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Mind Character

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Everything posted by Mind Character

  1. IMO, you have to separate nostalgia. That 2005 Texas team was iconic the way that VY went on his run and the defense had an impactful secondary on their way to beating the USC team everyone thought was unbeatable. Much like OSU beating the Miami juggernaut people thought were unbeatable. 2005 Texas: Offensive Impact Players: QB: Vince Young, RB: Jamaal Charles (Freshman), Ramonce Taylor, Henry Melton, Selvin Young WR: Billy Pittman; Limas Sweed; TE: David Thomas Defensive Impact Players: DE: Brian Robison, , Tim Crowder; DT: Frank Okam; Rodrique Wright CBs: Aaron Ross; Tarrell Brown, (Marcus Griffin) FS/SS: Michael Huff; Cedric Griffin, Marcus Griffin, VS 2016 Clemson: Offensive Impact Players: QB: Deshaun Watson RB: Wayne Gallman WR: Mike Williams; Deon Cain, Artavis Scott, Ray Ray McCloud, Hunter Renfrow TE: Jordan Leggett Defensive Impact Players: DT: Dexter Lawrence, Carlos Watkins; Albert Huggins DE: Christian Wilkins; Clelin Ferrell; Austin Bryant; LB: Dorian O'Daniel; Ben Boulware; Kendall Joseph CB: Cordrea Tankersley; Ryan Carter FS/SS: Jadar Johnson; Van Smith
  2. The wild thing is... Justin Jefferson, WR LSU might not even be the 9th best WR in this year's class in the minds of reasonable scouts. The WR class is just that good. The smartest teams will take two WRs that are more certain to be hits rather than opt for talents at other positions who have a lesser chance of being succesful/hits. Wide-Receivers 2020: This is the best Wide-Receiver class in the draft the scouting world has ever seen. Period. And I don't mean the best class in the last 5 years; I actually mean likely the best WR class to every come into the draft in terms of depth of quality. There are at least 10 WRs that have pro-bowl upside and high immediate impact WR1/WR2 ability. They will all go round 1 to mid to late round 2. There are 10 or so others that will get pushed down into round 3 and 4 that in other years would've easily gone round 2. Pro-bowl Upside, High Quality Immediate Starters: 1.) CeeDee Lamb, WR Oklahoma, 2.) Jerry Jeudy, WR Alabama, 3.) Michael Pittman Jr., WR USC, 4.) DeVonta Smith, WR Alabama, 5.) Henry Ruggs, WR Alabama, 6.) Jalen Reagor, WR TCU, 7.) Justin Jefferson, WR LSU, 8.) Bryan Edwards, WR South Carolina , 9.) Tee Higgins, WR Clemson, 10.) Denzel Mims, WR Baylor, 11.) Laviska Shenault Jr., WR Colorado, 12.) Jauan Jennings, WR Tennessee, High Quality Developmental Starters: 13.) Donovan Peoples-Jones, WR Michigan, 14.) KJ Hamer, WR Penn State, 15.) Quintez Cephus, WR Wisonsin, 16.) Joe Reed, WR Virginia, 17.) Kendrick Rogers, WR TAMU, 18.) Gabriel Davis, WR UCF, 19.) Isaiah Wright, WR Temple, 20.) Tylan Wallace, WR Oklahoma State, 21.) Lynn Bowden Jr., WR Kentucky, Quality Developmental Starters: 22.) Brandon Aiyuk, WR Arizona State, 23.) Antonio Gibson, WR Memphis, 24.) Tyler Johnson, WR Minnesota 25.) Collin Johnson, WR Texas, 26.) John Hightower, WR Boise State 27.) James Proche, WR SMU, 28.) Sage Surratt, WR Wake Forest, 29.) Tyler Vaughns, WR USC, 30.) Trishton Jackson, WR Syracuse
  3. Funny b/c I disagree with both of you. 2016 Clemson team that went on to win it all was an insane team talent-wise and better than this year's clemson team, the 2005 Texas team, and that 2008 USC team.
