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mushypeaches

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Posts posted by mushypeaches

  1. Draft will be 75% defense.

     

    I think that Beane recognizes that he needs quality over quantity at this point as well as filling out special teams and even creating depth on the Practice Squad.  This is why I'm hopeful to see some bundling and/or trading of later round picks to focus on getting a couple of high impact players this year, or re-setting ourselves up to do the same next year.

     

    There are a couple of decent sized holes left to fill, and you're never going to go into a draft feeling 100% comfortable with your current roster, but I can't remember a time in recent memory where we were truly able to go BPA and not reach for a need or compensate for self-inflicted wounds (like not giving second contracts to your own previous draft picks)

     

  2. My opinion is that by halfway through the season, there was no harm in putting him into the lineup given the stiffs that we were parading out there on a weekly basis.  Frankly, they should have been doing more of this, and earlier, given the outlook on the season.  He had his ups, and his downs, which is all that anyone should have reasonably expected.  

     

    Now, with more talent presumably coming into the pipeline, we can make a reasonable evaluation

  3. Kelly was really not well liked until well into his 5th year when the K-Gun started clicking.  Up until then, most of the fan base remained very skeptical and often railed on him on a week-to-week basis.  Not that he played particularly badly, but our offensive philosophy was mostly conservative at best and he often tried to force the issue.

     

    Not hard to think about how this could play out in the near future with Josh Allen.  Poor line play, plus conservative coaching and play calling will keep him from reaching his ceiling from a play perspective.  But his positive attitude, leadership, and running ability probably already have him ahead of Kelly from a fan approval perspective.  Maybe based more on lower expectations than anything else though.

     

     

  4. 29 minutes ago, jtothebrown said:

    Ive been in the business world for 20 years as a Manager in Sales with Goals of 2 million per year. Ive had numerous GMs as well as directors.

     

    What ive learned throughout the years is the very best GM's as well as Directors i ever worked for were people that werent looking for a new jod. They were solicited and payed very well to leave where they were.

     

    What did Beane or Mcdermott ever do in their previous roles to make Terry and Kim say, these are the very best canadites to turn this misserable franchise around?

     

    We need to get some people in here that have proven themselves over the years, and are currently employed elsewhere, and offer them much more than they currently make to leave.

     

    Recipe for success folks!

    Let’s all take off the tinfoil hats

  5. 1 hour ago, BuffaloHokie13 said:

    McD is too safe. Needs to take some gambles like starting his top 10 pick rookie QB over a guy who shouldn't be on a roster. Beane isn't safe at all though. Major trade ups on 2 guys that are high development, high ceiling players. That guy's swinging for the fences. Add in FAs coming off injury and trading for a WR with attitude issues, Beane is a risk-taker. Anything but safe.

    I’ve had about all I can stomach of safe.  

  6. Give it a rest folks.  We all cried about the endless mediocrity of the previous 17 years.  We all whined about not investing draft resources into a top QB.  We all b*tched about paying too much for mediocre free agents and the wrong drafted players.  

     

    Our leadership (rightly) decided on strategies that required a patient, thoughtful approach instead of the half-assed model that was previously employed.  We all enjoyed breaking the streak last year, but it would have been foolhardy to think that we would be better this year.  This is OK, and it's also OK to take a deep breath and walk away from the keyboard.  This year will likely not be a lot of fun to watch, but just recognize that we're building towards better days and you'll feel better too.

     

    Sometimes it takes being really bad for awhile before you can be really good.  

    • Like (+1) 1
  7. 7 minutes ago, Bangarang said:

     

    What is the obsession with Logan Thomas? He’s a fringe roster guy. Why on earth would you trade your proven and most productive guy in favor of guys like that? 

    And no one is trading for Clay either with his age and salary cap hit.  

     

    Yes, I know that we got someone to take Dareus off our hands, but trading Clay doesn't seem realistic or anything remotely resembling a good move

     

  8. 30 minutes ago, RoyBatty is alive said:

    Pretty amazing.  I can certainly believe the entire career with a partially torn ACL but I cant believe it was 85% torn that entire time.  He always was more of a straight ahead runner.

     

    Ummm... I'm not sure I would ever characterize him that way. 

     

    He wasn't Earl Campbell or OJ Simpson and straight-ahead was absolutely not the way he got the majority of those tough extra yards.

     

    Not all the way on the other end of the spectrum like a Barry Sanders, but you get the point.

     

    • Like (+1) 2
    • Thank you (+1) 2
  9. 5 minutes ago, Chandler#81 said:

    Part #1

     

     

     

     

    Part #2

     

    Question: If Josh Allen develops enough to be considered as good as Ferguson, is that acceptable to you?

