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Speculative article on friction between McDermott and Staff?


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18 hours ago, ScottLaw said:

Why are people upset at Dunne for this? 

 

I'd guess that some do not like speculative fiction article which fits author's point of view passed as news but those who do not have issue with article do like cheap attacks but that is just my opinion.

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20 hours ago, eball said:

What a hack job by a writer trying to become the next Timmah Graham.  He’s done this in other pieces as well.  Take nameless quotes and orchestrate them into his narrative to get clicks, follows, and subscriptions.

 

 


Welcome to NFL “ journalism”…

 

He is hardly on his own ..

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6 hours ago, Doc said:

 

Thanks for bringing that up, had been meaning to mention it.  I took it to mean it's been happening for years under McD.  And yet they've managed to overcome it and succeed.  Hopefully less friction going forward.

 

I'll be honest, I like some friction. Comfort is one of the worst things for success, if you are constantly uncomfortable and overcoming you will be surprised where you are 3 months down the road.

 

Constructive of course, but the lounge doesn't build champions.

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2 hours ago, Southern_Bills said:

 

I'll be honest, I like some friction. Comfort is one of the worst things for success, if you are constantly uncomfortable and overcoming you will be surprised where you are 3 months down the road.

 

Constructive of course, but the lounge doesn't build champions.

 

Where have the Bills been 2 years in a row now "3 months down the road"?  Sent home too soon--this year under chaotic circumstances.  

 

I'd rather have a coaching staff that was unified and"comfortable"  under a well defined plan/philosophy, not one that has members b-wording to those who are not in the FO.

10 minutes ago, Steptide said:

I don't think there's anything earth shattering in this article, but could be part of the reason players/coaches are frustrated. 

 

https://www.buffalorumblings.com/2022/3/5/22962831/bills-players-fans-continue-to-be-kept-in-dark-on-final-13-seconds-of-regulation-vs-chiefs

 

All these extra details won't stop the true believers from continuing to insist  that it's all made up clickbait...

Edited by Mr. WEO
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Publically stating it was execution is laying the blame on the players. It's obvious the coaching staff wasn't on the same page on the kickoff and the defensive scheme was terrible on the final two plays. 

Worst thing you can do when you preach accountability is not hold yourself accountable.  Leadership 101. 

Our only hope is Allen can overcome McDermott's screw ups. 

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5 hours ago, Steptide said:

I don't think there's anything earth shattering in this article, but could be part of the reason players/coaches are frustrated. 

 

https://www.buffalorumblings.com/2022/3/5/22962831/bills-players-fans-continue-to-be-kept-in-dark-on-final-13-seconds-of-regulation-vs-chiefs

 

The source for this piece is the same Ty Dunne article that is linked upthread

So it isn't a second source saying the same thing or independent confirmation.

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A loss that historically bad had to be dealt with the right way or he was going to never live this down (only a SB does that anyway), make it worse, and he would lose the players and fans who will forever blame him.

 

He dealt with it the wrong way.  

 

He essentially lied after the game.  All he had to say was "I called for it to be kicked deep."  The end.  

 

Shrowding it in mystery indirectly threw players (Bass) and coaches (Special Teams) all under the bus. 

 

The players (especially our QB) always say its starts with me I needed to be better.  Right after the game they say it. 

 

Because every player and coach knew what happened....because guys would eventually start talking...McD had to say this immediately after the game:

 

"I called it to be kicked deep."

 

"I didn't have our defense in the best chance to secure a win.  That's on me not them."

 

Instead they heard "execution.  We just didn't execute."  

 

Please tell me (especially if you believe these reports are at least somewhat true) that a coach doesn't lose his players by saying that.  

 

It's unfortunate.  I don't know how this plays out from here we'll know when they start playing.  But it was not a good look to handle it like we did.   If.....if these reports about the calls, players yelling at each other after the game, and that McD called for kicking it deep. 

 

You own that.  There is no other way.  The players will rally behind that even if a lot of fans won't.  

Edited by Big Blitz
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On 3/4/2022 at 9:42 PM, Doc said:

So McD told just Bass to kick it deep and no one else on STs?  Does that sound believable?

