Jump to content

habes1280

Community Member
  • Posts

    210
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by habes1280

  1. I like this.  I keep hearing that Thomas is a cut above the second tier receivers, but the closer we get to draft day, the less comfortable I am with moving up the order to draft him.  A trade-back like this, to the top of the second round, landing us at the top of the second surge of the receiver run, and in your scenario, recouping a pick in the third, would be perfect.  I'm not sure that Franklin would be my first choice of the remaining pass catchers, but I wouldn't scoff (especially with two more picks in the top-100).

  2. The jury's still out, but he's further along than I thought he'd be.  Coming into the season, I didn't think he had games like the Dallas game or the first half of the Texans game in him.  His profile had always been that he could flash with the right coaching and enough development, but that it might take more time than most.  His play this year showed that he has the stuff right now, he just needs to learn to get out of his own way.  I'll take that.

  3. I think you might be crazy on this one.  Knox didn't have a clear path to the endzone, and it wasn't befuddlement that kept the play from working, it was that Allen threw the ball over his head.  I'm all for this team trying to put the game away, but this didn't look like a rehearsed, go-for-broke decision, it looked like a desperate move when there was still enough time on the clock to make a play.

    • Like (+1) 3
  4. 10 hours ago, Mark80 said:

     

    Yep, a guy who is thought of so highly that they barely got a 2nd round pick for him.

     

    I don't think this is a real measure of his value.  The Cardinals left themselves with no leverage, and the Dolphins exploited it and got him for a price.  Rosen may or may not develop into a top-tier quarterback, but it would be difficult to argue that the Dolphins aren't more stable at quarterback with him on the roster.

    • Like (+1) 1
  5. This doesn't seem to be the year, the team, or the player to measure statistics.  I'd like to see signs that he can do what successful quarterbacks do: dictate to the defense instead of simply taking what they give him, work through his reads and find the right targets for his throws, make those throws from time to time, and finally, show that the offense can count on him to provide a spark, make a play, or lead the offense down the field in adverse circumstances.

     

    He doesn't have to consistently do ANY of these things, let alone all of them.  I understand that he's developing.  I just need to see signs that he has these qualities in him-- so stated another way, I need to see him do these things SOMETIMES, and I need to see him doing more of these things by the end of the season than he was at the beginning of it (an admittedly high bar given his performance against the Vikings).

     

    He can turn the ball over, make bad decisions, bad reads, bad throws; I just need to see that he can make good ones, as well, and that he's getting incrementally closer to where we need him to be to lead this offense, and this team, at some point in the not-too-distant future.

  6. 3 hours ago, major said:

    Heard today that Jon Gruden has a two year plan to completely overhaul the raiders roster to bring in his own players. Why do coaches do this (our own included)? I’ve seen this done in my profession as well and it rarely works. I know some answers will revolve around new schemes and new players. But it seems to be more of an ego trip, in my opinion. So why do you think they do this? 

     

    Something tells me this is a rhetorical question, but I'll bite anyway.

     

    Short answer?  It's easier.  It's easier for coaches to identify the kinds of players they think will best execute their concepts than it is to modify those concepts to match the players currently on the roster.  Adaptive coaches are rare, and there are only too many who are willing to rest on the laurels of schemes that may have won them games in the past, but are now either outdated or a bad match for their current personnel.

    • Like (+1) 1
  7. 7 hours ago, KGun12TD said:

    The guy we picked instead of Russel Wilson...He could run really fast but couldn't catch a ball if hi s life depended on it. I don't even remember his name.

     

    This is another stinger.  If memory serves, when the Bills played the Seahawks that year, Wilson broke an NFL rookie record by rushing for three TDs and throwing for another in a single half, and T.J. Graham dropped four passes, one in the end zone.

    • Like (+1) 1
  8. I think this has less to do with who is the better quarterback by the start of the season, and more to do with putting Mayfield into the best position to progress.  They're protecting their investment with statements like this by removing pressure to get him on the field, and giving him some time and room to grow (in principle, anyway). 

     

    It's the NFL, though.  The moment he outperforms Tyrod in practice or mop-up duty, they'll throw him into the starting lineup, no matter what they say in the offseason, or whether or not it hurts him in the long run.

    • Like (+1) 1
  9. 21 hours ago, ddaryl said:

    Baker Mayfield being off the board screams what I already have figured out. We are going to be Carolina Panthers north.  Baker can't run a similiar offense that Cam is running. I believe the bills didn't rate him low they just couldn't design an offense for Mayfield because they do not know how or feel condfident they could, so off the baord he went

     

    This makes me a little nerovous because it kinda saying to me, that our coaches don't have that much ability to design a offense around different styes of QB's. I would like to feel confident that our OC  and McD could go any direction whenver they need to but ob vioulsy this is not the case

     

    You might be right, but I don't see the Bills trying to duplicate the Carolina offense.  Dennison, by and large, had control over the design of the offense last year-- which was nearly identical to the offense he ran in Denver, and which didn't resemble, in scheme, pace, or execution, Carolina's offense.  I'm hoping the same will be true of Daboll (who, I also hope, has a better understanding of his personnel, and is more willing to design an offense to suit their strengths).

