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Culture and the Process do not equal talent


Foreigner

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On 10/22/2018 at 1:27 PM, Foreigner said:

You guys can cry all you want about needing to change the  Culture and a new Process but it is the talent that wins games.

 

The big bad talented Pats are awaiting next, with  Tom Brady's new bad boy play thing Josh Gordon's 100 receiving yards

yesterday. I guess Gordon was not good enough for a try out with the Bills because he didn't fit the culture.

 

 

 

You're not shy.  You've been around!

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6 hours ago, NoHuddleKelly12 said:

Can you “convert” this into an actual football insight? You’ve done your best on this and other threads, to turn this into some kind of a debate about spirituality and knocking any player for it, yet seemingly miss that each Bills’ player or coach, just like everyone else here, make personal decisions about faith, none of which  has anything whatsoever to do with their roster role or football acumen/ability. Although, isn’t it ironic that a Christian like Drew Brees plays at a high level for the “Saints?” That smells like a conspiracy to me for which Loomis and Payton should be fired—by your logic. C’mon man, I know you’re better than this kind of intellectually vacant posting. Can we talk ball ? now?

 

Peterman brought faith into it with his ridiculous, passive-aggressive, excuse making immediately after the Texans loss. He put the issue out there on the table.

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3 hours ago, GunnerBill said:

 

Peterman brought faith into it with his ridiculous, passive-aggressive, excuse making immediately after the Texans loss. He put the issue out there on the table.

He raised it as an excuse, or tried to justify his roster spot with faith? My response that you were quoting was aimed at correcting the obvious fallacy that McD somehow makes game roster decisions based on a religious test, which is more than a bridge too far, and is based on no objective facts whatsoever or trustworthy sources inside OBD. Never heard NP say that the reason he played the way he did was because of his beliefs. Hardly an excuse for how he played at the end. You can say what you will about him, and many have to the point of ridiculousness, but attack the guy for what he shows on the field, and leave the rest alone where it belongs, that's my point. I don't understand the incessant need by a few here to make these crazy leaps of no-logic just because a player dares utter that there's more to life than between the hash marks. I have no doubt your life consists of more than the Bills too.    

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53 minutes ago, NoHuddleKelly12 said:

He raised it as an excuse, or tried to justify his roster spot with faith? My response that you were quoting was aimed at correcting the obvious fallacy that McD somehow makes game roster decisions based on a religious test, which is more than a bridge too far, and is based on no objective facts whatsoever or trustworthy sources inside OBD. Never heard NP say that the reason he played the way he did was because of his beliefs. Hardly an excuse for how he played at the end. You can say what you will about him, and many have to the point of ridiculousness, but attack the guy for what he shows on the field, and leave the rest alone where it belongs, that's my point. I don't understand the incessant need by a few here to make these crazy leaps of no-logic just because a player dares utter that there's more to life than between the hash marks. I have no doubt your life consists of more than the Bills too.    

 

I will criticise him both for his play, and for his reaction afterwards, because in my mind both are worthy of criticism. You may disagree, that is your right - but when players feel the need to tell me how religious they are immediately after playing poorly and that it is their faith that should define them I maintain the right to criticise that reaction.

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Just now, GunnerBill said:

 

I will criticise him both for his play, and for his reaction afterwards, because in my mind both are worthy of criticism. You may disagree, that is your right - but when players feel the need to tell me how religious they are immediately after playing poorly and that it is their faith that should define them I maintain the right to criticise that reaction.

You’re right, we are both absolutely entitled to our opinion. Will leave it at that

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15 hours ago, Straight Hucklebuck said:

We have the 32nd ranked offense in the league at 11.6 ppg. 

 

Last by a full 1.5 points and the Cardinals started out with with 6 points in the their first two games. 

 

Believe us, we know we can't expect anything here in Buffalo, that we should just shut up and be grateful for a team. It's getting really old. 

 

McDermott is insulting talking to us about learning from 35 year old career backups, that culture is important than strategy, that they are trying to build a culture here. You're getting your teeth kicked in every other week. 

 

Its absurd.  