If that did happen McDermott would've said it was my call to kick deep at the after game press conference.  There's been nothing in the last five years that makes me believe McDermott is a liar.  Communication broke down at the most crucial time and McDermott didn't want to throw anyone under the bus.  I don't know how he could've handled it any differently without damaging his in house reputation as frustrating as it is for Bills fans.

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I'm confused about what this thread has turned into, but if the following is true...

 

1) Farwell wanted to squib kick and told the Special Teams guys (except Bass) that's what we were doing.

 

2) McDermott told Farwell we were kicking a touchback and taking no time off the clock, so Farwell said nothing to Bass.

 

3) Buffalo was focused on preventing a KC TD at the end of regulation without focus on a FG.

 

...that's terrifying moving forward as a Bills fan. Sean McDermott might be on a similar path to Mike McCarthy if that's true.

 

That doesn't bode well for Buffalo.

 

Has there been anything to refute the main points made in all that "speculation?"

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50 minutes ago, Doc Brown said:

If that did happen McDermott would've said it was my call to kick deep at the after game press conference.  There's been nothing in the last five years that makes me believe McDermott is a liar.  Communication broke down at the most crucial time and McDermott didn't want to throw anyone under the bus.  I don't know how he could've handled it any differently without damaging his in house reputation as frustrating as it is for Bills fans.

 

100% correct. It's as if some posters here haven't observed a single thing about McDermott over the last 5 years that defines his character. Or, they just have no ability whatsoever to accurately interpret the behavior of others. 

 

Edited by billsfan1959
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4 minutes ago, billsfan1959 said:

 

100% correct. It's as if some posters here haven't observed a single thing about McDermott over the last 5 years that defines his character. Or, they just have no ability whatsoever to accurately interpret the behavior of others. 

 

McDermott has been very consistent. He did include himself though. 

 

Listen, we're going by what's been said by people who claim they have sources.

 

How exactly the kick ended up in the end zone is a mystery. What's not a mystery is who made the decision. The kickoff and defensive calls at the end of regulation are head coach decisions. I've said that all along. 

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On 3/4/2022 at 4:39 PM, Einstein's Dog said:

Do people, like Dunne, use the term squib kick and pooch kick interchangably?   Because a squib kick, which had always been a kick along the ground, would certainly have been a risky call - and generally no better than what they ended up with.

 

A pooch kick that goes high and comes down at around the 10 is what should have been the call.  So, IMO, squib kick or out of end zone are no different - both bad calls.  The right play was a pooch kick.

An onside kick would've pry worked.  Nobody would've expected that.  

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18 hours ago, ScottLaw said:

Yep… people want to shut their eyes and ears and pretend McDermott didn’t look like a complete ass after that game in which he completely blew it…. Only recently has he at least accepted accountability… and yet still blames execution.😅

 

Again, it will be interesting to see how this team responds at the first sign of similar adversity next season. 

We overcame the Cardinals thing and we will overcome this

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21 hours ago, ScottLaw said:

Yep… people want to shut their eyes and ears and pretend McDermott didn’t look like a complete ass after that game in which he completely blew it…. Only recently has he at least accepted accountability… and yet still blames execution.😅

 

Again, it will be interesting to see how this team responds at the first sign of similar adversity next season. 

A manager “accepting responsibility” for a major mistake is a flexible, almost meaningless concept in our modern society. In Japan, it used to mean hurling yourself off the roof of the nearest skyscraper (and before that, ritually eviscerating yourself); in other societies, it means—or meant—at a minimum, resigning your position.  Nowadays, it just means uttering the words “I accept responsibility”, and little else, no real consequences.  


McDermott “accepts responsibility” for those 13 seconds only in this latter, modern sense. Maybe that’s why people are not satisfied with his stance on this whole fiasco…

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The "execution" line is just a cop out.   It was strategy and communication which both fall under coaching.   Plain and simple.   The three plays occurred with a TV timeout and Bills timeouts.  Plenty of time to get things right.   They were the 3 plays you wouldn't want to run in the  situation.  KO into the end zone followed by deep outside technique defense.   The Bills never got the ball back to another great offense.   Sean crapped the bed after a heroic effort by Josh and the offense.  The offense was given a task, score a TD within just over a minute of time.  Check done, and the KO team and D was given the task of preventing a FG in 13 seconds and they couldn't get it done.   Its squarely on our head coach with a defensive coordinator background.

