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Buffalo Bills’ Jordan Poyer named best safety in NFL


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Buffalo Bills’ Jordan Poyer named best safety in NFL

https://sports.yahoo.com/buffalo-bills-jordan-poyer-named-181504825.html
 

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The Buffalo Bills sport one of the best safety tandems in the entire NFL with Jordan Poyer and Micah Hyde. Our friends over at the NFL Wire have often complimented the duo and did once again.  We’re not here to overlook Hyde, he gets mentioned as well. Hyde was named the 12th best safety in NFL by TD Wire.

 

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Where Poyer lands was really eye catching.

In naming the 13 best safeties in the league, Poyer is named the best of the best. The top-spot overall is given to him.

 

 

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Hyde made Mac Jones’ life particularly miserable, as the Patriots’ rookie quarterback gave up three picks to him — two in Week 16, and one in Buffalo’s wild-card win. The wild-card pick came with Hyde as the deep safety, and Nelson Agholor beating cornerback Levi Wallace downfield. That didn’t matter, because Hyde zoomed over to take the ball away.

 

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Poyer deserves recognition.........but It is interesting how players in walk years or salary disputes SO OFTEN go from unrecognizable to many pundits..........to being pitched as shining stars.

 

It's been going on since free agency began.    

 

@H2o might actually be on to something.

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59 minutes ago, T master said:

I wonder how much Rosenhouse paid for that article . 😆

 

Just kidding of course !!

 

There is certainly reason to believe article writer is influenced by Poyer's agent.

Poyer's agent is pushing for a new contract and like in draft agents tend to try to create press when they are negotiating.

 

There is certainly a tradition of writers getting paid for articles by those favorably reviewed.

I used to game with a couple and the wife was a trade negotiator for US trying to allow American cars in Japan which was actively preventing it while their manufacturers were paying for favorable articles in US auto magazines. 

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If his agent really did influence this article as others have mentioned above (which seems plausible), that makes me think Poyer wants top of the market safety money.

 

I could see that being the case because he hasn’t really made a ton of money in his career and this is probably his last shot at a big pay day. But I just don’t see how it works out in Buffalo if that’s what he’s after. I think the best the bills could do is something similar to what he’s making now.

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1 minute ago, BillsFan4 said:

If his agent really did influence this article as others have mentioned above (which seems plausible), that makes me think Poyer wants top of the market safety money.

 

I could see that being the case because he hasn’t really made a ton of money in his career and this is probably his last shot at a big pay day. But I just don’t see how it works out in Buffalo if that’s what he’s after. I think the best the bills could do is something similar to what he’s making now.

 

With Poyer showing up to camp, I would say the the FO/Agent are at least talking enough where he's satisfied.  

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1 hour ago, BADOLBILZ said:

 

Poyer deserves recognition.........but It is interesting how players in walk years or salary disputes SO OFTEN go from unrecognizable to many pundits..........to being pitched as shining stars.

 

It's been going on since free agency began.    

 

@H2o might actually be on to something.

 

 

You're not kidding, Badol.

 

Back awhile when my wife and I were coming up on our 10th anniversary I kept hearing from friends and family (and her) how great she was and how "she's the best!" and how much she liked diamonds.

 

 

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If last years performance was used as the data point for concluding who ranks where on the best safety list, then I’m not sure why people questioning the writers motive.

 

 One can make the best safety in the league argument rather easily looking at last years numbers while considering he posted that stat line on the NFLs #1 defense.

 

if we’re going beyond last year and looking at everything to form an overall best safety list, then he’s somewhere in the 5-10 range IMHO.

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Love to see Jordan getting badly overdue respect for his hard work and amazing instincts.  He deserves every bit of it.  Time and time again I am blown away by his tackles that save sure touchdowns.  Reminds me of Antoine Winfield in many ways.

But no discussion about Poyer is complete without Micah Hyde.  That INT of Mac Jones in the playoffs was the best pick I have ever witnessed live and probably one of the best individual plays I have ever seen.  And that’s just a fraction of what Hyde brings to this defense.

 

Mad love to our boys at the safety positions right now!
 

 

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13 minutes ago, julian said:

If last years performance was used as the data point for concluding who ranks where on the best safety list, then I’m not sure why people questioning the writers motive.

 

 One can make the best safety in the league argument rather easily looking at last years numbers while considering he posted that stat line on the NFLs #1 defense.