I'm right there with you - the frustration levels are real and I'm having a hard time explaining to my GF (newly converted Bills fan), why this is just so frustrating. BUT the objective reality of the situation is that this is the season we (some of us) expected to have, and that this team is still being built. A partially built NFL team is expected to perform this way. That being said I agree that this is still the NFL and there are no excuses for these blowout losses. It takes a toll on everyone invested in the Bills success, and only adds pressure to the FO and HC to get things right. But there wasn't much that could have actually been done to achieve a different result. Since the first game, here's how the blame finger pointed in succession: first it was the OL being porous, then it was the WR not running routes and dropping passes, then it was scratching our heads with the OC and play calls on certain downs given the passing yd per game, we moved onto the QB realizing hey I don't want to get down on our future franchise, but he isn't anywhere near NFL ready, which leads us to the penultimate top HC saying all the wrong things not foreseeing the future and getting this team ready, ultimately let's add in the GM too since we know everything about their professional workflow and decision making, and it's who's responsible for this whole mess. We've run out of people to blame and things haven't changed, reason being because we simply aren't competing this year. It's a hard pill to swallow, but it's one that sets us up for a chance at a future that we all hope for. Skepticism is certainly warranted, but people judging their moves on offense as though this is what they intended to compete with are absurd. If we, the armchair ethnographers of the Bills, can see the issues with this offense, you can damn well bet our team does as well. But the intention was not to make the playoffs or SB this year, it was to start the build of our offense and continue the process. It's long, arduous, and stressful, but it puts together a team that we can eventually judge based upon performance. No coach in the NFL would've been able to come in when McD and Beane did and give you a team that we could all be proud of at this point. We all signed on for a 3-4 year process and even that is pushing it. They inherited a ship held afloat by a .500 record, but was otherwise sinking in bloated contracts and mediocre play. If you want to patch the holes you need to do so by giving yourself the resources to do so. So far, we're on track.

 

I couldn't care less about the culture talk, it has a place in the locker room and it's a part of what helped us get close enough to the playoff bubble last year. Criticism is necessary for a team regardless of W-L record, and accountability is needed - no one is saying be grateful for just having a team, although that in and of itself could also be true (looking at San Antonio and others). But this is not the team we should be judging and calling for people's jobs. While no one deserves to get their teeth kicked in every week and Bills fans have done nothing to deserve it, it's the reality we're in and honestly some expected all along. Suck it up and support a team for the future, calling for people's jobs now and saying everything is on fire literally does nothing to move forward.

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On 10/22/2018 at 1:08 PM, Buffalo Barbarian said:

So Allen , Dawkins, White, Edmunds, Philips, Milano, Johnson along with McCoy, Kyle, Hughes, Star, Poyer .... Don't have talent??

 

 

Not enough. You need at least 22 and you have named 12. It is akin to what Marv said about depth.

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13 hours ago, SoTier said:

 

Do you bother to follow the rest of the NFL at all or do you only watch the Bills demonstrate their ineptitude every week and lap up all the excuses coming from the usual Bills propaganda sources?  There is absolutely no question that the players the Bills allowed to leave in FA or traded away are significantly more talented than the players with whom the Bills replaced them (and yes, that includes both Tre White and Tremaine Edmunds, the only two who even come close).  If you don't think so, then it's just sour grapes and/or blind loyalty to McDermott and Beane.

  • Woods is tearing up the league in LA. 
  • Gilmore has become the Patriots' lock-down CB. 
  • Glenn is Andy Dalton's new best friend. 
  • Goodwin was on his way to becoming a star for the 49ers when he had Garappolo throwing to him.  He still lights up the board on occasion even with CJ Beathard throwing to him.  
  • Watkins shines whenever he gets the opportunity in a star-studded KC offense which features different players almost every week. 
  • Preston Brown, Marcel Darius, Reggie Ragland, and Ronald Darby are all season-long starters for play off contending teams. 

Easy champ - I'm not blind to the success of our former players. I pay for Sunday Ticket for a reason beyond just watching the Bills...but maybe you should re-watch our .500 record seasons.

 

Maybe there's a reason they're doing well now but weren't succeeding before. And it's always easy to say "look at all our former players who are doing well now!" I can't remember many, if any, being sad that Sammy or Dareus were dealt, Sammy had to get kicked out of LA to start to show up, and Dareus is doing Dareus in Jax nothing worth his contract. Maybe more so for Woods and Darby, but these are the players that get dealt during rebuilds as they are actually worth something to teams. Preston was a solid defensive QB but not game changing for our defense nor really had a high ceiling, and good for Goodwin, he was always a great WR option but never an irreplaceable talent. Gilmore was hot/cold and had a fair amount of really questionable plays at times that gouged our defense, and part of one of the weakest defenses in the NFL at the moment. I always liked Reggie, would've liked to have seen him have a chance in our D but likely wouldn't be a scheme fit. 

