ChronicAndKnuckles Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago Ed Oliver is a solid DT and provides much needed pass rush ability in the interior. I don’t get the hate he receives. He is one of the main reasons this is a perennial top 10 defense. Ask Joe Burrow what it’s like to have to win shootouts every week. 1 Quote
Simon Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 1 hour ago, GunnerBill said: Meh. Maybe. I'm not sure. I think that might be looking for an excuse where he just didn't play well. It's not an excuse, it's the reality of an undersized DT who has to work harder to beat bigger players. Increased exertion leads to more injuries and if the guy wants to be healthy and ready to go down the stretch and in the postseason, this is how he's going to have to approach the rest of his career. Quote
GunnerBill Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 38 minutes ago, Simon said: It's not an excuse, it's the reality of an undersized DT who has to work harder to beat bigger players. Increased exertion leads to more injuries and if the guy wants to be healthy and ready to go down the stretch and in the postseason, this is how he's going to have to approach the rest of his career. I'm still not persuaded. Quote
SoTier Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 57 minutes ago, ChronicAndKnuckles said: Ed Oliver is a solid DT and provides much needed pass rush ability in the interior. I don’t get the hate he receives. He is one of the main reasons this is a perennial top 10 defense. Ask Joe Burrow what it’s like to have to win shootouts every week. Some people need a scapegoat. 1 1 Quote
PoundingDog Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Ed Oliver is not the worst pick of Beane, but to me, pretty significant in the sense that he was not able to get a Bonafide elite player when there were such players in consideration (Simmons e.g.) in the same draft. The Bills have not, and probably will never going to be in the same position (#9 overall) at the draft table to draft an elite talent in Allen's tenure as Bills QB. In hindsight, Aaron Donald's success probably influenced Beane. Athletically, Oliver and Donald measured very closely, but I see that additional power and reach Donald had over Oliver played wonder to him along with superior technic. A HoF (maybe the best DT in NFL history) compared to a solid good player; the margin is that small. Donald does have a prototypical DT body. You need all the other things to make it work. Oliver has an even shorter arm (31+" compared to the average 33+"). I don't know I'd have banking on lightening struck twice by hoping Oliver became Donald light myself. Oliver did watch Donald's tape. I remember he marveled at Donald's hand usage, saying it is the best he has ever seen. Quote
HappyDays Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 29 minutes ago, Simon said: It's not an excuse, it's the reality of an undersized DT who has to work harder to beat bigger players. Increased exertion leads to more injuries and if the guy wants to be healthy and ready to go down the stretch and in the postseason, this is how he's going to have to approach the rest of his career. The counterargument is Aaron Donald, another undersized DT with short arms who still managed to produce at a Hall of Fame level for entire seasons. I don't know how well known this is but Donald had an all-time work ethic. He retired somewhat early specifically because he didn't want to put in the grueling work required for his body type anymore. I'm not going to say Oliver is lazy, but I also don't think he is committing quite as much as he could to reaching his full potential. Quote
DabillsDaBillsDaBills Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 14 minutes ago, PoundingDog said: Ed Oliver is not the worst pick of Beane, but to me, pretty significant in the sense that he was not able to get a Bonafide elite player when there were such players in consideration (Simmons e.g.) in the same draft. The Bills have not, and probably will never going to be in the same position (#9 overall) at the draft table to draft an elite talent in Allen's tenure as Bills QB. In hindsight, Aaron Donald's success probably influenced Beane. Athletically, Oliver and Donald measured very closely, but I see that additional power and reach Donald had over Oliver played wonder to him along with superior technic. A HoF (maybe the best DT in NFL history) compared to a solid good player; the margin is that small. Donald does have a prototypical DT body. You need all the other things to make it work. Oliver has an even shorter arm (31+" compared to the average 33+"). I don't know I'd have banking on lightening struck twice by hoping Oliver became Donald light myself. Oliver did watch Donald's tape. I remember he marveled at Donald's hand usage, saying it is the best he has ever seen. It hurts that the next 3 DTs off the board are all better than Oilver. Wilkins at 13, Lawrence at 17, and Simmons at 19. If Oliver had been a 2nd rd pick we'd all probably love his production. Just kinda disappointing for #9 overall. Quote
Bleeding Bills Blue Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 5 minutes ago, DabillsDaBillsDaBills said: It hurts that the next 3 DTs off the board are all better than Oilver. Wilkins at 13, Lawrence at 17, and Simmons at 19. If Oliver had been a 2nd rd pick we'd all probably love his production. Just kinda disappointing for #9 overall. Far from a bust though. He was a pre-season #1 overall type player so it's hard to ignore hype like that at #9. Lawrence and Wilkins were teammates so that can create some challenges scouting - was one looking better because of the other etc. Lawrence also projected as a pure 1T which usually isn't a 1st round priority. 1 Quote
Simon Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 32 minutes ago, HappyDays said: The counterargument is Aaron Donald, another undersized DT with short arms who still managed to produce at a Hall of Fame level for entire seasons. I don't know how well known this is but Donald had an all-time work ethic. He retired somewhat early specifically because he didn't want to put in the grueling work required for his body type anymore. I'm not going to say Oliver is lazy, but I also don't think he is committing quite as much as he could to reaching his full potential. I won't disagree with any of that. Quote
GunnerBill Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 34 minutes ago, HappyDays said: The counterargument is Aaron Donald, another undersized DT with short arms who still managed to produce at a Hall of Fame level for entire seasons. I don't know how well known this is but Donald had an all-time work ethic. He retired somewhat early specifically because he didn't want to put in the grueling work required for his body type anymore. I'm not going to say Oliver is lazy, but I also don't think he is committing quite as much as he could to reaching his full potential. I don't think he was fully committed first part of last year. That is what it looked like. He wasn't on it. Quote
Bleeding Bills Blue Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 28 minutes ago, HappyDays said: The counterargument is Aaron Donald, another undersized DT with short arms who still managed to produce at a Hall of Fame level for entire seasons. I don't know how well known this is but Donald had an all-time work ethic. He retired somewhat early specifically because he didn't want to put in the grueling work required for his body type anymore. I'm not going to say Oliver is lazy, but I also don't think he is committing quite as much as he could to reaching his full potential. Donald and Oliver have similar get off, but Donalds power, footwork, and specifically his hands are just next level. 1 Quote
GoBills808 Posted 58 minutes ago Posted 58 minutes ago 2 minutes ago, Bleeding Bills Blue said: Donald and Oliver have similar get off, but Donalds power, footwork, and specifically his hands are just next level. Aaron Donald doesn't really have a comp tbh he had all the moves but could also just decide to ragdoll his man straight thru his chest. insane power Oliver has a quick first step but if you get hands on him he kind of just starts churning laterally in 2nd gear Quote
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