I’ve always been fascinated by watching film of the “wishbone” offense and the “46” defense. I know there are variations of this that work in the modern NFL, but could teams get away with making one or both of these their main strengths? I hear the arguments that defenses are too fast for the wishbone to work and teams would kill you with the pass if you tried the “46” most of the game. What say you?
AFC east champs: Buffalo
AFC west: Kansas city
AFC north: Cincinnati
AFC south: Indianapolis
NFC east: Dallas
NFC north: Detroit
NFC west: San Francisco
NFC south: Atlanta
AFC Wild Cards: Baltimore and Denver
NFC Wild Cards: Green Bay and Eagles
*Bills and Bengals in AFC championship game
*Dallas and San Fran in NFC championship game
Buffalo over San Fran in Super Bowl 🏆
Offensive rookie of the year:
Ashton Jeanty
Joe Burrow: MVP
Penix gets injured and Cousins leads Atlanta to division title.
Sack leader: Micah Parsons
Remember that people in the 300 sections of life can often see things that we can’t or don’t want to see. We all have blind spots in our jobs and lives. The question is: what do we do when people point out those blind spots? Get defensive or listen to see if they are telling the truth (and if they are telling even a shred of truth it’s up to us to change). It’s up to Beane if he listens or not
When someone gets defensive like Beane did, it means there is a shred of truth in what he is hearing and he is pushing back. People do this all the time when confronted with things in life. When you get defensive there is a reason
Hot take: If Ralph Wilson hadn’t gotten involved, Wade Phillips would have played Doug Flutie instead of Rob Johnson, home run throwback never happens, and we represent the AFC in Super Bowl 34- but we still would have lost to the Rams