OZBILLS Posted January 24 Posted January 24 8 minutes ago, Shaw66 said: I feel like things are headed in the right direction, and it's only a matter of time. The Bills are building and growing You can't be serious 1 4 1 Quote
Casual fan Posted January 24 Posted January 24 (edited) Wonderful write up great approach to the team. Thank you. Just my idea here be it bull#### or not it's what I came away with. The Bills don't have enough clutch players. My model for that is Fred Jackson. His overall stats never rose to elite level. But over and over and over again when the Bills needed something to happen real bad, Fred Jackson stepped up. I'd got so would expect him to maybe come up with something at a crucial time. I'm not sure our coaches believe in that but I do. And I think if you have an elite receiver who drops the ball at a crucial time in a championship game, you will be the losing team. I don't blame the kicker because they never should have put the game on him to begin with but also he's not a clutch player else he would have nailed that kick. And who was that guy, David Tyree was it, who was lucky to be on the roster but caught the ball between his one hand and and helmet with the Giants Superbowl on the line. That guy was clutch. I think it's right to say the Bills have tended to lose big games in weird ways. They're usually in it right to the end then something bad happens because nobody stepped up and made sure it didn't. In case it matters I think Josh Allen is clutch or close enough that he is AOK on that score. But he can't do it all in playoff games. If I was the coach I'd be looking at prospects going all the way back to their high school days to see who stepped when the team had to have it get done. And I'd fill my roster with as many guys like that as I could. As backups or even practice squad just to keep them around for a time we really need a guy who won't drop the ***** football. Anybody can drop a ball at any time nobody's perfect. But there's some guys who will not drop the ball when the stakes are highest and the pressure is greatest and I'd want them around when the stars had got us into the playoffs to bring it home. Edited January 24 by Casual fan Quote
Shaw66 Posted January 24 Author Posted January 24 2 minutes ago, Casual fan said: Wonderful write up great approach to the team. Thank you. Just my idea here be it bull#### or not it's what I came away with. The Bills don't have enough clutch players. My model for that is Fred Jackson. His overall stats never rose to elite level. But over and over and over again when the Bills needed something to happen real bad, Fred Jackson stepped up. I'd got so would expect him to maybe come up with something at a crucial time. I'm not sure our coaches believe in that but I do. And I think if you have an elite receiver who drops the ball at a crucial time in a championship game, you will be the losing team. I don't blame the kicker because they never should have put the game on him to begin with but also he's not a clutch player else he would have nailed that kick. And who was that guy, David Tyree was it, who was lucky to be on the roster but caught the ball between his one hand and and helmet with the Giants Superbowl on the line. That guy was clutch. I think it's right to say the Bills have tended to lose big games in weird ways. They're usually in it right to the end then something bad happens because nobody stepped up and made sure it didn't. In case it matters I think Josh Allen is clutch or close enough that he is AOK on that score. But he can't do it all in playoff games. If I was the coach I'd be looking at prospects going all the way back to their high school days to see who stepped when the team had to have it get done. And I'd fill my roster with as many guys like that as I could. As backups or even practice squad just to keep them around for a time we really need a guy who won't drop the ***** football. Anybody can drop a ball at any time nobody's perfect. But there's some guys who will not drop the ball when the stakes are highest and the pressure is greatest and I'd want them around when the stars had got us into the playoffs to bring it home. Well, maybe they don't have clutch players in the right positions. Von Miller certainly has been a clutch player; whether he returns to form is still an open question. Shakir is clutch. Poyer is clutch. We thought Diggs was clutch, and Cook isn't, at least not yet. 1 Quote