  4. Mekhi Becton as a top 20 OT is a wild evaluation. I think it's highly probable that Epenesa, Thomas, Wirfs, and Wills will be all be gone by pick 15. In fact, I'd bet on it. Becton is a massive, long-armed, and powerful talent with slow and often uncoordinated feet. He also lacks awareness, quality technique, and linear/change of direction lateral agility/quickness. When/If Epenesa, Thomas, Wirfs, and Wills are of the Board, there are in my opinion 6-8 better tackles before considering Mekhi Becton as the selection. 1.) Andrew Thomas, LT Georgia 2.) Jedrick Wills Jr., OT Alabama, 3.) (Far Better at Guard) Tristan Wirfs, OG-Phenom/OT, Iowa, 4.) (Better at Guard) Netane Muti, OG/LT-Swing Fresno State 5.) Isaiah Wilson, RT Georgia 6.) Austin Jackson, LT USC, 7.) Prince Tega Wanogho, LT Auburn; 8.) Alex Leatherwood, LT Alabama, 9.) Josh Jones, RT Houston, 10.) Terrance Steele, RT Texas Tech // 10.) Yasir Durant, LT/OC Missouri // 10.) Mekhi Becton, OT Louisville
  5. This is absolutely freakin nuts if it means Dorsey is on the outs. If elevated to President of Football Operations or something, then okay fine. Eliot Wolf is literally the last person within the organization that we'd ever want to run a coaching search. He's a scout much like Dorsey in that's where their skillset lies leaving them to struggle with other aspects of the GM role. The difference is Wolf is Dorsey with far less leadership and exponentially less interpersonal skills and 25 years less worth of knowledge and relationships. By most accounts of those that have interviewed Wolf, he is an unbelievabl brilliant, talented scout robot who struggles to develop relationships with players and co-workers and has serious concerns regarding his ability to lead a highly effective scouting department. You should be very very afraid of losing Dorsey instead of losing Wolf. Dorsey has a wide variety of issues, namely his blindspot for unreliable, oft-suspended football players and issues scouting OLineman. However, you are out of your mind if you think Eliot Wolf is a better scout or GM than Dorsey. The same could be said about people that think John Dorsey should be fired. He's the most competent GM this franchise has ever had. His scouting eye is in the near-elite in the league. He knows how to run an effective scouting and talent acquisition operation. Elliot Wolf interestingly enough was the main thrust behind the Austin Corbett pick and thought he could play Left Tackle as other regional scouts on staff have even publicly spoken about how Corbett was "Elliot's favorite" (they meant it as a positive about Austin and Eliot) saying such things freely shortly after the draft. Dorsey's problem is that he agreed with that assessment. Alonzo HighSmith was the primary force behind the Nick Chubb pick. A lot of the scouts in the room had Saquon Barkley and Rashaad Penny above Nick Chubb; however, Zo had Nick Chubb as the best RB in the draft even above Barkley. Letting go or Firing John Dorsey would go down as one of the worst decisions this franchise has made in 12 years. There's a lot that I don't like or disagree with when it comes to John Dorsey but such a move would be utter insanity and replacing him with Eliot Wolf would be nonsense. Wolf is a talented scout, but he does not have the leadership, interpersonal/relational skills, leadership skills, and/or organizational skills to be a leading GM currently. His candidacy in GreenBay revealed a lot of interesting insights that have made their way to the scouting community about Wolf. He has a bright future as a GM and Executive scout in this league because of his positive attributes, but he has a long way to go before he's close to the level that Dorsey or other high-level GMs operate as second-nature. If the Haslam's let go of Dorsey in order to elevate Eliot Wolf, the fans should go ape sh*t.
  6. Indeed, that 2 minute read was a mountain to climb. I miss the good old days back when you would quickly scroll past my trash, long posts in disgust... ... we were younger then ...
