Sweats Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago I still can't put 13 seconds into words, so that one has to stay on top.........this past weekend is a close 2nd. Quote
uticaclub Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago Nothing will ever top 13 seconds. If Terry had the balls to fire him after that, there no Damar but there's a Super Bowl appearance Quote
ChronicAndKnuckles Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago 1 hour ago, Donuts and Doritos said: Ask and you have received. Good idea. 1st time making a poll in here. Thanks & Go Bills! I ultimately chose YES… this one felt like the nail in the coffin to me. 1 Quote
RochesterLifer Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago Being a regular season loss, especially one that doesn’t individually derail the Bills from the playoffs, this can’t be viewed as McDermott’s worst defeat. However, we may look back and see this as a day of reckoning. - The Bills have a pattern of stumbling mid season, then pulling it together after the bye. We have passed the bye, and yesterday looked completely lost. - Josh also has a pattern of gaining effectiveness and aggressiveness in November. As of November 10, this season’s gain has not yet begun - again, he looked completely lost. For the first time in six years, it is hard for me to see where the Bills are either growing or maintaining. I am as optimistic a fan as you’ll find and I hope like hell that I’m wrong. But, the Bills are showing no answers and yesterday may mark the beginning of the decline. Quote
dpberr Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 16 hours ago, zow2 said: Hey, i was there with my son. Not the worst game I've seen in person, but certainly the worst playoff game given the stakes. The game was bad enough, the long drive home in traffic, darkness, snow falling and poor road conditions was just the most depressing thing ever. My son and I barely spoke a word to each other. It easily gets my vote for McDermott's worst game because of the lack of preparation (42 pass attempts in bad weather) and the team's lack of interest and effort. 13 Seconds was bad but the team showed up for that game. Quote
Gregg Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 16 hours ago, SoonerBillsFan said: But I think we can agree that 13 seconds is #2 now for the team. Music city throw up and the 3 other SB losses are after that This is going back in time but the 1980 divisional round loss to the Chargers. The Bills had the lead late in the 4th and then Fouts throw a long TD pass for the game winning score. A year later in the 1981 divisional round vs the Bengals the Bills were driving for the tying score, but a penalty stalled the drive and the Bills lost by 7. 1 Quote
SoonerBillsFan Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 1 hour ago, Gregg said: This is going back in time but the 1980 divisional round loss to the Chargers. The Bills had the lead late in the 4th and then Fouts throw a long TD pass for the game winning score. A year later in the 1981 divisional round vs the Bengals the Bills were driving for the tying score, but a penalty stalled the drive and the Bills lost by 7. Don't forget the Ronnie Harmon drop against the Browns. Could have been 5 straight AFCCG for us 1 Quote
CirclnWagons Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago I haven’t seen a beating like the bills took Sunday since my mother caught me smoking behind our barn. My jaw still clicks from time to time Quote
Gunsgoodtime Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 13 seconds and its not even remotely close. The amount of stupidity it took to lose that game is shocking 1 Quote
Brand J Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago I thought we were moving towards a youth movement and speed in the secondary? Why did Hancock only get 10 defensive snaps to Poyer’s 43? Hairston started the game and played every snap; if Benford comes back and McD splits time between Hairston and White again I’ll be at the point where I truly want McD gone at the end of the year. Quote
Chaos Posted 25 minutes ago Posted 25 minutes ago (edited) Nick Faldo was a good golfer early in his career but decided that his swing would never allow him to win a major. So he went to David Leadbetter and asked him to rebuild his swing. Faldo went through a miserable period but he was steadfast in his belief that what he was doing was the right thing. Many outsiders shook their heads in disbelief. But then it all clicked into place. Faldo went on to win six majors. He knew what he was doing. Sean McVay massive rebuilding after getting to the Super Bowl is a recent similar football analogy. The missing link in the McDermott era was not recognizing 3 or 4 years ago, that the problem with the schemes were using wasn't with the offense, but with the defense. The deconstruction of the unstoppable offensive attack that once able to play a perfect game against New England, seems to be related to trying to preserve the concept that our once innovative defensesive scheme (circa 2018) was and is never going to be effective against a string of top tier playoff teams. Edited 23 minutes ago by Chaos Quote
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