     

    I get the impression that McDermott may want an OC who matches what he wants philosophically from the offense.  And he may target players whose skill sets match those philosophies—a power running game, a strong intermediate passing game, etc.—but at least to this point, he seems to have left the design of the offense to his OCs, who, to this point, have shown no interest in duplicating Carolina's schemes.

     

    Let's keep our fingers crossed.  There's reason to hope—or to Billieve—that there's a better method to the madness than you fear.

    • Like (+1) 1
  10. 29 minutes ago, MAJBobby said:

    But this point everyone should be nailing A+ because you have each pick in your scenario. Example you now know you can wait in Washington until last pick in 3rd 

     

    etc etc 

     

    this is a reason I like Fan Speaks better

     

    I thought the same thing, but it repopulates picks in a different order for each draft.  In my first crack at it, Sam Darnold fell to me at #12, in my second, he went first overall.  Some players fell in every draft (like Tim Settle), but most of the prospects in the first three rounds were selected differently from mock to mock.

  11. 6 minutes ago, absolvedregicide said:

    I can't figure out how to post the screen shot because it's too big, but this is my draft.  I got an A+ with no trades; if only this was realistic.

     

    Your Score is 22580 (Grade: A+)

    Your Picks:

    Round 1 Pick 12:  Edmund's, Tremaine, OLB Virginia Tech (A-)

    Round 1 Pick 22:  Mayfield, Baker, QB Oklahoma (A+)

    Round 2 Pick 21:  Price, Billy, C/OG, Ohio State (A)

    Round 2 Pick 24:  Gesicki, Mike, TE, Penn State (A)

    Round 3 Pick 1:  Harrison, Ronnie, SS, Alabama (A+)

    Round 3 Pick 32:  Washington, James, WR, Oklahoma State (A+)

    Round 4 Pick 21:  Yiadom, Isaac, CB, Boston College (A+)

    Round 5 Pick 29:  Mataafa, Hercules, OLB, Washington State (B+)

    Round 6 Pick 13:  Dickson, Michaels, P, Texas (A+)

     

     

     

    If only...

     

    That would be an unbelievable haul.

  12. 5 hours ago, vincec said:

    Probably too much

    So based on this chart, the #12 and #22 alone would be more than enough to get the #1 overall from the Browns. That sounds totally unrealistic to me.

     

    More unrealistic that trading 3 firsts, 2 seconds, and a third to move up ten spots?  Both seem prohibitive, just to different teams.  I have to think that the answer is somewhere in the middle.

  13. I hear you.  I just don't like how drafting a lower ceiling quarterback one year tends to preclude teams from drafting a higher ceiling quarterback the next.  I'll never forget watching Aaron Rodgers slide down the draft board-- past where the Bills would have picked, if they hadn't traded the pick for JP the year before.

     

    The thing about Derek Carr and Russell Wilson is that they were second and third round picks, respectively.  Teams don't hesitate to draft competition for players like that the following year.  QBs picked in the top-third of the 1st round are a different story.  Teams stick with those players until they've proven, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that they can't handle the load, and aren't getting better.

  14. I still have a hangover from the JP and EJ moves.  I'm all for doing what we have to do to get the guy we want, but if we miss, I don't want to reach on a prospect simply to have a new young quarterback on the roster.  If this year doesn't produce the opportunity to draft the QB we want or need, fill other positions, regroup, and go after one in next year's class, when we will likely be picking in the top 10.

     

    I trust that McDermott and Beane will make the right call, though.  And that's a significant relief, given how I've felt going into drafts with previous front offices.

  15. 46 minutes ago, ChasBB said:

    According to space.com, a Blue Moon happens, on average, once every 2.7 years.

     

    Brady is presently 26-3 against Buffalo in 29 starts (29 games effectively represents 14.5 seasons (let's call it 14.5 years for sake of this discussion) of games between the 2 teams where Brady has started.  So, 14.5  years / 3 wins = 4.83 -- which means Buffalo gets a victory over Tom Brady, on average, once every 4.83 years or seasons.

     

    So, sadly, the math quite literally says that Blue Moons happen with much greater regularity than do Buffalo wins over Tom Brady - dang close to being twice as frequently.

     

    Ah, being a Buffalo fan is a special place   :)

    (in hell)

     

    Well, there's a special place in hell for posts like this.  Well done, my brother.

×
×
  • Create New...