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silvermike

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Posts posted by silvermike

  1. Even leaving aside his evaluation of the Bills, does Prisco know that he's picking football scores?

     

    19-18 against the Pats, 24-16 against Miami, 20-19 against the Giants, 19-13 against Miami, 17-16 against the Jets, 26-16 against New England, 18-14 against Houston, 23-18 against Philly, 19-16 against Dallas, and 21-16 against the Jets.

     

    How often does an NFL team score 16, 18, or 19 points? And he has it happening 12 times for or against us this season? Did they abolish the extra point or the forward pass when I wasn't looking?

  2. Broadly speaking, I would say the candidates are:

     

    1.) Coaches (likely to be) fired after this season with offensive experience:

    a.) Tony Sparano (HC-Raiders)

    b.) Marc Trestman (HC-Bears)

     

    2.) OCs working for coaches (likely to be) fired after this season:

    a.) Marty Mohrninweg (OC-Jets)

    b.) Greg Olson (OC-Raiders)

    c.) Ben McAdoo (OC-Giants)

    d.) Aaron Kromer (OC-Bears) Note - worked with Marrone in NO.

    e.) Dirk Koetter (OC-Falcons)

    f.) Greg Roman (OC-49ers)

     

     

    3.) Offensive Coaches fired after last season not working as OCs:

    a.) Rob Chudzinski (Former HC-Browns, now "Special Assistant" in Indy.

    b.) Mike Munchak (Former HC-Titans, now OL coach in Pittsburgh, never been an OC)

  3. Wow...from that article:

     

    Hall of Fame running back Gale Sayers is the only other player in NFL history with at least 3,000 rushing yards, 1,000 receiving yards, 1,150 kick-return yards and 300 punt-return yards in his first four seasons.

     

    Today's entry in the meaningless stat department. It's so specific, it doesn't really tell you anything other than that he was used on special teams.

     

    3,000 rushing yards in your first four seasons isn't special. It's been done 109 times, and 98 of those guys ended up with more rushing yards than Spiller for that period. 49 had more receiving yards.

     

    Now you're down to special teams, and neither of those numbers is anything special. CJ's 1157 kick return yards puts him 4 above Al Edwards for the same period of their careers, but behind 407 other players. His 302 punt return yards are a non-state. It's less than Dick Jauron finished his career with.

     

    I don't hate CJ. But that's a line that just says he was used sparingly on special teams while being in a RB committee.

  4. Going from Mike Pettine to Donnie Henderson will be exactly the underwhelming move that takes the wind from my sails as a fan this off season.

     

    If anything, it's such a classic, "safe" move that this franchise has gone with time and again. If they go that route, I'll bet anything they don't interview outside candidates for the position.

     

    You have a great opportunity to exhaust through all available ex DC's and ex HC's with the relevant experience, but instead you promote your secondary coach because he's your friend who has "done it before" (to little to no success, mind you).

     

    A guy who did it before, 8 years ago, without even a college-level DC job since. He spent the two years before he got to Buffalo as a collegiate position coach.

  5. Seems to me our next DC is already here...DON'T LET HIM LEAVE! Donnie Henderson's Bio as DC.

     

    In 2004, Henderson was the coordinator for the Jets defense that improved to seventh, from 21st, in the NFL in total defense and rookie linebacker Jonathan Vilma was named the 2004 AP Defensive Rookie of the Season. In 2005, the Jets finished second in the NFL in total passing yards allowed (172.2 avg.) and finished fifth with 21 interceptions.

     

    That 2005 team that was 2nd in passing yards allowed was 29th in rushing yards allowed, on its way to a 4-12 season.

  6. Henderson is not necessarily going to maintain the same scheme as Pettine. He came over with Marrone from Syracuse, not with Pettine from the Jets and Ravens (although he was a Jet pre-Ryan, and a Ravens assistant in the distant past.) He's 8 years away from his last DC jobs, where he was not successful.