 

if we’re going beyond last year and looking at everything to form an overall best safety list, then he’s somewhere in the 5-10 range IMHO.

 

I am a Poyer fan for not what he does paired with Hyde but what he does elsewhere in game.  Bills were going with extra men pulling a DT to give extra rush on end and Poyer replaced DT going one on one with lineman.  I was friend at a sports bar and he asked who that LB was and I said it was our safety.  Offense lineman seemed surprised but Poyer handled him without grabbing put hands on chest and lineman actually took a step back.

 

I was pushing for him and Hyde to get extensions last time wanting Poyer's and Hyde's contracts to end same year since they need to be joined at hip for best value.   However I do not see him having as much value to another team as Buffalo as long as they have Poyer and Hyde together.   This does not mean another team will not be willing to spend stupid money (teams are obligated to spend 90% of cap) but I do not believe the Bills should match it.  If Rosenass has Poyer sit out in contract dispute Bills need to go full monty on replacing him with player on roster.  Luckily NFL changed rules to prevent teams from waiving mandatory fines for things like missing mandatory camp and games.

 

Need a sign at game: Poyer your wife wants a big diamond.  You should look at playing baseball.

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Poyer and Hyde are both terrific players, but they started to really shine only when they got to the Bills and Frazier built his defense to take advantage of what they do well and to minimize the impact of what they don't.  It's hard to separate the value of the player from the quality of the scheme.  The Bills have had several DBs over the years who were great here, signed big FA contracts, and were never as good with their new team.  (Antoine Winfield being a notable exception.) 

 

These are professionals who want to maximize their lifetime earnings while they still can.  You can't blame them for seeking top money, but no one should imagine that Poyer would necessarily be as good if he changed teams. 

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12 minutes ago, Utah John said:

Poyer and Hyde are both terrific players, but they started to really shine only when they got to the Bills and Frazier built his defense to take advantage of what they do well and to minimize the impact of what they don't.  It's hard to separate the value of the player from the quality of the scheme.  The Bills have had several DBs over the years who were great here, signed big FA contracts, and were never as good with their new team.  (Antoine Winfield being a notable exception.) 

 

These are professionals who want to maximize their lifetime earnings while they still can.  You can't blame them for seeking top money, but no one should imagine that Poyer would necessarily be as good if he changed teams. 

The chemistry of Hyde and Poyer is undeniable, I think both understand that the two together are much better and either would be by himself.  Not sure if Frazier deserves credit or the two do.  I think both would be willing to take a small hometown discount to stick together.

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24 minutes ago, Utah John said:

 

These are professionals who want to maximize their lifetime earnings while they still can.  You can't blame them for seeking top money, but no one should imagine that Poyer would necessarily be as good if he changed teams. 

I don't think this is a valid assumption. I think we view contract negotiations from our perspective, which is that we always could use more money to retire on. In Poyer's case, at the end of this season he will have earned 38 million dollars, and he has another contract to go. 38 million after tax is 20 million, and even if Poyers's wife is spending a million dollars a year, they already have 10 million dollars in the bank. I think at that point in their careers, a lot of players recognize that getting top dollar on their final big contract is less important than getting good money and playing where they'd like to play. I'm not saying that this is how Poyer is thinking about it, but I do think that it's not uncommon for players in his position to recognize that they're already financially secure and to decide on their next contract based on a variety of parameters, not just money.

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2 hours ago, BillsFan4 said:

If his agent really did influence this article as others have mentioned above (which seems plausible), that makes me think Poyer wants top of the market safety money.

 

I could see that being the case because he hasn’t really made a ton of money in his career and this is probably his last shot at a big pay day. But I just don’t see how it works out in Buffalo if that’s what he’s after. I think the best the bills could do is something similar to what he’s making now.

I'd like a 2 year extension at top dollar , him and Hyde are what makes this defense special. 

Wow Poyer had a 13.7 passer rating,  that's insane. Next best was Mccourty at 38

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4 hours ago, BADOLBILZ said:

 

Poyer deserves recognition.........but It is interesting how players in walk years or salary disputes SO OFTEN go from unrecognizable to many pundits..........to being pitched as shining stars.

 

It's been going on since free agency began.    

 

@H2o might actually be on to something.


it also sets the stage for dramatic free agency headlines, in addition to agents having incentive. You hype a guy as a huge story and suddenly you’ve manufactured future clicks. 
 

that said, he’s an excellent safety.