 

'

Edited by billsfan714
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8 hours ago, transplantbillsfan said:

I'm confused about what this thread has turned into, but if the following is true...

 

1) Farwell wanted to squib kick and told the Special Teams guys (except Bass) that's what we were doing.

 

2) McDermott told Farwell we were kicking a touchback and taking no time off the clock, so Farwell said nothing to Bass.

 

3) Buffalo was focused on preventing a KC TD at the end of regulation without focus on a FG.

 

...that's terrifying moving forward as a Bills fan. Sean McDermott might be on a similar path to Mike McCarthy if that's true.

 

That doesn't bode well for Buffalo.

 

Has there been anything to refute the main points made in all that "speculation?"

 

So the idea is that Farwell, the one who wanted to take time off the clock, communicated one thing to his kicker and something else to the rest of the ST unit (who were clearly running in a way that suggested they expected a kickoff return and were taken by surprise when it went through the end zone?

 

Therefore, after this screw-up by Farwell (not communicating the head coach's call correctly to the entire ST unit), he voluntarily decided to leave a championship contending team for a lateral move to a bottom-of-the-league team like the Jags

 

I don't know who Dunne's sources are so it's hard to evaluate, but this doesn't make a lot of sense to me.

 

I think there are people on the Bills who know what happened, and they aren't talking, including to Ty Dunne.

 

4 hours ago, Buddy Hix said:

The Dunne piece paints McD in a horrible light. Next season could be bumpy…

 

If you believe it. 

 

Keep in mind Ty Dunne is trying to sell a product - his "Go Long" writing - and to do that he has to generate enough controversy to attract buyers.

 

That also means he is no longer held to the standards of more mainstream journalism like AP, which requires two independent sources with direct knowledge of the situation.

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10 hours ago, Big Blitz said:

A loss that historically bad had to be dealt with the right way or he was going to never live this down (only a SB does that anyway), make it worse, and he would lose the players and fans who will forever blame him.

 

He dealt with it the wrong way.  

 

He essentially lied after the game.  All he had to say was "I called for it to be kicked deep."  The end. 

 

So let me get this straight. 

 

You want to believe an anonymously sourced piece by an independent football writer who is no longer bound by organizational standards like "I must have two independent sources with direct personal knowledge of the situation".

 

Therefore, because of this situation, you want to believe that McDermott, who by all other sources has been a man of deep integrity and character who says 'it was my decision' when in fact, it was his decision, actually called for a deep kick and lied.

 

The "Occum's Razor" call here is that McDermott is a straight shooter who would own a decision he actually made.  If he called for a deep kick, he would own it.  McDermott has made other controversial calls and has owned every one.  It's not actually a controversial call, Championship Winning coaches like Sean Payton are on the record as pointing to a deep kick as the correct call and explaining why he thinks so. 

 

The other approach still paints the ST coach as having incompetent communications (since the entire ST unit obviously still expected a kickoff return, so in this scenario the HC call for a deep kick wasn't communicated to 10 guys on the unit), AND paints McDermott as a lying weasel, so obviously that must be the correct scenario.

 

 

 

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13 minutes ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

So the idea is that Farwell, the one who wanted to take time off the clock, communicated one thing to his kicker and something else to the rest of the ST unit (who were clearly running in a way that suggested they expected a kickoff return and were taken by surprise when it went through the end zone?

 

Therefore, after this screw-up by Farwell (not communicating the head coach's call correctly to the entire ST unit), he voluntarily decided to leave a championship contending team for a lateral move to a bottom-of-the-league team like the Jags

 

I don't know who Dunne's sources are so it's hard to evaluate, but this doesn't make a lot of sense to me.

 

I think there are people on the Bills who know what happened, and they aren't talking, including to Ty Dunne.

 

 

If you believe it. 

 

Keep in mind Ty Dunne is trying to sell a product - his "Go Long" writing - and to do that he has to generate enough controversy to attract buyers.

 

That also means he is no longer held to the standards of more mainstream journalism like AP, which requires two independent sources with direct knowledge of the situation.

I believe Dunne. The way to build what he’s trying to build isn’t by creating sources and/or lying. And the story Dunne tells jives with what we saw happen…incompetence.

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I've figured it out.  We know Bass was off kicking to the side and kicked it deep.  That tells me he was told to kick deep (not sure by whom), and that's all he needed to know/do.  But the call was then changed to a squib, made by McD obviously, and Farwell told the rest of the STs but not Bass.  Farwell resigns instead of getting fired.

