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Marv Levy was on WGR550 this morning. I'm sure they have the audio segment in their "audio vault."

 

He basically reaffirmed his support for Dick but also admitted that at the end of the day, you are judged by wins and losses and he believes this season is a critical one for Dick. He re-stated why they brought Dick in and after seeing him in action, Ralph and Marv agreed he was everything they thought he was and greater (as far as being a teacher, a leader, high character man, etc..).

 

As for Trent, he believes he will be an excellent quarterback but he needs a defense and some wide receivers.

 

Marv admitted he didn't watch every game, but caught the few he could on TV, attended a few, and watched the play-by-play on the internet for the games that weren't on TV. Apparently he doesn't have the NFL package on DirecTV.

 

Nothing new basically but I thought you'd all like to hear that MARV STILL BELIEVES.

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Marv Levy was on WGR550 this morning. I'm sure they have the audio segment in their "audio vault."

 

He basically reaffirmed his support for Dick but also admitted that at the end of the day, you are judged by wins and losses and he believes this season is a critical one for Dick. He re-stated why they brought Dick in and after seeing him in action, Ralph and Marv agreed he was everything they thought he was and greater (as far as being a teacher, a leader, high character man, etc..).

 

As for Trent, he believes he will be an excellent quarterback but he needs a defense and some wide receivers.

 

Marv admitted he didn't watch every game, but caught the few he could on TV, attended a few, and watched the play-by-play on the internet for the games that weren't on TV. Apparently he doesn't have the NFL package on DirecTV.

 

Nothing new basically but I thought you'd all like to hear that MARV STILL BELIEVES.

 

 

Wow, inspiring... even Marv has become a dispassionate (sometime) observer...

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One thing I'll say for Marv: he was guilted into taking the GM job after TD failed. I really think at that point Ralph had run out of options. And so he turned to a man who was part of the team's recent glory days, if 15+ years ago counts for recent.

 

Marv wasn't suited for the GM job, either in mind or in experience. And when it mattered, poor decisions were made all too frequently. He's a bright guy, but wasn't all that savvy when it came to crunch time.

 

Marv was not a successful GM. He tried to build consensus with inferior front office characters. He could not duplicate Polian because the guys behind the scenes aren't there anymore. I'm talking about Butler, AJ Smith, Dwight Adams, et al. In their sted were John Guy, Tom Modrak, and a certain HC who should be no more than a DB coach.

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One thing I'll say for Marv: he was guilted into taking the GM job after TD failed. I really think at that point Ralph had run out of options. And so he turned to a man who was part of the team's recent glory days, if 15+ years ago counts for recent.

 

Marv wasn't suited for the GM job, either in mind or in experience. And when it mattered, poor decisions were made all too frequently. He's a bright guy, but wasn't all that savvy when it came to crunch time.

 

Marv was not a successful GM. He tried to build consensus with inferior front office characters. He could not duplicate Polian because the guys behind the scenes aren't there anymore. I'm talking about Butler, AJ Smith, Dwight Adams, et al. In their sted were John Guy, Tom Modrak, and a certain HC who should be no more than a DB coach.

He might not have been the greatest GM, but he is the best we have had since the Polian/Butler regime, no question.

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One thing I'll say for Marv: he was guilted into taking the GM job after TD failed. I really think at that point Ralph had run out of options. And so he turned to a man who was part of the team's recent glory days, if 15+ years ago counts for recent.

 

Marv wasn't suited for the GM job, either in mind or in experience. And when it mattered, poor decisions were made all too frequently. He's a bright guy, but wasn't all that savvy when it came to crunch time.

 

Marv was not a successful GM. He tried to build consensus with inferior front office characters. He could not duplicate Polian because the guys behind the scenes aren't there anymore. I'm talking about Butler, AJ Smith, Dwight Adams, et al. In their sted were John Guy, Tom Modrak, and a certain HC who should be no more than a DB coach.

 

But he certainly isn't as bad as you make him out to be. Whitner looks question at his draft slot but he is a pretty good player who still is only 23. McCargo was a bust as were most of his FA signings. Still after the mess of TD, we almost had to build an entirely new team.

 

Marv focused on rebuilding the o-line and we have our best since the Super Bowl year. He traded an overrated, malcontent running back for 3 draft picks in what is one of hte better trade this franchise has ever had. One of those draft picks maybe a franchise QB (who Marv selected in the 3rd round). Another of those draft picks led to bringing Stroud in here. We are in great shape capwise. All in all, Marv's positives definitely outweigh his negatives.

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But he certainly isn't as bad as you make him out to be. Whitner looks question at his draft slot but he is a pretty good player who still is only 23. McCargo was a bust as were most of his FA signings. Still after the mess of TD, we almost had to build an entirely new team.