  7. We need to redo everything around Baker, challenge him, make him uncomfortable, make him compete, and surround him with elite workers and elite QB developers. Lost in the shuffle is the manner in which Tyrod Taylor pushed Baker all last season. From the outset, Tyrod's professionalism and relentless work ethic won the day as his 5am routine forced Baker to elevate his daily preparation in order to compete with Tyrod. Baker didn't like when Hue pointed out that everything was a competition with Tyrod and that Baker needed to get a preparation routine that challenged Tyrod. Even when Baker got the starting nod, he knew that Tyrod was challenging him in the meeting rooms and that he had to maintain a high level of preparation. This organization in my mind made the terrible mistake of making everything around Baker buddy buddy and not truly challenging him with any competition or high-level QBs in the room that had elite routines. Chase Daniels makes tons of money as a backup because of his time with Drew Brees has led to an Elite routine and approach that helps both develop, challegne, and support the starting QB on the team. Drew Stanton isn't that. Brother of Baker's good friend, Garrett Gilbert isn't that either. Ryan Lindley is at the beginning of his NFL career and is more motivated to keep his job than to push Baker into uncomfortable situations. Lindley, Stanton, and Gilbert all had horrendously lazy footwork as players. None of them were known for any elite routine and drilling. None of them were accurate QBs. None of them had good eye discipline or were able to process defensive pre and post snap efficiently. A lot of times coaches are better than what they were as players and you can't judge a coach on their ability as a player. In Lindley's case, his public comments and Baker regressions all point to the fact that he doesn't have it as a high-level QB coach. We need to cut both Stanton and Gilbert. Baker won't like either of the moves. We need to get rid of Ryan Lindley. We need to pay big $ for an elite working habits QB that can challenge Baker's work habits and leadership while having the personality that won't threaten Baker or lead to confrontation. I think that QB is Marcus Mariota. We have to find a new QB coach. Hopefully, we can get a Joe Lombardi, Mike Kafka, Greg Knapp, Rich Scangarello, or Jim Caldwell. The Third QB in the room with Baker and Mariota would then be a more grizzled veteran to take on more deep mentorship like a Matt Moore-type. Replacing Freddie with a Head Coach that seeks to challenge Baker more and give him more expert knowledge on all things being a pro. QB Room: Baker Mayfield, Marcus Mariota, Matt Moore // QB Coach & OC: Joe Lombardi, Mike Kafka, or Greg Knapp. Those would be better environments for Baker than the one we have now imo.
  8. It's not about Baker needing a "throwing coach." Categorizing what the elite QB trainers do as just a "throwing coach" is complete miscategorization. It's about rigorously conditioning the mind, body, and spirit of the athlete to accelerate their development. There are many agencies that do it differently than 3DQB with some QBs believing that other QB performance agencies are even better but all have a depth of knowledge on advanced drill sets, biomechanics analysis and training, mental and psychological development, sleep and diet integration, and tieing eyes to defensive understanding. Tiger Woods has enough knowledge and expertise to be an elite Swinging Coach, but he has a swinging coach. Why doesn't he just fix his swinging problems on his own? In truth, he does as the swinging coach helps the golfer lead their own problem-solving of their issues on their own while also providing expert analysis, motivation, and solutions for sustaining and changing the swing when they are around. This is what Drew Brees and Tom Brady said about their numerous off-season's at 3DQB in his book: "He (House) didn't just deal with the physical; he worked on the whole person - the mental and emotional components as well. He tackled everything from sleep patterns and diet to attitude and awareness. I had the will, I had the desire, and I wasn't afraid of hard work. I just needed method - and someone to help me map it out. I sat down with Tom, and he understood immediately what I wanted to do. I went in with good footwork; I came out with exceptional, repeatable footwork. My drop mechanics and arm angles became more proficient. You are only as strong as your weakest link. Pretty amazing that the guy could identify a lot of my problems just by looking at my posture. The team put me through drills to expand my responsiveness to defensive manipulations of a QBs mindset. As I headed to training camp for that season, I wasn't going to show up as the same player. I was coming back stronger and better than ever."-- Drew Brees Tom Brady: "Over the years, I was a little inefficient and I learned how to get away with it. I've been working with Tom House on what's called ground-force production... Kinetic sequencing, getting the power from the ground, which translates from the ground to your legs, to your hips, to the shoulder, and all the energy is going toward the target. I've always had confidence throwing the football, but you have to stay on top of it. That's going to be a never-ending quest for me. But right now, I am more confident than ever."--Tom Brady ----- You can cherry pick Kessler but know this Cody Kessler lost 10pounds of fat and put on 8 pounds of muscle. He was in the best shape of his life. Mentally and mechanically he was the best QB he had been. He had a new 2nd round rookie on his heels with more arm talent and an organization highly motivated to play that QB. Cody never got a chance to start and by all reports succumbed to the pressure of the QB competition. Tebow's mechanics got light-years better and he went 7-4 with a playoff birth totaling 12 TDs; 6 INTs his second year in the league. He was basically black-balled from the league due to the media circus around him and after some injury at the Jets he was never given another shot in the league. Bortles was a disaster mechanically and decision-making wise before he went to see them. In his own words, he only went out there for a week not enough time for anything to likely take hold given how much of mess Bortles was. The point is Baker overall doesn't have the proper growth mindset to at this point in his career rebuking ways of improvement that have served many great QBs well. As human beings, improving ourselves can often be impossible as we are restrained by our own blindspots and working by oneself to improve can often lead to self-motivation issues. The Elite QB performance trainers layout a detailed plan of accelerated growth, train the mind-body, and instill a new mindset that will aid development even after leaving them.
