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Everything posted by Rochesterfan
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Marijuana to treat CTE in NFL players
Rochesterfan replied to Victory Formation's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
This is not correct - there have been numerous cases of children and teens that have died from overdose and the numbers are increasing. It is becoming more common as more edibles are being produced and children are getting their hands on it. Yes it is more rare than alcohol, but as it becomes more widespread- the number of cases have increased. It is also been attributed to an increasing number of deaths associated with motor vehicle accidents. It is not impossible to overdose, but the levels needed are quite high. THC is also becoming the next Vitamin D - the most recent miracle cure. Doctors attributed everything from mood changes to cancer to diabetes cure to Viamin D and because you produced Vitamin D from the sun - the thought was no one could overdose. Then they started doing studies and found it was not much better than placebo. We will see how THC fares. We know that CBD has some positive effects, but does the added THC have any real effect. -
Kyle Williams: Officially Retires
Rochesterfan replied to Clemfield2622's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
I do not see him getting into coaching. I think he wants time with his family and a coach spends even more time than the players away from family teaching and watching film. -
I totally disagree about the roster. The roster is squarely on the previous GM that overpayed for guys and then gave stupid contracts. The decisions by McDermott and Beane were made to begin cleaning up the mess - getting rid of underperforming players on larger contracts - Like MD. Using assets that they did not see here long term (Watkins) to get other assets. Yes the lack of talent was because of decisions by this regime, but were made to clear up previous decisions that were poorly made. The rest of the post is mostly hot garbage - great have them draft Mahomes two years ago - what do you think he looks like in a Bills uniform. He was raw and needed time to sit - do you think under TT he learns what he learned with Alex Smith having a career year. Do you think that without all of the talent that KC was getting for years for Smith that Mahomes would be successful throwing to KB, Jones, and the injured Clay. Also how would he have looked starting in the middle of his first season in a Dennison offense rather than getting to sit and learn under a Reid offense. My feeling is we would be sitting here talking about a bust at QB and when do we move on. I have the same issue with JuJu and Vander Esche. Both of them are fits as pieces on their current team. Is JuJu significantly better without Brown, the TEs, and experienced QB getting him the ball in Pittsburgh. Does he have just pedestrian numbers with TT and the motley collection of QBs throwing to him and are we questioning why we did not draft Jones because he ends up on a team like LA or Pittsburgh. Vander Esche is a typical MLB and I think would be a good fit, but I understand the Edmunds pick. They are looking for more of a coverage deep LB and Edmunds fits that better than Vander Esche.
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The defense definitely had it moments where it dominated and I think they have a chance if given time, but I think they were surprised to get Rosen and now want a offensive guy to work with the young QB. I do not think that was really the plan, but now they are adjusting. It is sucks for that staff.
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Marijuana to treat CTE in NFL players
Rochesterfan replied to Victory Formation's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
Neither Opioids or Marijuana in moderation are an issue, but just like alcohol or other prescription drugs - when abused they cause problems. The issue is that opioids are being abused and people are bringing in tainted drugs like laced Fentanyl and it is killing people. Many people (including NFL players) could use CBD oil for treatment and get many of the same effects - especially with quick absorbing oil under the tongue that gets into the system as fast as smoking weed, but you lose the good feeling associated with weed. The difficult part is why is someone taking or using the weed are they abusing it or taking it for management of illness. What studies are showing in states that have legalized pot use - is that the number of “high” drivers and accidents are up because they are looking for it now and it is becoming a huge issue. Another issue is that until there is good long term benefits versus risks analysis done and the actual rate of addiction is determined- everything is just people’s opinion. I always hear people say well pot is not addicting and that is bull as can be shown by the number of people that continue even when it will cost them their job or livelihood. The drug may not be as addictive as something like opioids, but the feeling created becomes something you crave and that becomes addictive. There are also studies being done looking at how feelings of anxiety and depression initially become better, but after long term use - the feelings get stronger making user crave more drug and faster between use doses. -
Marijuana to treat CTE in NFL players
Rochesterfan replied to Victory Formation's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
CBD could be used - it typically has very low levels of other cannabinoids and THC that is in the drug testing. Plus at the NFL level the THC cutoff is quite high as they raised levels. In reality if players wanted to actually treat illness they could do it with CBD oil and most likely never get caught if they are getting the oil from a respectable company that removes as many impurities as possible. The problem is that players are not using it for illness - even if they try to use it as an excuse. They are getting high and that is banned. -
Marijuana to treat CTE in NFL players
Rochesterfan replied to Victory Formation's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
Seantrel smoked Weed before he ever had Crones Disease. He was suspended multiple times for weed abuse going back to college. If it was about the disease he could of worked with the NFL for an exemption, but he did not because it was not the CBD to treat the disease he craved - it was the actual pot and the high feeling. There are treatments using CBD that can be helpful without getting the high feeling. -
All the Carolina signings, why did they not sign C.J.?
