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Don Otreply

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Posts posted by Don Otreply

  1. Josh will start to run out of time in about ten or so years, what Josh needs more than anything else is two boundary WRs that get separation and CATCH the ball, he already has the short to medium route guys. Give him that and an OC that knows what he is up to and we will be fine.

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  2. On 1/28/2024 at 11:08 AM, CNYfan said:

    When I read a post like this I am left confused.  The word "he" is employed 5 times and then "him" once.    But not once is the "he/him" defined or referred to so that reader can understand who is being discussed.   

    I get that I could recycle back through two pages of conversations and solve this, but may one solid reference would be an aid to understanding.  

    This is not an uncommon occurrence in threads here, hell, people don’t even mention what happened on plays or what the score is in the GDT, I have become accustomed to this and end up going back several pages to see who is being referenced, SOP for message boards. 

  3. 13 hours ago, SoCal Deek said:

    Yes we do. But I pray to God we don’t go after some speed dude with concrete for hands! 

    Remember back a few seasons ago when we had the worst receiver room in the league, and Beane and McDermott went into the next draft repeatedly saying that they wanted receivers that had good hands and speed as a priority…,  we need this as a priority again.
     

    What we need is (“fast boundary receivers that can run a whole route tree, with great separation skills and glue for hands”) 🤞.  We essentially have been running one guy (Diggs) into double teams and two high sets, without a #2 wr that can draw away coverage on a regular basis, this needs to be a priority fix. Don’t care how they do it as long as they are successful implementing it . It will be interesting to see what Joe Brady’s offense develops into with a better # 1b / #2 option. 

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  4. 2 hours ago, Buckets said:

    What I was trying to get at is when did we get in the business of training coordinators when we should be concentrating on winning the SB.

    Don’t bother with this guy, he is on a constant whining rant, just look at his last ten or so posts, says it all right there, 

  5. 3 minutes ago, wppete said:

    No one wants the Washington job. 

    This is likely true, there are some places where taking the HC gig is detrimental to one’s career, Washington has been that place for some time now, granted there is new ownership and a good cap situation, but it is a complete unknown organization at this time, but someone will take the chance, and accept the pay check offered, 

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  6. 12 minutes ago, TheWeatherMan said:

    How generous and selfless of them to accept promotions on a team with championship caliber talent.  We are all indebted to them for their painstaking sacrifice and commitment to the Bills.  Let us collectively start a go fund me for both of them to exhibit our gratitude! 

    Like any weatherman, your posts here exhibit why you are wrong the majority of the time…

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  7. 5 hours ago, RyanC883 said:

    totally agree.  

     

    One thought:  Given the OL and what it means to team success, I would not be opposed to adding a top C/G in Rd3 to provide depth and have a young guy ready to be Allens next long term center after Morse.

     

    But WR safety and DL are l gaping holes.  I expect the draft to be some combo of WR, S, and interior DL heavy.  Hopefully two WRs at least.  

     

     

    Yup, Hopefully at least one of those WRs is a high round pick and is ready to play out of the gate. 

    • Like (+1) 1
  8. 18 minutes ago, hondo in seattle said:

     

    You might be right but let me make some observations before asking you something.  

     

    There are two basic offensive systems in the NFL: Erhardt-Perkins and West Coast.  I've heard coaches and players say NFL teams run, more-or-less, the same plays.  So there are two basic playbooks: E-P and West Coast.  And there's a lot of overlap between the two. 

     

    Coordinators tweak and combine ideas as he feels appropriate to create his own syncretic scheme.  But no coordinator is filling a playbook with plays no one has seen before based on an offensive strategy no one has considered before.    

     

    When Kurt Warner, for example, diagnoses Bills film, he knows & understands the play he's reviewing because he ran the same play (or one very similar) when he played.  He knows what it's designed to do and how it's supposed to be executed.  

     

    So what is Brady's real offense?  What is he going to do schematically different next year that he couldn't do this year?  What plays will he use that weren't in this year's playbook?  

    It’s not so much the plays themselves, it is when in a sequence of plays that a given play is called, and what formation it is run out of, in an attempt to get the defensive to hesitate in coverage, then it comes down to execution, and the talent to pull

    it off, jmo. 

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