     

    I'd take a long look at Wade. Jim Schwartz is available, and despite Detroit's struggles, he ran some solid defenses under Fisher in Tennessee. Steve Spagnuolo had some moments in New York (though tanked as a HC and had a very bad year in New Orleans).

  7. GET RID OF DIVISIONS : i hate playing mia, nyj & ne twice

     

     

    keep 2 conferences, play everyone in your conference ONCE. (i know, thats only 15 games, i'm still thinking)

     

    how about expand the season to 31 weeks and play everybody ONCE !!

     

    One better: let's expand the season to 62 weeks so you can play everybody twice - once at home, and once on the road. Now, I know what you're thinking: there are only 52 weeks in a year! Psshh. What else are doubleheaders for!

  8. maybe I'm reading into it too much

     

     

    Just as Jaguars fans felt it was safe to come out from under the stairs their team laid a collective egg. The good news is that despite only a single player grading green they were still in with a chance to win and indeed should have.

     

    Why should they have? they are a crappy 4-10 (now) team!!

     

    They were down to our one yard line twice and came way with zero points. Them's the breaks.

  9. Can you please show me these cases? Players are put on IR all the time and get healthy late in the season but teams need the roster spots. This is not a case for a grievance as the Bills did nothing wrong and Hopkins is getting paid full salary.

     

    There's no rule requiring a season-ending injury to be put on IR.

  10. Timothy Richard Tebow- I know i'll get heat for this, and probably deservedly so, but he has a winning record and a playoff victory on his resume as an NFL starter. As far as accuracy goes, he's awful. He can't hit the broad side of Pam Oliver's face. But, selfishly, i cant help but wonder what a read-option offense would look like with Tebow/Spiller/Jackson. Just sayin...

     

    That's all true about Mark Sanchez, too.

  11. The Browns scored on drive starts from:

     

    BUF31 (FG)

    CLE26 (TD)

    PR

    CLE26 (TD)

    BUF32 (FG)

    CLE43 (FG)

    and

    INT.

     

    Two real drives against, one entirely to blame on a depleted secondary. 20 points were given up before the defense stepped on the field, given the starts in FG range. 3 more came from the doorstop of opposition territory. They got beat twice and forced six punts. I can live with that.

  12. Has he blocked any kicks? That is the ultimate special teams play in my mind, the rarest of the rare.

     

    Has he returned any kicks for touchdowns?

     

    I don't think Easley is close to Tasker (and I'm not even a "Tasker in the HoF" guy).

     

    Steve Tasker never returned a kick or a punt for a TD. Not sure about blocks. But man, a guy who is a reliable special-teams tackler is worth something in this league. Tasker was the best of the best, but I'm not going to knock a guy who does that job well.

  13. If you want to go with the 2 conferences /one division...then go to a 19 game schedule...then you play 15 intraconference and 4 interconference games

     

    Hmm, too many games, too many injuries if they're all in a row. Let's just have every team play every other week, from March through December. Then go to the playoffs, take February off for the draft and free agency, and start it again.

  14. Ask Eugene Parker....he is the one in control. Byrd has not got the stones to make a decision alone.

     

    One of the most important services agents apparently provide is deflecting blame away from the players. Byrd hired him, Byrd keeps him, Byrd agrees with his decisions, yet we all yell about Parker.

  15. Also the Bills have not had to call any stupid or pointless time outs because they had the wrong people on the field, mismanaged the play clock, failed to get plays in from the sideline, etc. imagine that somewhere earlier in the game they lost a TO because of one of these reasons... Likely we would have had a very different outcome.

     

    It's awesome that we didn't have to even worry about it, but I really question when, in the 3rd quarter of a close game, it's worth burning a time out to change personnel or revise a playcall, especially on offense. I think I'd rather just take the five yards and regroup. 2nd and 4 becoming 2nd and 9 is probably better than losing a time out, right?

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