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Interesting Buffalo News article on Dawkins


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Just for a bit more perspective, the average American male in his 20s weighs 200 pounds.

 

Let's say for the sake of discussion that Dion's "natural football weight" is 330 pounds.

 

Him dropping from 370 to 330 pounds is roughly equivalent to one of us bloating up to 225 pounds and dropping to 200 pounds.

 

Inexact science I know but we're not talking about an average-sized guy here.

 

 

 

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2 minutes ago, Sierra Foothills said:

Just for a bit more perspective, the average American male in his 20s weighs 200 pounds.

 

Let's say for the sake of discussion that Dion's "natural football weight" is 330 pounds.

 

Him dropping from 370 to 330 pounds is roughly equivalent to one of us bloating up to 225 pounds and dropping to 200 pounds.

 

Inexact science I know but we're not talking about an average-sized guy here.

 

 

 

Fair but the average person isn’t getting paid millions of dollars to play a sport. 
 

I really like Dion. But in this day and age, there is zero reason for a guy to get that out of shape. It is just straight laziness. Also, didn’t he have really bad Covid or some health issue? Just seems he should be a lot more forced on his eating habits. 

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1 hour ago, Beck Water said:

 

Tell us you didn't read the article or the offered summation of the article above, without telling us you didn't read the article.

 

First of all, doesn't say Dawkins wasn't working out, strength or cardio training before OTAs.  There's nothing "obvious" that he's not doing strength or cardio training because he's gained 40 lbs.

 

Fat people can and do work out!  It's harder, but as a wealthy athlete Dawkins has all the access he needs to zero-g treadmills, fitness pools, air bikes etc to work out without over-stressing his joints. 

 

Second, it says he reached out at the start of March and has been working with the Bills assistant S&C coach since then.

 

Voluntary workouts start mid-April - April 17 I believe it was.

 

 

 

 

  I didn't read the article you are correct as I don't have a subscription

Regardless, he reached out in March... Well that backs up my point.. He's a verteran no excuses. Get you ass in gear, get your head in the game and earn your million$$$

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cornerback, left tackle, and nose tackle are three positions most impacted by the bill parcels planet theory: there are only so many people on the planet born with what it takes to play that position.

 

no amount of training makes a guy 6'5+, giant framed, and just sturdy enough to play such a physical position like LT as well as be able to move.  you might be able to get in better shape, learn and improve skills, and so on, but most guys who are athletically talented are not that big nor that sturdy, and there is a mentality to battling hard in the trench all the time too, you have to want to play the position at a high level.  so once you filter for people who can even do that job at all, you are left with who is there, warts and all.  and there is just a huge tendency for giant men who have to play a sport at a heavy weight to be big eaters and either unmotivated to train, or just really really happy to indulge in some rest and binge eating post season (or during season even).

 

im somewhat disgusted by dion seeming like a chubby kid facing snax and being a sloppy fat body, but there just aren't that many humans who can do the job.

 

similar for nose tackle, but they blow up in fatness even more often.  for CB, there just aren't so many guys who can run like that and flip their hips and suddenly play to stop a guy from catching ball when they are at a disadvantage not knowing the route and timing.  and also still have the confidence to do it again and again after getting burned.

 

there are more corners of course, but their mistakes cost much more than a mistake by an LT or an NT.

 

i was hoping spencer brown being an athletic freak of freaks would take the LT job from DD, but SB just seems to not have the skills to play tackle in the nfl (i really  hope it was due to injury and nothing else last season).

 

I remember we had a trash heap of an LT named mike gandy before.  he went to the cardinals and actually started for them in the miracle season they had going 9-7 and losing to pittz in the super bowl (zona shoulda won).  it just goes to show you can make it deep w some weak guys in important positions, which i hope isn't the case for us but might be.

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5 hours ago, DaBillsFanSince1973 said:

 

 

Dawkins met with Will Greenberg, the Bills’ assistant strength and conditioning coach and performance development coach.

 

“I started drinking a ton of water,” Dawkins said. “I would drink 100 ounces of water before I would eat anything, before I would put any food into my body. Every day. Then I was doing two Chipotle salads a day, like 600 to 800 calories a day. That’s it. If I needed a pick-me-up, I’d have a protein bar for 200 calories.”

