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Enemarty

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Posts posted by Enemarty

  1. Leinart can get you those numbers and still stink, because he stinks and cannot play QB in the NFL over any significant amount of time. If you want a back-up QB who half the time can possibly be average, he is your guy. Leinart has no arm, and slow and lumbering in all aspects except his mind. He can see the field and make decisions but his body is big and his movements are slow, his release is slow, and he has little arm strength.

     

    * * *

     

    If everything goes right, and there is little rush, he can have decent stats on short accurate throws. He's a brittle, slow, Trent Edwards at best.

     

    Was just discussing Leinart with my work colleague, a long time Cards supporter. His comment - "Leinart will drop back, survey the field and refuse to make the challenging pass, instead looking for the easy dump-off for a three yard gain." I had a two word response to this information, and it appears you would have had the same two word response.

  2. Easterbrook has a rambling style that can be entertaining (I did enjoy his columns for a while), but he seems to come up with conclusions and blanket rules first, then force everything into that framework. I can't read his columns any more because he just doesn't bring any insight, just glib generalizations.

     

    Agreed. As I'm sure you are aware, one of his constants is his antipathy toward blitzing. However, I don't recall seeing him singing Wanstandstill's praises for the complete excuse of a defense we had last year. Of course, the first time we give up a big play on a blitz this year, he'll be jumping all over us.

  3. By the way, his fumble was clearly a forward pass too.

     

    I assume the folks in B-town watched local announcer coverage; those of us out of town were stuck with the Indy homey coverage on NFL channel. However, I had to laugh when the Colts play-by-play guy, while thinking that the rule was if the hand/ball started going forward it was a fumble, says that the hand/ball was definitely going forward,only to be reminded by the color commentator that if that was the case, it would be an incomplete pass. Then he quickly changes his tune in accordance with what was good for the Colts.

  4. I'm a bit more optimistic but yes. Can not wait for tailgating

     

    If I still lived in B-town, I would agree that at least there is the tailgating. But being limited to DTV (where I can pause the game and mow the lawn if need be), I'm looking forward to the season for the first time in years (ok, I was a little excited after signing Mario, but that was tempered by my concern for the offense).

     

    Win, lose or draw, this year appears to offer something different (yeah, I know, familiar refrain). The defense has a few blue chip players and perhaps an aggressive play-caller will get us out of our seats more than in the recent past.

     

    On offense, we have a coach who wants to use our best weapon, an improved (at least on paper) cast of characters surrounding Stevie, and a potential franchise QB who will play based upon ability and not because we have no one else on the roster. Sure there will be stumbles and fumbles, and Andy was a real loss, but the hope and possibility are there.

     

    In fact, had we retained Andy and signed Jarius, I would be pumped for the season. As it stands, as least thus far we have avoided the double loss of O-lineman - defensive stud that occurred with the departure of Jennings and big Pat. Maybe we are turning a corner.

     

    ... or maybe I was born in Buffalo, doomed to a lifetime of anticipation followed by disappointment. Hey, at least there is always next "off-season."

  5. Lastly, with Polian, I guess maybe he would come back for one last hurrah, but he is 70 guys, and does he really want to sign up for 4-5 years as that is what a GM looks to get in a contract. If you were to be a GM would you want to work those hours until your 74-75? Or would you enjoy like Parcells to get paid decent money at ESPN and NFL Radio for working 15 hours a week at most with maybe a little more in the season. At some point you want to spend time with your grandchildren.

     

    In addition to all of the other solid reasons to say no on this, mention should be made of his son, as some Indy commentators saw Bill's dismissal as part of a larger move to make sure Bill's son, the heir apparent, did not in fact become the future of the Colts braintrust. The same concerns would accompany Bill here.

  6. I never gave one thought about Jennings... our offensive line was pretty much a patchwork of guys anyways, but our defensive line was beast. I would have kept Big Pat and Big Ted FOREVER.... :P

     

    Then you were in the minority on here. The longest post I ever made on this board was in support of letting Jennings walk and keeping Pat and his buddy Sam together.

  7. I do not remember THAT much of that attitude... for the most part everyone was angry we let him go, because he was a big force in the middle.