  9. Who's ready for the "I Told You So, Baker's Better without Him." DERP DERPS when OBJ sits out and the Offense has success with Freddie bringing his Sunday's best in his and the coaching Staffs Superbowl and Baker's "I'm still that guy game." Hopefully, OBJ, Jarvis, and others sit out as well so that we can cleanse ourselves of he who doesn't get us. They know what's up.
  10. I can't believe we're giving up Njoku at 23 years old knowing how insanely raw he was coming out of college, as well as how difficult the Tight End position is in terms of development. Analytics suggest that Tight End is the top or top 2 depending on how you look at it hardest developmental position to achieve significant quality impact. The accountability structure of this team has been completely off. If Dorsey likes you and you make mistakes, then Freddie likes you and you get a pass and don't get benched (Antonio Callaway; Chris Hubbard). If Dorsey doesn't like you as a player, then Freddie doesn't and will bench you for mistakes (Greg Robinson; David Njoku). People bring up how Njoku looked in practice and the drop/fumble/interception that wasn't and was actually a catch, but all season other players have been far worse. I know everyone likes to worship at the altar of Stephen Carlson because of a handful of plays, but I've watched every snap of his and RSJ and you can't tell me that Njoku is worse even if hobbled some. Njoku had surgery and battled back early to contribute to the team and Dorsey/Freddie had already moved on. Like Ogbah, we'll be lucky if we get even a 6th for him when we inevitably trade him for peanuts this off-season. I personally haven't studied this draft eligible TEs yet, but I asked someone I trust who has where Njoku would fall amongst the class right now. He said, at 23 years old compared to the TEs coming out in the draft this year, Njoku is arguably a top 3 prospect even considering his issues/mistakes. That bag of crushed up doritos dorsey is going to get in return is going to delight so many browns fans who have become addicted to trashing young players after 2 years if they aren't immediate superstars. To me, I saw enough development last year that would suggest that Njoku would likely always have low-points in his career and mistakes but his high points would grow more consistent and truly be a high quality contributor towards winning. What a shame. Dorsey has a habit of holding on to players he shouldn't too long while flushing one's he should give more chances too soon.
  11. I don't know. The only person I've heard currently associated with McDaniels' next staff is Ben McDaniels - Michigan's QB Coach and Bret Bielema - Patriots DLine Coach. Outside of that I personally have no clue nor do I know anyone who has insights on that one. Heading to the Colts, McDaniels' confirmed staff included guys like Matt Eberflus, Dave DeGuglielmo, Mike Phair, and Jerry Schuplinski with only Schuplinski and DeGuglielmoDo having readily apparent ties to Josh. After backing out of the Colts HC position last minute and leaving 3 coaches stranded, it's hard to know who is and isn't willing to commit to working with McDaniels. Might some Dolphins coaches leave Brian Flores to join McDaniels in order to reset their coaching job security clocks? Out of the Patriots limited staff, who's still on-board? Who are the Eberflus and Phair type guys that McDaniels wants to work with that aren't on peoples' radars currently. It's an interesting one. It begs the question of how competitive his staff will be relative to other coaching candidates' lists.
