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Everything posted by bills_red
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- We all now konw Maybin just sucks at everything - We know the Refs want NE* to win so lets just rest our starters next year - We know Jon Scott sucks dick at OT - We need a new QB - Our run D still sucks and will suck untill we get bigger - T.O ??????? He go home after 1st half????
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O and his 2 passes today, lol. -1 yards to the TE, then a 5 yard pass way behind Reed.
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she was hot.
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B.Scott will got on IR I bet, McGee was hurt put him on IR before he gets really hurt, Trent sucks and got hurt IR that piece of ****. Maybin flat out sucks IR him for that.
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Whitner, McKelvin, Maybin
bills_red replied to BillnutinHouston's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
McKelvin doesn't fit, the other 2 suck balls. -
Brohm isn't on it too, and look at the IR list. Langston W. Copeland B., V.Hall, Omon and Ko are still on that page too. BB.com f'ed up.
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A lot of people had Locker as a top 5 pick
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Dan Williams has blown up, he could go midd. 1 now. He is a 3 down NT.
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http://movies.yahoo.com/feature/buzzlog-ur...-hollywood.html Looks sweet.
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Bills claim Incognito
bills_red replied to In space no one can hear's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
http://proxy.espn.go.com/nfl/players/scouting?playerId=8495 -
Brown is like 280 lbs. btw.
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Do people still think Desean Jackson is "too small"?
bills_red replied to Big Turk's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
The thing is Desean Jackson was and is 10 times better the WR Parrish is. Jerry Rice was and I think still is helping D.Jack learn the WR pos. At the time I wanted D.Jack becuase I thought he was the best WR from the draft. But I understood why Hardy was the pick. -
DraftTek Positional Needs For December
bills_red replied to Astrobot's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
Dekoda Watson is like 225 pounds, and plays LB at Florida State, how is he a DE????? -
DraftTek Positional Needs For December
bills_red replied to Astrobot's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
BOLD -
Beason is 10 times better than Poz
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good thing he was on the pro-bowl ballot........
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HE HAD 4 SACKS TODAY http://espn.go.com/nfl/players/profile?playerId=12439 11 on the year, lol. Maybin has 11 tackles!
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Levitre was moved to LG for a reason (and all the scouts said he'd need to move to G), he isn't NFL LT material. I'd like this Draft/FA-Levitre-Wood-Draft/FA/Butler-Draft/FA/Butler Moving Hang. to back-up C/G.
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DraftTek Positional Needs For December
bills_red replied to Astrobot's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
WR needs to be on the list. Bradford sucks tbh. Spikes at 7???? lol he is late 1 at best. Dunlap also sucks. and the 2 OTs (Bulaga-Williams) are not worth the 7th pick. -
I didn't watch the game today because I didn't want to watch ****ty football between 2 teams that suck balls.
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7th round pick if you get lucky. We will most likely cut him so why would a team want to trade for him? He also sucks.
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The best QB for the 2010 Bills...
bills_red replied to Armchair GM's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
he is like 6'0 -
The best QB for the 2010 Bills...
bills_red replied to Armchair GM's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
2. is wrong it is start 3 years at a big time program (ie, MICH, Notre Dame) and 4. would mean McCoy is out, he is listed at 6'2 so he is more like 6'1. Tebow is also out cuz he just sucks. -
When I heard Goodell say "With the 11th pick in the 2009 NFL Draft the Buffalo Bills select DE Aaron Maybin" I punched a baby in the face.
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http://insider.espn.go.com/nfl/draft10/ins...tory?id=4662630 In reviewing Oklahoma Sooners offensive tackle Trent Williams, I can't help but think of Gosder Cherilus. Cherilus is the progenitor of this series; after seeing his subpar collegiate metrics accurately translate into subpar professional metrics, I decided to start reviewing more NFL draft prospects this way. Williams is much like Cherilus in that his collegiate metrics leave a lot to be desired. His first and most important metric weakness is pass blocking. Left tackles get monster contracts and highly publicized motion pictures ("The Blind Side," about Michael Oher, opens Friday) because of their ability to keep pass-rushers from impacting the game via splash plays (e.g., sacks, offensive holding penalties, tipped passes, etc.). A review I did in Scientific Football 2009 shows the best professional pass-blockers allow four or fewer splash plays in a season. It tiers down from there, with four to six being above average, six to 10 being below average and more than 10 ranking at or near the bottom of the league. Getty Images Trent Williams might not be signaling for a lot of first downs on Sundays. The central premise of the Draft Lab series is that the top-level pro prospects should be able to post metrics against collegiate competition that are above average or better than high-end NFL players at the same position. In the five-game series I broke down on Williams (at Miami, versus Texas, at Kansas, versus Kansas State, at Nebraska), he gave up four splash plays. There were two sack plays and one offensive holding play, so three of the four splash plays were direct impacts and not simply judgement calls. As bad as four splash plays in five games is, Williams was lucky that total wasn't higher. He was beaten quite badly on an inside spin move in the Nebraska game that was very nearly a hurry or sack, but a quick reaction by OU quarterback Landry Jones saved Williams from splash play No. 5. That wasn't the only time Williams struggled with an inside pass-rush move. He was pushed completely off his feet with an inside shoulder club move in both the Kansas State and Nebraska games. Miami also ran 10 inside moves against Williams, which is such a high total that one has to figure the Hurricanes saw a similar inside pass-blocking weakness. Those woes would be enough on their own to consider Williams overhyped, but his run blocking is actually worse than his pass blocking. Williams blocked at the point of attack on a running play 41 times and won the battle 33 times. That equates to an 80.5 percent POA win rate. To put that in perspective, an 80.5 percent POA rate in 2008 would have ranked 28th among NFL left tackles. Williams' POA win rates are worse than that if the 10 plays on which he had double-team blocking help are removed. He had zero POA losses on those plays, so his POA win rate on one-on-one blocks was 74.2 percent. Williams also has issues with penalties. There was the aforementioned offensive holding penalty, two false starts, a personal foul/leg whip penalty and a personal foul/late hit. The late hit might show an additional weakness. It came not long after Nebraska defensive lineman Barry Turner beat Williams on a POA run block. Williams beat Turner on a run block a few plays later and wouldn't stop blocking him until well after the play was over. His extra pushing eventually led to the penalty, and it looked to my scouting eye like he was mad about having been beaten and was trying to send a message to Turner. That could be a strength in that if a coach can find a way to tap into it, it might be used to his team's advantage. The problem is, though, NFL defenders know when someone reacts poorly to having his buttons pushed, and if they sense that weakness in Williams, he'll have someone trying to goad him in every game he plays. The Football Scientist lab result: Had I not known before watching video of Williams that he was considered a first-round prospect in many circles, it wouldn't have occurred to me to even consider ranking him that high. He might go in the first round because he is a left tackle, but the metrics say he will be a mediocre pro player, and that stamps him with the TFS overhyped label.