Catholic Guilt Posted September 26, 2006 Author Share Posted September 26, 2006 I hate to be the one doing all the work in this conversation, but a google search of "2006 mock draft" led me to this page: http://www.fftoolbox.com/nfl_draft/2006_mockdrafts.cfm To save you the trouble of reading the link, it shows the top 4 of a bunch of different mock drafts. Williams is in the top 4 in virtually all of them. Anyone following the draft in even a cursory fashion had heard of him. 786755[/snapback] I'm glad you are doing all the hard work for us in this thread. Let me say thank you. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Like A Mofo Posted September 26, 2006 Share Posted September 26, 2006 what exactaly does it make you wonder? That Michael Vick cant win in this league if you force him to beat you by sitting in the pocket and having to pass? That the option offense doesn't work if the nfl if you contain lanes and stay at home instead of over comitting basically taking away the rollout option? The Saints put on a clinc and ATL can basically expect more of the same the rest of the season teams comitting 8-9 in the box until vick proves he can beat teams by being a passing threat, why anyone would respect him as one is beyond me. Id look for teams to continue to defense vick the same way. Make them substain drives and have to pass to win. 786931[/snapback] Could not have said it any better. Plus, I wonder if the arrival of Mark Simoneau played a role in last night's game plan, because when Simoneau was with the Eagles, generally they enjoyed a great deal of success against Vick. Emotion can be a big time factor in a lot of games. I beleive the key for New Orleans last night was right off the bat, the blocked punt, that got the crowed juiced, and I think it just gave the Saints everything they needed and the Falcons never recovered. If Atlanta scored first, the game would have been much much different. Kudos to the Saints and it was great to see part of New Orleans cheering last night after all that city has been through. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
loadofmularkey Posted September 26, 2006 Share Posted September 26, 2006 Then Houston has the number one pick in the draft last year and they take a Defensive End from NC State. Now I live in Carolina and never heard of the kid until draft day. 786679[/snapback] I find this incredibly hard to believe. He was #2-4 on every single draft board. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Catholic Guilt Posted September 26, 2006 Author Share Posted September 26, 2006 I find this incredibly hard to believe. He was #2-4 on every single draft board. 787036[/snapback] I follow the ACC VERY CLOSELY. NC State had THREE Defensive linemen go in the 1st round of the draft. Maybe I'm not a draft/stats guy, but with three D lineman going that high in the draft (Mario Williams, Manny Lawson and John McCargo), State would be better than a medicore ACC team. How do you pass on Reggie Bush? Not only is he talented, he puts butts in seats! Interesting links on the subject. NFL rigged? More NFL is rigged Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
buckeyemike Posted September 26, 2006 Share Posted September 26, 2006 If the NFL was rigged, the New York teams would have won more than three Super Bowls between them and appeared in more than four. I don't think there is any question that the league wants "big-market" teams to win, but there are simply too many variables that occur within the game of football for me to believe that the whole thing is rigged. What the NFL needs to do is hire full-time officials, instead of the bankers, attorneys, and insurance agents they have now. These zebras miss calls all the time and this past Super Bowl might have been the single worst officiated game ever. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Catholic Guilt Posted September 26, 2006 Author Share Posted September 26, 2006 Another NFL predraft board... Superbowl XL sham Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bigjdotcom01 Posted September 26, 2006 Share Posted September 26, 2006 this was the first sentense of the main story, right on the frontpage of cnn.com.http://www.cnn.com http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/09/25/saints.return.ap/index.html that's from the full story... 786943[/snapback] Exactly. If there was ever a fix in on an NFL game, it was last night. On the third play of the game Vick fumbles the ball without it being touched, no one blocks the Saints UP THE MIDDLE on the punt, Crumpler has to try to drop a wide open touchdown, two very questionable non-calls on PI in the second half. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RayFinkle Posted September 26, 2006 Share Posted September 26, 2006 It would be incredibly hard to rig american football. There are so many small things that could happen to mess up the rigging. 786895[/snapback] Quite the opposite, there is a penalty on virtually every play which could be called, or not called. It would be simple for an extra call here, and a non call there, to effect the outcome of a game or shave a couple points. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Catholic Guilt Posted September 26, 2006 Author Share Posted September 26, 2006 Quite the opposite, there is a penalty on virtually every play which could be called, or not called. It would be simple for an extra call here, and a non call there, to effect the outcome of a game or shave a couple points. 787119[/snapback] Laces out! Look at last years Super Bowl for proof. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mike formerly from Florida Posted September 26, 2006 Share Posted September 26, 2006 people used to laugh at the same comments about italian soccer... and then it ended up being true. 786928[/snapback] Maybe this will help to answer some of the doubters: http://www.moldea.com/gamefixing.html The league is fixed, folks. Accept it! The Bills/NE game wa fixed. I always thought it was the refs, and I still maintain it is. Except now, with all the money the networks pay, they want to control the outcome for ratings. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LabattBlue Posted September 26, 2006 Share Posted September 26, 2006 Exactly. If there was ever a fix in on an NFL game, it was last night. On the third play of the game Vick fumbles the ball without it being touched, no one blocks the Saints UP THE MIDDLE on the punt, Crumpler has to try to drop a wide open touchdown, two very questionable non-calls on PI in the second half. 787084[/snapback] ...and none of these things has happened before?? Players fumbling without being touched, dropped passes and questionable calls happen every week. For those into conspiracy theories...the fix is in. How it looks to me...sh-- happens. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fan in San Diego Posted September 26, 2006 Share Posted September 26, 2006 While there is a mountain of calls and things to make you wonder, I always come back to this thought. No one in this world can keep a secret. Especially one that juicy. Now if you study the mortallity rate of refs, head coaches and players from Super bowl teams and there are strange mortality rates then there might be something to it. Because after a ref fixes a game, you pretty much have to kill the guy at some point because he will talk to someone and it will get out. That is one of the guarantee's of life, people cannot keep their mouths shut. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mike formerly from Florida Posted September 26, 2006 Share Posted September 26, 2006 While there is a mountain of calls and things to make you wonder, I always come back to this thought. No one in this world can keep a secret. Especially one that juicy. Now if you study the mortallity rate of refs, head coaches and players from Super bowl teams and there are strange mortality rates then there might be something to it. Because after a ref fixes a game, you pretty much have to kill the guy at some point because he will talk to someone and it will get out. That is one of the guarantee's of life, people cannot keep their mouths shut. 787227[/snapback] Good point. Probably the only argument against my usual tirade why the league is fixed. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Catholic Guilt Posted September 26, 2006 Author Share Posted September 26, 2006 While there is a mountain of calls and things to make you wonder, I always come back to this thought. No one in this world can keep a secret. Especially one that juicy. Now if you study the mortallity rate of refs, head coaches and players from Super bowl teams and there are strange mortality rates then there might be something to it. Because after a ref fixes a game, you pretty much have to kill the guy at some point because he will talk to someone and it will get out. That is one of the guarantee's of life, people cannot keep their mouths shut. 787227[/snapback] I can think of two, money and fear. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheMadCap Posted September 26, 2006 Share Posted September 26, 2006 straight up fixed? No friggin way but pushed in the direction the NFL wants it to go? Definitely! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pyrite Gal Posted September 26, 2006 Share Posted September 26, 2006 I used to wonder seriously whether the game was fixed, but then the wife of a buddy asked me a question which put a stop to this theory for me. She asked, "If it were fixed why isn't it more interesting?" I actually do find the NFL quite interesting, but believe me if I was gonna fix the game, I wouldcome up with a lot better scripts than some of the idiocy that happens. Occaisionally one gets a good SB for example, but year after year, the games primary interest is if you have a dog in the hunt and your team is in it, otherwise the primary attraction is really the commercials. Last year, the Bettis season was really only marginally interesting and it ended up with a game where the MVP could as easily been picked by throwing a dart at the winning team's rpster. The Brady story was an interesting story for the Pats in the 2001 season, but things got pretty old with their re-wins in the 03 and 04 seasons. If the game were fixed one would be producing scripts which featured unusual applications of little know rules like the tuck rule, some teams hanging around for years while other teams are prominent and the do an el foldo and one evn wrote in the refs blowing the coin toss call in a nationally televised game. Perhaps these mistakes were all part of the conspiracy but if so is this the best they can do in terms of storytelling. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
buckeyemike Posted September 26, 2006 Share Posted September 26, 2006 I can think of two, money and fear. 787273[/snapback] And you probably think that the moon landing was faked. Was 9/11 an inside job? Such conspiracy theories require waaaaaaaaaay too many people to be secret about things that people would brag about if they got drunk enough. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stuckincincy Posted September 26, 2006 Share Posted September 26, 2006 I used to wonder seriously whether the game was fixed, but then the wife of a buddy asked me a question which put a stop to this theory for me. She asked, "If it were fixed why isn't it more interesting?" 787446[/snapback] OTOH, crime - some of it organized - extorts, blackmails, runs drugs and prostitution, medicare fraud, controls some unions, deals in insurance fraud, gambling, numbers rackets and so forth. One has to question if criminals somehow have some sort of honor code that states "NFL football is Pure. Thou shall not violate it. Even if it increases the betting take". A gentle touch here and there, a bit of Omerta... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bill from NYC Posted September 26, 2006 Share Posted September 26, 2006 OTOH, crime - some of it organized - extorts, blackmails, runs drugs and prostitution, medicare fraud, controls some unions, deals in insurance fraud, gambling, numbers rackets and so forth. One has to question if criminals somehow have some sort of honor code that states "NFL football is Pure. Thou shall not violate it. Even if it increases the betting take". A gentle touch here and there, a bit of Omerta... 787462[/snapback] Organized crime as it was once known (the "Italian Mafia) is all but finished. Their bookies are getting pushed out of places such as Queens and the Bronx by Albanians. The Dominicans bank their own numbers in Washington Heights, and the government is the biggest numbers runner. Out of the ones left, close to half are probably informants. I like watching the Sopranos as much as the next guy, but those days are over. If any games are now fixed, it would be by a MUCH bigger entity than the "mob." Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Catholic Guilt Posted September 26, 2006 Author Share Posted September 26, 2006 And you probably think that the moon landing was faked. Was 9/11 an inside job? Such conspiracy theories require waaaaaaaaaay too many people to be secret about things that people would brag about if they got drunk enough. 787461[/snapback] Do you think Lee Harvey Oswald killed President Kennedy by himself? A lone nut? 9-11 I'm not sure what to think... Christof had an interested quote in the Truman Show. When asked how Truman lived in a fake bubble for over thirty years without questioning anything he said, "We accept the reality of the world with which we are presented." Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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