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Catholic Guilt

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Posts posted by Catholic Guilt

  1. was all that we heard about all this time he spent with Wyche and how good he was doing and how little of it we saw on the field.

     

    As many of you have stated previously, it seemed to possibly be Donahoe, Mularkey and Wyche making exaggerated comments to justify getting rid of bledsoe and making JP the starter.

     

    Hopefully Jauron, Levy & Ralph recognized that and base their decisions on it.

     

    Some of the other things we have heard about JP, like his 1st preseason where they said he was mixing up calls from the Bills with those from college and/or high school still bothers me about his ability to handle the job.

     

    He also has shown getting too excited and the coaches said they needed to calm him down.  Well, geez, the guy played high school and college ball.  Didn't he get somewhat used to playing the game from that experience.

     

    Of course, there are only a few cool customers like a Montana and Brady.  Then you have guys like Bledsoe with many years of Pro Ball and he still get sjittery back there an d looks like a rookie.

     

    Hopefully it'll all click for JP and this QB issue can be put behind.

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    Dude - just relax and give JP the benefit of the doubt. Let the kid play and get the experience he needs to be a better QB.

  2. That was a great game.  UNC will have a nasty team next year once all those guys have a year of experience under their belts.  Only JJ "Best Player in America" Redick saved Duke from the upset.  The sequence with Dockery at the end was bizarre.

     

    The poll ESPN put up at the end about the greatest Duke-UNC game got me thinking a bit.  I'd have to go with 1995, we lost to UNC in 2 OT, but the game was incredible.  In Cameron, Capel's bank 3 to send the game into OT, UNC's response, I wish I had a DVD of that one.

     

    Oh, and for those who think this series is about hype, I'd say it is one of the two sports rivalries in America that actually beats the hype.  The other being, of course, Red Sox-Yankees.

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    Hey bills_fan do you get the ACC Basketball Handbook? Shoot me an email.

  3. Alright I talked to a couple of my friends who ment JP on Friday night in E-ville.  One is one of the bartender at the bar he was at all night.  Said he was a really cool guy and said he didn't want to refered to as the Bills qb, just JP.  My buddy told me that he was hitting on more than one girl and that no one really cared what he was doing.  Keep in mind it isn't odd or rare to see Bills or Sabres players in this town during the winter because of the skiing.  So nobody in E-ville is star struck.  I asked him if he got bounced and he said no.  Said he was playing pool all night and that he was really down to earth.  He also told me that he signed a minnie helmet for him, which he was physched about.  Maybe this is a sign.  I remember when I used to live there growing up and it wasn't out of the norm to have players like Ballard, Ricter and Metz at our high school football games.  I remember Kelly and a player named Ferotte (nickname was the pitbull oline) outside the bars hanging out with local bikers.  Chirstie was another one who I saw quite a bit as well.  Ahh the glory days.

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    Are these your "inside sources?" Did they tell you the Bills were hiring Sherman? :blush:

     

    I miss Pumpkinville~!

  4. SLATE.com

    By Robert Weintraub

    Posted Monday, Feb. 6, 2006, at 3:11 AM ET

     

     

    A media meme emerged late in the long, two-week march to the Super Bowl: Since everyone had basically handed the game to Pittsburgh, Seattle was sure to shock everyone and win. Unfortunately for underdog lovers, no one briefed the refs about this scenario. Remember all that screaming about the Troy Polamalu pick that wasn't against the Colts a few weeks ago? Well, the Steelers got so much payback last night that I'm sure Steelers fans have found it in their hearts to forgive the men in black and white.

     

    Four critical calls stood out. A rinky-dink offensive pass interference flag wiped out an early touchdown pass from Matt Hasselbeck to Darrell Jackson, forcing Seattle to settle for three instead of seven. When Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger lunged for the goal line near the end of the first half, replays indicated a close play but a clear stop by the Seahawks. Nope—touchdown, Steelers. Then came the pivotal double shot that ended all hope for Seattle. With the Seahawks trailing 14-10, a phantom holding call negated a completion that would have given Seattle first and goal at the one yard line. Three plays later, Hasselbeck was picked off by Ike Taylor, a mistake he partially made up for by tackling the Steelers CB. Sadly for Seattle, tackling now brings a 15-yard penalty—the zebras somehow called Hasselbeck for a "block below the waist." The last call set up Pittsburgh for the clinching score.