 

As for the defensive calls...I've got nothing. 

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12 minutes ago, Doc said:

I've figured it out.  We know Bass was off kicking to the side and kicked it deep.  That tells me he was told to kick deep and that's all he needed to know/do.  But the call was then changed to a squib, made by McD obviously, and Farwell told the rest of the STs but not Bass.  Farwell resigns instead of getting fired.

 

Just a little note that folks have made upthread, the terms are sometimes used interchangeably, but a squib and a pooch kick are in fact different.

 

https://coachingkidz.com/what-is-a-squib-kick-in-football/

https://www.marca.com/en/nfl/2022/01/26/61f1b63d22601d942e8b4604.html

 

11 minutes ago, Buddy Hix said:

I believe Dunne. The way to build what he’s trying to build isn’t by creating sources and/or lying. And the story Dunne tells jives with what we saw happen…incompetence.

 

Just to be clear, I'm neither accusing Dunne of "creating sources" or of "lying".

 

But we don't know who his sources are, whether they are people who have direct personal knowledge of the situation or are recounting hearsay, or even whether they are people who have a personal interest in shifting the narrative.

 

A person can have actual sources and be correctly conveying what they were told by those sources, but their story is only as good as their sources.  This is, essentially, the "eyewitness" problem in criminal trials.

 

However, the fact that you converted what was said into an accusation of "creating sources" and "lying" speaks to the thinking process behind your beliefs, thus whether those beliefs should be considered credible.

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6 minutes ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

So let me get this straight. 

 

You want to believe an anonymously sourced piece by an independent football writer who is no longer bound by organizational standards like "I must have two independent sources with direct personal knowledge of the situation".

 

Therefore, because of this situation, you want to believe that McDermott, who by all other sources has been a man of deep integrity and character who says 'it was my decision' when in fact, it was his decision, actually called for a deep kick and lied.

 

The "Occum's Razor" call here is that McDermott is a straight shooter who would own a decision he actually made.  If he called for a deep kick, he would own it.  McDermott has made other controversial calls and has owned every one.  It's not actually a controversial call, Championship Winning coaches like Sean Payton are on the record as pointing to a deep kick as the correct call and explaining why he thinks so. 

 

The other approach still paints the ST coach as having incompetent communications (since the entire ST unit obviously still expected a squib, so in this scenario the HC call for a deep kick wasn't communicated to 10 guys on the unit), AND paints McDermott as a lying weasel, so obviously that must be the correct scenario.

 

 

I certainly understand the emotional reaction after the game, as every one of us had experienced it to one degree or another. However, it feels that there are a small number of posters who, not only have shown little ability to move past it, but seem to have actually elevated their anger at McDermott to a whole new level. To the point they are willing to ignore five years of behavior that would lead even the casual observer to conclude McDermott is a man of, as you say, deep integrity and character, in order to believe anything that fuels that anger...

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3 minutes ago, billsfan1959 said:

 

I certainly understand the emotional reaction after the game, as every one of us had experienced it to one degree or another. However, it feels that there are a small number of posters who, not only have shown little ability to move past it, but seem to have actually elevated their anger at McDermott to a whole new level. To the point they are willing to ignore five years of behavior that would lead even the casual observer to conclude McDermott is a man of, as you say, deep integrity and character, in order to believe anything that fuels that anger...

You don't know McDermott any more than me or anyone else. You have no idea about his integrity or character.  Lots of coaches preach integrity and then practice differently.  

What we know is the coaching staff cost the city of Buffalo a championship and McDermott labeled it as execution which is code for the players didn't perform. The players don't decide how to kick the ball and they don't decide to rush 4. At best Levi may have freelanced lining up wide and deep, but based on where the safeties were lined up, McDermott was defending against a TD not a FG. He called timeouts twice and they still choked.

 

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34 minutes ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

The other approach still paints the ST coach as having incompetent communications (since the entire ST unit obviously still expected a kickoff return, so in this scenario the HC call for a deep kick wasn't communicated to 10 guys on the unit), AND paints McDermott as a lying weasel, so obviously that must be the correct scenario.


Dunne (Smart Ass) is more likely the lying weasel.   Question is which posters supporting him fit other characters Stupid, Greasy, Psycho and Wheezy best?

