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dave mcbride

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Everything posted by dave mcbride

  1. No, Goff is actually very good. He’s no Mahomes, but that’s not a fair standard. Lewis Riddick is terrific. More of him, please. pS - his brother is rob riddick!
  2. I bet you he misses BB. Arians is a sloppy, uncareful coach.
  3. This is a bad NFL game. Neither team can run the ball and they barely even try. It’s like watching a mediocre basketball game.
  4. Love your last point, but allen could probably throw a 50-yard deep out on a rope!
  5. Not the 2018 to 2019 jump with this guy? https://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/T/TannRy00.htm
  6. The thing about that 1991 season is that the Bills' QBs collectively threw for 4,140 yards and 39 TDs. Reich had 6 TD passes himself that year.
  7. Exactly. Couldn’t step into the throw. He was wide open! It was a good call. Unfortunately for Murray, the pressure was there, making him unable to step into his throw.
  8. Yeah, he's a much better natural passer than Jackson. People forget he was drafted #10 overall by the A's to play center field. You have to have a great arm AND be highly mobile to play CF in MLB. The best athletes in MLB are SS, 2B, and CF.
  9. ? - What I meant is that older qbs who have been elite for a while and can quickly diagnose every defense thrown at them don't have to rely on mobility like virtually every other qb in the league. Lack of mobility is a key reason why Josh Rosen is a failure. I'm sorry I didn't mention Rodgers, but I certainly include him in that group along with Roethlisberger and to a lesser extent Rivers (whose extreme lack of mobility will kill him in the end, as it always does). As for sack rate, please explain your mocking laughs. It's a really important stat that tells you a lot about a QBs ability to quickly diagnose plays and avoid drive killing sacks. Carson Wentz's slow recognition this season and his constant inability to get rid of it quickly has led to a 9.3 percent sack rate. It is killing the Eagles this season. Also, I didn't think this needed to be relitigated because it's so obvious, but the reason that Flutie was so much more effective than Rob Johnson is that both played behind the same line, but while Flutie had a low sack rate, Johnson accumulated the highest sack rate in NFL history. Sacks kill drives--plain and simple.
  10. 604 rushing yards, 5.9 ypc, 10 rushing TDs, and a low sack rate of 4 percent (Allen's is over 5 percent). Murray's electric running ability is a game changer, as the Bills found out. His passing is good too. Bottom line: to qualify as a great qb, you can't simply be just a thrower in the NFL anymore unless you're Brees/Brady (i.e., qbs who have seen everything).
  11. I would think so. He looks like a career backup to me. I was pretty unimpressed with his physical talent last year when he played. Darnold is a much better thrower, especially when on the move.
  12. I think he's in the worst situation for a young qb that I've seen in ages. Maybe Steve Young in Tampa Bay? Sidenote: It has occurred to me that Gregg Williams may soon be the only defensive coordinator in NFL history to preside over two different 0-16 teams. If I'm the Steelers, I think hard about a late first for him. He has talent and he'd be set up to succeed there. Ben ain't gonna play too much longer. Yup. As I said above, Steve Young.
  13. I know the numbers don't show it, but Moss looks pretty good to me. Interestingly, here's what Albert Breer, who I really like, wrote in his SI MMQB column on Monday: 1) I think Zack Moss needs to be the bell cow for Buffalo coming out of the bye. https://www.si.com/nfl/2020/11/16/arizona-cardinals-hail-mary-kyler-murray-deandre-hopkins-believable
  14. Also, Hughes is in eighth season with the Bills, and has never missed a game. https://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/H/HughJe99.htm
  15. He is not a problem and has made big plays. I would keep him.
  16. I disagree with him. My read on each of the INT-possible throws. 1. He threw from an unstable base and overthrew the receiver (which was not Singletary) by a lot irrespective of Peterson. 2. Just a bad throw that Peterson dropped. Don't know what he was looking at there. I don't think this one is complicated. 3. Inaccurate throw behind Davis that the trail cover guy could make a play on. Ball needs to be on the other side of the receiver. 4. My read at the time, and I'm standing by it, is that he wanted to get Knox back in the game after that killer penalty and threw a reckless, inaccurate heave into coverage that failed. He regularly tries to pick up his teammates after they make an error, and it's an admirable trait. But it didn't work in this case because there were two defenders in the area and Knox was covered. Just my opinion, of course.
  17. Four balls that *should* have been picked (and two were). A crazy decision to heave a ball into the middle of the scrum to avoid a sack. Missing on both deep throws by 5+ yards. The throws weren't even close. He made a lot of good plays too. But 5 legit bad ones plus the return of deep-ball inaccuracy on the two such throws he made adds up to a lot of negative plays. Anyway, anytime you throw four clearly interceptable balls, you're making an inordinate number of bad plays.
  18. I'm a huge fan of Josh Allen. I'd still say he made an inordinate number of bad plays in that game. As I was saying. This was the last play of the game: .
  19. He has led the league three times in game winning drives, and in 2016 had 8. The Lions only won 9 games that season! The Lions have 4 wins now and he has 3 game winning drives. He should have 4 given that season opener too. https://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/S/StafMa00.htm
  20. Awesome play! To be fair, Gene has a point. Josh A is 14th in INT percentage right now. https://www.pro-football-reference.com/years/2020/passing.htm#passing::pass_yds, and over the past few games the rate has climbed. He does need to clean up his game in that area.
  21. Not by me. The league existed long before the SB era and there were many, many great teams and players. The best teams of their eras are still the best teams of their eras; it's a fool's errand to try and compare them with teams now because it's not like to like. The Lions of the mid-1950s are one of the great teams in league history based upon their performance in that era.
  22. They have won 5 NFL titles and have been around for 90 years ...
  23. As I said earlier, White is giving up about 7.5 inches to Hopkins when factoring in height, measured vertical, wingspan, and hand size. That's a lot.
  24. Really? I said before that play that the Cardinals were clearly set up to throw two hail marys in a row or a dipsy-doodle lateral play involving Drake. Seemed obvious to me given that there were only 11 seconds left.
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