     

    As I recall, the issue wasn't Pat's play, which everyone was behind, but who deserved the big free agent contract, Pat or Jonas Jennings. Most on this board thought LT was more important.

     

    Of course, Jennings rejected our offer and bolted to the 49ers. When we turned to Pat, he had had enough of the front office and went to the Vikes.

  8. Incorrect. I graduated from Howard U. This story was always whispered about. Old timers who had been with the University for years maintained the logo originated at HU and the Bills took it. I can tell you with clarity the logo was in operation from at least the mid-80's on through my time there in the early to mid-90's. The only difference was in the 80's the logo was entirely blue. Then they changed the stripe to red by 89 or 90. And both color schemes incorporated "BISONS" on the stripe.

     

    The Bison crest with the cross swords came in the late 90's or so. Then they returned to their "original" logo with the streaking bison. Thank God. BTW, nobody at Howard treated it as a big deal that the Bills use the logo. It was just seen as a fact of the matter where it was created.

     

    Although I can offer nothing to resolve this issue of who came first, I can push PH's memory-based mid-80s date back to 1982, as my friend brought her 1982 Howard U yearbook into work today and the football team sported white helmets with the blue charging buffalo and blue stripe with "Bisons" written in white cursive on the end of the stripe.

  9. They'd have scored more if Reed didn't start hearing footsteps.

     

    They would have won the game if Reed hadn't heard footsteps. If I recall correctly, consecutive 2nd quarter drive-ending drops when we had a 12-3 lead. Score, and NYG would have had to think about throwing, rather than pounding out a ten-minute half ending drive.

     

    Now you've gone and made me sad...

  10. Huh?

     

    Actually it was Tom Cousineau, picked no. 1 overall in 1979 who, after blowing us off, was eventually traded to Cleveland and with that pick, we got Jim Kelly.

     

    Walt ended up being Joe Devlin after we traded him to St. Louis in 1976 for their second round pick in 1977. Of course, Joe proved to be a wonderful member of the organization for years.

     

    But if you want to get really goofy, you could make an argument that Walt led to Bruce.

     

    Walt, who wasn't a bad player for the Bills during his four years, getting a handful of sacks each year he was here, certainly better production than Maybin and Flowers combined, went to St. Louis and the Bills, in an apparent attempt to restock the d-line, traded their no. 1 in 1977 to the Bengals to get Sherman White, who, ironically, was drafted by the Bengals no. 2 overall behind Walt in the 1972 draft. Although not a dominating force, Sherman had a productive career with the Bills through the 1983 season.

     

    Now, like most years it seems, the Bills were crap in 1976 and the pick they sent to the Bengals for Sherman ended up being the third overall, which the Bengals used to get Eddie Edwards. Edwards went on to have a stellar career with the Bengals, ending up their all time sack leader. His best years were, arguably, 1983 and 1984. So, had the Bills kept that pick and drafted Edwards, they would have had a dominate pass rusher still in his prime when it came time for the 1985 draft as opposed to a d-line in which White had retired after the 1983 season and the sack leaders for the 1984 Bills squad came from the LB corps.

     

    So, assuming with Edwards we still had the overall pick in 1985, and he was as productive in Buffalo as he had been in Cincy, would we have drafted Bruce no. 1 overall in 1985?

     

    In any event, say what you want about the fact that a number-one overall didn't produce like we would have hoped, Walt contributed a lot more to the team than Maybin or Flowers and, arguably, Mike Williams. And unlike those three, at least the trade of Walt ended up getting us Joe Devlin, where the picks for Maybin, Flowers and Williams were entirely wasted.

     

    And finally, in case you were wondering, the very first player autograph I ever got was ... Walt Patulski.

  11. Anyone doubting the trade is out of their mind crazy! RG3 has proved me wrong and I am not afraid to admit it. I thought Wash paid too much on the backs of Newtons rookie year making a guy like RG3 look so valuable, but RG3 has not only proven his worth, but exceeded it.