 

This is the plan that Greenberg came up with??  wtf lol

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I'm no training expert or nutritionist but I've heard that guys with a lot of muscle mass need way more protein than average people. Does Dion have/need a lot of muscle under the fat? I would think so.

 

So did this diet maintain his muscle mass? I would be curious to know not just what he eats but how he trains. The article doesn't, as far as I could see, reference his training.

 

I hope our players don't just do what is required to be pros but go above and beyond. That's the mindset of champions. We'll know soon enough how good Dion and this team is. 

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While we’re on the subject take a look at this fatty too. This just doesn’t look like the body of a pro athlete to me. He’s getting paid $250 million and still can’t get motivated to get in shape??? We need to start having serious discussions about Josh Allen and his commitment to this team.

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I hope he's learned his lesson.  I also hope that he can be in good form this season.  It will be better for him if he can maintain some dietary discipline early in the offseason so he can focus on getting stronger and sharpening his technique instead of losing large amounts of weight.  It's hard to maintain strength or even get stronger if you're having to lose weight at the same time.

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6 hours ago, DaBillsFanSince1973 said:

 

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Mark Gaughan: Dion Dawkins feels fit, trim, and he's ready to make Bills' haters eat their words

 

Dawkins had lost 40 pounds earlier in the offseason. He has been strictly following an eating regimen laid out by the team for the past six months, since the start of March. He’s in great shape and ready for the start of his seventh season.

 

He gained an added 40 pounds from his 330-pound playing weight during late January and February.

 

“I was like 370 by the start of March,” Dawkins said. “I was kinda binging as comfort. Dinner, dinner, dinner, dinner. It caught up quick.”

Dawkins met with Will Greenberg, the Bills’ assistant strength and conditioning coach and performance development coach.

 

“I started drinking a ton of water,” Dawkins said. “I would drink 100 ounces of water before I would eat anything, before I would put any food into my body. Every day. Then I was doing two Chipotle salads a day, like 600 to 800 calories a day. That’s it. If I needed a pick-me-up, I’d have a protein bar for 200 calories.”

 

I find it mind blowing that the team trainer and nutritionist would recommend a player eat 600-800 calories a day for a long period of time.  This is exactly what they tell people NOT to do if they want to lose weight. 

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1 hour ago, Beck Water said:

 

You're certainly correct that if we didn't talk about stuff where NFL employees know more, this board would be a "quick read".

 

May be a dumb question but:

 

Do the people you know, actually know the people working in football to have opinions good and bad?  I could see (say) the nutritionists working with Olympic lacrosse players knowing the nutritionists working with Olympic soccer players because they all come together at various points.

 

But I could see NFL football being its its own enclave, since it doesn't overlap with an Olympic sport.

 

The other thing is, some of the nutritional demands of NFL positions are out of whack with normal athlete nutrition.  I'm trying to think of another sport where about 1/4-1/3 of the players on team are encouraged to maintain extra body mass so they can "anchor", and I can't.

 

There's actually some funny stuff in "NFL Confidential" by "Johnny Anonymous" (believed to be former Eagles backup center David Molk) about being a guy who struggled to maintain his team-mandated weight and what he went through to "make weight" (he would get up in the morning and eat a lot, drink a lot of water, and "hold in" any output until after he was weighed - then he'd run to the toilet for a 'big dump')

 

 

I didn't think that was how it was framed.  The article quotes Dion as saying he was "binging for comfort", and yes, it's concerning.

 

My point was that I can see how weight could pack on quickly, if a guy is accustomed to eating, say, 6,000 calories a day and maintaining weight because of all the physical activity, then the physical activity drops sharply - but you still perceive 6,000 calories a day as a "normal" amount of food.

 

I don't say it's not concerning and obviously Dion knows it was a problem.


Yes a number do. I have some experience with my involvement in international sport that’s valid but I should also say I have some bias. When my sport moved to OKC (oil money) the S&C team was contracted out to coaches who were by and large big time football people. They literally took bids. Programs paid to treat us not the other way around. I had a few injuries mismanaged so did some others Those people were removed. Letters were written to the USOC to step in by other USOC specialists etc. I ended up working with some trainers from the Thunder instead as well as some people from US Ski and Snowboard. They all said the same thing. 
 

