Jay_Fixit Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago After that 4th down call I'd have fired McDermott and Brady on the spot. Quote
Nihilarian Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago We unquestionably have an injury problem, and the defensive players need to talk to the O-line players to find out what they are doing to stay healthy. Injuries are not the head coaches or GM's fault. Injuries are part of the game, while some teams accrue more than others for some reason. As bad as the Buffalo defense was in the first half, it was all on Buffalo OC Joe Brady to set up a scheme that didn't involve getting his QB killed. Other teams face a ton of blitzing and pass rush pressure, and they don't fold like lawn chairs. They can beat a blitz by using quick passes, changing the play at the line of scrimmage, or employing effective blocking schemes to protect the quarterback. Quarterbacks with good decision-making skills can also exploit the defense's weaknesses by recognizing the blitz and adjusting their plays accordingly. Instead of quick outs or max protection, this OC kept calling for deep drop-back passes of 5-7 step drops to hit a big play. If I ever see a WR screen to Shakir, I'll want to strangle someone. Just keep handing off on first down over and over. Quote
popcornpam Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago (edited) 5 hours ago, TheyCallMeAndy said: So the plan isn't made off the cuff during the game, right? Brady and McD formulate it throughout the week. So who is this on? Both. During his press conference on Monday, he said it’s a short week so we’re not gonna change much so there it is played the same bad plays. They did a couple weeks ago. Edited 9 hours ago by popcornpam Quote
Kelly to Allen Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago 3 hours ago, DCOrange said: I know it's cool to hate McDermott right now, but I promise you he did not watch our offense hang 40 points in a win and pull Brady aside to chastise him for scoring too much lol. Houston is just a lot better defensively than Tampa is and both of our tackles seemed to be playing hurt. I mean he just did a massive philosophy shift away after daboll.... Why? Quote
Trogdor Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago 3 minutes ago, Kelly to Allen said: I mean he just did a massive philosophy shift away after daboll.... Why? He blamed the offense after 13 seconds. If people didn't know then that he was the wrong coach then idk what they want. He wants a slow plodding offense that keeps his rotation heavy defense off the field. 1 Quote
DCOrange Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 7 minutes ago, Trogdor said: He blamed the offense after 13 seconds. If people didn't know then that he was the wrong coach then idk what they want. He wants a slow plodding offense that keeps his rotation heavy defense off the field. Where does this slow plodding offense fit into the fact that we are one of the highest scoring offenses every year? During our streak of division wins, we've gone from averaging 2:59 per drive to 3:02. Do you really think those 3 seconds are the difference between being up-tempo and trying to score score score vs. just trying to kill the clock? We're also averaging fewer plays per drive and more yards per drive than the 13 seconds season. Quote
Kelly to Allen Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 4 hours ago, DCOrange said: I know it's cool to hate McDermott right now, but I promise you he did not watch our offense hang 40 points in a win and pull Brady aside to chastise him for scoring too much lol. Houston is just a lot better defensively than Tampa is and both of our tackles seemed to be playing hurt. Once again nothing learned from the Tampa game 14 minutes ago, DCOrange said: Where does this slow plodding offense fit into the fact that we are one of the highest scoring offenses every year? During our streak of division wins, we've gone from averaging 2:59 per drive to 3:02. Do you really think those 3 seconds are the difference between being up-tempo and trying to score score score vs. just trying to kill the clock? We're also averaging fewer plays per drive and more yards per drive than the 13 seconds season. No for 2020, and not during the 21 playoff run.... Quote
nosejob Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 7 hours ago, IYKYK said: You lost me at “great defensive coordinator” he is anything but that. I didnt see a single blitz up until I quit watching in the 3rd. Quote