Rochesterfan replied to zow2's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
As of this moment - please tell me exactly how many former Panthers are on the roster and active on Sunday? Star is your answer and that is it. You also have Anderson on the roster until the end of the year. It is not like we are some hotbed of Carolina Players. -
I think it was a total miscalculation by the FO staff. I do not think they felt there was a shot at one of the top 4 QBs - so they signed Bradford for 2 years and were sort of going to go for it. They hired a rookie HC with a veteran OC and a familiar DC for the HC. I think they felt the defense was good enough and getting a veteran QB to go with Johnson and FITZ - they had a chance to be competitive- especially if they got a playmaker in the early rounds. The issue was when both QBs started to drop the entire mindset of the organization changed - now they have a rookie QB, a veteran QB that was not playing well and it switched to being all about the future. Therefore if you have the young QB they are going to try and switch it up and no they never gave him a chance. I think things would be totally different if they had not taken Rosen - because the Arizona defense was never the issue and they are going to totally change things up on an aging defense.
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Of course teams are banged up - this happens every year - later in the season with scores of tape to watch and the ability to game plan and really understand what is being accomplished- the defenses begin to react and we start to see more and more close/low scoring games. As each game becomes more important and as players are slowed down and the weather further impacts teams - defense becomes more important and offenses struggle. The Playoffs ratchet it up even more and to get to the Super Bowl you typically need at least one game where your defense pulls you through. What I find interesting is the Super Bowl can go either way depending on how long between games and how familiar the teams are. If two teams are familiar and there is enough tape - defense is a bit more dominant, but lack of familiarity leads to offensive advantages. For example the switch from Wentz to Foles last year changed the entire Philly offense and Philosophy giving them a bit of an advantage especially being super aggressive. Defenses tend to play more basic coverages and attack less against the unknown. You need both a good offense and a good defense to be successful, but to say as people did early in the year - defense is dead and this staff should be fired for trying to build a defense - that has been proven to be wrong. As to the offense not being turned around - the Bills through their own choices had very limited money to spend and recognized where they were defensively and that the offense would get new life with the QB. Since you do not know who you are getting in the draft - it is very hard to build an offense around an unknown. The WRs, OL, TE, RB needed for JA is very different than Josh Rosen or Sam Darnold. By the time the Bills had drafted Allen - most of the WRs had been signed because free agency comes first. What we saw is that the team recognized what they needed on offense and what they could get and their offense has been getting better with the limited people they could get during the season. Give them a chance now that they have money and knowledge of their QB to build around him. I do not think they will be complete after one off season, but I think they can improve the offense and keep most of the defense - they can be good and then they can keep growing.
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Agreed - if they are going to make that change then I think you have to make a bunch of other changes around the goal line. People need to be down in the end zone rather than just break the plain. There are several times guys just barely break the plain and are not down and then fumble because they carelessly reach out the ball. The end end zone has always had different rules for many things than the middle of the field and the turnover aspect of OOB plays is one of them.
