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granitestatebillsbackers

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Posts posted by granitestatebillsbackers

  1. Ok, here goes. Are you sitting down?

     

    After 40 years of watching pro ball (the Bills, of course) and immersing myself in every conceivable facet of the game, it's time to scale Everest.

     

    That's right: the Salary Cap.

     

    I need someone to reply with Salary Cap 101. Just the basics--tell me what the hell the cap is, how players count against the cap, etc. etc. etc. You know, all the crap that they talk about on Sirius NFL radio while I sit there and nod thoughtfully so the guy in the next car thinks that I am part the NFL "brain trust."

     

    It would be greatly appreciated--and they'll be able to inscribe the following on my gravestone:

     

    Here lies Mike.

    He was full of crap.

    But the dude could talk

    Salary Cap. Oh yeah.

     

    Thank you.

  2. Chris Mortensen just said that the "buzz" is that Marv is going to ride to the rescue in Buffalo! Brought tears to my eyes! He is the face of winning for this franchise and I'm thrilled to hear about this news. Ralph Wilson and Marv are good friends and that might be the key to all of this, Ralph probably asked for Marv' advise, and got a proposal he couldn't refuse! Truly great news!!! :unsure:

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    Thank you for that post. Just thinking about the possibility of Levy coming back made my 2005 season (not that it would take much).

  3. My first taste of the pain and joy known as the Buffalo Bills came as a 6-7 yr old.  It was post-Ferguson and Pre-Kelly.  I remember hearing my father, cousins and uncles voice their frustration with the team both on Sundays and all week long.  I remember wondering how anyone could get so upset with something they so obviously enjoyed.  Why didn't they just walk away?  At this point, my experience with the NFL was limited to sticker books and wondering what in world third and ten meant.     

     

    Then it happened.  I became a fan.  Sometime before Marv Levy and my tenth birthday I got hooked.  I don't remember how.  It just happened.  The Bills weren't good yet, but they were on their way.  They had a cocky, strong armed young QB.  They took a shot on a running back that had a horrible knee injury in college.  There was a crazy trade that brought in a killer linebacker.  It all seemed to culminate when the Bills won their first division title in years  and fans rushed the field in exhuberance. 

     

    That day I realized why Bills fans didn't walk away. The bad games may have far outnumbered the good, but watching thousands of people rush the field in a surge of absolute elation made me realize exactly what this team gave the community.  Moments.  The tearing down of the goal posts.  The juice rushing for 2000 in '73. Mike Stratton destroying Keith Lincoln.  The comeback.  The nail biting portion of my existence when Jim Kelly went from good to hall of famer by "taking it himself" and diving for a game winning touchdown with no time left on the clock. 

     

    As for next year, I will go into the season with the same dream of seeing the Bills win the super bowl that I always do.  It seems to be a part of me.  Some years it is more.  Some years it is less.  But it is always there. 

     

    The Buffalo Bills may never win the Super Bowl in my or your lifetime.  They may never win it at all.  They may move away.  All the more reason that the most important things are the moments and the dream. 

     

    Yes, I am upset that this year's dream died about eight games ago.  But people are getting a little out of hand.  This is my antidote for screaming fans, sportstalk radio hosts claiming they are numb, fans describing themselves as depressed and the overall feeling that this is the end of the world.  Cause it ain't even close.

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    Nicely done. A ray of light in the sarcastic, cut-and-run murk.

     

    In my opinion, nothing before or since was as bad as watching Norwood's kick sail wide right--at that point, the dreams of a 5-year old crashed into the memories of a 30-year-old and both slid by that post. Over and over again, in slow motion.

     

    Since then, through all the questionable personnel decisions and monumental collapses, the image of that kick keeps me going. It can only get better. Elation and despair go with the being-a-Bills-fan package, but there's no reason to climb out on a ledge. Those of us who have been with this team through thick and thin are going to really enjoy the moment when the Bills do become the world champs.