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1 hour ago, Shaw66 said:

I don't think this is a valid assumption. I think we view contract negotiations from our perspective, which is that we always could use more money to retire on. In Poyer's case, at the end of this season he will have earned 38 million dollars, and he has another contract to go. 38 million after tax is 20 million, and even if Poyers's wife is spending a million dollars a year, they already have 10 million dollars in the bank. I think at that point in their careers, a lot of players recognize that getting top dollar on their final big contract is less important than getting good money and playing where they'd like to play. I'm not saying that this is how Poyer is thinking about it, but I do think that it's not uncommon for players in his position to recognize that they're already financially secure and to decide on their next contract based on a variety of parameters, not just money.

This ^^^. I don’t think it’s about maximizing cash as much as it’s about maximizing value. Money can certainly compensate for things like location, facilities, losing, etc. However, once you have a substantial amount of wealth quality of life tends to be determined by factors other than money…. Granted, happy wife happy life may be one of them. 

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Well, he isn't the best safety in the NFL. Him and Hyde are both top 10, though. What a great duo. I do hope the Bills work out an extension for him, but with both of them over 30, we probably only have a couple more years of them in Buffalo.

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1 hour ago, Shaw66 said:

I don't think this is a valid assumption. I think we view contract negotiations from our perspective, which is that we always could use more money to retire on. In Poyer's case, at the end of this season he will have earned 38 million dollars, and he has another contract to go. 38 million after tax is 20 million, and even if Poyers's wife is spending a million dollars a year, they already have 10 million dollars in the bank. I think at that point in their careers, a lot of players recognize that getting top dollar on their final big contract is less important than getting good money and playing where they'd like to play. I'm not saying that this is how Poyer is thinking about it, but I do think that it's not uncommon for players in his position to recognize that they're already financially secure and to decide on their next contract based on a variety of parameters, not just money.

I think a big part of contracts is just the "respect" component. What you get offered shows how a team values you. If you think you are a top player in the league at your position, you want to be valued that way by the organization you are playing for, and your contract is a direct representation of that. It's not just about the money, of course, but top players feel that they have earned a big contract and getting offered less is disrespectful.

So yeah, it isn't always just about securing their future financially (despite so many players bringing up the "feeding our families" crap), but most players go where teams value them the most based on the contracts that they offer.

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2 hours ago, Utah John said:

Poyer and Hyde are both terrific players, but they started to really shine only when they got to the Bills and Frazier built his defense to take advantage of what they do well and to minimize the impact of what they don't.  It's hard to separate the value of the player from the quality of the scheme.  The Bills have had several DBs over the years who were great here, signed big FA contracts, and were never as good with their new team.  (Antoine Winfield being a notable exception.) 

 

These are professionals who want to maximize their lifetime earnings while they still can.  You can't blame them for seeking top money, but no one should imagine that Poyer would necessarily be as good if he changed teams. 

 

good points.  Also, shouldn't your user name be Tennessee John? 

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2 hours ago, MJS said:

I think a big part of contracts is just the "respect" component. What you get offered shows how a team values you. If you think you are a top player in the league at your position, you want to be valued that way by the organization you are playing for, and your contract is a direct representation of that. It's not just about the money, of course, but top players feel that they have earned a big contract and getting offered less is disrespectful.

So yeah, it isn't always just about securing their future financially (despite so many players bringing up the "feeding our families" crap), but most players go where teams value them the most based on the contracts that they offer.

Yes, that's another factor.  Some guys don't care so much about the actual money, but the money is like a report card with all A's on it.  For some guys, that's important.   For a guy like Brady, it wasn't.   For some guys, just winning is important.   For some guys, his legacy with the team is important.  There are a lot of factors that can affect the decision, depending on the guy.  That was really my point - it doesn't make sense to assume that the decision will be driven by money.  It may be, but maybe not. 

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33 minutes ago, Shaw66 said:

Yes, that's another factor.  Some guys don't care so much about the actual money, but the money is like a report card with all A's on it.  For some guys, that's important.   For a guy like Brady, it wasn't.   For some guys, just winning is important.   For some guys, his legacy with the team is important.  There are a lot of factors that can affect the decision, depending on the guy.  That was really my point - it doesn't make sense to assume that the decision will be driven by money.  It may be, but maybe not. 

It usually is, though. Brady is a big exception to the rule, really. For most guys, getting a big contract is important to them for many different reasons, but yes, you do sometimes see players prioritize other things.

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