 

Marv focused on rebuilding the o-line and we have our best since the Super Bowl year. He traded an overrated, malcontent running back for 3 draft picks in what is one of hte better trade this franchise has ever had. One of those draft picks maybe a franchise QB (who Marv selected in the 3rd round). Another of those draft picks led to bringing Stroud in here. We are in great shape capwise. All in all, Marv's positives definitely outweigh his negatives.

 

I love Marv, it's probably why I am a football fan. But Marv was just a little more than a figurehead when he was brought in as GM. He was just steering and letting people under his supervision do their jobs and build consensus. Unfortunately those people haven't done very good jobs.

 

Marv's error was presuming that the rest of the personnel in the organization were the same kind of people he had when he was with the Bills the first time around. Thereby allowing him to delegate and maintain a hands off approach. Unfortunately, that was not the case.

 

C

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But he certainly isn't as bad as you make him out to be. Whitner looks question at his draft slot but he is a pretty good player who still is only 23. McCargo was a bust as were most of his FA signings. Still after the mess of TD, we almost had to build an entirely new team.

 

Marv focused on rebuilding the o-line and we have our best since the Super Bowl year. He traded an overrated, malcontent running back for 3 draft picks in what is one of hte better trade this franchise has ever had. One of those draft picks maybe a franchise QB (who Marv selected in the 3rd round). Another of those draft picks led to bringing Stroud in here. We are in great shape capwise. All in all, Marv's positives definitely outweigh his negatives.

 

In your warped view of the world, yes.

 

In reality, Marv screwed up pretty badly. Rebuilding the o-line as the best since our Super Bowl year? So you're essentially saying that the line is better than awful -- hardly high praise. Anyone can go out and spend $100M to bring in lineman. That doesn't take skill, nor does it take foresight. The question is how did Marv spend those dollars: spending $100M on Dockery and Walker was just plain stupid.

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Marv Levy was on WGR550 this morning. I'm sure they have the audio segment in their "audio vault."

 

He basically reaffirmed his support for Dick but also admitted that at the end of the day, you are judged by wins and losses and he believes this season is a critical one for Dick. He re-stated why they brought Dick in and after seeing him in action, Ralph and Marv agreed he was everything they thought he was and greater (as far as being a teacher, a leader, high character man, etc..).

 

As for Trent, he believes he will be an excellent quarterback but he needs a defense and some wide receivers.

 

Marv admitted he didn't watch every game, but caught the few he could on TV, attended a few, and watched the play-by-play on the internet for the games that weren't on TV. Apparently he doesn't have the NFL package on DirecTV.

 

Nothing new basically but I thought you'd all like to hear that MARV STILL BELIEVES.

Let's assume for a minute, that Marv now believes that hiring Jauron turned out to be a flop (it has). Since Jauron is under contract for next season and since Marv hired him, of course Marv is going to put a positive spin on things.

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I love Marv, it's probably why I am a football fan. But Marv was just a little more than a figurehead when he was brought in as GM. He was just steering and letting people under his supervision do their jobs and build consensus. Unfortunately those people haven't done very good jobs.

 

Marv's error was presuming that the rest of the personnel in the organization were the same kind of people he had when he was with the Bills the first time around. Thereby allowing him to delegate and maintain a hands off approach. Unfortunately, that was not the case.

 

C

 

I really don't think some people realize how thin the margin of error is in a NFL front office. No one should demand perfection, but you've got to make the right personnel move in a smaller market more frequently than Marv did.

 

Whiffing on McCargo and signing Tripplett, Royal, Fowler, P. Price, Dockery, and Walker to excessive contracts are too many failures over the course of two seasons. And ultimately, hiring DJ was the biggest failure.

 

You are spot-on about Marv's principle error being that he trusted the front office to act like Polian's version did years ago. Unfortunately, when you have a thin margin due to financial restrictions and hire a joke of a HC, it's going to be hard to succeed.

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I really don't think some people realize how thin the margin of error is in a NFL front office. No one should demand perfection, but you've got to make the right personnel move in a smaller market more frequently than Marv did.

 

Whiffing on McCargo and signing Tripplett, Royal, Fowler, P. Price, Dockery, and Walker to excessive contracts are too many failures over the course of two seasons. And ultimately, hiring DJ was the biggest failure.

 

You are spot-on about Marv's principle error being that he trusted the front office to act like Polian's version did years ago. Unfortunately, when you have a thin margin due to financial restrictions and hire a joke of a HC, it's going to be hard to succeed.

 

Amen.

 

I'm not sure if hiring DJ at the time was the wrong move. For a young team learning how to win and a franchise needing stability the Bills needed someone to quiet the waters, I think Jauron was fine as the father figure type. Calm demeanor, intense but pleasant.

 

But teams evolve, and DJ hasn't adapted. Keeping him now is absolutely the wrong move. Peyton Manning continuously gives Jim Mora Sr. credit for developing him into the player he is today. But Dungy was the guy to take the franchise to the next level.

 

Jauron short of a miracle will be fired at the end or before next season. The Bills record will be worse than this season. The other teams in our div. have vastly improved - with the exception of maybe NE. But they were great to start with.