  4. All the analysts were expressing concern this week about the "distractions" that would affect the Bills today.

     

    We saw the result of that this afternoon.

     

    I am going to stop short of suggesting that the Bills let their actions speak loudly and clearly about their attitude toward MM and TD intentionally. They are professionals, after all. But when you consider how admired Moulds is by his teammates (evidenced by their comments earlier in the week), it makes you think, doesn't it?

     

    They may be professionals, but they are human--and friends of Moulds.

  5. Well, i fear that this so-called "down-cycle" (and I classify down cycles as seasons without a playoff win) is in serious danger of lasting 15-20 years at this rate.

     

    Yes, it's been 10 years since we've won a playoff game. Frightening.

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    Conservatively, we could be looking at 3-4 seasons to the next playoff win. A wildcard spot would look damned good right now, wouldn't it?

  6. Do the words "Chuck Knox" mean anything to you?  That guy had a great run with the Rams in the '70s and although he never got to the SB, he was very highly regarded and, as I recall, very well-compensated (for the times) to come here.  In fact I still remember the headline in the D&C when he was hired:  "Knox Banks On Buffalo."

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    Point well taken--I forgot about Chuck's compensation. It supports my point that any one aspect--personnel, GM, coaching, luck--can't carry a team on its own.

  7. So this is the '82 - '87 cycle it should end now?  What changes were made to end each bad cycle? And how do they apply today?

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    My point was that the NFL is cyclical; teams rise and fall all the time. Some take longer than others, e.g. the Bengals.

     

    You can't I'm not sure you can analyze the length of the good/bad spans and try to anticipate what might happen. Too much change in the league re: salary cap, free agency, etc., and 99% depends on the personnel decisions made during the "down" cycles.

     

    The problems in 2005 are serious: we don't have the core of much of anything on the two lines, so it may take a little longer than we'd like to crawl back. Players such as Losman, Spikes, McGahee, Evans and a few others--given the right leadership, game planning and front office to fill in key positions around them--will shine. Losman to Evans may become as common and exciting as Kelly to Reed.

     

    The next time we have the dominant defensive backfield in the league it will be for real--not a result of a weak late-2004 schedule and a lot of hype.

  8. Well if it takes the great mix you speak of to be successful in the NFL, and I think you are 100% correct btw, how can you look at what has happened over the last 5 Years and be optimistic? Is it just blind faith that this bunch is going to stumble into being able to Field, or Coach a consistant winner?

     

    I just think the evidence is overwhelming at this point...We need to find the proper ingredients you speak of to be successful...They are not in Buffalo currently for whatever reason...

     

    Time to try again...

    521225[/snapback]

     

    I think it is going to take a new general manager with a different personnel philosophy. Wilson has never opened the wallet to hire marquee coaching talent (Levy was not a Hall of Fame-bound coach when he got to Buffalo), so it is going to take a pretty sharp football guy to be able to find a coaching diamond in the rough. I like Mularkey, but we're not getting there with him at the helm. He's here because of a connection, and a GM who (apparently) is able to spin like crazy and get us all to take the bait.

  9. This is the NFL. Some players enter the league, rise to their peak performance, and then fade away. Others have great promise and turn out to be flops, e.g. Ryan Leaf. GMs and coaching staffs make boneheaded decisions that can keep teams out of the post-season for years. And in the midst of it all, seemingly random events occur that NOBODY--not even the "experts" on TBD--can predict.

     

    For example, if I told you a sixth-round (seventh?) backup could take the pathetic Pats to three Super Bowls when he was drafted, you would have laughed me out of here. Or if I told you a head coach who was a moron in Cleveland would become a bonafide Hall of Famer, you'd ban me from posting again.

     

    Fact: it takes a rare combination of personnel, coaching, front office and luck to get to the playoffs in the National Parity League. We are missing a couple pieces this year--and we all got a little carried away from listening to the pre-season hype.