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The current rule is consistent - if you fumble OOB of your end zone - it s a safety and the defensive team gets the ball. If you fumble OOB in the other end zone - again the defense gets the ball. The rules are actually consistent if the offense fumbles OOB in either end zone they turn the ball over to the defense. The rule is fine for the limited number of times either occur.
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I like the current rule - fumbles everywhere else through 90% of the game do not move back to the spot. I think it makes sense to greatly penalize a team for a fumble in the most important area - especially with how the goal line changes other rules for the offense. So the team that fumbled the ball get the ball in the middle of the end Zone? A fumble out of bounds is marked where it goes out of bounds not where the fumble occurs. If they are going to change the rule near the end zone then the rule needs to be updated across the field with all fumbles being moved back to the spot and not advancement - so for example the Zay Jones Fumble into the end zone recovered by Buffalo for a TD gets moved back to the 3 yard line.
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The inactive thing as has been stated multiple times in this thread was to balance out rosters on game day and allow injured players to sit without losing them. For example if all 53 men were active for the last game - the Bills had multiple players Ivory, McCoy, Lewis, etc that were hurt and could not play; therefore if Detroit had no injuries and the Bills had 4 or 5 injuries - Detroit could theoretically use 53 Guys, while the Bills would have been more limited to 48 guys. The League and players association decided that 46 for both teams would be the active roster allowing 7 players to sit so that injuries did not unbalance the playing field before the game starts. Both teams can draw on the same number of players. It is smart and makes a ton of sense to allow guys with muscle pulls and strains or a 1 week shoulder injury to miss a game without having to use IR and have teams stash players so they can try to get talent from other teams once their season is over.
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Exactly and the 46 active and 53 total is part of player safety- it maintains balance - same number active on each team - while allowing injured and semi-injured players to sit for the week. If the entire 53 man roster was active then a guy like Ivory probably ends up back in the game because others were hurt. I may be in the minority, but I do not care if they expand the rosters - there is too much specialization that goes on as it is. 3rd down LBs, special teams only (gunner) and pass catching backs - eliminate that and have a balanced roster and you would be fine. There are some changes I would be fine with - I do not mind if they up the PS and make some 2 way players and adjust short term IR rules, but it has to be very limited to prevent stashing players and teams taking advantage of the rules. You also would still need inactives or the ability to have 3 or so people inactive due to injuries and have a balanced number of active players on the roster. If you are going to up the roster size - I would also make changes to how teams deal with in game injury. If a player is hurt and trainers come out onto the field - I think they should be required to sit out a specific amount of time or number of plays making sure staff can evaluate them and then stop the players just pretending to be hurt to slow plays down. I would love to see players have to sit out a quarter or 15 plays from their side of the ball rather than just one play. My Opinion.
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Exactly. I think it also points to the ownership and leadership of the Bills and the Sabers - Josh is out in front as this was his guy, but that kind of coordination means the entirety of both organizations was on board and willing to help out. I think this points directly to the Pegula family and how they are working to rebuild and rebrand Buffalo - everything from the “One Buffalo” to working and sharing resources to advance both teams screams family and I think this is just a part of that. I also love how it counters the other growing feeling of how scummy the NFL has become filled with abusive players - 99% of the league is filled with great men and women that fly under the radar and the 1% get the coverage - this and the cleats piece show the underlying good these guys do for no recognition or reward - just to give back.
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Amazing story! This I believe is what McDermott and Beane meant when they said Josh is Buffalo. Many people thought they were referring to arm strength and weather, but it seems obvious they are building a family and he has heart and character oozing out of him. He was a leader of men - he is becoming a leader of the entire organization. Great job and great video.
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Excellent - could not have said it better myself. I think that confidence is born internally and the humility is a result of believing in himself, but having others always doubt him. From HS through Junior College to getting to Wyoming- every step he had others doubt him and I think it does wonders for the type of person he has become. Kudos!