oldmanfan Posted January 24 Posted January 24 (edited) 2 hours ago, 4th&long said: I don’t know how some of you guys who are older than me do it? I’ve been a fan for 46 years and this is the first time I didn’t care they lost on one hand but on the other it is starting to bother me more as the days go on. I know at first I was so sure they would lose I turned down a free ticket to an enclosed club. I’ve been wanting one of those for years! But I knew the D was to beat up to keep up with mahomes. I didn’t expect them to be a no show! But I wasn’t going to a game to watch them lose. So I want to mad when the game ended. Hardly yelled at the tv at all during the game, only on a dropped pass. After the game I was just glad I didn’t have to sit thru anymore bills games this season. Just tired of it! a few days on I’m thinking it’s time to start doing something else with my Sundays in the fall. I’m not going to make any statements like I’m done with the bills, I’m sure I will always root for them to win. But I am tired of getting no return. This is probably the most I’ve ever questioned myself during the season on why I watch? Why do I put myself thru this? so again I ask some of the fans who have been around since the beginning how do they do it? I was 4 years old sitting with my dad and older brother in the Rockpile for the first ever game in 1960. Like Shaw as a kid I lived for the Bills; we got both the News and the Courier and I devoured every item Bills related. To this day the Hit Heard Round the World is the greatest play in the history of Bills football. So when you ask how is older fans do it, part of it is the memories we have. We will always have the memories of the 2 AFL championships. For me personally, I have memories of going to watch my dad ref charity basketball games when the Bills would play back in the 60’s, and hanging out in the locker room with my heroes. Or watching OJ live. Or being there for the Monday night opener in ‘74, still the best football game I’ve ever seen. Or helping carry the goalposts to Ralph’s box when we finally squished the Fish opening day in 1980. Other more modern memories to be sure. The SB years, watching the K gun and Bruce and Thurm and Kelly. Now watching Josh and not believing the talent that kid has. When you grow up in WNY (Town of Tonawanda for me) the Bills just were an integral part of your life. And remained so for many of us when careers caused us to move away. I moved in 1983 after grad school, but it doesn’t matter. The memories and tradition keep you a fan forever. And you pass it along. Both my daughters grew up just outside Indy, and my older one has been a fan since she could watch football. One of my proudest parent moments was when they would have Colts Spirit Day on Fridays and she’d wear her Bills stuff to school. My younger one is a more recent convert but proudly wears Bills stuff on campus most days even though she’s in Bengals country. And the two of them, my future son-in-law, my wife and I group text through each and every game. So why put myself through this for 64 years? Because I cannot imagine life without doing so. They’re the Bills. They’re my team. They made my hometown a major league town. Like Shaw, I’ve mellowed with age. I was sad Monday morning, but not despondent. I think Josh will get us a Lombardi or two before he’s done. With the current coach? Maybe, maybe not. Changes will be made, some will work, some won’t. But come next September it will be like every fall since a 4 year old, waiting all week with anxious anticipation for how my Bills will do that week. It’s in my blood, as it is for so many of us. Go Bills! 3 hours ago, Shaw66 said: Not that anyone cares, but I’ve reached a new plateau in my fandom. I’ve been a Bills fan since 1960. When I was a kid, there was nothing more important to me than whether the Bills (and the Browns) won. There was no greater weekend in my life (to that point) than when the Bills and the Browns won the AFL and NFL championship games on successive games. A friend of mine came over to my house that Sunday night, and we talked and talked about one game, then the other, then the first, over and over. It was great. In the Super Bowl years, I absolutely ached for a Lombardi. It hurt each year when they lost, and it hurt doubly as I watched my kids suffer through the losses, too. When I began writing the Rockpile Review, I allowed the anxiety associated with the games to grow, as I watched and studied and reviewed, analyzed data, read other columns. Every season was a disappointment. Somehow, this season, a lot has changed. I’m still a fan, I look forward to every game, and I’m thrilled when the Bills win. What’s changed is that I’ve gotten more or less non-judgmental. I don’t think much about why some play didn’t work, and I don’t think much about who’s to blame. If the Bills win, great. If they lose, I feel bad for the players, but I tend to let it go. My attitude is sort of like watching my ten-year-old kid’s game – great if they win, sorry for my kid if he loses. I don’t how this transition happened, but I definitely seem to have entered a new stage to my fandom. And it’s nice. And so it was that I was sitting in Highmark Stadium, desperately wanting a win but knowing all along that if the Bills lost, I’d just drive home the next day and hardly give the game a second