  12. The associated/potential OC, QB Coach, and Defensive Coordinator are critical elements of a future HC hire. In the spirit of discussing future coaching hires for the Browns, Who's the best combo staff based on who's reported to be their key assistants? 1.) HC: Ron Rivera; OC: Norv Turner/Scott Turner; QB Coach: Scott Turner; DC: Steve Wilks 2.) HC: Mike McCarthy; OC/QBC: Frank Cignetti Jr.; DC: Jim Haslett 3.) HC: Dan Campbell; OC/QBC: Joe Lombardi; DC: Mike Nolan 4.) HC: Kevin Stefanski; AHC: Brad Childress; OC: Kevin Stefanski; QB Coach: Bill Musgrave ; DC: Leslie Frazier Whenever we think of names for HC, it's important to think about who's coming with them as principal members of the staff. When taken together as a staff, it honestly looks different imo.
  13. We need Andy Dalton, Zac Taylor, and the Bengals to save us from ourselves. Most of us believe that the way we play against the worst team in the NFL shouldn't have any impact on whether we keep or fire Freddie. However, NFL owners often look for any reason they can to keep continuity. The Bengals have to help force the Haslam's hand. I'm rooting for 1.) Browns players to stay healthy, AND 2.) For the Bengals to win and expose Freddie. The Paul Brown Bengals are the Browns only hope.
  14. There's a reason why Brees, Ryan, and Brady went to 3DQB off-season after off-season after off-season. There's a reason why they and others seek out and go other places to speed up the leaps in their QB skills development and overall athlete, diet, mind-body development. The off-season grind is where greatness is forged. The sacrifices and time invested in becoming the best total athlete are what separates average from great/elite. I don't think Baker has what it takes in terms of maturity and self-awareness to pursue truly becoming that next level athlete or QB. As a result, we have to adjust accordingly and build the team with his ceiling in mind as we should've approached it from the beginning. Just finished Baker's presser today...Pressers are pressers but sometimes they are windows into mentalities of players/coaches. Uhhhh..... Oooooff... I don't know about Baker fellas... I'm not all that confident Baker has the awareness and humbleness to seek out the help he needs to take the next step as a QB.. He was specifically asked about getting together with a "QB coach" this off-season" to improve and whether he was open to it. He said "No...(other things said)... I don't need someone to teach me how to do a 3-step drop." He also still equates those QB coaches to essentially "I don't need to go on a beach.. have someone film my feet and swim in order to figure out how to play Quarterback" (paraphrase). He downplays that elite QB trainers do more than just non-important stupid stuff. He talks about how he can do it himself and critique himself. Then, when he probably heard his own bluster he goes on about how he's got help from others in the organization and realizes he doesn't know everything then he ends with more bluster. You don't know what you don't know. You can't trust yourself at 24 years old to watch your own tape and figure out all the ways you need to improve on your own. It's narcissistic and ill-informed. The problem with Baker is that he doesn't know what he doesn't know and he's sees it as a devaluation of himself to reach out for expertise to hasten his development The manner in which he thinks he's too good or too knowledgeable or too self-capable that he doesn't need to work with an intensive QB skills development coach the way that Drew Brees, Matt Ryan, Tom Brady, Peyton Manning, Matthew Stafford, John Elway, Deshaun Watson, Lamar Jackson, and even Brett Favre knew they needed to. Imagine being a 24 year old in the game seeing Rodgers, Brees, and Brady seek out QB training help in the off-season and deciding "F-that ... I'll do it on my own." Lol. It's an alarming sign and ultimately doesn't bode well for his development that he thinks he can do it by himself. That he thinks he can look at his drop and decide to change his punch drop on his own to something else or whatever. There's a reason all great QBs seek out and find experts to speed up their development and improvement in the off-season and I'm not just talking about QB gurus alone. Even Hue sent the rookie QBs to see Tom House and Adam Dedeaux to get in the mindset of off-season leaps and alternative perspectives on all things quarterbacking. If Freddie returns, I wonder if he'll suggest Baker go or find someone. Problem is... everything around Baker is buddy buddy and the brain trust around him (Garrett Gilbert, Ryan Lindley, Freddie, Drew Stanton) aren't likely to be the one's to get him to the next level or to get him to realize he has to go after it a different way. Baker from his public comments thinks the issue is OTAs and whatever else he figures out from the tape. At this point, I don't think we can trust that Baker will take the next steps or giant leaps he needs to be elite; however, if we improve the things around him he still may be able to take us where we want to go as many lesser than elite QBs have gone to that place as well. After that presser, I'm done with it. I'm going back to my original eval and what I said from the beginning: "He's a trailer not a tractor. Surround him with an elite OLine and elite skill players. We'll know what he is around 50 starts in. He'll be a good player but never a transcendent one."