 

The reason they are all doing better now? Different teams, different coaches, and dare I say different cultures. They were not the players they are now when they were on our team, and there's no guarantee they would have improved to this point under our team regardless. It's the same logic for Mahomes, no guarantee he ends up anywhere near the QB he is if we draft him. I'm not saying this out of loyalty to McD or Beane, I'm still reserving judgment for when they put together a team, just simple logic and the reality that we never made the playoffs when these guys were a part of the team. Context is everything and we were not winning with those guys, so what would've changed to help them perform the way they are now that doesn't include a new team?

12 hours ago, NewDayBills said:

I don't trust them with the offense and I don't like Daboll, our only hope is McDermott fires him but that will be his third coach in three years which in return would make me question if McD is mentally capable of building an offense to begin with. I'm beginning to think McD is really a glorified DC that should not be a HC in the NFL. 

I have those thoughts too - I've always questioned defensive coaches ability to translate to HC, but factually there's no basis for that thought. It all depends on the OC/DC and the HC's role within the team and playcalling responsibilities if any. I've always been a proponent of hiring failed HC's that were great OCs/DCs to be our coordinators. They're failed HC tenure prevents them from being poached by other teams, and they seem to turn out for the better (i.e. Schwartz, Wade Phillips, etc.) HC's can have variable involvement and actual say for both sides of the ball, while maintaining oversight. As far as his ability to identify OC success, while it is his decision ultimately (I believe), I doubt he's making it all on his own. I also doubt our Defense looks this way with an offensively minded HC, need to consider that as well.

 

But how is getting a new OC any different than this board calling for our coach's head every other year like we're the Cleveland Bills? It's fine to fire our Coach/GM every other year but bringing in an OC every year until we get it right is out of the question? I'm not saying your inclination is wrong, but continuity is being vastly overlooked by this board and the effects that it can have on players and player performance.

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6 minutes ago, ctk232 said:

I'm right there with you - the frustration levels are real and I'm having a hard time explaining to my GF (newly converted Bills fan), why this is just so frustrating. BUT the objective reality of the situation is that this is the season we (some of us) expected to have, and that this team is still being built. A partially built NFL team is expected to perform this way. That being said I agree that this is still the NFL and there are no excuses for these blowout losses. It takes a toll on everyone invested in the Bills success, and only adds pressure to the FO and HC to get things right. But there wasn't much that could have actually been done to achieve a different result. Since the first game, here's how the blame finger pointed in succession: first it was the OL being porous, then it was the WR not running routes and dropping passes, then it was scratching our heads with the OC and play calls on certain downs given the passing yd per game, we moved onto the QB realizing hey I don't want to get down on our future franchise, but he isn't anywhere near NFL ready, which leads us to the penultimate top HC saying all the wrong things not foreseeing the future and getting this team ready, ultimately let's add in the GM too since we know everything about their professional workflow and decision making, and it's who's responsible for this whole mess. We've run out of people to blame and things haven't changed, reason being because we simply aren't competing this year. It's a hard pill to swallow, but it's one that sets us up for a chance at a future that we all hope for. Skepticism is certainly warranted, but people judging their moves on offense as though this is what they intended to compete with are absurd. If we, the armchair ethnographers of the Bills, can see the issues with this offense, you can damn well bet our team does as well. But the intention was not to make the playoffs or SB this year, it was to start the build of our offense and continue the process. It's long, arduous, and stressful, but it puts together a team that we can eventually judge based upon performance. No coach in the NFL would've been able to come in when McD and Beane did and give you a team that we could all be proud of at this point. We all signed on for a 3-4 year process and even that is pushing it. They inherited a ship held afloat by a .500 record, but was otherwise sinking in bloated contracts and mediocre play. If you want to patch the holes you need to do so by giving yourself the resources to do so. So far, we're on track.

 

I couldn't care less about the culture talk, it has a place in the locker room and it's a part of what helped us get close enough to the playoff bubble last year. Criticism is necessary for a team regardless of W-L record, and accountability is needed - no one is saying be grateful for just having a team, although that in and of itself could also be true (looking at San Antonio and others). But this is not the team we should be judging and calling for people's jobs. While no one deserves to get their teeth kicked in every week and Bills fans have done nothing to deserve it, it's the reality we're in and honestly some expected all along. Suck it up and support a team for the future, calling for people's jobs now and saying everything is on fire literally does nothing to move forward.