 

 

Why is Dunne trying to be the Sulking Sullivan replacement?

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9 hours ago, billsfan1959 said:

 

100% correct. It's as if some posters here haven't observed a single thing about McDermott over the last 5 years that defines his character. Or, they just have no ability whatsoever to accurately interpret the behavior of others. 

 

Yeah, but a botch of this magnitude can do a lot of damage, even to a coach who has done things right for five years. His "execution" comment throws the players under the bus, when it's obvious they did what he and Frazier asked them to do. The two of them blew it, not the players, and he really screwed up by exculpating himself at their expense.

 

And, no, his "...and that's on me" bromide does not undo the damage. I wouldn't be surprised if this is festering to a degree among the players. I suspect it will clear up, but McDermott may have used up a lot of goodwill. He can't blow it again, or blow it and blame the players.

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35 minutes ago, Ethan in Portland said:

You don't know McDermott any more than me or anyone else. You have no idea about his integrity or character.  Lots of coaches preach integrity and then practice differently.  

What we know is the coaching staff cost the city of Buffalo a championship and McDermott labeled it as execution which is code for the players didn't perform. The players don't decide how to kick the ball and they don't decide to rush 4. At best Levi may have freelanced lining up wide and deep, but based on where the safeties were lined up, McDermott was defending against a TD not a FG. He called timeouts twice and they still choked.

 

 

If you don't have a pretty good idea of the type of man McDermott is after the last five years, then that says says volumes about you...

 

18 minutes ago, finn said:

Yeah, but a botch of this magnitude can do a lot of damage, even to a coach who has done things right for five years. His "execution" comment throws the players under the bus, when it's obvious they did what he and Frazier asked them to do. The two of them blew it, not the players, and he really screwed up by exculpating himself at their expense.

 

And, no, his "...and that's on me" bromide does not undo the damage. I wouldn't be surprised if this is festering to a degree among the players. I suspect it will clear up, but McDermott may have used up a lot of goodwill. He can't blow it again, or blow it and blame the players.

 

How do you go about conjuring this much drama up in your head?

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5 hours ago, billsfan714 said:

The "execution" line is just a cop out.   It was strategy and communication which both fall under coaching.   Plain and simple.   The three plays occurred with a TV timeout and Bills timeouts.  Plenty of time to get things right.   They were the 3 plays you wouldn't want to run in the  situation.  KO into the end zone followed by deep outside technique defense.   The Bills never got the ball back to another great offense.   Sean crapped the bed after a heroic effort by Josh and the offense.  The offense was given a task, score a TD within just over a minute of time.  Check done, and the KO team and D was given the task of preventing a FG in 13 seconds and they couldn't get it done.   Its squarely on our head coach with a defensive coordinator background.

 

'

Perfect post

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10 minutes ago, finn said:

Yeah, but a botch of this magnitude can do a lot of damage, even to a coach who has done things right for five years. His "execution" comment throws the players under the bus, when it's obvious they did what he and Frazier asked them to do. The two of them blew it, not the players, and he really screwed up by exculpating himself at their expense.

 

And, no, his "...and that's on me" bromide does not undo the damage. I wouldn't be surprised if this is festering to a degree among the players. I suspect it will clear up, but McDermott may have used up a lot of goodwill. He can't blow it again, or blow it and blame the players.

Gotta be honest, this is where I am.  If things go South for the Bills, this is what everyone will point to as the place it all went wrong.  It’s by no means a foregone conclusion that’s how it will go, but I agree that a lot of goodwill is used up.  That matters if, for instance, Dorsey’s offense gets off to a slow start or the defense takes a step back.  The former is a possibility, but the latter is a near certainty IMO simply because we are going to play a tougher schedule with better opposing QBs.  I hope that the ship gets righted and we get over the hump.  Expectations are so high for this team that it is difficult to live up to them, especially in a loaded AFC.  🤞

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2 minutes ago, billsfan1959 said:

 

If you don't have a pretty good idea of the type of man McDermott is after the last five years, then that says says volumes about you...

 

Please. You think what we are allowed to see is the reality. Lol. Google Jim Tressel who preached and even wrote about integrity and then did the exact opposite.  

