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New O-Line; From 31st to top 5 in one off season?


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37 minutes ago, TigerJ said:

That's my big concern with the O-line.  With so many new faces, it's going to take a while to figure out the best combination, but they need to get that figured out quickly so they can work at developing chemistry and becoming a cohesive unit.  How do you accomplish both objectives?  The good news is the guys they signed are all pretty smart players.  Even the guy they drafted, Ford is very smart and technically proficient.  That should help accelerate the learning curve.

That is why they have Minicamp and Training Camp before the real bullets fly.

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On 4/27/2019 at 7:17 AM, vincec said:

They're going to give Dawkins every opportunity to keep the job. I don't think Nsekhe beats him out.

 

OL is an area where cohesion is very important so I would expect a period of adjustment, trial and error before a group of 5 emerges and begins to gel. So the first half of the season will be interesting. Then we can see what they've put together at OL.

We will likely trade at least 1 guy and we will go on to play well for a SB contender.

On 4/28/2019 at 3:02 AM, Buffalo Barbarian said:

Just to be contrarian im going to keep Teller at LG .

 

 

Teller could be very good this year.

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12 hours ago, ganesh said:

That is why they have Minicamp and Training Camp before the real bullets fly.

I have heard coaching staffs say that very little evaluation and decision making goes on in OTAs and minicamp.  The spring is for teaching, especially new guys on the team.  For veterans, a lot may be review, but when you have a new coach (Bobby Johnson - offensive line coach) he will have his own nuances and ideas that he will need to to introduce even to the few holdovers on the offensive line.  Yes, training camp is where lineup decisions and the development of chemistry and cohesion will need to take place, but the longer it takes to set the starting lineup, the less time will be available for the development of chemistry/cohesion.  That was actually part of the problem last year.  That's why I hope Bobby Johnson/Daboll/McDermott can settle on a starting 5 quickly.

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Very difficult to build a top 5 line from scratch in one year.  I think your expectations are a bit high.

 

Is it possible?  Yes. There's leadership with Morse.  There's good experience with all the free agents. So the ingredients are there.

 

But it's a new line coach.  And the linemen have no experience together.  It may take more than a year to blend into a god unit.  

 

More likely scenario is that the 2020 line 8s good, with 3 or 4 ca%yours from 2019 and 1 or 2 upgrades.  Thats when you'll have a combination of talent and experience together. 

 

I'm expecting a better line in 2019 but not top 5.  

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I hope they prove me wrong, but I think it's ridiculous to claim we have the pieces for a top 5 oline, especially in year 1.

 

If we are league average that's a huge step up and we all should be thrilled with that.  Individually the Cowboys Oline have top of the league players at LT / C / RG between Smith / Fredrick / Martin.  Maybe Morse is there, though most place him only in the "very good" category, but otherwise I don't think we have anywhere near a top 5 individual piece at any one position.  Really tough for the "sum to be better than the parts" by a huge margin the first year together.

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8 minutes ago, Chuck Wagon said:

I hope they prove me wrong, but I think it's ridiculous to claim we have the pieces for a top 5 oline, especially in year 1.

 

If we are league average that's a huge step up and we all should be thrilled with that.  Individually the Cowboys Oline have top of the league players at LT / C / RG between Smith / Fredrick / Martin.  Maybe Morse is there, though most place him only in the "very good" category, but otherwise I don't think we have anywhere near a top 5 individual piece at any one position.  Really tough for the "sum to be better than the parts" by a huge margin the first year together.

Normally I would agree. Buffalo however has don e a nice job building around Allen (on paper anyway )  who has the pocket awareness and athleticism to make the leap possible IMO.

Edited by Figster
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Others have said that the free agent s I goings were mostly marginal players, backups, etc.  That's generally true.  But I saw an interesting thing a month ago from some coach or GM who said that lineman coming out of college are generally unable to play immediately 9in the NFL.  There are exceptions, of course, but they generally don't come with the skills they need, and the only way to get the skills is to play.  He said there's so little contact now in training camp and practice that linemen kneed a lot of time on the field in games to learn.  Like a few years.

 

So that's something that is promising about the Bills' free agent linrmen.  They've been in the league a few years and they've gotten a reasonable amount of playing time.  So the chances are that some of them are ready to blossom.  For example, just as one scenario

 

Dawson takes a step forward at LT, Morse is what we expect in the center, two free agents with experience take guard spots.  That just leaves one youngster, and he will get the benefit of veterans all around him.  

 

That collected experience should contribute to the improvement this year. 

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If the O-line improves to half of 31st at seasons end it be a huge improvement. If "D" plays at the same level this year, things should be looking real good. 

 

(.....yeah, that's what I meant, 15.5)

Edited by I am the egg man
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1 hour ago, Chuck Wagon said:

I hope they prove me wrong, but I think it's ridiculous to claim we have the pieces for a top 5 oline, especially in year 1.

 

If we are league average that's a huge step up and we all should be thrilled with that.  Individually the Cowboys Oline have top of the league players at LT / C / RG between Smith / Fredrick / Martin.  Maybe Morse is there, though most place him only in the "very good" category, but otherwise I don't think we have anywhere near a top 5 individual piece at any one position.  Really tough for the "sum to be better than the parts" by a huge margin the first year together.

Part of it is we were so bereft of talent last yr, the contrast makes the new guys appear perhaps stronger than they are. Nonetheless, I still think league average is their floor.

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1 hour ago, Shaw66 said:

Others have said that the free agent s I goings were mostly marginal players, backups, etc.  That's generally true.  But I saw an interesting thing a month ago from some coach or GM who said that lineman coming out of college are generally unable to play immediately 9in the NFL.  There are exceptions, of course, but they generally don't come with the skills they need, and the only way to get the skills is to play.  He said there's so little contact now in training camp and practice that linemen kneed a lot of time on the field in games to learn.  Like a few years.