There isn't much that could have been done. 

 

Can we stop making excuses and lowering the bar? 

 

Did we have to have Josh Allen so badly that it took #53, #56 and Cordy Glenn? Guess so. I guess Brian Daboll was the best we could do for OC. 

 

We needed Tremaine Edmunds so badly that it took #65 as well. 

 

Did we need to force Richie Incognito to take a paycut?

 

I am sick and tired already of McDermott and Beane and this mantra that they inherited a complete mess and the fans have to eat more poop to eventually get good. 

 

They made the Playoffs and so they get 2018 and 2019. But honestly, looking at the moves they have made, I don't have faith in what they're building. I see McDermott sitting in a room with Brian Daboll and there are no ideas there. 

 

I don't buy that this was a dumpster fire that McDermott and Beane had to clean up by gutting everyone in the process. Beane and McDermott are still leaning on two Whaley guys in McCoy and Clay. 

 

You can believe that after this dumpster fire of a season, real winning is on the way with Josh Allen and the new weapons from the $80MM in cap space and the Draft. But based on who McDermott/Beane tend to go after, I don't think we're going to be the Rams or Chiefs anytime soon. 

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12 minutes ago, Straight Hucklebuck said:

There isn't much that could have been done. 

 

Can we stop making excuses and lowering the bar? 

 

Did we have to have Josh Allen so badly that it took #53, #56 and Cordy Glenn? Guess so. I guess Brian Daboll was the best we could do for OC. 

 

We needed Tremaine Edmunds so badly that it took #65 as well. 

 

Did we need to force Richie Incognito to take a paycut?

 

I am sick and tired already of McDermott and Beane and this mantra that they inherited a complete mess and the fans have to eat more poop to eventually get good. 

 

They made the Playoffs and so they get 2018 and 2019. But honestly, looking at the moves they have made, I don't have faith in what they're building. I see McDermott sitting in a room with Brian Daboll and there are no ideas there. 

 

I don't buy that this was a dumpster fire that McDermott and Beane had to clean up by gutting everyone in the process. Beane and McDermott are still leaning on two Whaley guys in McCoy and Clay. 

 

You can believe that after this dumpster fire of a season, real winning is on the way with Josh Allen and the new weapons from the $80MM in cap space and the Draft. But based on who McDermott/Beane tend to go after, I don't think we're going to be the Rams or Chiefs anytime soon. 

 

Feel better now?

 

 

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15 minutes ago, Straight Hucklebuck said:

There isn't much that could have been done. 

 

Can we stop making excuses and lowering the bar? 

 

Did we have to have Josh Allen so badly that it took #53, #56 and Cordy Glenn? Guess so. I guess Brian Daboll was the best we could do for OC. 

 

We needed Tremaine Edmunds so badly that it took #65 as well. 

 

Did we need to force Richie Incognito to take a paycut?

 

I am sick and tired already of McDermott and Beane and this mantra that they inherited a complete mess and the fans have to eat more poop to eventually get good. 

 

They made the Playoffs and so they get 2018 and 2019. But honestly, looking at the moves they have made, I don't have faith in what they're building. I see McDermott sitting in a room with Brian Daboll and there are no ideas there. 

 

I don't buy that this was a dumpster fire that McDermott and Beane had to clean up by gutting everyone in the process. Beane and McDermott are still leaning on two Whaley guys in McCoy and Clay. 

 

You can believe that after this dumpster fire of a season, real winning is on the way with Josh Allen and the new weapons from the $80MM in cap space and the Draft. But based on who McDermott/Beane tend to go after, I don't think we're going to be the Rams or Chiefs anytime soon. 

I agree with a lot of this.   It wasn't necessary to completely detonate the entire roster.   But every new regime does it.  the Giants are doing it right now.   So is Oakland.   McVay didn't, and neither did Pederson when they took over....When Andy Reid took over the Chiefs, he basically traded for Alex Smith, and went from there.  He didn't detonate anything either.    The best seem to come in and take what's there and make it better.   The teams that don't, they blow it up, F*** it up, and get fired in 36-42 months. 

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1 minute ago, Jauronimo said:

He was our leading receiver the past few years.  Our #1 pass catcher goes for 32 yards per game, by the way.

Biggest reason being he was signed to a ridiculous contract, it's not as if he was some irreplaceable part. I think it's sort of ridiculous to say an offense led by Taylor 'leaned' on Clay any more than it would have 'leaned' on whichever warm body they decided to throw in there at TE.