All that said even if he is a man of high integrity and there is nothing truly publicly known to doubt that, he still choked in the moment. I could really care less about his character flaws or not, just don't blow our chance at a SB with the best QB talent in the NFL.

25 minutes ago, finn said:

Yeah, but a botch of this magnitude can do a lot of damage, even to a coach who has done things right for five years. His "execution" comment throws the players under the bus, when it's obvious they did what he and Frazier asked them to do. The two of them blew it, not the players, and he really screwed up by exculpating himself at their expense.

 

And, no, his "...and that's on me" bromide does not undo the damage. I wouldn't be surprised if this is festering to a degree among the players. I suspect it will clear up, but McDermott may have used up a lot of goodwill. He can't blow it again, or blow it and blame the players.

Another perfect post. Well stated.

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Just now, Ethan in Portland said:

Please. You think what we are allowed to see is the reality. Lol. Google Jim Tressel who preached and even wrote about integrity and then did the exact opposite.  

All that said even if he is a man of high integrity and there is nothing truly publicly known to doubt that, he still choked in the moment. I could really care less about his character flaws or not, just don't blow our chance at a SB with the best QB talent in the NFL.

 

I stand by what I said. If you don't have a really good idea who McDermott is by now, that's on you.

 

I believe your stances are driven by emotion rather than reason and every post you write only reinforces that belief.

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1 hour ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

Just a little note that folks have made upthread, the terms are sometimes used interchangeably, but a squib and a pooch kick are in fact different.

 

https://coachingkidz.com/what-is-a-squib-kick-in-football/

https://www.marca.com/en/nfl/2022/01/26/61f1b63d22601d942e8b4604.html

 

Yup, know the difference and meant squib.  A "pooch" kick, at least as far as the article you linked described (a high kick to the 20-25 yard line and designed to be taken by an up-man to prevent/limit a return) doesn't make sense because you get to about the same yard-line as a TB and the ball can still be fair caught with no time being taken off, but also has a chance to be returned.  The squib OTOH bounces around preventing a returner from getting a good bead on it and theoretically ends up closer to the endzone compelling the returner to pick it up and use up clock.  The only other kick that would have been appropriate would be a high kick to close to the endzone.  But again, that allows for a return set-up.

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6 hours ago, mannc said:

A manager “accepting responsibility” for a major mistake is a flexible, almost meaningless concept in our modern society. In Japan, it used to mean hurling yourself off the roof of the nearest skyscraper (and before that, ritually eviscerating yourself); in other societies, it means—or meant—at a minimum, resigning your position.  Nowadays, it just means uttering the words “I accept responsibility”, and little else, no real consequences.  


McDermott “accepts responsibility” for those 13 seconds only in this latter, modern sense. Maybe that’s why people are not satisfied with his stance on this whole fiasco…


if he said “I accept responsibility for… whatever caused the issue” it would be much stronger than “I accept responsibility for losing because I’m the head of the team and it’s all my responsibility”

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2 hours ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

Just a little note that folks have made upthread, the terms are sometimes used interchangeably, but a squib and a pooch kick are in fact different.

 

https://coachingkidz.com/what-is-a-squib-kick-in-football/

https://www.marca.com/en/nfl/2022/01/26/61f1b63d22601d942e8b4604.html

 

 

Just to be clear, I'm neither accusing Dunne of "creating sources" or of "lying".

 

But we don't know who his sources are, whether they are people who have direct personal knowledge of the situation or are recounting hearsay, or even whether they are people who have a personal interest in shifting the narrative.

 

A person can have actual sources and be correctly conveying what they were told by those sources, but their story is only as good as their sources.  This is, essentially, the "eyewitness" problem in criminal trials.

 

However, the fact that you converted what was said into an accusation of "creating sources" and "lying" speaks to the thinking process behind your beliefs, thus whether those beliefs should be considered credible.

LMAO…you said to keep in mind that Dunne is trying to sell a product and then said that he isn’t being held to the journalistic standard of two independent sources. Dunne has multiple independent sources.

Have you read the article?

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50 minutes ago, Buddy Hix said:

LMAO…you said to keep in mind that Dunne is trying to sell a product and then said that he isn’t being held to the journalistic standard of two independent sources. Dunne has multiple independent sources.

Have you read the article?