     

    Even John Madden, as reliable an apologist for the NFL as there is, started questioning the calls. The videogame pitchman sounded especially miffed after the phantom hold/illegal tackle sequence. He wasn't quite as persistently loud and angry as Billy Packer in the 2001 NCAA basketball finals, sounding off on a series of laughably pro-Duke calls. But this was eye-opening stuff coming from the usually see-no-evil Madden.

     

    Before I start sounding like some embittered Seahawks fan—for the record, I'm an embittered Bengals fan—let's go through Seattle's flurry of mistakes and near-misses. Several key drops by Jerramy Stevens, who the bored media (and the bored Joey Porter) inexplicably cast as Terrell Owens after an innocuous "we'll win" comment. Two bombs caught just out of bounds by Darrell Jackson, who might have been MVP but for a few inches. Grant Wistrom tripping over his own feet rather than sacking Roethlisberger on a third-and-28 heave to eventual MVP Hines Ward.

     

    Give the Steelers some credit. For sublime blocking on Willie Parker's record TD run. For Chris Gardocki's excellent punting. For speedy pursuit from the linebackers that kept Shaun Alexander to a quiet 95 yards. And, of course, for continuing their remarkable streak of successful trick plays. For at least one play every game—when Antwaan Randle El flicks a perfect pass downfield as the defense reacts just a few seconds too late—the Steelers look like the boldest, smartest team that's ever laced them up. As for those other 100 plays ...

     

    Maybe Randle El should have played quarterback the whole game. Ben Roethlisberger played like he knew the game was fixed, completing a mere nine passes for 123 yards and throwing a critical interception when a touchdown would have iced it. He also got clobbered during that Kelly Herndon interception return, a sad irony after his memorable, game-saving tackle against Indy.

     

    Then there was the Most Valuable Backup. It may not be Jerome Bettis' fault that he became the centerpiece of this storyline-deprived Super Bowl. Nevertheless, his self-absorption was astonishing. First, Das Bus turned the player introductions into a dig-me moment, waddling out a few seconds ahead of everyone else. Unfortunately for him, ABC missed the memo, and its cameras stayed on the team. Four hours later, Bettis turned the Lombardi Trophy presentation—which was held atop a bizarre, teacup-shaped, UFOlike structure—into a self-love session, essentially saying the team won it all for the glory of Jerome.

     

    Seattle's role as afterthought to the pre-ordained Pittsburgh coronation was confirmed when ABC didn't even bother with the traditional losing-coach interview. But perhaps Seattle brought this on themselves by coming out of the tunnel to The Verve's "Bittersweet Symphony." Note to the Seahawks: That's probably not the best choice of pump-up tunes. Next time, why not just play Beck's "Loser"?

     

    Also absent was any mention of the industry gossip that Madden and Al Michaels will be reunited at NBC next season. Michaels is expected to weasel out of the contract he signed with ESPN to broadcast the cable network's Monday Night Football package—apparently, Sunday night is now the bigger stage. My favorite moment of the broadcast came at the very end, when the two glumly shook hands in a bit of network blazer kabuki, as though they would never see each other again. Here's hoping that when the long-lost pals meet again to call the Super Bowl for NBC, the officiating won't be the only thing worth talking about.

  5. Every time there seemed to be a big call to setback a team, it was against Seattle.

     

    Offensive pass interference takes away TD.

     

    Ben Rothlisberger TD allowed despite replay.

     

    Holding call on big Peter Warrick return.

     

    Terrible holding call on Stevens pass to 1 yard line.

     

    No call of Porter horse-collar. Would have been a huge bailout personal foul 1st down.

     

    Brutal personal foul call against Hasselback who actually made a clean tackle.

     

    Even the Hassebeck non-fumble, it was as if the refs WANTED it to be a fumble.