 

C

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Amen.

 

I'm not sure if hiring DJ at the time was the wrong move. For a young team learning how to win and a franchise needing stability the Bills needed someone to quiet the waters, I think Jauron was fine as the father figure type. Calm demeanor, intense but pleasant.

 

But teams evolve, and DJ hasn't adapted. Keeping him now is absolutely the wrong move. Peyton Manning continuously gives Jim Mora Sr. credit for developing him into the player he is today. But Dungy was the guy to take the franchise to the next level.

 

Jauron short of a miracle will be fired at the end or before next season. The Bills record will be worse than this season. The other teams in our div. have vastly improved - with the exception of maybe NE. But they were great to start with.

 

C

 

I continue to believe next season will make the final year of TD seem tame. Going 7-9 three straight seasons, retaining the HC, watching the Cards in the SB, and having a game in Toronto have created an unfriendly atmosphere for Bills fans. I hope it doesn't deteriorate into bedlam, but the team is in poor shape, and arguably at the same point as when Marv inherited TD's mess.

 

Maybe DJ was the coach the Bills needed in 06, but he's not the guy to get them into the playoffs. Buffalo needs a tactician, not necessarily a loud person, but someone with quiet confidence who can push when he has to. DJ's stoic demeanor isn't working with this team anymore. Going 2-8 down the stretch demonstrates this.

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I really don't think some people realize how thin the margin of error is in a NFL front office. No one should demand perfection, but you've got to make the right personnel move in a smaller market more frequently than Marv did.

 

Whiffing on McCargo and signing Tripplett, Royal, Fowler, P. Price, Dockery, and Walker to excessive contracts are too many failures over the course of two seasons. And ultimately, hiring DJ was the biggest failure.

 

You are spot-on about Marv's principle error being that he trusted the front office to act like Polian's version did years ago. Unfortunately, when you have a thin margin due to financial restrictions and hire a joke of a HC, it's going to be hard to succeed.

Yeah if you look carefully at Marv's GM record...it is about a D. Didn't Marv bring in Billy Joe Gunrack??

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One thing I'll say for Marv: he was guilted into taking the GM job after TD failed. I really think at that point Ralph had run out of options. And so he turned to a man who was part of the team's recent glory days, if 15+ years ago counts for recent.

 

Marv wasn't suited for the GM job, either in mind or in experience. And when it mattered, poor decisions were made all too frequently. He's a bright guy, but wasn't all that savvy when it came to crunch time.

 

Marv was not a successful GM. He tried to build consensus with inferior front office characters. He could not duplicate Polian because the guys behind the scenes aren't there anymore. I'm talking about Butler, AJ Smith, Dwight Adams, et al. In their sted were John Guy, Tom Modrak, and a certain HC who should be no more than a DB coach.

 

I wouldn't get too sentimental over Marv.

 

He had ulterior motives in taking the GM job

 

The only reason Marv agreed to act as GM was because he thought he could finesse his way back into coaching which is what he has been trying to do since he got run out of Buffalo.

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I really don't think some people realize how thin the margin of error is in a NFL front office. No one should demand perfection, but you've got to make the right personnel move in a smaller market more frequently than Marv did.

 

Whiffing on McCargo and signing Tripplett, Royal, Fowler, P. Price, Dockery, and Walker to excessive contracts are too many failures over the course of two seasons. And ultimately, hiring DJ was the biggest failure.

 

You are spot-on about Marv's principle error being that he trusted the front office to act like Polian's version did years ago. Unfortunately, when you have a thin margin due to financial restrictions and hire a joke of a HC, it's going to be hard to succeed.

 

 

Not sure i agree the margin of error is any thinner in Buffalo than it is elsewhere in the NFL. What justifys this? The Bills have been profiatable, not spectacularly so, but profitable. I t is their choice not to spend more on the front office or coaching.

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I wouldn't get too sentimental over Marv.

 

He had ulterior motives in taking the GM job

 

The only reason Marv agreed to act as GM was because he thought he could finesse his way back into coaching which is what he has been trying to do since he got run out of Buffalo.

 

I'll get destroyed for saying it, but I don't think Levy was a great coach. He was a good coach, and obviously wanted back in three years ago. During his career, he had a fine OC in Marchibroda for several years, and had Polian acquiring players for him through 92-93. Marv just needed to manage the personalities, but from a talent perspective, he had a whole lot.

 

On his blog, Tim Graham made a point that Belichick's 3 SB winning teams will probably have only one HOFer (Brady) while Buffalo's four non-winners will have at least 3 when Bruce Smith is elected. Sure, it's different eras in comparing before and after the cap, but you have a hard time winning SB's without HOF talent.

 

Marv is in the HOF, but if that's the case, shouldn't Dan Reeves and Bud Grant be in as welll. Both had lots of talent, made 4 SB's, and lost them all.

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