     

    The way I see it, I have two choices: I can cry and whine and B word and moan about the Bills, the ownership, TD, MM, WMcG, Losman, etc. etc. etc. etc. OR I can commiserate with my fellow fans, see the glass as half-full because of the great core of young players, and look forward to the rest of 2005, next season and beyond.

     

    I'm going with the latter. Most of the fun of watching this team get to the playoffs and Super Bowls last time was the anticipation, e.g. "No, they can't win this one, can they?" And watching my Bills sink to these depths, while disturbing, is going to make those future seasons (when we return to crushing the AFC East--esp. the Patsies--routinely) even sweeter.

     

    I've been a Bills fan since I was five, and have watched some pretty miserable seasons. NOTHING will ever be as bad as watching Norwood's kick sail wide right, in my opinion.\

     

    Not even the play call on 3rd and 1 yesterday.

  10. Sullivan and the Buffalo News have accomplished their mission.

     

    There are many, many posts in this thread and others complaining about Sullivan sounding like a nagging mother-in-law; no sources; he's so meeeeean; wah wah wah.

     

    Truth is, more people than not can't wait to see what he'll write next. He's not a columnist because he can't/won't/doesn't want to/ cultivate sources or because he's a basketball writer in a town without a b-ball team :devil: He's a columnist because in the Buffalo market, he has broad readership--that's what sells papers.

     

    He's just pushing buttons. Sells papers, keeps the buzz going. I have seen posts on OBD from supposed fans that are far worse than anything JS produces--and they're poorly conceived and written to boot.

     

    If you want in-depth analysis, hit the NFL Network or Sirius NFL Radio (well, except for Randy Cross, who is a knucklehead). But Sullivan and his editors know that in a football-crazy town like Buffalo, thousands of outraged fans are going to be talking about HIS column the next day.

     

    Do I like his columns? Generally, no. He's a master of overstatement, and I prefer more objective analysis. But he's still employed--and that means that he's getting readers and reactions.

  11. The defining JP moment for me in the Carolina game:

     

    He took a five-step drop, then moved quickly and smoothly into the pocket and fired a completion while all hell was breaking loose around him. At that moment, he looked like an NFL QB. No happy feet, no hesitation. There's going to be good and bad for a while, but he's going to be a good one.

  12. Great posts all around.

     

    Out here in PatsLand, the Granite State Bills Backers group has fallen all but silent, and attendance at our bar for games is lackluster--and we're up to 48 members just since the beginning of the season.

     

    You can feel the desperation starting to take hold . Members who are pro-Holcomb were sniping at the members wanting the Bills to start building for the future. Wanting Losman to develop into the QB we hope he will be was equivalent to giving up on the season somehow, according to those members.

     

    There are a lot of opinions on this board--many of which propose one specific solution or another ("fire him!" or "move him around" or "bad personnel department"). None of that matters, because what happens on One Bills Drive is the only reality here. So we all have two choices: hope that over the next N years all the pieces come together, or vote with our feet...by NOT making that walk from the lot to the gate.

     

    Holding forth on one's football expertise may make the poster feel important, but changes NOTHING on Sunday. Bills fans know that you take the good, the bad, and the ugly with this team. We're the best in the NFL (ok, maybe second after the Steelers fans) at sticking with our team.

     

    There is a ray of sunlight around here, though. After weeks of looking at local listings and seeing no game or some pointless game televised after the Pats, this Sunday Fox is broadcasting the Bills-Panthers game!

     

    I am planning on donning my McGahee jersey, putting Sean the 11-month-old in his Bills gear, and watching Bills play like there is no tomorrow.

     

    GO BILLS!!!!! Keep the faith.

  13. I don't expect Willis to have big numbers but in order to have a chance in this one we need to control the clock. I agree that we need to take some shots down field but it's even more important that we keep the Chargers offense off the field as much as possible.

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    If we take those shots down the field, it'll open things up for Willis. That equals controlling the clock. Most analysts are writing off the game as a sure thing for SD. I'm not willing to concede the game. Maybe Gray and the brain trust can figure out a way to neutralize LT. Nailing his hotel door shut might work.

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