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dave mcbride

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Everything posted by dave mcbride

  1. That was way, way short. He was so off -- again -- that frankly I'm tired of the excuses for his staggeringly poor performance in that part of his game. If the Bills are going to be a dangerous offensive team, defenses can't go in knowing they can let receivers get deep because the opposing QB can't hit any of the throws. I think you're starting to see this, actually - on just about all of the deep shots lately, guys have been very open. I mean, why take the threat seriously given the lack of accuracy?
  2. He threw that with the wind at his back. Wentz hit his deeper throws when he had the wind. yes, it was late and forced him to slow down, allowing Darby to recover.
  3. ?? - there were two defenders between him and the ball, which was far behind him.
  4. He also badly missed a wide open Foster on a deep ball that would have put them up 14-3 in the second. I know you're not asking me, but I thought was a "A" yesterday. He played extremely well.
  5. Correct. Daboll is not the problem here. If Allen were ever able to hit the occasional deep throw (Foster was wide open yesterday), the conversation surrounding the production from Daboll's offense would be a lot different.
  6. Agree almost entirely, but the late-game QB play plus the lack of a real pass rush from the RDE position vs. a quality opponent left me concerned. At home, the Bills squeaked by Cincy and Miami, but lost to the Pats and werr blown out by Philly. I hate to say it, but shades of 2008 and 2011 are at the front of my mind.
  7. @Hapless Bills Fan - circling back on this. https://www.footballoutsiders.com/stats/teamdef/2019 through the miami game, FO has the bills’ D ranked 12th, dropped from 3rd the previous week and despite still being third in both points and yards allowed. Given this Eagles game, it looks like their assessment of who they really are on D is more or less correct.
  8. That sounds unfeasible for Atlanta. https://www.spotrac.com/nfl/atlanta-falcons/julio-jones-7721/
  9. No need. I've pasted it immediately below. It took me no time at all.
  10. I mean, I guess it's conceivable that Cincinnati could franchise Green. They're projected to be $50 million under the cap next season and will have the room.
  11. ... and Cooper was the one guy in 2015 who performed well out of the gate. The other first rounders from 2015 were Kevin White, Devante Parker, Nelson Agholor, Breshad Perriman, and Philip Dorsett.
  12. The WRs taken in the first round in the past 3 seasons (2016-2018 prior to this one) are as follows: Corey Coleman, Josh Doctson, Will Fuller, Laquon Treadwell, Corey Davis, Mike Williams, John Ross, DJ Moore, and Calvin Ridley. Ridley did the best of the bunch as a rookie, and he had just 821 yards as a complementary player to Julio Jones. Not a great group in terms of first/second-year production.
  13. Bill, I think he stands to make a lot more money if he proves on the field he's still elite after missing essentially his last 16 games.
  14. I know what you're saying, but my view is that this isn't about long-term answers. He's an elite player for this season, and I want the Bills to win a playoff game for the first time this century.
  15. He was fantastic last year before suffering a toe injury. He was playing at an all-pro level through his first 8 games. He's only 31 and can still play.
  16. Great piece. Draft picks are very overrated in this era of well-managed caps. This ain't 1998 anymore.
  17. More Scandrick: https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/27926556/orlando-scandrick-rips-eagles-gm-being-released That team sounds like it has some real problems internally.
  18. He was very good last season before getting hurt at the beginning of game 9. Through 8 games, he had 45 catches for 689 yards and 6 TDs. Extrapolated, that works out to 90 catches, 1378 yards, and 12 TDs--basically, an all-pro level season. He was IR'd because of a toe injury (presumably turf toe), which is hardly crippling long term.
  19. Lotuleilei actually produced in Carolina up until his final season there, which is when he began his decline into the ultimate JAG. On the positive side, he knows his assignments and doesn’t get injured (no small thing). But as I said earlier, NFL players are paid to make plays. He is not even close to being a disruptor, and his lack of ability to pressure the QB is one reason why the Bills’ sack numbers are pretty low (13).
  20. The thing I'd worry about if I'm worried about culture is appearing to favor one of your guys who starts every game, gets paid a LOT of money, but makes absolutely no plays. He literally hasn't done anything this season in the playmaking dept., and he did virtually nothing last season either. As a baseline, the NFL players on the field are there because of their ability to make plays. Lotuleilei has 3 tackles, 3 assists, no TFLs, no pressures, and no sacks through 6 games, and he has started all of them. And it's not just the numbers -- he's basically a barely visible and slowly moving slab of flesh in the middle of the TV screen on virtually every play. He's not disruptive at all.
  21. To be clear, I am not opposed to taking a flyer on Gordon. I just don't think that the Bills' organization is likely to do so.
  22. Yeah, when he wins yet another SB MVP on a 15-1 team we'll still be talking about his decline. Watch the games and the players around him. He hasn't changed; the other players have. FWIW, he threw a ball at 61 mph this offseason, which is elite: https://www.masslive.com/patriots/2019/06/tom-bradys-arm-appears-to-be-in-peak-form-patriots-qb-posts-photo-of-radar-gun-at-61-mph.html. I'm not saying that he's not trying to score; I'm saying that he's not forcing things in close-call plays because he doesn't have too.
  23. I think he throws a ton of them away. I honestly think he's playing cautiously because the defense is so dominant. When he needs to make plays, he does (particularly early in games).
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