Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted
6 minutes ago, SoMAn said:

If rules that eliminates some of these violent shots saves one player from life in a wheelchair or on a ventilator, the league has made the right decision. It hasn't made the game any less entertaining, just safer for these young guys who are already exposing themselves to potential injury every down.

 

From a safety standpoint the rule changes are good.  I said that in my initial post. Back in those days though when you saw a big hit jar a ball lose on what would have been a big play... it was pretty exciting. Nowadays you fart in the direction of the receiver wrong and its a 15 yard penalty on top of the catch.

  • Like (+1) 1
  • Agree 1
Posted
4 minutes ago, Scott7975 said:

 

From a safety standpoint the rule changes are good.  I said that in my initial post. Back in those days though when you saw a big hit jar a ball lose on what would have been a big play... it was pretty exciting. Nowadays you fart in the direction of the receiver wrong and its a 15 yard penalty on top of the catch.

I don't disagree that there's an element of excitement for violence. Watching auto racing we love big pile up or a good fight in a hockey game.  But, unless you're a sociopath, you hope the participants don't suffer a debilitating injury. With the level of protection Nascar drivers have, there's probably less chance of injury in a major crash than a WR who gets blindsided by a human projectile. 

Posted
1 hour ago, Since1981 said:

Maybe rush 2-3? A few times, anti blitz

tuia releases in 2 sec

 play 8 off and have extra to bang hill at line

 

They do have a running game, unfortunately.  I prefer the approach of dropping AJE and/or Rousseau into the middle lanes and rushing Taron and/or Milano in their stead so we still have 4 up front.

Posted (edited)

The key to our D is to disrupt Tua’s timing. Yeah, you could say that about any QB but especially Tua because he’s the ultimate game manager. What I mean is McDaniels is scheming guys wide open and Tua is throwing to a spot with anticipation. Only when he comes off his first read does he really survey the defense to see who’s open. If you can get him off his first read, he’s not an off script guy.

 

Easier said than done. McDaniels has done a brilliant job of using motion and routes to make space for guys to get wide open. Dorsey should take some pointers from this guy - you don’t see 2 receivers in the same spot all the time and the motion is very effective. 

 

I think the best way to disrupt this is to blow up the gaps, especially Oliver and Jones in the A/B gaps. I’m sure we are going to see a lot of simulated pressures but if we can win off the snap and just get in Tua’s face, his timing will be disrupted, hopefully enough to disrupt the throw to his first read.

 

I doubt Tua is going to take many sacks with his 2.4 second time to throw, but if you make him second guess what he’s seeing he might. The pressure needs to come from the interior, the DE’s coming around the tackles won’t have enough time. So, they should rush contained, ready to defend the run and get their hands up. Send the heat from the interior and play zone for the most part. We can’t run with these receivers, Trey has lost a step, Poyer looks a step slower and Benford is an instinctive zone defender. It’s their bread and butter.

Edited by RunTheBall
  • Like (+1) 3
  • Agree 2
Posted
12 hours ago, WV Fin Phan said:


The thread debating whether Tua should have gone back in was epic at FH.  Many posters wanted to skin McDaniel alive.  Others pointed out that Tua passed the concussion tests at halftime and leading up to the Cincy debacle.  There were some who said they suffered from back spasms and said they’ve fallen in similar fashion when their back seized up.  
 

 

It was just a shove, but it was 100% late.  Tua being unbalanced didn’t help anything.  I don’t think Milano is dirty but he’s  one of those players it’s easy to dislike.  Would I want him on my team?  Hell yeah.  The Dolphins with Milano, JFC.


Can’t wait for Sunday.  I think the pressure is on the Bills.  

 

And there are some who suffered from back spasms who said their reaction is nothing similar to Tua's

 

"Easy player to dislike" GTFO

 

  • Awesome! (+1) 1
Posted

I watched Mia last two games on recap. 
 

achane , Mostert , waddle and hill are so deadly. Can take it to the house any play 

 

mia D LOOKS better than last year. Long and baker and holland terrify me. 
 

This is not your Flores / shulas dolphins folks. Best mia team I’ve ever seen. 
 

That being said it’s all mcdaniel. I don’t think tua has any really wow plays (LAC he had good some dimes). He’s a distributor. 
 

all on Allen and the offense to ball control and score every drive. Need to be super scoring efficient 

  • Haha (+1) 1
Posted
10 minutes ago, RunTheBall said:

The key to our D is to disrupt Tua’s timing. Yeah, you could say that about any QB but especially Tua because he’s the ultimate game manager. What I mean is McDaniels is scheming guys wide open and Tua is throwing to a spot with anticipation. Only when he comes off his first read does he really survey the defense to see who’s open. If you can get him off his first read, he’s not an off script guy.

 

Easier said than done. McDaniels has done a brilliant job of using motion and routes to make space for guys to get wide open. Dorsey should take some pointers from this guy - you don’t see 2 receivers in the same spot all the time and the motion is very effective. 

 

I think the best way to disrupt this is to blow up the gaps, especially Oliver and Jones in the A/B gaps. I’m sure we are going to see a lot of simulated pressures but if we can win off the snap and just get in Tua’s face, his timing will be disrupted, hopefully enough to disrupt the throw to his first read.