thought. When Bass missed the field goal, the irony of it being wide right didn’t even occur to me. I just knew the game was over, and the next day would be a nice day. So, if you’re looking for in-depth analysis, it ain’t here. Someone else can fret over whether Allen should have thrown underneath to Diggs, why they tried the fake punt, who blew the coverage on Kelce, but I don’t worry about it. It happened. Here are some thoughts about the game: I love going to those games. Crowd was amazing. Plays were amazing. It's actually better to go to a game like that if you aren't a fan of either team, because then you can enjoy the plays that BOTH teams make. Fundamentally, the Bills weren't good enough. KC's offense was fabulous - scored on every possession but one. The book on KC was to beat them you have to hold them under 20. That's when they lose. The Bills defense wasn't good enough. The real killer was the end of the game. Bills miss the field goal, they need the Chiefs to go three and out, everyone knows the Chiefs are going to run the ball, and the Bills gave them 8 yards on a run up the middle. Game ended right there. Just horrible. Do you want to know what the worst sound is that I’ve every heard in that stadium? Bass’s kick went up, and whole stadium went silent, except for the sound of about 1000 people cheering under the scoreboard. That’s where the Chiefs fans were, and they could see the ball sailing wide. It sounded like people cheering in some imaginary stadium next door. Horrible sound. I think the problem with the defense is that although it's very effective, it's very predictable. It's a bend-don't-break defense. They gave up a lot of yards during the season, but they were fourth in points allowed. That's a great defense for the regular season, but when you play against the best offenses, and the best offensive coordinators, it puts you at a disadvantage. The Bills need a playoff defense, and that’s something I’m sure McDermott will work on. Andy Reid is a special offensive coach, with decades of experience. With Mahomes at QB and against a predictable defense, Reid gives the Chiefs a big advantage. Reid always had a play to run, he seemed always to be a step ahead of the Bills. The result was all of those explosive plays, and the Bills didn't have answers. The Bills needed some defensive stops, and they couldn't get them. The best stop they got was a prayer, the fumble out of bounds in the end zone. On the other side of the ball, the Chiefs had one of the best defenses in the league this year, but there was nothing to complain about with the Bills offense. Well, James Cook dropped what should have been a touchdown in the red zone. Diggs should have caught the incredible bomb from Allen - I haven't seen the replay, but I think that was a 65-yard throw that hit Diggs on the run. Joe Brady wasn’t great in the red zone. He needed better answers. Allen was great. I think he's matured, and we're finally starting to see the complete package. Mahomes is the only guy who throws as well as Allen, Jackson is the only guy who runs better than Allen. He now is running the offense with discipline and intelligence. The mature Josh Allen began to emerge this season, and it was a sight to behold. He is an incredible gift to Bills fans. How about the future? It’s bright. Yeah, yeah, Bills have an old roster and cap issues, but it's all just talk. When you have an old roster, you have more experience. I'll take Josh Allen now over Josh Allen four years ago because, well, he's older. All that young roster stuff is baloney. Rosters turn over all the time. Rams only had two guys on the roster from the team that won the Super Bowl two years ago. Think about that! So, yeah, some of the Bills will be gone. Hyde will be the biggest loss, but they have his replacement on the team. Poyer probably will be back. Von Miller is old, but he's still recovering from his ACL, and he can still play. Bills had one of the best offenses and one of the best defenses in the league, and they'll turn over parts of the lineup like they always do, and they'll be fine. They'll get two or three rookies who will play, and two or three free agents will play. Allen, Cook, Diggs, Knox, Kincaid, Shakir are all back, so they have their skill guys on offense, and the whole offensive line will be back. Milano and Bernard will be back at the linebacker spots, and the Bills should have both starting corners back, too. I listened to McDermott’s and Beane’s season-ending pressers, and it encouraged me. They’re on the job. They’re working actively to make the team better. They don’t talk so much about it anymore, but there’s a process, and they’re sticking to it. When McDermott talked about Josh and Bernard and Shakir and Kincaid, I could hear the excitement in his voice – those are the kinds of guys he wants on his team and he can build around. He didn’t talk about White or