    Thurman Thomas was the premier receiving back in the NFL..........an NFL MVP.

     

    That's one of like 50 points of comparison that just don't match up AT ALL or make it extremely difficult to compare era's.

     

    Guys like Reed and Lofton finished their NFL careers in the top 2 in both career catches and yardage when they hung them up..............I hate to break it to you but none of the Bills receivers are going to finish their careers that high on NFL lists.

     

    Bottom line.......this offense is very fun to watch but there aren't going to be 4 passing game Hall of Famers from this bunch like there were on the 1990-1991 Bills.   Nope.

     

    What's important is that the current Bills are excellent at a style of offense that can win big in today's NFL.

     

     

    Didn't mean to get your blood pressure up.

     

    I'll stand by my take.  We'll just have to agree to disagree on this one.

     

    I do agree with you 100% that what is most important is that our Bills are playing lights out.  

     

    🍻  

  3. 2 hours ago, BADOLBILZ said:

     

     

    They aren't scoring 30+ points per game.   They came into this week 10th in the NFL in scoring.   

     

    They are absolutely the best passing offense the Bills have had since the NFL basically disallowed the hitting of QB's and WR's in 2010 but offensively they don't yet stack up against their peers the way the 1990 Bills did.

     

     

     

    The Bills are averaging 29.1 points per game this year.

     

    Thuman. Thomas. had 1000+ yards rushing each season from 1989 - 1996.  During the four Super Bowl seasons he had;

    1990 -  1,297

    1991 -  1,407

    1992 -  1,487

    1993 -  1,315

     

    Josh Allen's rushing offense this year?  The Bills leading rusher through 14 games, Devin Singletary, has 644 yards. 

     

    The Super Bowl Era Bills had a fantastic running game to compliment the fantastic passing of Jim Kelly.  Josh Allen has essentially no running game.  Almost all of the offense this year is the passing game. That was never the case with the Kelly Bills.  They could run the ball with Thurman any Sunday.  That's not the case this year.   I'm not comparing the offense of the Kelly Bills to the offense of the Allen Bills, I'm compatring the passing offense of the two.  

     

    I'll stand by my point that the 2020 Allen Bills is the best passing offense the Bills have ever fielded.

  4. 36 minutes ago, Bob in STL said:

    Not so fast.  
     

    Thurman’s  pass receiving and receiving yards were stellar.  Better than our RBs by miles.
     

    Reed and Lofton had HOF careers.  Bebee was a good player too as was Tasker. 

     

     McKelker/Metzellars was more potent than what we have.  
     

    The game is different now so you can’t go by numbers.  Put Kelly and his group in today’s NFL and no telling how much the no huddle would score. 
     

    You have to judge players by performance versus peers in there era.  
     

    The current Bills are impressive indeed and the best is yet to come but we don’t know what the future holds.  They can get better but I am not saying the are better than the 90’s group yet.  
     

     

     

    32 minutes ago, Coastie said:

     

    You are spot on. There was never a player on the field that seemed that couldn't make a play. And I mean a big play. I remember when Lofton came over from the Packers and it just seemed like extra icing on a wonderful red velvet cake.

     

    31 minutes ago, Ed_Formerly_of_Roch said:

     

    Think the game has changed too much to compare the two.  While Allen certainly is stronger and bigger than Kelly,  Allen would have been beat to hell 30 years ago as would his receiver group.  Kelly too would hardly be playing today as likely would be out with a concussion every other week. On the other hand maybe not as the defensive team couldn't have touched him at all.

     

    I stand by my point.   This is the best passing offense the BIlls have ever put on the field.  

     

    I'm not arguing that Kelly wouldn't ball out in today's NFL where QBs are protected and offense is encouraged.  That's a totally different argument.  To Bob in STL's point, we don't have a Thurman Thomas on our team which makes this team's ability to pass the ball all the more impressive.  No defense game plans to stop Moss and Singletary, they game plan all week to stop Josh Allen and Diggs and Beasley and this passing offense.  And no one can do it. 

     

    I'm not crowning this team as better than the Kelly Era teams.  Time will tell on that.  That's a whole other discussion.  I'm not saying that Diggs and Besley are better than Lofton and Reed.  That's a different argument too.  I watched all those Kelly Era games.  I don't ever remember the Bills winning games when they only had three running plays in a half.   We are scoring 30+ points a game with no running game this season.  It's all about the passing game this year.  