That said I think Dawkins verbiage is important. He called strong to and conditioning. The performance science team for the Bills has been educated and worked for world class sports science universities and Olympic sports. I have 100% faith that that group did not sign off on Dawkins 800 calories of Chipotle a day diet as a reasonable solution. I guarantee it. 
 

My comment was more geared toward the strength and conditioning team and S&C coaches in football. These are the kind of meatheads that recommend 800 calorie per day diets for 6’5 professional athletes.

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8 minutes ago, Big Turk said:

 

I find it mind blowing that the team trainer and nutritionist would recommend a player eat 600-800 calories a day for a long period of time.  This is exactly what they tell people NOT to do if they want to lose weight. 


Tagging this just to see my post above. Check the Performance Science team out for the Bills. 
 

Collins, Beanland, and Dziedzic didn’t recommend it. Guaranteed. The EIS (lottery funded) and AIS are two of the premier sports science institutions in the world. They’re in the range of being the Cleveland Clinics of sports science.
 

This was a S&C coach operating out of bounds. 

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2 hours ago, Beck Water said:

From an interview or podcast with Eric Woods, the eating life of an NFL lineman during the season can be a challenge.  To maintain weight, some of them eat 6 or even 7 times a day (Spencer Brown said he keeps a smoothie by his bed and wakes up in the middle of the night to consume it).  They may be eating 4,000-8,000 calories a day to maintain weight or even add a little while trying to maintain their strength/fitness and play during the season.
 

I know from personal experience that if I'm getting a ton of physical exercise then I get an injury and cut that out sharply, I can gain a lot of weight super-quickly unless I really mind the calories right away.

 

I've never seen anyone conflate an issue more than you do.  Inserting a little doubt here on this topic is akin to Netflix's murderer series where they leave out certain facts to create the appearance of being not guilty.  Dawkins put on 5 pounds a week for 2 months...and you're talking about maintaining weight?  Sure, on his frame 5 pounds a week isn't as much as a normal sized man, but come on.  

 

Even if he were injured, would it be too much to cut back a little to allow yourself to heal?  

 

Besides, Dion has shown he doesn't have a problem maintaining weight.  He has a problem with adding too much.  Because of the 40 pounds to reach 370, how much of it do you honestly think was muscle weight or fat?  I'll hang up and listen.  

 

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3 minutes ago, ScottLaw said:

If he’s gaining that much weight I guarantee he’s not doing much of any cardio…. And he was eating whatever the ***** he wanted when he wanted…. What a fluff piece. 


And his crash diet was fudging Chipotle. 
 

Gaining 5 lbs per week for a few months. Then crash dieting 5 lbs per week for a few months is not the mark of an elite athlete committed to his craft. 
 

Hoping the was a reset for him. He’s learned he botched this whole thing both on the way up and way down and he finds some stability. But I’d be lying if I wasn’t concerned. 

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Hmmm… count me among those who don’t completely understand the genesis of this article. We’re to celebrate the fact that Dion lost 40 extra pounds of fat as some sort of commitment to the team? Versus the alternative to this situation which is, you know, showing up and weighing 370 pounds? Commitment isn’t spending time shedding extra bad weight, commitment is getting with a nutritionist and personal trainer early in the offseason and dedicating yourself to working on your build, maximizing your athletic attributes to perform at your best in the 310-320 pound range. That’s commitment. Strange piece.

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Well, if I get Dion's story right, he put on a lot of "comfort weight" in February and March.

What happened at the end of January to make him need that comfort?

Could it be a little depression after a bad ending to a stressful season?

 

These guys are humans with the same feelings as anyone else.  I'm sure in retrospect Dawkins wishes it didn't happen, but it did.

As to his captaincy, maybe he needed to concentrate on himself more this season.  I'll leave that to his teammates in the locker room.

 

He evidently had to work hard to correct his weight, and he did.  I guess I'm just glad he righted the ship. 

I'm not buying any tar and feathers yet.

 

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