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Not to disagree to much, but you were probably closer with the 60 picks than 35-40. Cleveland is mid round and NE will be 15 picks or so later. So 5th to 6th is 32 picks plus 5th round comps (5 or so). Then the rest of the 6th and those Comp picks ( another 5 or so). So if Cleveland is 15 and NE ends up 27th you would have 32 picks + 5 (end of rd 5) + 15 (rd 7) + comp picks - about 55 - 70 picks or so. I do not think it is a loss other than the fact they have counted on him being there and now he is gone. They could have made a different move and maybe had not given up a pick and had someone for the rest of the season. It ends up being low risk and very low reward for them.
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I don’t disagree they won’t bring either of those guys in, but I don’t think it is about them not being squeaky clean. It is that those players have shown themselves to be more concerned about “me” rather than “we”. The issue is exactly how good can they be? Many coaches call it different things, but have the same idea - team first and you are one of eleven. Frank Reich in Indy after this game talked about the importance of team and these guys really buying into playing for each other - same idea. Belichek In NE brings in a bunch of these guys, but they are forced to adjust or he moves on from them - even if they are talented. Just listen to the Gronk interviews from last season about why he could not celebrate TDs - the coach forbade individual celebrations. The biggest issue I had is you somehow lump Mayfield in for some reason when we have no idea what the staff really thought of him - with the assumption that because he is not squeaky clean - this staff would not touch him. I think they would look at his leadership and how he plays for his teammates and they would of had no issue with him, but it is only an opinion.
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I really hate this lazy (and terrible) opinion about this staff - especially as it has been shown to be wrong repeatedly. We have no idea how they felt about Mayfield as he was the #1 pick and the Bills never had a chance to pick him, but considering they seem to like guys that want to play and give it their all - I do not think Mayfield would have been an issue. Rosen on the other hand makes so much more sense now that you see him playing in Arizona and he flashes immaturity and does not seem to be the natural leader and have the natural charisma of Allen. They have picked up and signed a ton of non-squeaky clean guys. Phillips was essentially kicked off Miami for arguments with the coaching staff, we have also picked up guys with suspensions like Murphy and the new kid Bolden along with guys during the off season. Just because what what they are looking for in players does not always match what you are looking for does not mean they only sign goody two shoes players. They do not Mind having players that are nasty or bad ass - see Teller, Phillips, and Incognito - as long as you do not have a me first attitude that permeates your play - see Dareus and Watkins. It is not the squeaky image, but team first play and thoughts that matter. This squeaky clean image garbage is just as bad as the take that they would cut people because they are not religious enough or that was the reason a guy like Peterman made the roster. It also is nearly as bad as the opinion that this front office only picks up former Carolina players - when it has been patently proven that on the current Bills roster there are now only 2 former Carolina players and one - Anderson - has not been active and is only here in a mentor role right now, but people still say - well they only pick guys up if they have been on Carolina’s roster.
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Go and find any of a ton of threads on this. The NFL allowed dual ownership as long as they were in the same market or another market without an NFL team. The Pegulas were fine and never an issue. It would have been an issue if the owners of Delaware North would have tried to buy the Bills because he is a part owner of the Boston Bruins. The change is to allow guys in specific situations to dual own even if the market is shared with an NFL team. The Rams owner is also a partial owner of the Colorado avalanche. This is to allow him to consolidate so no one forces him out over a control issue.
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I have no issue with this - I think they are happy with what McKenzie is giving them in the offense - so find a guy to replace him and Murphy on special teams. Plus another young kid to mold into this group. His combine 40 time did not look elite fast and I saw he had a NFL suspension to start his career - anyone got any info on that? Looked like a banned PED that he took full responsibility for - just wondering if anyone saw or heard more - probably just a legit mistake, but always makes me nervous with such a young group.