 

I doubt Tua is going to take many sacks with his 2.4 second time to throw, but if you make him second guess what he’s seeing he might. The pressure needs to come from the interior, the DE’s coming around the tackles won’t have enough time. So, they should rush contained, ready to defend the run and get their hands up. Send the heat from the interior and play zone for the most part. We can’t run with these receivers, Trey has lost a step, Poyer looks a step slower and Benford is an instinctive zone defender. It’s their bread and butter.

This sounds good, but is this what Belicheck did?  Do what he did.  I repeat myself:  do what he did.  JA17 and friends will put up 30 plus.  One more time:  do what he did.

Posted
9 minutes ago, Buffalo_Stampede said:

Hopefully Poyer taking it easy. He will need all his energy Sunday.

 

Can we get him some new bionic legs?

 

Posted
15 hours ago, WideNine said:

 

Valid point - it could have been something Dorsey and the offensive staff saw they could exploit specifically with Washington.

If it is a lack of confidence having Kincaid as a blocker on running plays... then that is something they will need to address to keep defenses guessing.

 

Kincaid is still hit-n-miss as a run blocker.  Sherfield is a good downfield run blocker.

 

The whole thing is being overblown though.   Like I said, one of the differences between the snap counts in the Jets vs Raiders vs Washington game is that some starters got taken out - something like 10% of the Raiders snaps and 15% of the Commanders snaps.  So a certain amount of this "tell" is Kincaid sitting on the bench for the final drives of the game, along with the other starters.

 

The 11 play 4Q TD drive against the Raiders was 8 runs, 3 passes.  9 play 4Q TD drive against the Commanders was 9 runs, 0 passes. 

 

I hope that situation arises vs the Dolphins, and if it does, I don't think the Phins will need Kincaid as a "tell" to guess that the Bills are going to try to run it.

Posted (edited)

 

 

bau2fepixnveww3nhjs3.png

 

Drew Bledsoe announced as the Bills Legend of the Game against Miami

 

eoklxsaenrda14lj1zhz.jpg

 

Drew Bledsoe will be the Bills Legend of the Game for Buffalo's 1 p.m. contest against the Miami Dolphins this Sunday. Bledsoe is excited to return to the stadium where his NFL career began.

 

Initially drafted as a Patriot, Bledsoe made his debut against Buffalo in 1993 before the Bills traded a first-round pick to acquire the star quarterback from New England in 2003.

 

"Coming back into that stadium and having the fans welcome me rather than boo the crap out of me was great," Bledsoe said. "Loved it. We just, very quickly, fell in love with everything about Western New York and especially being a part of the Bills."

 

One of Bledsoe's favorite memories about his time in Buffalo was the passion and respect of Bills Mafia.

buffalobills.com

Edited by DaBillsFanSince1973
  • Like (+1) 1
Posted
1 hour ago, Ga boy said:

This sounds good, but is this what Belicheck did?  Do what he did.  I repeat myself:  do what he did.  JA17 and friends will put up 30 plus.  One more time:  do what he did.

 

This is great in theory but a lot of what allowed the Pats to have success against the dolphins O was having Gonazlez at the line jamming hill on a lot of plays, throwing off timing and taking away first reads. We dont have that guy (Elam, MAYBE?) so I would assume we wont be using the script. 

Posted
42 minutes ago, Warriorspikes51 said:

I really hope we get Kincaid more involved in the passing game.... 

 

For frame of reference, Kincaid is on pace to finish the year as the 5th most ever receptions from a rookie TE...on a team where he is TE 1A/TE 2. People need to relax a bit with his usage. He will get high volume games. The offense has been just fine so far. 

Just now, JaCrispy said:

Any word on uniforms for the game?

 

Hoping for anything but all blues…👍

 

Blue tops, white panties 

  • Like (+1) 2
Posted
24 minutes ago, DaBillsFanSince1973 said:

 

 

bau2fepixnveww3nhjs3.png

 

Drew Bledsoe announced as the Bills Legend of the Game against Miami

 

eoklxsaenrda14lj1zhz.jpg

 

Drew Bledsoe will be the Bills Legend of the Game for Buffalo's 1 p.m. contest against the Miami Dolphins this Sunday. Bledsoe is excited to return to the stadium where his NFL career began.

 

Initially drafted as a Patriot, Bledsoe made his debut against Buffalo in 1993 before the Bills traded a first-round pick to acquire the star quarterback from New England in 2003.

 

"Coming back into that stadium and having the fans welcome me rather than boo the crap out of me was great," Bledsoe said. "Loved it. We just, very quickly, fell in love with everything about Western New York and especially being a part of the Bills."

 

One of Bledsoe's favorite memories about his time in Buffalo was the passion and respect of Bills Mafia.

buffalobills.com

Bledsoe is selling his wine at the Roycroft on Friday if you have an extra $110 kicking around. 
 

https://roycroftinn.com/event/drew-bledsoe-wine-pairing-dinner/

  • Like (+1) 1
This topic is OLD. A NEW topic should be started unless there is a very specific reason to revive this one.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...