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26CornerBlitz

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Everything posted by 26CornerBlitz

  1. I think it's a look from a practice session at New Era. It was in the beginning of this video.
  2. I don't remember seeing this look in a game, but it works.
  3. Now we have red and black in a hockey uniform. Come on man! Here you go.
  4. I think you are being overprotective here. It's a negative reflection on the receiving corps not Allen.
  5. It's a nice change of pace, but once per season is definitely enough.
  6. It would be an anti-Bills league thing that Belichick and Kraft would have approved.
  7. That's one helluva division race if the Bills go 16-0 and still have to play in the Wild Card Round.
  8. Great look irrespective of the "interesting" OP.
  9. 10. Buffalo Bills: Rashan Gary, DL, Michigan For the Bills, Gary is a player who can line up on the outside and on the inside. The former No. 1 overall high school recruit was banged up for much of this season, but when he’s healthy he can make an impact.
  10. Seahawks' stunning loss to 49ers reportedly cost one sports bettor more than $500,000 What happens in Vegas usually stays in Vegas, unless, of course, you lose more than $500,000 betting on the Seahawks, then it will probably leak out. The Seahawks' shocking overtime loss to the 49ers on Sunday didn't just keep Seattle from clinching a playoff berth, it also cost one guy some serious money. According to ESPN.com, a bettor at MGM in Vegas was so confident that the Seahawks would win in San Francisco that he placed two money-line bets on Seattle and those bets were worth a total of $569,000. The first bet came in at $235,000 and with Seattle's money-line at -230, the bet would have paid out $102,225 if the Seahawks had won ($337,225). The second bet was worth $334,000 and would have paid out $133,600 in winnings ($467,600 total) on a Seattle money-line that was at -250. In the end, the bets paid out nothing, because the Seahawks lost 26-23. The bettor obviously seemed confident in Seattle and there's a good reason for that: Going into Sunday, the Seahawks had won nine regular-season games in a row against the 49ers AND they were playing for a chance to clinch a playoff berth.
  11. Schofield: Kansas City Chiefs' Patrick Mahomes Could Shift NFL's QB Paradigm | Pro Football Weekly By MARK SCHOFIELD When Patrick Mahomes was facing his pre-draft evaluation process, a lot of the skepticism surrounding him as a quarterback was the stigma surrounding quarterbacks coming from Air Raid offenses. This piece from Jason Kirk of SB Nation got at the issue. Titled “Air Raid QBs Haven’t Succeeded in the NFL: WIll Patrick Mahomes or Davis Webb,” it outlined some of the reasons that quarterbacks from these systems went on to failure in the league. Whether it was because the offense is overly simplified, or the fact it was an “underdog strategy,” or whether it was due to the fact Air Raid offenses typically operate in conferences that do not play a lot of defense, the history of Air Raid QBs in the NFL is a flawed one. Or so it was. In a piece for The Ringer this summer, Rodger Sherman argued the “Case for the NFL’s Air Raid Revolution.” As Sherman points out, Jared Goff, he of the Air Raid background, had a very successful 2017 season . Nick Foles also operated an Air Raid offense in college, and he was named Super Bowl MVP. Despite the criticisms levied at the feet of Baker Mayfield, he was drafted first overall. Those criticisms centered on his offensive system and the fact that he was throwing to so many open receivers, in the wide open Big 12. When he got to the NFL, it was thought, he wouldn’t see so many wide open receivers. Or will he?
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