     

    We might just have to agree to disagree on this one guys.   

     🍻 

     

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  5. This is the best passing offense the Buffalo Bills have ever had.  Even back in the Kelly Era the Bills offense really ran through Thurman Thomas.  I have never seen a Bills team throw the ball this much and this well.  It just looks effortless.  When we get John Brown back I don't know who can line up against this passing offense and stop it.  

     

    I think we can go score for score with the Chiefs at this point.  I think we can beat the Chiefs.  I think this team can win the Super Bowl.

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  6. We are getting healthier and playing better each week in all three phases of the game.  We are peaking at just the right time.  I don't think I'm being a homer when I say this, if we can stay healthy, I think we have a chance to win it all this year.  I can't believe I'm actually saying that...

     

    If the Bills win the Super Bowl, Buffalo will look like St. Patrick's Day, Mardi Gras, Cinco de Mayo, and Chinese New Year all rolled into one.

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  7. I can't argue that the Bills front office has put Allen is a position to succeed and the Jets' front office has been inadequate in supporting Darnold's development. 

     

    What I take issue with is that the guy doing the video above gives Josh Allen no credit for any of his improvement.  His position is that the Bills made Allen, and while it's true that Beane, McDermott, Daboll, and Dorsey were all a part of the equation, the person most responsible for Josh Allen's success is... Josh Allen.  That seems to get lost in the equation somewhere.

     

    Revamping the O-Line last year is not responsible for how Allen is now throwing the ball with touch and anticipation causing an almost 20% jump in his completion percentage from his rookie year.   Bringing in Beasley and Brown is not responsible for Allen no longer playing Hero Ball causing turnovers and making cringe worthy plays weekly.  Bringing in Diggs in not the reason Allen leads the entire NFL in 4th quarter winning drives and come from behind victories.

     

    There is just something in Josh Allen that drives him to succeed.  Brandon Beane and the coaching staff didn't create that drive in him.  Brown, Beasley, and Diggs didn't cause him to move and rent a house so he could be close to his QB coach during the off season so he could continue to work on his craft during the COVID pandemic.  The revamped O-Line isn't the reason Josh is the first and last person in and out of the building everyday.

     

    Saying that the only difference between Darnold and Allen is the difference between the Jets and the Bills is overly simplistic and short changes the drive that Allen has to be the best QB he can be.  Everyone says they want to be the best, very few have the drive to make that happen.  Did Darnold get hosed going to the Jets?  Absolutely.  Would Allen find a way to get better and evolve no matter where he went?  Absolutely.  That is what the gentleman in the video above fails to acknowledge.

     

    It's time people start to acknowledge the simple truth, Josh Allen is the single biggest reason for Josh Allen's success.

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  8. Great write up as always Shaw.

     

    Couldn't agree more about Andre Roberts and what he has meant to the team this year.  He is sure handed and consistently gives the Bills the best starting field position possible.  Can't help but feel he is going to take one to the house before this season is over.   I hope it's in the playoffs.  Roberts is a real weapon and another feather in Beane's cap for going out and making special teams a priority.  Beane's attention to teams is paying big dividends now.

     

     

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  9. 1 minute ago, appoo said:

    It was interesting to not that the Bills did hit on a single one of Allen’s deep balls last night. Allen is having to play at an elite level because teams don’t have to respect the Bills deep game right now. 
     

    This offense badly misses Smoke, and with him the Bills probably put that game away in the first half.

     

    This isn’t to say you keep him at the expense of a good looking RT, but rather just be careful, if you’re the bills, about cashing in on the cap savings from cutting Brown 

     

    Fair points all appoo.

     

    I want both of them on the roster next year.  Let's hope we get more Magic Beane this offseason with his cap and roster moves.

     

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  10. 8 hours ago, The Red King said:

     

    I'm worried about the conversions.  You wanna watch Buffalo blow an eight point lead to KC in the Championship Game?  The Super Bowl?  It cost us last year, and it's not fixed.

     

    Yes, Buffalo is a better team then last year.  This was a big win and I feel like the Bills are real contenders.  That doesn't mean I can't point out the one concern I have left with this team.

