murra Posted December 2, 2008 Author Posted December 2, 2008 Really, you're blaming a 25 year old, 2nd year QB? That is jsut stupid. Maybe if we don't have Edwards weren't 2-10 instead of 6-6. As frustrating as it is, this is still a very young team that started off extremely well and raise expectations beyond what they should have been. Yes I'm blaming Trent Edwards for us going from 5-1 to 6-6. I proved why. You, on the other hand are ignoring that. I didn't say I want him gone, I just said he was a significant factor in why we began to suck. You justified it by his age. That's unacceptable. This team is not all 25. We're young, yes...but you can only rebuild for so long, after a 5-1 start this is your year...the result is unacceptable. Stop pretending he's a savior and realize that we blew a big chance.
Ed_Formerly_of_Roch Posted December 2, 2008 Posted December 2, 2008 Clearly in the NE and Cleve game TE looked real bad. Howwever I really can't blame him for the Jet's and Miami loss as he was the teams entire offense. There was no running game at all. He did move the team up and down the field, was able to get first downs, just no TD's. But with no running game at all hard to blame a 2nd year QB who did have what 280 yards passing.
Billsinfla Posted December 2, 2008 Posted December 2, 2008 I don't think there is a specific turning point as much as the current situation was inevitable. Teams saw that we can't play the 3-4 planned accordingly and drew up a good game plan. The Bills are not a good team. It's funny to watch people on this board carry on with the whole J.P versus T.E. debate. Neither guy is the caliber needed at starting qb to win in this league. We have NO star players.......a bunch of hometown heroes that's all.
bananathumb Posted December 2, 2008 Posted December 2, 2008 I had the feeling as soon as Edwards wasthrow to the carpet in Arizona that this would be more than a one-game injury. He has never been the same since and as we knowthe team is useless without him (as he was). I felt at the time that he would never be the same, too smart to miss this point: I could be really hurt out there and I don't need it! That was it: oe play, a reason undone. Shows you how weak a team we really have.
Captain Hindsight Posted December 2, 2008 Posted December 2, 2008 Conservative play calling, huh? So you don't think Schonert EVER sends a WR on a deep route that goes ignored by Trent? If you belive this, you're flat out wrong. Trent will ONLY throw down field if the WR is WIDE open. That's called conservative QUARTERBACKING. Do you think that passing inside the 5 yard line is conservative? Because half the people who agree with you about Jauron being a crappy coach will cite the plays called close to the goal line as his Achilles heel. Lynch ran a whopping 16 times yesterday. Where's the conservatism in that?
bizell Posted December 2, 2008 Posted December 2, 2008 I had the feeling as soon as Edwards wasthrow to the carpet in Arizona that this would be more than a one-game injury. He has never been the same since and as we knowthe team is useless without him (as he was). I felt at the time that he would never be the same, too smart to miss this point: I could be really hurt out there and I don't need it! That was it: oe play, a reason undone. Shows you how weak a team we really have. 4 years from now, if trent edwards is still in the nfl, the excuse for whenever he has a bad game is still going to be 'that concussion he suffered in arizona!'
The Big Cat Posted December 2, 2008 Posted December 2, 2008 4 years from now, if trent edwards is still in the nfl, the excuse for whenever he has a bad game is still going to be 'that concussion he suffered in arizona!' Prove it.
murra Posted December 2, 2008 Author Posted December 2, 2008 I had the feeling as soon as Edwards wasthrow to the carpet in Arizona that this would be more than a one-game injury. He has never been the same since and as we knowthe team is useless without him (as he was). I felt at the time that he would never be the same, too smart to miss this point: I could be really hurt out there and I don't need it! That was it: oe play, a reason undone. Shows you how weak a team we really have. That is such a pathetic argument. He came back after the bye week and won his first game handily. We have doctors, all who unanimously cleared him to play, and Trent himself says he feels fine. You're making excuses for someone who does not make the excuse himself. It's such a pathetic argument.
