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Conlan58

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Posts posted by Conlan58

  1. 5 minutes ago, GunnerBill said:

     

    Again I am getting this all very third hand but the guy feeding me the info just said there is a mutual discomfort with the fit on a number of issues that would have to be resolved. 

    I would think any coach interviewing with the browns would have some discomfort. Awful lot of personalities in one locker room, and not a great track record as a top notch organization to work for. Hell, they only gave Kitchens one year. That alone is enough to be terrified. 

  2. 4 minutes ago, thebandit27 said:


    The ball was tipped AND Allen was being contacted and his arm restricted. Read the rules before you spout off.

    I have yet to see a replay zoomed in and slowed down enough to show the ball actually being tipped. Yes the defender made an attempt to block the pass, but I don't see it clearly being tipped. Allen being contacted has nothing to do with whether or not you can call intentional grounding... numerous grounding calls are made every year with defenders draped all over the QB if it is warranted. 

     

    I refuse to give Daboll or McDermott a pass by directing blame toward the officials in this one. 

  3. 2 minutes ago, RobbRiddicksTDLeap said:


    This is a bigger deal than i think people are realizing.

     

    It wasn’t a line judge, or the back judge, it was the game referee who was overruled on the field. 
     

    I think any objective fan, would say that the play was not over, and that the returners intent is irrelevant. He made a mistake and when the outcome didn’t go the way the officials “felt” it should, they changed the rules on the field. 
     

    Because of the poor play in the second half by the offense and defense, this will get overlooked and brushed under the rug because “cry baby fans blame the refs” is the narrative always. 
     

    The truth is, when money is on the line, no one cares about “respecting the shield”. 

    The return man tossed the ball to the ref... the ref literally had to dodge the ball to be able to make the call that the ball was still live and therefore was a touchdown. We would all be fuming if we were on the other side of that call, regardless of the outcome of the game. 

     

    The right call was eventually made.

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  4. 2 minutes ago, dave mcbride said:

    I appreciate you linking this. I thought the way it was explained last night was enough to justify a call in that situation (Ford facing his own end zone). By rule, I can see why it was called. As a Bills fan, I could clearly see Ford making a play to stop a defender in pursuit of Allen from making a play and think it was a play that the refs should have let the players play. I can argue both sides, but I feel the Bills had a prime opportunity to put this game well out of reach numerous times. 

  5. 1 minute ago, Meatloaf63 said:

    Sorry, that play wasn’t suspect that’s the rule, the NFL officials on the sidelines didn’t want an embarrassing score like that to be the focal point of the game so they overruled it. But that is the rule it’s black-and-white and it’s why the referee didn’t try to catch it because he knew the player screwed up.

    Can you really look at that play and tell me the return man didn't give himself up? By rule, all plays stop at the point where the ball carrier gives himself up. 

  6. 1 minute ago, dave mcbride said:

    But it wasn’t “called.”  As soon as it happened, the sub refs ran out and basically said, “you’re mad, bro,” and the call was corrected. No review, no replay, just a a conference in which the refs applied common sense. 

    I mean, I guess if you really want to argue semantics, we can. I saw the result of the play get "called" a touchdown rather than touchback, but I guess it could be argued that I had too many Labatts at that point and was seeing things...

  7. 2 minutes ago, Maine-iac said:

    The playcalling has been the same almost every game and all season.  Good enough but not great.  The win was there for the taking.  The difference this game was the execution got worse and worse as the game went on instead of better.  Frankly I feel like we didn't know how to play with a lead.

    I agree - this coaching staff has shown time and again that playing with a lead is a definite weakness. 

  8. Just now, dave mcbride said:

    Um ... that wasn’t actually called. And it wasn’t a penalty anyways. 

    Um, the referee "called" it a touchdown by putting both hands vertical signaling touchdown... but was quickly corrected. I never said it was a penalty. It was a call. I cannot believe anyone is even bringing officiating into the discussion on why the Bills lost. 

  9. 13 minutes ago, Maine-iac said:

    A WR threw a TD to the QB ............... I think they played as out there as you can expect from the group we have. 

    That was on drive #1... where was that creative play calling on the rest of the drives? 

     

    Also, the best coaches keep that kind of play up their sleeve for when it really matters, and don't need to rely on that in a wild card scenario. See: Philly Special. 

  10. I actually think for the most part they did a good job of letting the players play. The call on Ford was rough, but according to the rule book, was a correct call. I think that was the only instance that they neglected to let the players play. 

     

    Even that challenge for PI could have gone either way, but they let it slide even though Hopkins was wrapped up with the left hand as the right hand knocked the ball away.

     

    Being up 16-0, the Bills should have never allowed this game to get to the point where people are over analyzing every call or non call. This was 100% on the Bills, not the Zebras.

    3 minutes ago, thebandit27 said:

     

    Also, I have no idea how either IG or illegal touching gets called on a batted pass, let alone both.

    Homerism at its finest here... #1 there wasn't an eligible receiver anywhere near the pass. #2 offensive linemen are not eligible receivers unless they report as such, and for one to be the first to touch a thrown pass, constitutes illegal touching. Take off the blinders or rose glasses and it is plain as day. Unreal.

  11. I have lived in Maine for the past 20 years. I held seasons with a friend from utica for 2 years, and have made the trip down for at least 1 game every since since I turned 19 (32 now). It is a 10+ hour drive, and can get costly when you consider gas, tolls, tickets, parking, hotel, duffs or anchor bar, etc...

     

    But let me tell you this. My wife and I went to the Bills game a couple weeks ago in New England and it was completely lame compared to a game at the Ralph. Lame tailgating with no tents allowed, lame banter from obvious bandwagon fans, and a lame stadium experience... people were not even yelling for their team!! 

     

    Well worth the trip and added expense to experience at least one home game every year, and I cannot wait until my boys are old enough to bring them! 

     

    It is nice, however, not having to wait in line to get a beer or take a piss. It is also nice having a halftime quickie without worrying about being arrested, rather that the boys will wake up from their nap.

     

    If we lived in WNY again, seasons would be a must. No other team has the same experience and atmosphere IMO.

     

    Go Bills!!

    5 hours ago, Rc2catch said:

    .. Both New York teams suck.. AGAIN..

    There is only 1 New York team, and if you happen to get lucky while channel surfing around 4:30 today, you can catch them in the playoffs on TV!

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