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Everything posted by dave mcbride
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I'm not sure of your point -- although I suspect the source of your attempted joke lies in the fact that you seem to think that any non-laudatory comment about anyone with a connection to Alabama is in reality a slight against the school, the region, and the Christian Lord above himself (a trait that is -- to be frank -- pretty tiresome). Perhaps I'm being unfair. Anyway, I'm simply stating that Daboll has been involved in the soap opera-level Pats drama for literally years and years, which I find ... interesting.
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Most interesting of all: he joined Mangini before the 2007 season, and shortly afterward (September 9, 2007 to be precise) Spygate happened. He also followed Mangini to Cleveland and served under him both years he was there. Yet the Pats took him back. Hmm. The dude's been involved in a lot of soap opera drama over the years. (He was also in NE for deflategate.)
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Buffalo News in financial trouble
dave mcbride replied to PromoTheRobot's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
The Washington Post will survive. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/washington-post-still-plays-catch-gaining-times-n833236 -
Buffalo News in financial trouble
dave mcbride replied to PromoTheRobot's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
It's their first negative quarter in the last 40, which is pretty remarkable given the landscape. The News is known as a well run paper, relatively speaking. The headwinds are just so strong now. I open and read at least one every day (NYT and occasionally others). It remains a better way to read the news (in my opinion) because you are visually more likely to see and read stories that are not in your own personal wheelhouse. I am firmly convinced that I'm a more informed person because of print newspapers. Reading things digitally, is fine, but it's not the same. -
Is "faith" a requirement under McD?
dave mcbride replied to eball's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
Good post. And I am a devout atheist. -
Is "faith" a requirement under McD?
dave mcbride replied to eball's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
I actually think you're onto something unless I'm reading the tea leaves correctly. It does seem to be a thing. -
Rodak on Sirius Opening Drive 5/14
dave mcbride replied to stevewin's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
Peterman will absolutely be on the team. He was a good college player and is not devoid of upside long term. -
Um ... the Bills were pretty good at scoring points in 2015 and 2016 -- 12th and 7th overall if you exclude the final clown-show game from 2016, when Manuel started. Taylor did almost none of the things you say he did when he had a good receiving corps, which was far too infrequent in his time in Buffalo. He is limited, but he is not by nature a check-down or inaccurate qb. He is not the most accurate qb in the world, but when blessed with good receivers, he's at least a little better than league average. I agree about with you about what he does for a team vis-a-vis mean regression, but he's really not that bad. It'll be interesting to see what he does in Cleveland, which unlike the 2017 Bills is not stuck with an absolutely garbage receiving corps. People forget to mention that issue far too often. If Josh Gordon is on, he is the sort of player who can actually catch up to Taylor's deep throws and beat his man while doing it.
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The Yankees are Fun to Watch
dave mcbride replied to Alaska Darin's topic in Major League Baseball's Topics
Related, from my favorite Yankees site: http://riveraveblues.com/2018/05/intangibles-17-1-hot-streak-170706/ How much credit does Boone deserve? It’s impossible to say. Do the Yankees go 17-1 in these 18 games with Joe Girardi? Almost certainly not, and I say that only because I believe if you change one little thing, the results would be different, and the Yankees have been so good lately that any change would make the results worse almost by default. Had Clint Frazier been on the roster instead of David Hale, the Yankees probably wouldn’t go 17-1. Remember though, the Yankees hired Aaron Boone because of his communication skills, and because they wanted to create a better clubhouse atmosphere. I don’t think they had a bad clubhouse under Girardi, not at all, but communication was a concern and the Yankees took steps to improve it. Boone seems relaxed — you know as well as I that Girardi would’ve been on edge in the dugout last night — and I think players feed off that. The current manager projects calm. Ultimately, Boone is the manager and the buck stops with him. When the Yankees got off to a slow start, people were already questioning his hire. Now that they’re kicking butt, he’s getting credit. Boone obviously deserves some credit. How much is up for debate. Talent reigns surprise. You can’t win without talent. But is it possible Boone’s clubhouse skills, the clubhouse skills the Yankees invested in, are taking that talent to another level? -
The Yankees are Fun to Watch
dave mcbride replied to Alaska Darin's topic in Major League Baseball's Topics
I questioned Boone at first, but not now. He seems perfectly fine. No reason to cast suspicion on a guy who is 26-10! I watch most of the games, and nothing really sticks out as a problem. -
Yet you don't adress the fact that he pointedly addresses the collusion issue. Disagree. SI really DOES have some good younger writers at present. NBC? Not so much.
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Was Kelly getting picked ahead of Marino a issue in 1983?
dave mcbride replied to ganesh's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
Most fans didn't care nearly as much about the draft back then and had a negligible amount of information to analyze compared to what they have now. Heck, teams themselves were relying on Street & Smith guides to take players. -
Indeed, in baseball, the new analytics fad is ... wait for it ... a measurable athletic skill: exit velocity ( https://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/05/sports/baseball/baseballs-latest-craze-its-like-rocket-science.html ). The same can be said for the ridiculously high demand for bullpen pitchers throwing 95 or above. Josh Allen has one of the (if not the) strongest arms ever in terms of his passes' "exit velo." Will that translate to excellence? Who knows, but I'd rather have the skill than not have it. In sports, athletic ability actually matters. Call me crazy for saying that.
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I thought it was a pretty fair piece, but I thought he was wrong about one thing: Barkley. Bear in mind that I think that the Giants should have taken Darnold , but Barkley isn't just a RB. He's by all accounts a terrific receiver, with Marshall Faulk being the comparison. If you're gonna write a piece like this, you better look at a guy like Faulk's receiving numbers in his prime (1998-2001). In 1999-2000, he had nearly 2000 receiving yards and 13 TD receptions.
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Speak for yourself. If Mayfield had reacted like that, I would have thought the same about him. I'm not merely regurgitating media points; I'm making up my own mind. Fair enough. I never said he wouldn't be good. I also think that a large percentage of these guys are meatheads and often a-holes (e.g., Cornelius Bennett, Bruce Smith, Jim Kelly), so it's not as if I think Rosen is a particularly bad apple. He seems like a narcissist to me (and as you know, it's not the politics, because I'm further to the left than he is), but even if he is, maybe that'll do him well in the NFL. It's impossible to tell at this point. I have no idea how good any of the top four guys will be, and neither does anyone else here. I just find it kind of odd that people are leaping to the defense of this guy's character given that he comes across as a bit of a putz in the interviews I've read. He can be a the better pick (vis-a-vis Allen) and the less likable person at the same time, after all. At the end of the day, I just want the Bills to win. QB personality matters to an extent relative to that overriding concern, and I don't really know how good Beane and McDermott are on that front. My small-ish concern at present is that they have no tolerance for freethinkers and use ill-suited heuristics (e.g., being from an NFL family) to make an assessment of a player's willingness to be a "process guy." I could be wrong about them too; they haven't been around long enough for me to form a judgment one way or the other.
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Ironically, for me, the seemingly endless series of self-defense articles featuring Rosen in which he wanted to show how good of a guy he is led me to think that he's a straight-up narcissist. It honestly seemed pretty clear to me by the end of the process, and then he punctuated it with his ridiculously petulant "rue the day" rant after being selected as a TOP TEN PICK. Really unlikable. You're right, though; there are tons of successful jerks in the NFL, and as I always say, for a large percentage of pro players (many of whom are borderline psychos), if not for the NFL, jail.