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5 minutes ago, Soda Popinski said:

I agree with a lot of this.   It wasn't necessary to completely detonate the entire roster.   But every new regime does it.  the Giants are doing it right now.   So is Oakland.   McVay didn't, and neither did Pederson when they took over....When Andy Reid took over the Chiefs, he basically traded for Alex Smith, and went from there.  He didn't detonate anything either.    The best seem to come in and take what's there and make it better.   The teams that don't, they blow it up, F*** it up, and get fired in 36-42 months. 

This is a good observation. 

 

The Browns have tried the detonation technique going all the way back to when Mangini in 2009/2010 shipped Edwards, Winslow, Jamal Lewis out. The offense was neutered and he didn't survive (he got 2 years - 2009, 2010). Like the Bills brass with ex-Panthers, he loaded up on a ton of old Jets Barton, Barlow and McGinest.

 

McDermott will get this season and the offseason, but if 2019 starts off with more losing, I don't think he gets out of that season as a HC.

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1 hour ago, Straight Hucklebuck said:

There isn't much that could have been done. 

 

Can we stop making excuses and lowering the bar? 

 

Did we have to have Josh Allen so badly that it took #53, #56 and Cordy Glenn? Guess so. I guess Brian Daboll was the best we could do for OC. 

 

We needed Tremaine Edmunds so badly that it took #65 as well. 

 

Did we need to force Richie Incognito to take a paycut?

 

I am sick and tired already of McDermott and Beane and this mantra that they inherited a complete mess and the fans have to eat more poop to eventually get good. 

 

They made the Playoffs and so they get 2018 and 2019. But honestly, looking at the moves they have made, I don't have faith in what they're building. I see McDermott sitting in a room with Brian Daboll and there are no ideas there. 

 

I don't buy that this was a dumpster fire that McDermott and Beane had to clean up by gutting everyone in the process. Beane and McDermott are still leaning on two Whaley guys in McCoy and Clay. 

 

You can believe that after this dumpster fire of a season, real winning is on the way with Josh Allen and the new weapons from the $80MM in cap space and the Draft. But based on who McDermott/Beane tend to go after, I don't think we're going to be the Rams or Chiefs anytime soon. 

There's a difference between excuses and evidence. We made the picks for Allen and Edmunds, I wasn't high on Allen and I am still not nearly convinced given what we've seen, but a lot of factors have to come into play that lead me to reserve judgment on him until he develops more and within a competent offense. What's your problem with Edmunds? Are you inferring Incognito left because of the paycut or what was the problem there? He literally quit on a mental breakdown, that's what happened. McD/Beane didn't inherit a dumpsterfire, but they inherited a team who's ceiling was proven to be 8-8, maybe 9-7, and in order to make the moves needed to perennially compete and especially compete for an SB (the end goal, mind you) would take giving up more of what we currently had. The cap absolutely plays a role in terms of who you can and can't bring in, it's not the reason we are where we are but it's a factor. I still don't know how I feel about Daboll and I'll admit I'm not high on him at present. These aren't excuses, it's just reality and we're approaching it very differently. While you've become fed up with blowout losses and what you've seen thus far and it's caused you to quit on what you're seeing for the future already, I'm choosing to wait and see more efficacious data before saying the ship is totally sunk and let's move on already.

 

I don't know what is on the way in the next seasons - no one does. I'm not predicting a complete turnaround or a playoff berth next year. We can all be skeptical based upon what we've seen, I am as well. The issue is calling it now before anything happens and treating this like it was the result they've been building toward. I agree some decisions have been questionable, and others have actually been for the better. All I'm saying is it's impossible to judge something that isn't even here yet - and while the current state is one of complete lack of competitiveness and ability on offense, who's to say what will and won't happen next year or the year after? The reason it is such an unknown is because of the cap space and draft picks giving us greater opportunity to right things and fill holes than not. It's not an excuse, it's a reason why no one knows for certain what will happen after this year.

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2 minutes ago, Straight Hucklebuck said:

This is a good observation. 

 

The Browns have tried the detonation technique going all the way back to when Mangini in 2009/2010 shipped Edwards, Winslow, Jamal Lewis out. The offense was neutered and he didn't survive (he got 2 years - 2009, 2010). Like the Bills brass with ex-Panthers, he loaded up on a ton of old Jets Barton, Barlow and McGinest.

 

McDermott will get this season and the offseason, but if 2019 starts off with more losing, I don't think he gets out of that season as a HC.