Milano, because they weren’t with the team at the end, but they’re the guys he wants, too. And Taron Johnson and Dawkins and, well, keep naming them. When Josh Allen finished his junior season in high school, do you think his coaches sat around bemoaning the loss of their seniors and wondering what they were going to do? No. All they thought was, “We have Josh Allen and the other teams don’t. All we have to do is work with the guys who show up at tryouts, and we’ll be fine.” That’s essentially what Beane and McDermott were saying. “We may not have Davis, but we’ll have someone. We may not have Jones at tackle, but we’ll have someone. We may not have Hyde at safety, but we’ll have someone. We have Josh Allen and the other teams don’t.” It’s incredibly difficult to win the Super Bowl. By the divisional round in the playoffs, all the teams are good. Packers were good. Texans were good. Every game is a tough game. All you can do is work at getting better, every day, every week, every season. That’s what the Bills do. The Bills will keep getting better. GO BILLS!!! The Rockpile Review is written to share the passion we have for the Buffalo Bills. That passion was born in the Rockpile; its parents were every-day people of western New York who translated their dedication to a full day’s hard work and simple pleasures into love for a pro football team. Brilliant as always Shaw. Edited January 24 by oldmanfan 3 3 Quote
msw2112 Posted January 24 Posted January 24 22 minutes ago, Shaw66 said: Well, maybe they don't have clutch players in the right positions. Von Miller certainly has been a clutch player; whether he returns to form is still an open question. Shakir is clutch. Poyer is clutch. We thought Diggs was clutch, and Cook isn't, at least not yet. Terrell Bernard seems to be that clutch kind of player. Not the biggest, strongest, or fastest, but has a knack for making big plays. Him being healthy would have helped a ton. 1 2 Quote
Shaw66 Posted January 24 Author Posted January 24 5 minutes ago, msw2112 said: Terrell Bernard seems to be that clutch kind of player. Not the biggest, strongest, or fastest, but has a knack for making big plays. Him being healthy would have helped a ton. McD or B had high praise for him. They said by the end of the season, he was the boss in the huddle. All the vets were following him. 2 Quote
Olliemets Posted January 24 Posted January 24 4 hours ago, Shaw66 said: Andy Reid is a special offensive coach, with decades of experience. With Mahomes at QB and against a predictable defense, Reid gives the Chiefs a big advantage. Reid always had a play to run, he seemed always to be a step ahead of the Bills. The result was all of those explosive plays, and the Bills didn't have answers. The Bills needed some defensive stops, and they couldn't get them. The best stop they got was a prayer, the fumble out of bounds in the end zone. Peter King mentioned something interesting on Chris Russo's show yesterday about Reid and his play selection/designs. He sat with Andy after the games and said "He's won xx amount of games....but he didn't want to go home. Didn't want it to end. He loved talking about the game just completed" Bills and Chiefs have played each other 6 times past 4 years. Andy decided to dig into his playbook and pull out something Chiefs ran when Alex Smith was the starter. It's the play Kelce scored on. When Reid proposed it Kelce loved it and they worked on it all week in practice. Kept it under wraps until an opportune moment last wee Great post by the way. Thanks. I'm 65 and have been trending that way for a while now. 2 Quote
4th&long Posted January 24 Posted January 24 48 minutes ago, oldmanfan said: I was 4 years old sitting with my dad and older brother in the Rockpile for the first ever game in 1960. Like Shaw as a kid I lived for the Bills; we got both the News and the Courier and I devoured every item Bills related. To this day the Hit Heard Round the World is the greatest play in the history of Bills football. So when you ask how is older fans do it, part of it is the memories we have. We will always have the memories of the 2 AFL championships. For me personally, I have memories of going to watch my dad ref charity basketball games when the Bills would play back in the 60’s, and hanging out in the locker room with my heroes. Or watching OJ live. Or being there for the Monday night opener in ‘74, still the best football game I’ve ever seen. Or helping carry the goalposts to Ralph’s box when we finally squished the Fish opening day in 1980. Other more modern memories to be sure. The SB years, watching the K gun and Bruce and Thurm and Kelly. Now watching Josh and not believing the talent that kid has. When you grow up in WNY (Town of Tonawanda for me) the Bills just were an integral part of your life. And remained so for many of us when careers caused us to move away. I moved in 1983 after grad school, but