Trogdor Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago 53 minutes ago, DCOrange said: Where does this slow plodding offense fit into the fact that we are one of the highest scoring offenses every year? During our streak of division wins, we've gone from averaging 2:59 per drive to 3:02. Do you really think those 3 seconds are the difference between being up-tempo and trying to score score score vs. just trying to kill the clock? We're also averaging fewer plays per drive and more yards per drive than the 13 seconds season. 2020 was our best offense when you consider PPG. Since then there has been a very clear shift to a running offense. It's real cool that it works in the regular season, but it's been sputtering in the postseason. Even the Ravens game last playoffs was a fluke thanks to the great field position. Quote
TheFunPolice Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago Was it McDermott or Dennision? Was it McDermott or Daboll? Was it McDermott or Dorsey? Was it McDermott or Brady? Was it McDermott or _________ (next OC to be under fire by the end of 2027) Of the above, it was McDermott all the times except "Dabs" which is why Daboll was going to be gone with or without a HC gig. Quote
notpolian Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago It's Brady, but that means it's also McDermott. Brady demonstrated again last night that he is just not up to the job. This entire staff has run its course but with Pegula seemingly 99% clueless, I don't know that it'll ever change. Sigh. Quote
Ed_Formerly_of_Roch Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago Based on post game comments by McD, it's mostly all on Brady. Here's what I don't understand. The Bills WR were not great last year, but we still had one of the top offenses in leage, Allen won MVP, it wasn't just because of his running ability. While many wanted more improvements for 2025, seemed most felt the WR group was better this year than last with the addition of Palmer and Coleman having a year more experience. The Coleman part hasn't worked out, but even there, statistically not any worse than last year. Hollins was good last year , but he is far from a #1 WR. Kincaid also has been improved. So what happened? Quote
BananaB Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago I believe Joe is just McDs puppet. Look at the end of the Rams game last year when McD called the timeout which we needed to get the ball back, he said he wanted to make sure they had their best play best play called. Figure he wasn’t happy with what Joe was running, that’s just my opinion though. Quote
sven233 Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 1 hour ago, TheFunPolice said: Was it McDermott or Dennision? Was it McDermott or Daboll? Was it McDermott or Dorsey? Was it McDermott or Brady? Was it McDermott or _________ (next OC to be under fire by the end of 2027) Of the above, it was McDermott all the times except "Dabs" which is why Daboll was going to be gone with or without a HC gig. The easy theme here is McDermott. That said, the OCs had their share of flaws. Dennison was flat out awful. Just too many things to even get into with him. Unqualified for the job. Daboll, in my opinion, is the type of OC that you want. Fiery, competitive, and driven to hang 40+ on the opponent every week. He schemed to his talent and worked on concepts to get certain guys open on any given play. He used defensive tendencies against the opponent, found the weakness, and worked to find ways to attack it. The problem was he probably errored on the side of passing a bit too much. That said, though, he didn't have much of a run game to count on. Our offensive line staff was bad and couldn't block things up well enough in the run game at times so Daboll eventually just got away from the run too much. The problem with this is that McDermott HATES the style Daboll wanted to run. Daboll wanted to run as many plays as possible in a game and wanted to score as fast as he could. But, McDermott wants a ball control offense, control TOP, and limit the opponent's number of possessions. Scoring too fast and putting his defense back out there (which struggled to keep opponents from scoring) was not something he wanted and that's why it was very contentious between them. Dorsey was kind of the exact opposite of what Brady is in terms of depth of target. Everything Dorsey ran was down the field and took a long time to develop. His running game wasn't great either. But he wasn't a schemer by any means. He called plays, but was never a guy to set out to fool anyone. He was competitive and wanted to score, but just didn't have the play design skills to do it effectively. Out of all the coordinators we have had under McDermott, I think Dorsey was the most reliant one on the actual skill and talent of the players on the field. Brady....well, we know what he is. He's McDermott's dream OC that is struggling to make things work. He wants to roll our 3 TEs and pound the ball, play a ball control offense, and control the clock. The problem is, he doesn't have a creative bone in his body. Every route is at or behind the LOS. The ball rarely travels over 15 yards in the air within the