  15. The problem with Rivera that is likely going to hurt him this off-season is that he's known to be a very isolated head coach not maintaining far reaching and/or close ties with other current and former head/assistant coaches or even mentors. That may hurt him when it comes to the type/quality of assistant coaching staffs he proposes to GMs and Owners. His assistant lists doesn't have a great deal of depth and/or sampling of various coaching trees or coaches thought to be adapted to/updated with current NFL trends. The assistant coaching staff is everything a lot of times for owners as it tells them what their organization could look like in a few years via potential elevation of successors to assistant positions, firings of particular staff members, and/or coaches leaving for bigger roles elsewhere. Often times when HC candidates are close in the hiring teams mind, the coach that wins is the one with the "best" assistants and support staff plans..
  16. You're right bruce. All his public comments point to him explicitly putting the issues of this season on OTAs. That if only the WRs and him would've had better OTAs and chemistry in OTAs all would've been/will be well. That to me is both some progress but also extremely alarming if that's all he thinks the problem was as the bulk of QB improvement happens before OTAs even begin. That's where QBs like Brees, Manning, Brady... even younger QBs like Lamar Jackson, Deshaun Watson make their giant leaps and begin to out-pace the field in knowledge, mechanic, and quarterbacking skills improvement/development. Lamar Jackson's mechanical improvements and base training as he put it "started 6 days after the season ended. I gave myself 6 days to reset then it was all go." Baker has to recognize and take it upon himself to look inward in order to take the leap. He's going to have to get over his dislike for working with "QB gurus" because as he says "already knows how to throw." OBJ and Landry will likely be coming off of surgeries and will be limited in OTAs again to no fault of their own. Players get injured or in the old days they used to hold-out, but that can't stop a QB from improving. OTAs are important, but without Baker taking it upon himself to improve his drop mechanics (i.e., speed/distance to drop depths), throwing mechanics, understanding of defense, eye progression training, eye deception training, pocket stature, pinpoint accuracy, understanding of offensive adjustment, etc... all before OTAs even occur then we will not take the next step as a team nor will Baker take the next step as a QB.
  17. This is the beauty of sports: that the tip of the iceberg box-score stats without context mean absolutely nothing. Interestingly enough though, if you look at other deeper advanced analytics raw numbers via PFF, Sports Info Solutions, Football Outsiders, Pro Football Logic, etc (i.e., Big-time throws index, 3rd down efficiency, Accuracy without pressure, Accuracy with pressure, Misread index, Late-Throw to On-time Ratio, Response to Pressure coding, etc), Baker is a completely and totally different QB after the Bye this year versus after the Bye last year. It's really a night and day different; and really shows the lack of utility of box-score stats in painting a representation of play for comparison purposes. The box-score stats are similar, the advanced analytics and actual play quality as assessed by traditional scouting analysis metrics couldn't be anymore different. Baker was substantially a better QB last year after the bye and that's even controlling for bad luck as well as personnel deficiencies. The good news is that all is not lost heading into next year and that Baker still has the opportunity to be a top 10 QBs given his skill-set. It could just be my confirmation bias at work, but let's just say Ryan Lindley is indeed not a quality QB coach; that would mean getting a new better one in to work with Baker, as well as an off-season guru to help Baker take the next step could very well lead to Baker taking that next step we all thought he would this year this upcoming year. From the beginning, I've been wait and see until that magical 40-52 starts number hits. It's a little worrying that he's not that we're only a year away from him hitting that zone of knowing whether or not we have something longterm. Here's to hoping that we do, but no off-season or next coaching hire is more important.