it doesn’t matter. The memories and tradition keep you a fan forever. And you pass it along. Both my daughters grew up just outside Indy, and my older one has been a fan since she could watch football. One of my proudest parent moments was when they would have Colts Spirit Day on Fridays and she’d wear her Bills stuff to school. My younger one is a more recent convert but proudly wears Bills stuff on campus most days even though she’s in Bengals country. And the two of them, my future son-in-law, my wife and I group text through each and every game. So why put myself through this for 64 years? Because I cannot imagine life without doing so. They’re the Bills. They’re my team. They made my hometown a major league town. Like Shaw, I’ve mellowed with age. I was sad Monday morning, but not despondent. I think Josh will get us a Lombardi or two before he’s done. With the current coach? Maybe, maybe not. Changes will be made, some will work, some won’t. But come next September it will be like every fall since a 4 year old, waiting all week with anxious anticipation for how my Bills will do that week. It’s in my blood, as it is for so many of us. Go Bills! Brilliant as always Shaw. Maybe I need the mellow part. I think I want to win the Super Bowl too much. The other day I was thinking I need to give that up, I might enjoy the games more on a weekly basis. Every injury, every game, every loss my first thought is how does this affect our Super Bowl chances? I’m losing my love for the game. I’m not even sure I’m going to watch the Super Bowl this year which would be a first ever for me. Quote
HappyDays Posted January 24 Posted January 24 5 hours ago, Shaw66 said: The Bills need a playoff defense, and that’s something I’m sure McDermott will work on. Unfortunately Shaw I'm not sure this is the case. Every playoff loss the defense has looked the same - the opposing offense has moved the ball at will almost without resistance. What makes me especially concerned is that this was the worst offense the Bills have faced in any of their playoff losses, and yet they turned in their worst defensive performance yet. So it is getting worse, not better. The players are not prepared and Reid is exploiting our scheme with ease. I'm kind of sick of hearing about McDermott's growth mindset. I haven't seen any growth from him as a head coach. I'll voice the concern that I know every Bills fan feels deep down - what if the Josh Allen era ends with 0 Super Bowl wins? Nothing is guaranteed in this brutal league. Every season that passes gets us one year closer to Allen declining from his peak and eventually retirement. This regime has now had 4 swings at the bat since Allen broke out as an elite QB, and they are hitting nothing but singles. We already have one historically great QB that never won it all. Having two on our record would be a total gut punch. And so the anxiety is always there in the back of mind that we are wasting the best years of the best QB in franchise history. Two elite playoff runs from Allen ended at the divisional round. That isn't acceptable. McDermott and Beane are both good at what they do. But you need greatness from at least one of those positions to win it all. 3 1 1 Quote
EasternOHBillsFan Posted January 25 Posted January 25 5 hours ago, Shaw66 said: In the Super Bowl years, I absolutely ached for a Lombardi. It hurt each year when they lost, and it hurt doubly as I watched my kids suffer through the losses, too. When I began writing the Rockpile Review, I allowed the anxiety associated with the games to grow, as I watched and studied and reviewed, analyzed data, read other columns. Every season was a disappointment. Somehow, this season, a lot has changed. I’m still a fan, I look forward to every game, and I’m thrilled when the Bills win. What’s changed is that I’ve gotten more or less non-judgmental. I don’t think much about why some play didn’t work, and I don’t think much about who’s to blame. If the Bills win, great. If they lose, I feel bad for the players, but I tend to let it go. My attitude is sort of like watching my ten-year-old kid’s game – great if they win, sorry for my kid if he loses. I don’t how this transition happened, but I definitely seem to have entered a new stage to my fandom. And it’s nice. I haven't completely gotten there yet... I'm still very frustrated by the waste of talent we seem to fall into every season since Josh Allen became our QB, and now I get how Dolphins fans felt all of those times we beat them down when they had Marino. I can't wrap my head around it and it's probably made my blood pressure much higher than it should be. My mother graduated from Lew-Port in 1963, and of course she loved Joe Namath back in the day. I never asked her if she actually went to any Bills games until today! Quote