When Tomlin took over in Pittsburgh he didn't really change a thing, and he wasn't an incumbent coach, he was brand new, but he came in and learned Steeler football instead of Tomlin football.  That organization I am fairly convinced could win 8-10 games every year with a high school coach running the show.   It's an organizational culture they have towards winning.   They just win.   

 

I don't think Pete Caroll detonated the Seahawks when he took over either, he tweaked, and added, but didn't have some fire sale and gut the roster.   Miami has gutted their roster almost as many times as we have.   There is definitely a pattern for bad teams being blown up and staying bad and teams that get in good coaching staffs, retain most of their talent, and getting better.  

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22 minutes ago, GoBills808 said:

Biggest reason being he was signed to a ridiculous contract, it's not as if he was some irreplaceable part. I think it's sort of ridiculous to say an offense led by Taylor 'leaned' on Clay any more than it would have 'leaned' on whichever warm body they decided to throw in there at TE. 

Clay is just another warm body out there? 

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1 hour ago, Soda Popinski said:

I agree with a lot of this.   It wasn't necessary to completely detonate the entire roster.   But every new regime does it.  the Giants are doing it right now.   So is Oakland.   McVay didn't, and neither did Pederson when they took over....When Andy Reid took over the Chiefs, he basically traded for Alex Smith, and went from there.  He didn't detonate anything either.    The best seem to come in and take what's there and make it better.   The teams that don't, they blow it up, F*** it up, and get fired in 36-42 months. 

This is a good point - while not exactly causation there's a correlation here. I do wonder though what the contract/cap situations were when they inherited those teams and how it may or may not have affected the way they approached building their teams. Also, while not blowing up their rosters, how much of each current team is still around from when they began their coaching tenures?

 

The one thing for the Bills is that, while it's not the reason for our dismal state and certainly no excuse, we did have a few players on stupid large contracts that just weren't performing close to what they were being paid, a couple are still here, in a cap situation that wasn't headed anywhere remotely sustainable. It seems that it would make sense to take the dead cap hits from their salaries sooner than later and offload for any kind of ROI, which would be better than putting up with middling performances while paying top 5 contract amounts long term.

 

The Rams will lose their roster in the next 2-3 years, you think paying Donald, Gurley, and Goff not to mention other DBs and players will be sustainable? Wait til Mahomes is off his rookie contract and they need to resign Hunt and their WRs while still fielding a defense. Sure, they have a solid chance at a SB run in the meantime, which is certainly better than our current state. But unless they make it and win it in the next 2-3 years, barring any other roster moves it's unlikely their current situations are sustainable either. Lastly, I'm pretty sure neither McVay nor Reid declared their new teams to be undergoing a full rebuild, which McD and Beane have repeatedly confirmed they are doing - this is what rebuilds tend to look like in the NFL. Retaining rosters and adding select talent isn't exactly what people mean when they use the term.

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5 minutes ago, ctk232 said:

This is a good point - while not exactly causation there's a correlation here. I do wonder though what the contract/cap situations were when they inherited those teams and how it may or may not have affected the way they approached building their teams. Also, while not blowing up their rosters, how much of each current team is still around from when they began their coaching tenures?

 

The one thing for the Bills is that, while it's not the reason for our dismal state and certainly no excuse, we did have a few players on stupid large contracts that just weren't performing close to what they were being paid, a couple are still here, in a cap situation that wasn't headed anywhere remotely sustainable. It seems that it would make sense to take the dead cap hits from their salaries sooner than later and offload for any kind of ROI, which would be better than putting up with middling performances while paying top 5 contract amounts long term.

i really don't believe it has as much to do with the salary cap situation of a team as it does the stubbornness of coaches who have to have "their guys".   Hell Rex ruined a top 5 defense with his hubris.       How much was Dareus making vs how much his dead cap hit AND Star equals right now?  coaches get rid of players, then sign players and you end up doubling down for a year or two until that money is off your books.

 

Deep down coaches believe that they can compensate for lack of talent with better coaching, and in the NFL it never works.   They all come in with their own process for winning and start from scratch, well it's an NFL freaking roster, you don't have to start from scratch every NFL team has some talent hanging around.  And the coaches that don't have the ability to not only work with that talent but then add to it are the ones continuously circling the drains.    

 

I do think McDermott and Beane will get in better players in 2019 but I think this year is MUCH MUCH more of a throwaway year than it ever needed to be.   We could have been much more competitive with a few roster changes. 

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