     

    Big Ben calls time out with play clock at zero, they give him timeout anyway.

  6. As I watched tonights game I think that you will all agree with me that Big Ben had a very average game.Alot of guys here on this board drool all over Ben and wish he was in Buffalo.I saw nothing that he did tonight that JP couldn't do.

     

    You see the difference here is not that Ben is that much better than JP but just that the team surrounding him is.So for every JP is a bust thread that is out there take a deep breath and look at what a great team in total Pittsburgh is.Team being the key word here.I'm not saying that if you put JP in Pitt you would get the same results but if Ben were here in Buffalo he wouldn't have a ring to wear.

     

    Lets hope that Marv and company can put together as quality a team in Buffalo as they have in Pitt.And than we can all make an assumption about JP being a bust or not.But until then lets give the kid a shot with a quality O-Line and a Defense that can hold other teams down.

     

    After watching tonights game I have new found faith that JP just might be the guy here in Buffalo if we can just get the right parts around him.Lets go Buffalo in 2006

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    That was one of the smartest posts I've read on TBD. And yes - you are correct. Big Ben manages the game well, but isn't that good.

  7. A qiuck recap of what I saw. Every time there seemed to be a big call to setback a team, it was against Seattle.

     

    Offensive pass interference takes away TD.

     

    Ben Rothlisberger TD allowed despite replay.

     

    Holding call on big Peter Warrick return.

     

    Terrible holding call on Stevens pass to 1 yard line.

     

    No call of Porter horse-collar. Would have been a huge bailout personal foul 1st down.

     

    Brutal personal foul call against Hasselback who actually made a clean tackle.

     

    Even the Hassebeck non-fumble, it was as if the refs WANTED it to be a fumble.

     

    Big Ben calls time out with play clock at zero, they give him timeout anyway.

     

    Make no mistake. The Steelers deserved to win. But on the whole, it will go down as one of the crappiest officiated Super Bowls that DEFINITELY fell in favor of one team.

  8. How does Moon get in, but Thomas doesn't...?

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    And how does Rayfield Wright make it and NOT Art Monk? Hell Monk didn't even make the top 10!

     

    From Czabe.com (He has a real issue with SI fatman Peter King on the committee)

     

    Peter King’s arguments against Monk include the following….

     

    1. “He was only voted to 3 Pro Bowls.” (Rebuttal: Fine, so was Charlie Joiner, Lynn Swann, and John Stallworth. It’s also worth noting, John Riggins only went to ONE Pro Bowl. Tells you what that’s worth.

     

    2. “Modern wideout numbers are threatening to obliterate Monk’s catch total.” He cites Keenan McCardell, Jimmy Smith, Marvin Harrison as examples. Okay fine. But they aren’t Monk’s contemporaries. If you look up at Pro Football Reference the list of Most Catches in a Season, the staggering number of 100-plus catch years is amazing. Monk’s 106 in 1984 is notable however in one very important respect. It’s the ONLY such mark from the entire decade! Once 1993 rolled around, wideouts began racking up 100 catch seasons like it was nothing. Hell, even scrubs like Brett Perriman had 100-ball years!

     

    3. “Monk was the 4th most dangerous weapon on those Redskin teams.” Please. Ricky Sanders, while a nice compliment wideout, could hardly be considered a “bigger weapon” than Monk. Comments like this really make you question King’s ability to judge ANYTHING in regard to pro football.

     

    Finally, I want to layout a pair of wide receiver numbers, and you tell me who is who.

     

    Receiver A: 13 Seasons 5 Pro Bowls 743 Rec. 10,205 Yds 84 TD

    Receiver B: 12 Seasons 5 Pro Bowls 750 Rec. 11,904 Yds 65 TD

     

    Both receiver A and B were Top 10 in the league in Touchdowns (5 times each) and Catches (4 times each). The only significant difference is that Receiver A has just one Super Bowl ring, while B has three.

     

    Who are they?

     

    A = Andre Rison

    B = Michael Irvin

     

    And yet I don’t hear anybody banging the drum for Bad Moon for Canton, do you?

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