structure of the offense. The only time it gets pushed down the field is when Allen scrambles outside of structure and tries to make things happen. Everything is static. No choice or option routes. He has a list of plays and he just calls them with no real plan. Many coordinators run plays not necessarily to be successful, but to set up something bigger later in the game. He doesn't call plays with a plan. He runs mesh as part of his base play package on not only early downs, but in every situation because again.....he's not scheming guys open....he's just calling plays. Why is he not using max protect or bringing in an extra lineman to help block up front last night when everyone could see that our front was getting manhandled? Because he doesn't have a "plan".....he has plays that he calls. And when you couple this with a lack of talent at the WR position, it's a recipe for disaster and that's where we are now. I posted it in another thread last night....just look at Allen's passing chart. Not one ball over 15-20 yards down the field even ATTEMPTED, let along completed. So, Houston was plan a mix of zone and man all night with virtually every defender within 15 yards of the LOS and Brady never once tried to exploit this over the top. There's so much more to get in on with Brady, but it would take all day. So, in the end.....is it McDermott or the OCs? While the answer is both in many respects, most of it is on McDermott because he is trying to find a guy to run the type of offense he wants to run that doesn't expose how bad his defense truly is by putting them on the field more. He wants a "yes man" to run a 50/50 offense to control the clock and win games by scoring in the low 20s. He hand picks guys that he believes can do enough on offense, but not be too good to outshine his defense and won't rile anyone up with calls to replace him with said offensive coordinator. It happened with Daboll because we were scoring a ton of points and his defense let us down in the end. Just think about it.....the last 2 games Daboll coached here was the Perfect Game and 13 Seconds. THe offense was great in both games. Against KC, the offense did just about everything you could expect to in order to win that game on the road against a great team and McDermott's defense and coaching decisions BLEW that game. Yes, Daboll was going to get a head job somewhere because of the job he did here with the offense, but McDermott couldn't wait to get rid of him because he's the exact OC he fears.... a creative mind that knew how to put up points and did it quickly that a lot of fans were asking to take over for McDermott. But yeah.....in then end, this is McDermott's ship and he is well on his way to sinking it. Problem is, we have an owner that loves him and Beane and they probably have lifetime contracts at this point because Pegula doesn't want to fire them. Heck, just look at our hockey team. Awful year in and year out but because he loves the GM, he gets to sit there and do nothing to help the team day in and day out. So all of this "Fire McDermott and Beane talk"? Just forget about it. It's not happening, especially in a year they are heading into a brand new stadium. 1 1 Quote
Chaos Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 8 hours ago, Low Positive said: If I step back and look at this objectively, what I'm seeing in the AFC is the salary cap working how it's designed. Teams like the Pats, Colts, and Broncos are on the upswing because they went through the rebuilding cycle. On the other side, teams like the Chiefs, Bills, and Ravens are in a downward cycle due to aging rosters, late draft picks, and a lack of cap space. The main reason the Chiefs are struggling is that some of their elite talent (Kelce and Chris Jones) is aging out of the league. But they got KC three rings. The problem for all of us is that we didn't win during our window, which ran from 2020 to 2023. The Ravens are in a similar spot. The logical step for the Bills is to actually tear it ALL down and rebuild from nothing, take their lumps for 2-3 years, and come back with a new GM, HC, and franchise QB. You do that because this group will never win, and by the time they could be ready to actually contend again Josh Allen will be 34 at best. But that is a drastic step that I'm sure no one actually wants to take. I don't see a solution. In the thread leading to the talent question, the intro point was that the Bill's with Allen, have NEVER had a go to play and go to player, in the welker, edelman, kelce mold who just executes , executes and executes. Its not a current season question. Quote