Jrb1979 Posted January 25 Posted January 25 A litt off topic. I have been fascinated with older fans like @Shaw66 and @oldmanfan in their love for the Bills but no love for the other team in town thats been around since the 70s. I know the Sabres haven't been good the last decade but from the 70s til early 2000s they had many good runs in the playoffs. I would have thought they would have had the same level of fandom. As far as the team goes, I think they have regressed since that 13 second game. The offense isn't as dynamic and explosive. Quote
TampaBillsJunkie Posted January 25 Posted January 25 It's Wednesday and the loss still stings a little. I'm glad you posted because I really don't want to read about the draft and free agents right now. I wanted to be reading about the AFC Championship game and our guys returning to health. I'm not as pissed as I used to be, but I really thought we'd get past KC at home and get our revenge on Reid. Finally! It's no so much that the Bills lost, it's the Chief's winning. All game I had to watch stupid commercials with KC players and not one Buffalo Bill. Mahomes, MaAuto. Screw that! Most Valuable Bundler. F' off. Bundling is like these fries. Let me shove those fries down your fat throat Reid. And don't even mention that Kelce 2 for 1 Pfizer spot. That's just too much. No NFL player should be shilling for Big Pharma or the cable company. And to top all that crap off, I have to look at shots of Taylor Swift every time Kelce rips the jock off Klein, a guy who shouldn't be on the roster, much less the field. I despise KC right now. Their fans are douche bags. About as bad as New England during the Brady years. If we lost to the Ravens and I got some Lamar MVP over Josh, I could stomach it. But this. It probably won't wear off until those dreaded Chiefs are eliminated and Kelce fades into oblivion. I respect Mahomes and Pacheco, but Kelce is just a public nuisance at this point. They needed to lose! Quote
Shaw66 Posted January 25 Author Posted January 25 44 minutes ago, Jrb1979 said: A litt off topic. I have been fascinated with older fans like @Shaw66 and @oldmanfan in their love for the Bills but no love for the other team in town thats been around since the 70s. I know the Sabres haven't been good the last decade but from the 70s til early 2000s they had many good runs in the playoffs. I would have thought they would have had the same level of fandom. As far as the team goes, I think they have regressed since that 13 second game. The offense isn't as dynamic and explosive. Hey JR. Grew up in Buffalo, never skated, never played hockey. Went to see the Bisons once in a while at the Aud. Moved from Buffalo in 1968, so I never had any reason to get attached to the Sabres. I live in Hartford and saw the Sabres play the Whalers a couple times. Felt guilty rooting against the Sabres. 2 Quote
Shaw66 Posted January 25 Author Posted January 25 1 hour ago, HappyDays said: Unfortunately Shaw I'm not sure this is the case. Every playoff loss the defense has looked the same - the opposing offense has moved the ball at will almost without resistance. What makes me especially concerned is that this was the worst offense the Bills have faced in any of their playoff losses, and yet they turned in their worst defensive performance yet. So it is getting worse, not better. The players are not prepared and Reid is exploiting our scheme with ease. I'm kind of sick of hearing about McDermott's growth mindset. I haven't seen any growth from him as a head coach. I'll voice the concern that I know every Bills fan feels deep down - what if the Josh Allen era ends with 0 Super Bowl wins? Nothing is guaranteed in this brutal league. Every season that passes gets us one year closer to Allen declining from his peak and eventually retirement. This regime has now had 4 swings at the bat since Allen broke out as an elite QB, and they are hitting nothing but singles. We already have one historically great QB that never won it all. Having two on our record would be a total gut punch. And so the anxiety is always there in the back of mind that we are wasting the best years of the best QB in franchise history. Two elite playoff runs from Allen ended at the divisional round. That isn't acceptable. McDermott and Beane are both good at what they do. But you need greatness from at least one of those positions to win it all. That all may be true, and Josh may never win a Super Bowl. Matt Stafford lucked out. Nothing is promised anyone. The problem I have with all of this ruminating is that I don't think anyone here can tell me what person the Bills should hire who is going to take Allen and win a Super Bowl with him in "this brutal league." It is a brutal league, and what it takes to win includes a lot, really a lot, of luck. I'm betting on McDermott and Beane. They are more determined, more purposeful than anyone else I see in this league, and McDermott is not going to keep doing things that don't work. 1 1 Quote