meazza Posted December 2, 2008 Posted December 2, 2008 Beginning at 4-0 the Buffalo Bills appeared to the media as a strong team. Most people who now speak out against us believe it was a result of our easy schedule. While we made comebacks in decent fashion, it was overlooked by our coaching staff's commitment to playing not to loose. The cool thing about playing not to lose is that when you have a lead, you typically hold on to it and win. The bad thing is that it pretty much voids comeback opportunities. Interestingly enough, we were able to win 3 of the 4 games with 4th quarter comebacks. After the Arizona debacle I personally believed it a result of a poor defensive gameplan and playing a good team on the road. Regardless, at this point in the season, I (along with many fans) maintained a fairly optomistic outlook for the rest of the year. Where did it go wrong? What was this "turning point" (if there is only one)? I think it would be cool if we could all decide together where the team fell apart. Believe it or not, I think it was one pass. Having just beaten San Diego to take that 5-1 record, then falling to Miami, the Bills were rebounding nicely in the beginning of the Jets game. We knew that we could afford to drop one of the three divisional games and still be in great shape. We were marching, in the red zone attempting to take a bigger lead. The bills were leading 7-6. A touchdown, and the first quarter ends 14-6, a field goal, and we're still up 10-6. Instead, Trent catapults a horrendous dud, that goes 97 yards the other way, and we have to play catchup at home again (and this time it isn't Oakland). If we score on that drive, the game is pretty much in our hands. Trent finished with his highest passing yardage game of the season, but that pass began what can only be characterized as a complete meltdown of choke-artist proportions. Sophomore slump or no sophomore slump, he choked in the MNF game last year, choked in our biggest divisional game, and yet again BIG TIME in this year's MNF. The guy is young and maturing, but having a choke-artist reputation is starting to worry me much more than the glove wearing or "phantom" post-concussion illness. You know I drove 7 hours to go and 9 hours to comeback (massive traffic on the I90) to watch this game. As I listened to WGR and all the other stations and dumbass callers complaining about the coaching to the wind to God knows what, I realized that this is simply just a bad team. Think of it this way, we put ourselves in a nice situation at 4-0 building a nice cushion. At 4-0, we simply needed to go .500 the rest of the way and maybe .600 against our own division. If we can't even pull off that, the team does not deserve to be no where near a playoff contention. I don't know exactly what the problem is. Coaching? Surely can't always be this. Ownership? Ralph is no Al Davis QB? It can't always be the QB Defense? Probably the most consistent unit since the last playoff team. OL? DL? Seems like they are playing half decent... decent enough to beat the Browns and 49ers... Everytime we fix the problem another one arises just like an old car that should be sent to the scrap yard.
Hossage Posted December 2, 2008 Posted December 2, 2008 For me, the biggest factor has been lack on intensity all year long. Our offensive players look sullen and bored. Only jackson shows consistent effort and positive body english. Lynch is a little streaky, but he has tried hard too. I blame not one of our players. Our coaches and management bear the entirety of the responsibility. If they cannot motivate our players then they have failed. Peters holding out was a disaster. We should have the type of management were peters would understand that behavior will not be rewarded. Crowells actions were deplorable. The failure of the bills to motivate or eliminate players alone cost us our season, before we even begin to discuss personnel and scheme. This would not have been tolerated in Pittsburgh.
The Big Cat Posted December 2, 2008 Posted December 2, 2008 For me, the biggest factor has been lack on intensity all year long. Our offensive players look sullen and bored. Only jackson shows consistent effort and positive body english. Lynch is a little streaky, but he has tried hard too. I blame not one of our players. Our coaches and management bear the entirety of the responsibility. If they cannot motivate our players then they have failed. Peters holding out was a disaster. We should have the type of management were peters would understand that behavior will not be rewarded. Crowells actions were deplorable. The failure of the bills to motivate or eliminate players alone cost us our season, before we even begin to discuss personnel and scheme. They're getting paid millions of dollars to play a game, and they can't get motivated to play a guaranteed 16 times in 52 weeks? Get real, man.
1billsfan Posted December 2, 2008 Posted December 2, 2008 I'll always believe that the turning point was when the Bills won the coin toss on that nice and sunny day in Miami and Jauron deferred to the second half. The Dolphins quickly scored 7 points on our defense and the Bills never looked like that same 5-1 team from that moment on. It was a classic Jauron "play not to lose" conservative coaching decision, not believing in his offense, not caring to get points on the scoreboard and take it to the opponent in their first divisional game. He's a loser because he makes loser coaching decisions. It's no surprise this guy has a long history of being the head coach of losing teams.