NastyNateSoldiers Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 12 hours ago, PepeSilvia said: I think it’s Joe Brady calling a game in the manner of how McDermott wants. McDermott and Daboll didn’t see eye to eye because McDermott wanted a run oriented, ball control offense with the likes of Devin Singletary as the starting RB. Daboll knew the offense should go through Josh Allen. They needed balance but not a compete shift in offensive philosophy The next hire was Dorsey, who ran the offense the way McDermott wanted, but didn’t have the 21 personnel to do so. Same with Brady. Now they have the 21 personnel, but are lacking anyone (besides Cook) with speed or that can create separation. On top of that, all the defensive short comings over the years….After you fire/lose 4+ coordinators, who is the common denominator?! Imagine how bad a coach you have to be to want to take the ball out of Allen's hands Quote
True Blue Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago The blame is equally shared by McD and Beane because both are joined at the hip. Beane is the GM and has the final say, but I believe McD has influence in every decision made when it comes to roster construction with the draft, free agency, and the coaching staff. 1. Coaching Staff. It's no coincidence that coordinators who have had success prior to being hired by the Bills such as Frazier, Daboll, and Kromer, have had the most success with the Bills compared to everyone else we've hired. Assistants such as Rick Dennison sucked as NFL OC for the Broncos (2006–2008, 2015–2016) and the Texans (2010–2013). We have inexperienced assistants like Dorsey, Brady, and Babich. Dorsey had zero NFL OC experience prior to being named OC for the Bills, and the same applies to Babich whose NFL experience as DC is limited to his time with the Bills. Brady spent only 2 seasons as OC with the Panthers (2020–2021). When you have a unicorn like Allen, we should be hiring some of the best and brightest in the business but we're having to pass on some of the best and the brightest because McD wants YES MEN he can control. No man worth a lick is willing to be a yes man which is why we don't hire some of the best and the brightest. It was widely reported that Leslie Frazier's departure from the Bills stemmed from a disagreement with McD over defensive play calling duties. Tensions began by the defensive play-calling during the final 13 seconds of the AFC Divisional playoff game against the Chiefs in 2022, when the Bills surrendered a field goal to tie the game, which many attributed to a soft defensive scheme. It was later reported that McD had called the plays during that specific sequence. After the 2022 season, the issue came to a head when McD decided he would call the plays for the 2023 season. Frazier was unwilling to accept this arrangement and reportedly refused the demotion, leading to McD suggesting he could leave. The official announcement stated that Frazier would be taking a year long hiatus from coaching to "take a step back". There's friction between McD and Daboll, primarily stemming from philosophical differences, specifically regarding the run game versus the passing game. Daboll wanted to pass more and McDermott wanting to run more. Daboll was looking for a new job and wanted out of Buffalo, even without a head coaching job in place, partly because of his relationship with McD. Dorsey was fired during the 2023 season because of ongoing conflict with McD stemming from McD's micromanagement and the two disagreeing on how to implement the offense. McD Effect: McD's defense leans heavily on zone coverages — Cover 2, Cover 3, even Cover 4 are commonly used. He’ll disguise coverage frequently by showing two-high safeties pre-snap and then rotating one into the box or another area post-snap, but the problem with that tends to work most of the time vs average QB's or offensive coaches but mostly not vs the good or great ones. Same old one gap system which means linemen focus on penetrating specific gaps rather than two-gapping and reading blocks. The idea is to keep the structure simple, so players can react quickly, play fast, and be aggressive without overthinking. This allows his front to be aggressive and disrupt plays early, rather than absorb blocks, but the problem with that is the rush defense is prone to long runs if we're unable to disrupt plays early or shoots through the wrong gap which is what we've seen happen to our rush defense year in and year out, no matter who or what the personnel is. While McDermott’s approach is aggressive, that doesn’t mean he blitzes constantly. Instead, his aggressiveness comes through line stunts, movement, and pressure generated from the front-seven, not just sending extra rushers, but the problem with that vanilla style of defense is it makes life easier on the opposing teams to gameplan for and play against since it's so predictable. Another problem that McD has is he makes too many defensive substitutions which doesn't allow anyone to get into a groove. The same can be said about our WR core. Not only does the offense eats, but the