     

    Hey OP,  I think you make a fair point.  Our two point defense is pretty bad.  Not sure it's my first take after this game, but it is a concern.  It's especially confusing because our defense has had so many solid goal line stands this season.  At the end of the day, I think it's just hard to stop an offense from gaining two yards on a set play that they have drawn up and practiced specifically for just that situation.  I have no idea where Buffalo's rate of surrendering 2 point conversions is compared to the rest of the League. Might be interesting to see where they stand in comparison to other defenses. 

     

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  11. Josh's box score last night won't impress anyone, but if you watched the game, you could not walk away without seeing what a complete QB Allen has become. 

     

    In the first half there were Steelers' defenders all over Allen. He never looked panicked or flustered.  He didn't just take off and run as the first sign of pressure.  He hung in there and continued to try and push the ball down the field.  He had a pick but it was when his arm was hit during the throw.  The end zone view of that play shows what Allen saw, Beasley had gotten behind the secondary and was streaking down the sideline.  Allen is playing with so much composure this year.  The pocket can be a mosh pit and he is still hanging in there making good calls.  He's not seeing ghosts, tucking and running, or playing Hero Ball.  What a difference.

     

    We watched the Bills' offense struggle to find a rhythm the entire first half.  The same thing happened last week.  Allen didn't let that affect him.  He continued to battle.  How many times in the past 20 years have we seen the Bills start a game poorly and it just snowballs?  Not anymore.  Sometimes we get off to a fast start, sometimes it's a slow start like last night, but Allen doesn't let it get in his head, he keeps grinding, and eventually things start to click and he starts moving the ball.  I also think it's fair to say that he has exorcised the team's 3rd quarter demons.  Josh has the mental toughness that you need to be a great QB.  It never seems like the Bills are out of a game anymore.  

     

    Josh is now manipulating defenses with his eyes and pump fakes and consistently finds the open man.  How many times have you heard the announcers call out Allen for missing a wide open receiver somewhere?  It just doesn't happen.  This is two weeks in a row where he has helped get Gabe Davis open for a 20 yard TD with a pump fake to slow the secondary for just a split second to allow Davis to get to behind them and into the corner of the end zone.  He is looking off safeties and he doesn't get fooled by coverages.  He is executing the offense like a real franchise QB.

     

    This was only the second game this season when Allen had a completion percentage of less than 60%.  Watching the Bills' offense struggle in the first half I didn't feel like it was because Allen was having accuracy issues.  In the second half when the protection scheme was adjusted and Daboll shifted to shorter receiving routes and more of a rhythm passing attack to get the ball out of Allen's hands quickly,  Allen and Diggs just took over the game.  Allen just doesn't hit his receivers, he hits them in stride, leading them with the ball and allowing them to pick up YAC.  That's a whole new level of accuracy from Allen.  He isn't just getting the ball inside of the receiver's catch radius, he is putting it exactly where it needs to be to maximize the run after catch.

     

    Lastly, his leadership skills are incredible.  Josh Allen is not hot and cold, jumping up and down with joy and then pouting five minutes later on the bench.  He doesn't throw hand grenades during press conferences.  He deflects all praise to his teammates and coaches and takes all the blame on himself when anything goes wrong.  Even when it's not his fault.  Even though this team's success is all about him, you never get the sense that Josh is full of himself.  When asked about his game Allen always starts with what he needs to improve upon, not what he did well.   Josh Allen has the temperament to be a franchise QB, unlike a mercurial QB from Cleveland.  Sorry Skip Bayless, you common, ignorant, jerk.

     

    I think this team can beat the Chiefs.  If we played the Chiefs 10 times I think it would be a 6/4 result.  Not sure who has the 6 and who has the 4.  The bottom line is that Josh Allen is playing at a level that puts the Bills in position to go to a Super Bowl this year.  At the beginning of the season the prevailing opinion was that the Bills would go as far as Josh Allen could take them.  Fourteen weeks into the season and the Bills are sitting at 10-3 after playing a much harder schedule than last season, and are a Hail Mary away from being 11-2 and competing for the Conference bye.

     

    Josh Allen has developed into an elite NFL QB and talk of a Buffalo Bills Super Bowl is neither unrealistic nor premature.