Ed_Formerly_of_Roch Posted December 3, 2008 Posted December 3, 2008 I certainly agree the holdout hurt big time, but what should the Bill's have done different, cut Peter's to prove a point? I really can't blame the Bill's management on either of these as I think they took a rather agressive stand. The only thing you possibly could argue in the Peters case, maybe some free spending team would have given him a new contract last spring so he never would have held out. But the Bill's I think did the right thing in both situations. Peters holding out was a disaster. We should have the type of management were peters would understand that behavior will not be rewarded. Crowells actions were deplorable. The failure of the bills to motivate or eliminate players alone cost us our season, before we even begin to discuss personnel and scheme. This would not have been tolerated in Pittsburgh.
Ned Flanders Posted December 3, 2008 Posted December 3, 2008 The turning point was Lynch's dance in the endzone after his TD put the Bills up 16-7 in Miami, in the 3rd qtr. The VERY NEXT PLAY the Fish gain a gazzillion yards on a pass to Ginn Jr. (I think) and the Fish go on to beat the Bills by nine points. It was that stupid end zone dance that started the whole slide....
PromoTheRobot Posted December 3, 2008 Posted December 3, 2008 CONCUSSION! That's the tipping point. Compare the Bills pre- and post-Edwards concussion. Night and day. PTR
Beerball Posted December 3, 2008 Posted December 3, 2008 Where did it go wrong? What was this "turning point" (if there is only one)? I think it would be cool if we could all decide together where the team fell apart. IMO, there wasn't one. The team was able to get wins against a couple teams who were 'supposed' to be good but aren't and a couple of teams that were expected to be bad and are. Remember the bitching when someone from the national media brought up our opponents? We beat teams who were bad, there was no turning point. Until there is a complete overhaul at OBD we can expect more of the same.
bizell Posted December 3, 2008 Posted December 3, 2008 CONCUSSION! That's the tipping point. Compare the Bills pre- and post-Edwards concussion. Night and day. PTR If by "concussion" you mean "not playing crap teams anymore", then i agree with you.
Cal Bill's Fan Posted December 3, 2008 Posted December 3, 2008 This team has scraped it's way up to..... mediocre. an 8-8 record and the middle of the power rankings is expected. We would need to do some clever things in the front office to get better. Else expect mid round draft picks - and maybe a 10-6 and miss the playoffs again as the best we'll see in the future. Our FO and coaches are the cheap paid, middling performers, so we aint gonna see no miracle blockbuster trades or steals in the draft. You think Jauron can out think Bellicheck? You think Russ can out think Parcells? Just aint gonnna happen. You think Ralph is gonna pay even in the same league as Jones? yeah right. But yet somehow Jim Kelly ended up here. So I guess it could happen again.
murra Posted December 3, 2008 Author Posted December 3, 2008 This team has scraped it's way up to..... mediocre. an 8-8 record and the middle of the power rankings is expected. We would need to do some clever things in the front office to get better. Else expect mid round draft picks - and maybe a 10-6 and miss the playoffs again as the best we'll see in the future. Our FO and coaches are the cheap paid, middling performers, so we aint gonna see no miracle blockbuster trades or steals in the draft. You think Jauron can out think Bellicheck? You think Russ can out think Parcells? Just aint gonnna happen. You think Ralph is gonna pay even in the same league as Jones? yeah right. But yet somehow Jim Kelly ended up here. So I guess it could happen again. That's such an overly pessimistic view on our franchise. You're giving all other teams way too much credit.
Erik Posted December 3, 2008 Posted December 3, 2008 The turning point was Lynch's dance in the endzone after his TD put the Bills up 16-7 in Miami, in the 3rd qtr. The VERY NEXT PLAY the Fish gain a gazzillion yards on a pass to Ginn Jr. (I think) and the Fish go on to beat the Bills by nine points. It was that stupid end zone dance that started the whole slide.... Yeah...an end zone dance started the slide I doubt Lynch's end zone dance had anything to do with Royal fumbling the ball away on a potential scoring drive which could have set up yet another comeback. Lynch's end zone dance doesn't explain the fact that despite the three division losses in a row we should be 8-4 and tied for first place. I love how some of you self righteous clowns can't get over what Marshawn did in the offseason. Name one guy on this roster who has played harder than he has this year.
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