  18. Sure. But you Hire them as QB Coach and/or OC --OR-- as a QB Coach with OC Responsibilities. A QB guru and offensive wizard does not make a good or great Head Coach. The utmost qualification for Head Coach is ability to implement and create a a winning football systematic program/culture, as well as their ability to hire similarly qualified assistant coaches. We have to break the Hot QB guru/good OC hire for HC cycle of madness.
  19. Trey Adams is buttcheeks. I've been trying to tell people everytime I see him mocked to us in the 2nd or wherever. He's always on the ground. He is extremely athletically gifted and will blow up the combine in terms of straight linear athleticism but he is tremendously uncoordinated during actual gameplay with pigeon-toed sloppy feet. Ezra Cleveland has some games where he looks like a 1st rounder and other games where he looks like JAG 5th or 6th rounders. With a little more horizontal movement juice, he'd be a early 3rd or late 2nd round guy. As is, he's probably a 4th round guy. It's funny because Trey Adams and Ezra Cleveland will likely be drafted around the same area in the draft; however, I'd take Cleveland by a longshot b/c his impact on the next level is clear while Adams' is all based on some potential projection. Curtis Weaver is this year's Charles Harris, Kamalei Correa, Nate Orchard and/or Hau'oli Kikaha; that is, a high production college DE with intangibles, good hands, and instincts to get to the QB in college, but ultimately won't amount to any real impact in the league. In each case, teams should've drafted players from other positions that would more readily make an impact.
  20. 3? white claws? Try 11... Jameson's... ... definitely fathoms the serious tone of my posts and definitely gets and is a comedy and satire savant.. ^^^ I don't quite know who this guy is exactly, but he's been dialed in from the jump... ^^^ dialed in ....
  21. Dearest FF brethren mistakey, We are overjoyed that you remain a loyal part of the 'He Doesn't Get Us' congregation and flock. But lest you forget, our true work is not done until we reach and save every last lost soul. P.S. I've enclosed a return envelope where you can place a check to help support the 'He Doesn't Get Us' fundraiser for a private jet so we can spread the true news far and wide. Please note: Disregard the rumors that we have plans to use the plane for selfish repeated luxury trips on the congregation's expense. Sincerely, Mind Character President of He Doesn't Get Us International
  22. Lol... you have your mindless internet sports forum entertainment posts... and I have mine... good times.
  23. We'd have a Super Bowl and had the glory of witnessing magical MVP-All-Pro-HOFer Quarterbacking play for 10 years. Watching our 36 year old QB struggle a little late season would bother us some but mostly we wouldn't really give a F#ck while we reminisce of that Lombardi trophy.
  24. Baker is going into the HOF.... the HOF for Twitter foolery. A true Twitter QB1 All-Pro with the "I know you are but what am I," "I'm not stupid your stupid" high school comebacks. He has no self-awareness at all. All Colin Cowherd wants is for Baker to respond via Twitter. That's why Fox Sports used the @-symbol ... to increase $$$ and views. How does this guy at 24 years old not understand that Cowherd is a Sports Entertainer. How can he not stop himself from engaging one of the truly elite sports entertaining trolls of our time. Cowherd is a genius with this Baker stuff. Baker just can't help himself man.
  25. Do not be deceived by the upcoming Bengals game. We will go no huddle and play with pace in an attempt for Freddie to make people fall in He Gets Us again. Freddie in his Monday presser likely internalized the criticism about pace. We will look explosive as an offense and Baker will play his best game. Nick Chubb will run wild in an effort to get him the rushing title. As a result, our entire passing game will open up and Freddie will fall into success. It will all be illusion. And so many of you poor bastards will fall for it. Bengals are the worst team in the league. Nigh.
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