 

I did and, from beginning to end, the language in the article was dripping with Dunne's dislike for Sean McDermott. When you don't even attempt to hide your disdain for the person you are writing about, you better have something substantial to overcome the credibility issue you create for yourself from the start. Dunne didn't. He sounded like an entitled little brat who didn't get what he wanted and the entire article felt like a tantrum.

 

If articles that scream, "lack of intellectual integrity" are the kind of thing you need to justify your own dislike for MCDermott, be my guest. 

 

Edited by billsfan1959
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1 hour ago, Doc said:

Yup, know the difference and meant squib.  A "pooch" kick, at least as far as the article you linked described (a high kick to the 20-25 yard line and designed to be taken by an up-man to prevent/limit a return) doesn't make sense because you get to about the same yard-line as a TB and the ball can still be fair caught with no time being taken off, but also has a chance to be returned.  The squib OTOH bounces around preventing a returner from getting a good bead on it and theoretically ends up closer to the endzone compelling the returner to pick it up and use up clock.  The only other kick that would have been appropriate would be a high kick to close to the endzone.  But again, that allows for a return set-up.

That's pry what was called.  Their returner is not going to fair catch it at the five yard line or take the chance of it bouncing through the end zone. We have one of the best special teams coverage units in the NFL and have used that kick effectively throughout the season.  Bass is excellent at executing them.  The problem with the squib kick is it can take a funny bounce, it can hit one of their blockers at like the 40 where they can just fall on it, and the lack of hang time on the ball gives our coverage unit less time to get down the field increasing the chances of a long kick return.  

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3 hours ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

So let me get this straight. 

 

You want to believe an anonymously sourced piece by an independent football writer who is no longer bound by organizational standards like "I must have two independent sources with direct personal knowledge of the situation".

 

Therefore, because of this situation, you want to believe that McDermott, who by all other sources has been a man of deep integrity and character who says 'it was my decision' when in fact, it was his decision, actually called for a deep kick and lied.

 

The "Occum's Razor" call here is that McDermott is a straight shooter who would own a decision he actually made.  If he called for a deep kick, he would own it.  McDermott has made other controversial calls and has owned every one.  It's not actually a controversial call, Championship Winning coaches like Sean Payton are on the record as pointing to a deep kick as the correct call and explaining why he thinks so. 

 

The other approach still paints the ST coach as having incompetent communications (since the entire ST unit obviously still expected a kickoff return, so in this scenario the HC call for a deep kick wasn't communicated to 10 guys on the unit), AND paints McDermott as a lying weasel, so obviously that must be the correct scenario.

 

 

 

 

 

 

He did not say after the game what he said last week at the start of the combine.  Which was much closer to owning it tho still not completely.  

 

At the combine he said "it's execution and that includes communication and ultimately that starts with me."  End.

 

After the game he said something very close to "it was execution.  We just didn't get the job done.  There are situations we prepare for and we just didn't execute."

 

 

It's not even important anymore what the players said as the game ended.  What matters is what they heard from their HC after the game and if it was acceptable to them because they know what happened.  But apparently after the game and since we've decided to keep what actually happened under the most bizarre code of silence I've ever seen about a collapse that absolutely warrants the fans but especially the players hearing the coach tell the truth.    

 

His answer at the combine revealed there was more to what happened on the squibb or no squibb call.  So I don't need the most upstanding reporter to accurately and without bias investigate this.

 

And for the 100th time.  I'm the biggest McD supporter there has been.  And agree with everything you said about his integrity, etc.  But they just lost in historic fashion they knew then cost them a SB and I don't know what his mindset was.  It wasn't a week 3 loss where it's easy to take ownership.  This doesn't make him lesser of a leader btw.  Maybe he just didn't feel he deserved the blame for those awful D calls that were just as equal at costing us the game. 

Edited by Big Blitz
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17 minutes ago, Doc Brown said:

That's pry what was called.  Their returner is not going to fair catch it at the five yard line or take the chance of it bouncing through the end zone. We have one of the best special teams coverage units in the NFL and have used that kick effectively throughout the season.  Bass is excellent at executing them.  The problem with the squib kick is it can take a funny bounce, it can hit one of their blockers at like the 40 where they can just fall on it, and the lack of hang time on the ball gives our coverage unit less time to get down the field increasing the chances of a long kick return.  

 

It could very well have been...but after Bass was initially told to kick a TB and not relayed to him.

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