     

    This, this a thousand times this. I too thought the Redskins paid too much, but part of that results from my living here in DC and being embarrassed that our team didn't consider making such a crazy deal. What's more, I thought drafting Kirk Cousins was absolutely bonkers. Well, not anymore.

     

    There was a time when Buffalo might have pulled something like this off. Ah, the memories ... we were hosting a halloween party when I was attending UB. I went out to get a few more supplies an hour or so before the party when I flicked on the car radio and was floored by the news. I rushed home to tell my housemates - "blockbuster trade, C. Bennett coming to Buff." Boy did we have one heck of a party that night. Going into the 87 draft, I wanted Bennett more than anything, but was happy with Shane given Bennett being off the board. You can imagine how I felt the night of the trade. Kind of like Redskin fans with RG and KC.

  12. I watched Fitz all day. (1) He cannot and does not throw deep. (2) He missed at least 5 open receivers. At least three easy 3rd dwn passes that would have kept drives going. His arm looks weary or hos head is in his ass. It doesn't matter what his completion percentage is or if the bills won or lost. He has to improve or this season is lost against every team that will figure out how to stop Spiller.

     

    he was driving me crazy. He made a couple of really nice throws, especially the one down the sideline to Chandler. But too many drive killer throws to the dirt for an NFL starter.

  13. This is an intelligent analysis. So often, windbags like Kiper go on about a team that had two first round picks or drafted in the top five and couldn't help but get quality and suggest that they had an A draft, while a team like the Bills that didn't make any foolish moves and took great talent when it came their turn and filled the needs they set out to fill gets a C.

     

    For example, last year we drafted MD with the third pick, a BPA and need position, but which was essentially a no-brainer decision and many gurus gave us a good grade as a result. However, I consider the job Nix did this year, with the 10th overall selection, to be far superior from the GM perspective.

     

    He managed to select what many, if not most consider the BPA, after several (or all) of the the pre-draft favorites were off the board, and still got his choice of O-lineman, indeed the same guy many had us using our first round pick on. Although the third round was curious, he could well fit a major need and the talent from the 4th and 5th rounds was nothing short of highway robbery.

     

    In Nix we trust indeed!

  14. Wow--this is the edited version of your post??

     

    Manning went 13-3 his second season. They drafted no o-linemen that year, but they did draft E James (that's an impact player). In fact, they didn't draft hardly any o-linemen in Mannings tenure--and a LT only once in his first 6 years. What was the point you were making with Manning again?

     

    Anyway, every team is in a hurry to get good, to some degree. Cleveland and Miami didn't get better by picking "franchise LTs" (and passing on Peterson and Ryan) and it's several years later. Cleveland is stuck with McCOy for now and Miami is thinking about reaching for...Tannehill. Whio are their point scorers??

     

     

    yes, yes, yes.

     

    Do not give up our 2nd even if Kalil falls. If he falls to 10, great, otherwise get the bodies in Buddy.

  15. I used to be superstitious about things like this, but somewhere along the way it finally kicked in that none of it matters. If a Bills fan can't be ridiculously optimistic right now, there's something wrong with this world.

     

    This is so true. I moved to DC for work in 89, but retained my season tickets and would make the crazy 8-hour road trip for home games.

     

    So, for XXV, after not winning the SB lottery, I decided the best thing I could do to ensure a Bills victory was drive back to Buffalo to watch the game with the guys I had my season-tickets with. That didn't work out.

    So for XXVI, I watched at an all-Bills supporters party here in DC with a bunch of new friends I had met from Buffalo while watching away games at a supporters' bar down here, thinking we're playing the Redskins, won't the after-party be awesome if we win seeing all those smug Redskin fans crying in their beer. Nevermind.

    For XXVII I actually won the lottery and decided I'd better fork over some money and go to the game while I had the chance. At least I went to Disneyland the next day.

    By the time XXVIII rolled around, I watched the match quietly at home with my new bride and, through the first half, thought that I had finally figured it out.

     

    After that four-year period, I realized that whatever I did had no effect upon the prosperity of the Bills.

     

    Of course, I didn't watch any of the four at my childhood home with my dad, the guy who inflicted this curse on me, so you can blame me for those four disappointments... goodness knows, I blame myself every February.

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