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JESSEFEFFER

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Everything posted by JESSEFEFFER

  1. If I take others to the game who can't take the longer walk, I'll park at ECC and pay the extra $10 but keep this in mind. With many lots scattered across campus, only one offers a shorter walk and it fills faster. As you enter the campus from Rt 20 ( SW Drive) and then pay, go to the left even if they say it's full. Just ask to check it out for yourself. There are usually spots in the lot near ECCs football field still remaining. Also, an added benefit is the open space around those lots for some fun n games if you are so inclined.
  2. A sneaky smart way to get to the airport after the game. Call it a naked bootleg.
  3. I am thinking that given his connection to the QB Summit, Mark Sanchez should have some Josh Allen commentary that we might find interesting. I'm willing to give him a chance to do a good job. Here is a Mark Sanchez pod where he interviewed Josh. It was strange that there was new information as you would think we has had heard it all. But no.... Mark Sanchez interviews Josh
  4. It would really matter what the goal of the next offensive drive would be. Kneel downs matter ~ 0. A drive that needs to end with a score and a Bills defender makes that int for a selfish goal, and I'd be freaking out. Micah is very heady so I doubt he'd make that play in any situation other than to close the game. I remember Nate Clements getting roasted for going for the int on a pass thrown by Byron Leftwich on a game winning TD drive. Fans do not forget a selfish move that costs a win. From ESPN: Before the winning drive, Leftwich had gone 11-of-23 for 75 yards, converted just two of 10 third-down attempts and threw two interceptions. In the final 2:07, he went 7-of-13 for 72 yards, and converted three fourth-down plays. That included the touchdown, when the Jaguars faced fourth-and-goal from the 7 with four seconds remaining. Leftwich sent up a touch pass to the back of the end zone, where Wilford out-muscled three Bills defenders and came down with the ball as he fell out of bounds. The play was reviewed, and the officials' ruling on the field that Wilford was pushed out stood, stunning a soldout crowd that had spent most of the game cheering on a strong defensive effort. Leftwich chose Wilford because at 6-foot-4, he presents a tall target and, as a former basketball player, possesses great leaping ability. "Anytime you're 6-foot-4, you're open," Leftwich said smiling. Just as impressive was Leftwich hitting Smith up the left sideline for a 45-yard reception when facing fourth-and-14. Smith made the catch in one-on-one coverage by out-muscling cornerback Nate Clements along the left sideline.
  5. Troy Aikman having a bias toward a consensus 4/5 star recruit who played at UCLA? Really? Our Josh is the Roy Hobbs of the 2018 QB class. Maybe of all QBs. His pedigree defies any comp-- a no star JC QB that broke the modern day process of what it takes to be great and nearly missed on having a DI collegiate career at all. There are many that could not trust him as a prospect because of it.
  6. Something I have often checked with regards to Josh's passing stats is his home/road split. 2021 is in line with his career numbers but even more extreme. I attribute this mostly to home game weather and mostly wind. The home crowd getting Josh too amped up narrative is entirely b.s., imo. But, when looking at season or career numbers, (and the same applied to Jim Kelly) it's pretty negligent to compare them to those of QBs who played their home games in domes, or LA/SD, or Florida absent any context.
  7. Tough to balance giving the offense the free play vs. protecting the QB. Ref has little time to read it.
  8. Titans looking ripe to be shut out.
  9. I wonder what Tom Brady was holding when he heard that news. Hope it wasn't a puppy.
  10. I see the NFL ticket exchange has Atlanta and NJ game tickets for $20 or less. Anyways, a sneaky good plan would be to target sections 205, 217, 228 or 239. Corner endzone, club level views and the sections are only 5 seats wide. I am like you in that I get to my seat and rarely leave it thereafter for the entire 4+ hours so this is much appreciated by me. I am glad your gameday experience went well. I must say that the Pegula era of customer service is much improved over what it was prior.
  11. Stinger by the look of it.
  12. I am 99% correct. Choose the ball at the start after winning the toss. NE chooses the direction of the kick. At the start of the 2nd half NE has choice and 99+% of the time would take the ball rather than kick and effectively give up a possession. The Bills then decide on which direction their offense moves in the 4th quarter.