     

    Nope - Ferguson was barely adequate enough for the era that he played in.   

     

    Allen either needs to be much more (so that we finally have a QB worthy of a second contract) or much less (so that we QUICKLY know that we drafted a dud and can move on)

    • Like (+1) 1
  10. 1 minute ago, John from Riverside said:

    Here is my elaboration

    - 1st year head coach

    - We let go nearly every high priced core player for draft picks so the team was devoid of talent

     

    DESPITE all this.....this coaching staff found a way to win enough games to make its first playoffs in 17 years

     

    They did pretty well given the circumstances.   What they were doing worked and they deserve the benefit of the doubt.

     

    Couldn't disagree more.  

     

    The circumstances of the team have little correlation to McDermott's approach to game day management.  Yes, there are factors that would lean toward a more conservative approach, which you've noted, but I don't think the team's success in 2017 had much to do with McDermott's game management, and in many cases, they had success DESPITE some very questionable and probably overly conservative in-game decisions.  

     

    Bill Belichick has won 5 SB's.  Does he get the benefit of the doubt for benching Malcolm Butler in the last one, even though that possibly cost his team the game?  He does not.  

     

    My point is that McDermott has a lot to improve upon in this area and it will be a big factor in whether he can build a perennial playoff contender or whether we just saw his ceiling as a coach.

     

  11. I think that overall, we are pretty pleased with Sean McDermott's performance over the past year.  He's proven to be disciplined, organized, good with players, media, and team personnel.  No one can question that reaching the playoffs in 2017 was an amazing accomplishment, due in no small part to his leadership and actual competence as a head coach (which we almost forgot what that looked like).

     

    But I never felt last year that he was that great at in-game management.  Yes, he had the team prepared most weeks - the game plans were well-structured, the players & coaches knew what they were doing, and it largely manifested on the field with fewer mistakes & turnovers, players were in the right spots, and the team at least looked better on a week-to-week basis, some stinker performances notwithstanding.

     

    Having said all of these things, I don't yet see Sean McDermott as any more than an adequate game-day coach.  I see this most in the area of aggressiveness - going for it on 4th down, risky play calls & gadgets, in-game adjustments, clock management.  Too often, it felt like we were playing not to lose, instead of aggressively getting after it - dictating the flow of play, forcing the action, and making the other team prepare and respond to what we are doing, instead of the other way around.  Don't get me wrong, I like the overall direction of the team, but I want my coach to be more like a Sean Payton - Mike Tomlin - Bruce Arians.  Guys who aren't afraid to push the envelope and strategically try to play parts of the game differently.  These guys are good at forcing their coordinators to be innovative, and enabling creativity within their teams.  I'm not saying that everything they do is successful, but I like that they're on the AGGRESSIVE end of the spectrum.  

     

    I know that our last buffoon of a head coach was aggressive, but I'm not including him in this discussion.  You also have to be intelligent and have a measure of self-control to qualify...

     

    What I'm afraid of is that when things come to a point or when we face adversity or a rough season, that McDermott becomes more of a Ron Rivera, or a Marvin Lewis, or a Jim Caldwell.  These guys all were somewhat competent in their own way, but they were never going to out-coach the  good/great coaches, the true innovators.  Most of the time, they just rolled over, maybe because they didn't get enough "breaks" to win the game.  The point is that I want McDermott to coach in a way that we make our own breaks, that we push the envelope, that we try new things and make other teams respond to us, instead of always having to be the reacting team.

     

    Can he take the next step?  Can he overcome his basic conservative nature?  Can he get the best of his coordinators and position coaches?

     

    That's what I'll be watching for in 2018, regardless of the other big factors (like a new QB, overall talent, etc)

     

     

     

     

    • Like (+1) 4
  12. Good for her for at least being somewhat honest and transparent about the entire decision-making process - instead of parroting the endless cycle that we see in other cities of BS, graft, and outright lies between team owners, politicians, and the NFL.  And it's not like this is exclusive to football, just the $$$ figures are the most exaggerated.

     

    I'd love to see her in the room with the Jerrah and the Ginger Hammer and telling her in a discreet, polite way to eff off and stay the hell out of trying to tell her and the family what's best for Buffalo

    • Like (+1) 1
  13. This is all part of what all Bills fans should see as inevitable:

     

    New stadium - corporate, antiseptic, and built to price out the average Joe Six Pack

    Limited on-site tailgating

    The fan experience will be just like what you see in the big cities...

     

    Of course we really don't want that to happen, but we probably know that most of it will come true whether we want to or not. 

     

    There is a happy medium to be found that cuts down on the truly reprehensible behavior while still maintaining all that makes the Bills' game-day experience unique.

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