defense does too LOL. Joe Brady Effect: The biggest red flag with Joe Brady is he has a habit of making WR's stats worse. Curtis Samuel, Joshua Palmer, and Elijah Moore, all had better stats before they played for the Bills and during. Stephon Diggs statistical drop-off from Ken Dorsey and Joe Brady will blow your mind. Dorsey was fired by the Bills the day after our 10th game of the season which was a loss to the Broncos on November 14th of 2023 and replaced by Brady on the same day. Diggs stats with Dorsey: the first 10 games was 73 Receptions (7.3 per game avg) on 102 Targets (10.2 per game avg) for 868 Yards (86.8 yards per game avg) and 7 TD's (TD rate of 0.7). Diggs stats with Brady as OC the last 7 games of 2023: 34 Receptions (3.4 per game avg down from 7.3 with Dorsey) on 58 Targets (8.28 down from 10.2 with Dorsey) for 315 Yards (45 yards per game avg down from 86.8 with Dorsey) and ONE TD (TD rate of 0.14 down from 0.7 with Dorsey) This indicates a 53.4% decrease in receptions per game, 18.8% decrease in targets per game, 48.1% decrease in yards per game, and a 79.6% decrease in TD's per game. It's safe to say Brady's system is not WR friendly. 2. McBeane Personnel and Roster Construction: For the most part, ever since 2018, McBeane has failed at finding premier or blue chip players in the first 3 rounds of the Draft, failed in Free Agency, failed at managing the cap, and doesn't have a clue as to how to build a team physically. Too many undersized DT's and LB'ers. Too many 3 TECH DT's and not enough big, nasty, and physical 1 TECH DT's. Too many tweener DE/3 TECH DT's. Too many big DE's and not enough athletic types. We've seen a pattern of struggling vs the run, generating sacks, small and fragile Linebackers and DT's, reliance on too many big outside WR's no jitterbug types surrounding Allen with WR's that opposing teams Some players who left Buffalo played better elsewhere. Take Poona Ford, Wyatt Teller, Jerry Hughes, and Harrison Phillips as examples. Ford was with the Bills in 2023, but had a much stronger season after leaving and signing with the Los Angeles Chargers. In 2024, Poona recorded 39 total tackles, 3.0 sacks, 5 passes defended, and a superb PFF score of 85.1. His performance was disruptive in both run and pass defense, and that led to him getting a 3 year deal afterward with the Rams. Poona's PFF thus far this season is 82.9. Despite playing well, McBeane traded Wyatt Teller to the Cleveland Browns for a 5th and 6th round pick. Hughes had only 2 sacks with the Bills in 2021, but the following year had 9 with the Houston Texans. With Buffalo (2018-2021) Harrison's role was more rotational; his single-season high with the Bills was modest (he never posted huge counting totals while in Buffalo). After Buffalo (Vikings, 2022–2024): Phillips became a full-time starter and recorded career highs — most notably 92 tackles and 3.0 sacks in 2023. That single-season tackle total is clearly higher than any year he had in Buffalo, driven by a jump in snaps/starting role. Offensively, our pass catchers is not built in a way that's taylor-made to bring out the best of Allen's strengths and physical skills. Too many slow OUTSIDE WR's instead of fast and shifty despite having a QB with a howitzer for an arm is mind boggling. Top end speed make plays downfield and stretches the field to keep defenses honest. Too many SLOT WR's. Dalton Kincaid is a TE posing as a SLOT RECEIVER. Curtis Samuel is primarily a SLOT RECEIVER. Khalil Shakir is a SLOT RECEIVER. Elijah Moore plays SLOT and OUT WIDE. For God sakes, there's not enough snaps for all of them. Brandon Beane threw two 3rd round picks in the trash for Kelvin Benjamin and Amari Cooper because we didn't get a good return on investment. In 16 games played, Benjamin had only 39 receptions on 89 targets for 571 yards (35.7 YPG) and 2 TD's between 2017 and 2018. Cooper had only 20 receptions on 32 targets for 297 yards (37.1 YPG) and 2 TD's in 8 games. It took McBeane 2 full seasons (2018 and 2019) before they paired Allen with a stud #1 WR in a trade for Stephon Diggs in 2020. Since May of 2017, McBeane have only been able to add a stud #1 WR a grand total of ONCE in 9 seasons, 8 WITH ALLEN, which is unacceptable. McBeane hasn't been able to find a stud WR themselves be it through the Draft or FA, they're so inept they needed to trade for someone else's stud receiver. Cole Beasley signed as a UFA in 2018. In 2019, John Brown and Tyler Kroft signed as a UFA, and we drafted Dawson Knox. Traded for Diggs in 2020. In summary, it took McBeane 3 full seasons to finally surround Allen with a pass catching core that threatens defenses when it should've been done sooner than 3. Gabe Davis was drafted in 2021, Khalil Shakir in 2022, and Dalton Kincaid in 2023. By my count the hits include 1 stud WR, 4 good WR's, and 2 good TE's, in 9 seasons. Here's