  13. In college football OT, coaches choose to play defense first. It is powerful to play offense knowing what you need to tie or win the game. If you need a desperate 4th down play to get what's needed, it's there to use. Having the wind in the 4th quarter is much the same. Whether throwing or kicking, it's best to have the advantage when you know what you need for the win/tie. I have not seen the replay of the throw to Diggs that hit him in the arm for what should have been a TD. That throw was not even possible going the other way. Moving with the wind allows many more options to be available when the game is on the line.
  14. A Anytime the Bills fail in the RZ and Josh did not run even once, that seems like a mistake to me.
  15. Much like seasons in general, it matters way more how things end than how they begin. Wanting that advantage in the 1st quarter rather than the 4th quarter is short sighted and, frankly, foolish.
  16. No coach willingly leaves time on the clock for the opponent to do whatever weird things they might have practiced for such a situation. The Bills were also out of times out so it think a blocked kick recovery or botched snap would require that they somehow lineup and spike the ball after the mayhem of a botched play and recovering the ball. I do not think that they get another chance and it was nothing to plan for.
  17. Good point. Sitting in section 228, it was noted among our group how odd it was that the Bills would kick short to the Saints in a dome but not even attempt that during a home game in cold and windy conditions.
  18. I have been in a bit of Bills news time warp since attending the Monday game as I flew out of Buffalo at 5:30AM the following morning and worked long hours at a company facility all week. So, while maybe it was discussed in the GDT or post game conversation but as a main take-a-way from this game I do not know if as much was made of this as I think it deserves. It's as big of a mistake as Wade Phillips' decision to kick a field goal for the lead, on first down at the 23 with 20 seconds on the clock. The Bills won the coin toss and DEFERRED as if nothing was going to be different about this game. But everyone knew it would be different and we knew it all week. Watching pregame warmups, kicks toward the scoreboard were driven short and to the right from even a modest distance of 40 yards. Kicks toward the tunnel had a range of 65+ yards leaving me to wonder if we might witness a new NFL record FG. A close game was reasonable to expect and close games get decided in the 4th quarter. With timeout usage, the two minute warning and clock stoppage for out-of-bounds in the last 5 minutes of the game, more plays from scrimmage usually occur in the 4th quarter than in any of the other three. By deferring, Sean McDermott left the decision of whether the Bills would have the wind advantage in the 4th quarter in the hands of Bill Belichick. I 'd bet when the Bills deferred, Bill might have even laughed out loud knowing that everything the Bills might attempt to do in the 4th quarter of a normal game would now become either more difficult to even impossible. I count this as one of Sean's biggest in game coaching blunders and right up there with Wade's. On to Tampa Bay, where giving your opponent the option to decide which direction to kickoff in the 3rd quarter is of little consequence.
  19. I believe the rule speaks of movement not position. Moving toward own end zone or parallel to line of scrimmage.
  20. Agree. Blocker was not moving. Through shoulder to the chest. He just hit him too hard.
  21. 1986 game vs Steelers. Marv Levy's and Steve Tasker's first game with Bills vs. Steelers. Robb Riddick grinding out yards moving into the wind was a key to a win. Bills 16 and Steelers 12 This game was dry but wind was 30+ mph and neither team could throw moving toward the scoreboard end. Robb could get yards vs. a stacked defense and thereby burn the clock and avoid having to punt into the wind. I would pick Moss to do something similar for monday's game. Short crossing routes with picks/rubs for big YAC (Phil Rivers of perfect weather SD Chargers in 2014) and 3rd down QB scrambles and RB screens (Carson Wentz in 2019) were successful strategies opponents used to beat the Bills in past wind affected games. If you are a betting type, my advice is to play the under.
  22. There are separate issues for the players vs. the fans. Wind has the bigger effect on how the game plays out assuming the footing is not an issue. The two games vs. the Pats last year are good examples. A close, run heavy game in Buffalo vs. a pass heavy blowout win in Foxboro. For fans, 38F and rain is much worse than 28F and snow. As bad as this one was for the players (the worst I can remember) it was worse for the fans. Hypothermia is a serious thing. Bills vs. Cardinals 1990
  23. You are correct. Despite Collinsworth's inability or unwillingness to acknowledge the obvious, Clark lifted JA's hips and when Josh had hit the ground, he drove his shoulder into Josh's rib cage. It's called "stuffing" and QBs are vulnerable to separated shoulders and cracked ribs (ala Epenesa on Tua) because of them. That's why they are illegal now.
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