 

So that's something that is promising about the Bills' free agent linrmen.  They've been in the league a few years and they've gotten a reasonable amount of playing time.  So the chances are that some of them are ready to blossom.  For example, just as one scenario

 

Dawson takes a step forward at LT, Morse is what we expect in the center, two free agents with experience take guard spots.  That just leaves one youngster, and he will get the benefit of veterans all around him.  

 

That collected experience should contribute to the improvement this year. 

 

When Beane spoke on this he said almost the same exact thing. 

 

Likes guys that that have shown they can do it at this level.

 

 

Also as an aside: If you look across the depth chart now you can see a pipeline of similar players. You could almost project that you can plug one in for the other in a season or two in some cases. Not QB, maybe not others, bu there is a pattern here. 

 

Tyree similar to Josh 

Easily similar to Beasley 

foster similar to jones 

Singletary similar to McCoy 

Vosean similar to Milano 

Joquan similar to Poyer 

Edited by Over 29 years of fanhood
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19 minutes ago, Dr. Who said:

Part of it is we were so bereft of talent last yr, the contrast makes the new guys appear perhaps stronger than they are. Nonetheless, I still think league average is their floor.

This is where I am at...

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On 4/28/2019 at 2:00 AM, Richard Noggin said:

Run game I think has to improve with new/improved linemen and new/improved coaching (I mean Castillo, amIright?).

 

Allen having loads of time behind the line probably has a lot to do with how defenses play him this season. Will they man-up and send pressure often to speed up his decision-making? Or will they sit back in zones and make him take what's given? It will be interesting to watch unfold.

 

We can reasonably expect the line to better handle stunts and twists and zone-blitzes; they had a rough time with those last season, especially with Groy in the pivot. Morse is key here, as are more savvy interior vets like Spain, Long, et al. 

 

How Allen and the offense execute against defenses designed to beat him/them will be fascinating. 

You are right about coaching.

I don’t think JA is a world beater yet but with his ability to drive the ball and his lack of fear doing it, coupled with receivers who can actually catch; I expect a better product.

Add his ability to run and IF this team figures out it’s identity I expect entertaining offensive football like we haven’t seen in years.

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39 minutes ago, Over 29 years of fanhood said:

 

 

 

Also as an aside: If you look across the depth chart now you can see a pipeline of similar players. You could almost project that you can plug one in for the other in a season or two in some cases. Not QB, maybe not others, bu there is a pattern here. 

 

Tyree similar to Josh 

Easily similar to Beasley 

foster similar to jones 

Singletary similar to McCoy 

Vosean similar to Milano 

Joquan similar to Poyer 

That's really interesting.  Hadn't made the connection.

 

Offensive line - nasty.

 

LInebackers - speed.  

 

There is a mold.  

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Agree with all you have said & most of all that Beane gets it !! It all starts in the trenches you can be a Tom Brady but if you don't have protection up front

u aint S**T !

 

I will be very interested to see what & who is on the O line this year ! Chemistry, Talent, & scheme have a lot to do with how this will play out & Beane has given Dabol everything he needs to succeed as a O coordinator now he just has to make it work ! 

 

But i'm with you in thinking given what they have acquired there is no reason what so ever that we can't have at least a top 10 O line if not higher !! Go Bills !! 

 

Good post !! 

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On 4/27/2019 at 4:19 AM, Inigo Montoya said:

When the season was over last year we all knew that upgrading the O-line was the single most important thing on Beane's to-do list.  It looks like he felt the same way.  With the addition of no less than seven new O-lineman, I think we may have upgraded the teams biggest weakness into one of its major strengths in just one off season.

 

I think the last truly dominant O-line in the NFL was the 2016 Cowboys.  They were maulers and helped rookie Zeke Elliott to over 1,600 yards rushing and helped rookie Dak Prescott look like an All Pro, franchise QB.  There's a link below for a great article that really digs into the incredible stats for that Dallas 2016 O-line.  

 

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000784248/article/offensive-line-of-the-year-dallas-cowboys-lived-up-to-the-hype

 

I remember watching the Dallas offense tear it up that season and wondering why more teams don't invest in their O-lines like Dallas did?  Why the Bills never seemed to make that common sense investment? I know O-linemen are not flashy or sexy like skill position players, but everyone knows that the offense lives and dies by two things, QB play, and O-line performance, and the QB play is dictated in large part by how well the O-line plays.

 

I think a lot of GMs feel the need to keep the fans happy (and hopefully keep their jobs) by making splashy skill position signings and don't invest in the O-line. Does the average fan get stoked about an offensive guard signing?  It looks like Beane gets it though.  Enter Cody Ford.  It might have seemed that we were set at O-line after a free agency where we brought in six O-linemen, but I think Beane is determined to place not just a solid O-line in front of Allen, but a dominant O-line, a line like Prescott had in 2016. 

 

That's why they turned in an envelop with Cody Ford's name on it with the 38th pick.  A right tackle instead of a flashy WR or TE.  With any luck, Ford is the Bill's starting RT for the next ten years.  By all accounts Cody Ford plays nasty and this line has been in dire need of a little bit of nasty since Incognito left.

 

I think that when all the dust settles, we will have gone from the 31st ranked O-line in the league last year to a top 5 line this year.  I think every part of our offense will flourish this year because of it.  Beane gets it, find your franchise quarterback and then build the trenches, everything else will follow.

 

They do look good on paper. The key will be the chemistry they develop. More than any other position group, the Oline needs to work together since one weak link can spoil all the hard work.

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