dock581 Posted January 25 Posted January 25 I pretty much agree with the feelings of the more senior fans who have contributed to this discussion. I have been an ardent if not crazy Bills fan now for 75 years! I first saw them lose to the Browns in the old AAC in 1948 when my Dad took me to my first game. I'm happy to say that I have 5 wonderful Grandkids, all of whom grew up in New England but all hate the Patsies and love the Bills so I must have done something right! I have always felt there was an unusual bond between the Bills and Buffalo accounting for the intense pride so many of us have. One of my sons pointed me to a documentary on Hulu entitled Welcome to Wrexham which is the story of a downtrodden town in Wales and their once proud and very old soccer team. The team is purchased by 2 Hollywood guys (I never heard of indicating my age) and how their goal is to improve the soccer team. The parallels between that story and the relationships between the players, the team, the coaches and staff, and the town are so similar to our situation and so insightful that I urge you all to sign up for a month of Hulu just to watch this story unfold. It is enlightening and very moving and I LOVED it.! Quote
oldmanfan Posted January 25 Posted January 25 1 hour ago, Jrb1979 said: A litt off topic. I have been fascinated with older fans like @Shaw66 and @oldmanfan in their love for the Bills but no love for the other team in town thats been around since the 70s. I know the Sabres haven't been good the last decade but from the 70s til early 2000s they had many good runs in the playoffs. I would have thought they would have had the same level of fandom. As far as the team goes, I think they have regressed since that 13 second game. The offense isn't as dynamic and explosive. Love the Sabres as well, just that this is a Bills message board. When I was a kid my dad would take us to the Bisons games all the time. Then when the Knox brothers got the Sabres into the NHL it became pretty hard to get tickets, even in the new orange seats. But their PR director lived across the street from me and sometimes he’d get me a ticket when I cleared his driveway. Those were the days. The French Connection. Shoeney going through the Zamboni entrance in his fight with Cashman. My favorite was Danny Gare. Sundays we’d watch or listen to the Bills game at 1:00, then watch the late NFL game, eat dinner at the half, and watch the Sabres at 7 - seemed they almost always played Sunday night at 7. 1 Quote
Old Coot Posted January 25 Posted January 25 Well said, my man. I think you are onto something. I always look forward to your Rockpile reviews. They are well thought out and nicely written. They single-handedly substantially improve the quality of submissions to this forum (and I include my own submissions here). The Bills are like the seasons of the year. In spring we have the new expectations for a successful year. By summer the season is well underway and may be bright and sunny or grey and rainy. Fall is crunch time. That earthy fall smell in the air reminds one of the gridiron (at least for those of us who played on grass fields). Then the winter of our discontent sets in -- another year without a Lombardi. But then we know that a harsh winter (even a harsh Buffalo winter) will be followed by another spring of great expectations. 1 Quote
Comebackkid Posted January 25 Posted January 25 just enjoy the game. enjoy the players..the plays..the atmosphere. a super bowl would be great but dont let the lack of a superbowl take away from what you love as a fan..which is buffalo football. the bills were bad for so long and may well go back to being bad one day so enjoy what we have. thats my perspective. Quote
Bills!Win! Posted January 25 Posted January 25 (edited) It's funny. I'm mad at the bills right now, but come July I'll have forgiven them and will be stalking the internet for training camp tickets. It's the circle of life Edited January 25 by Bills!Win! Quote
Old Coot Posted January 25 Posted January 25 Well said, my man. I think you are onto something. I always look forward to your Rockpile reviews. They are well thought out and nicely written. They single-handedly substantially improve the quality of submissions to this forum (and I include my own submissions here). The Bills are like the seasons of the year. In spring we have the new expectations for a successful year. By summer the season is well underway and may be bright and sunny or grey and rainy. Fall is crunch time. That earthy fall smell in the air reminds one of the gridiron (at least for those of us who played on grass fields). Then the winter of our discontent sets in -- another year without a Lombardi. But then we know that a harsh winter (even a harsh Buffalo winter) will be followed by another spring of great expectations. Sometimes you just gotta do the Walk of Life: Quote
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