the whiffs by McBeane. Zay Jones, Kelvin Benjamin, Jordan Matthews, Deonte Thompson, and Andre Holmes in 2017. Zay Jones, Robert Foster, and Kelvin Benjamin in 2018. John Kumerow, and Tommy Sweeney in 2019. Isaiah Hodgins in 2020. Jake Kumerow, and Marquez Valdes-Scantling in 2021. None in 2022. Justin Shorter and Tyrell Shavers in 2023. Keon Coleman, Amari Cooper, and Elijah Moore in 2024. and Joshua Palmer in 2025. I won't count Isaiah McKenzie in 2019, Emmanuel Sanders in 2021, or Jackson Hawes in 2025 as a whiff since they're all solid players. By my count, that's 19 whiffs by McBeane. In summary, by my count when you count the hits and the whiffs, only 7 of 26 total pass catchers (27%) in 9 seasons between 2017 to 2025 are hits, 19 are whiffs, and 3 are neutral. 2026-2027 Season: Bills have 15 UFA's, and 3 RFA's. UFA notables on Defense are Joey Bosa, A.J. Epenesa, DaQuan Jones, Larry Ogunjobi, Matt Milano, Shaq Thompson, Tre White, Cam Lewis, and Damar Hamlin, UFA on Offense are Connor McGovern, David Edwards, Mitch Trubisky, Elijah Moore, Reggie Gilliam, and Punter Mitch Wishnowsky. The 3 RFA's are Ryan Van Demark, Alec Anderson, and Ja'Marcus Ingram. 3 of these 19 players are OL, 2 of which are starters which won't be cheap to re-sign. I expect Van Demark to be tendered, and Trubisky and Gilliam to be re-signed, and possibly Wishnowsky. Out of the 9 defensive players, the only defensive player worth a lick to re-sign is Cam Lewis. The defense needs a makeover anyways. I expect there to be some cap casualties as well. Knox $10 million in savings, Samuel $6 million, Palmer $5 million, and Rapp $3.5 million. Post June 1st release candidates could be Taron Johnson $9 million. Spotrac projects the Bills will have approximately $8.5 million in cap space for 2026, and $3 million according to Over the Cap. The final 2026 NFL salary cap amount is not yet set, but projections estimate the cap will be around $300 million, which is a nearly 7.5% increase from the 2025 cap of $279.2 million. Based on these projections, the Bills will have approximately $24 million to $28.5 million in salary cap space in 2026. McBeane has their work cut out for them. I know I left out other concerns but flame away. 1 2 Quote
Andy1 Posted 44 minutes ago Posted 44 minutes ago (edited) Cover One has a new video out with some interesting points. Basically the organizational problem is everyone from coordinators on up. Last night, Brady committed organizational malpractice by not adequately protecting the franchise - Josh, when it was plainly obvious to everyone that our 5 linemen could not block their 4 rushers. Brady refused to adapt and bring in an extra lineman or chip the D ends to help the line. And stupidly, they left Brown out there with a bad shoulder with no help. The receiver routes did not provide Josh with quick options. If Josh had a season ending injury, from that stupidity, this season and maybe next season would be over. Furthermore, McDermott was seemingly fine with the approach. They show no ability to adapt and learn from past failures. Clean house unless the unimaginable happens. Edited 41 minutes ago by Andy1 Quote
BillsFan130 Posted 29 minutes ago Posted 29 minutes ago (edited) 15 minutes ago, Andy1 said: Cover One has a new video out with some interesting points. Basically the organizational problem is everyone from coordinators on up. Last night, Brady committed organizational malpractice by not adequately protecting the franchise - Josh, when it was plainly obvious to everyone that our 5 linemen could not block their 4 rushers. Brady refused to adapt and bring in an extra lineman or chip the D ends to help the line. And stupidly, they left Brown out there with a bad shoulder with no help. The receiver routes did not provide Josh with quick options. If Josh had a season ending injury, from that stupidity, this season and maybe next season would be over. Furthermore, McDermott was seemingly fine with the approach. They show no ability to adapt and learn. Clean house unless the unimaginable happens. This is one of many things I can't stand about Mcdermott... He has no problem calling joe brady out after games, but he NEVER steps in mid game to intervene. Just like the atlanta game when cook wasn;t used in the 4th quarter. His quote after the game: "Ya ill talk to Joe about that" He is the head coach... Instead of addressing these things mid game, he throws his coordinator under the bus after the game Edited 29 minutes ago by BillsFan130 Quote
major Posted 29 minutes ago Posted 29 minutes ago I’m tired of blaming coordinators. They’ve blamed Daboll, Frazier, and now Brady. Time to stop the scapegoat crap and go all the way to the top: Beane and McD. But this is pegula and I know good and well we will just fire Brady. It’s Groundhog Day Quote
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