     

     

     

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  12. 5 hours ago, Big Blitz said:

    And continue to find (make up) stats to trash Allen 

    It's almost parody at this point 

     

     

    I've got a new statistic too:

     

    Most snarky takes on Josh Allen over the last 3 years that have proved completely wrong:

    1.  Pro-Football Focus  -  1,246

    2.  Football Almanac    -   879

    3.  Dan Le Batard and the cast of Highly Questionable  -  812

     

     

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  13. I think the game plan for Sunday night will be a throw back to the last couple of years with designed runs for Josh and a game plan that gives him the green light to tuck the ball and take off if the safeties turn their backs on him.  Use pre-snap motion to manipulate the defense and open up lanes for Josh to run. Jet sweep to the right and have Josh sneak out to the left.  Run away from the side of the field TJ Watt is lining up on and see if their backup LBs can contain Josh.  He doesn't need to run for 20 yards.  He can break the Steeler's back with repeated 6-8 yard runs.  If they start to spy Josh that's when Daboll should dial up a down the field shot.  I expect Josh to rush for 75+ yards Sunday.  Josh's legs will be the X-factor this week if the weather is as bad as predicted.

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  14. What has driven the NFL towards mobile quarterbacks is the advent of players like JJ Watt, Aaron Donald, the Bosa Boys, Khalil Mack, Myles Garrett and others who have made it very expensive for a franchise to put a statue behind their offensive line.

     

    Just like in nature, the QB position has adapted to it's changing environment and those QBs who can roll out and escape the pocket and make a penetrating defense pay have found a niche and are exploiting it.  Twenty years ago defensive ends and tackles just weren't the athletes that they are today and that new level of athleticism has forced offenses to adapt.  To date the most effective adaptation has been the introduction of the mobile QB.  (The fact that the defense isn't allowed to decapitate QBs today also helps a little bit too...)

     

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  15. There are no Football Gods sitting on a cloud above Bills Stadium demanding tribute in the form of running plays.   If runs aren't working, and you can move the sticks and score throwing the ball, then don't run the ball.  It's called playing to your strengths and it's what good offenses do.  

     

    Case in point, the Chiefs have five games this season where they didn't even break 100 yards rushing as a team.  Two of those games they only ran for 36 yards and 50 yards, and they won both of them.  I don't remember people going crazy about the lack of a Chief's running game after those contests.  They are a passing offense.  Most games this year they are 2:1 passing to running.  The only week where they featured the run was against the Bills in Week 6.

     

    Would it be great if we could run the ball like the Titans?  Absolutely.  

     

    Can we run the ball enough to get bye if the weather or game script demands it?  Probably.  When Daboll made it a point to run the ball against the the Chargers we had more running plays than pass plays and averaged 5.7 yards a carry.  I think we can all live with that.  I also think the current composition of our O-Line is better than it was back in Week 12 versus the Chargers.

     

    If an opponent wants to stack the box to stop our running game and feels comfortable leaving Beasley and Diggs in single coverage, be my guest.  Even in 30 mph winds and rain I like the odds of Allen making them pay dearly a couple of times.  At the end of the day, we win by playing to our strengths and against their weaknesses.  Right now our strength is Allen's arm and our receiving corps. We need to stick with the passing game as long as we can in every game until the opposition stops it.

  16. 1 hour ago, Dont Stop Billeiving said:

    Great point, Daboll does a solid job mixing run and pass out of those 3 and 4 WR looks to keep the defenses guessing. And sub-package or not, Pittsburgh is going to have less talented and experienced back up ILBs on the field who we need to take advantage of. 

     

    In this game, I'd hope to see more of Knox and Lee Smith lined up next to Darryl Williams to help block TJ Watt with the occasional chip and slip for a TE screen. TJ Watt might be the DPOY this season, but if he has one weakness, it's his size (6'4" and 252 lbs). I'm sure this is overly simplistic and Watt being a bit lighter allows him to be so quick and agile, but I'd use Williams and a TE to just pound him into the ground on every play and hopefully tire him out. 

     

    Then use every misdirection/jet motion/RPO trick we have in the book and make it difficult for those LBs to trust their eyes and stay disciplined in their gaps. 

     

    Logan Thomas was lined up on the end with TJ Watt and chipped him all game long last week when the Redskins beat the Steelers.  We need to mirror that.  We can't have another Joey Bosa fiasco this week.  If the O-line can give Josh a chance to go through his reads and throw the ball the Bills will win this game.  I really think it's that simple.

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