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  #21  
Old 12-06-2010, 09:41 PM
chuck chuck is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Warren View Post
I thought this article has some interesting points, particularly this quote from an anonymous NFL executive:
Excellent article, thanks.

I'm learning a number of things being able to watch a full slate of weekend games.

One, all the good defenses run the 3-4. Maybe they're on to something.

Two, all very good quarterbacks have the latitude to field general on the line of scrimmage. They change protections, change plays, all sorts of things. Maybe they're on to something.
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  #22  
Old 12-06-2010, 10:21 PM
chuck chuck is offline
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Another thing I learned is that Pat Bowlen is a less patient owner than is Bob McNair. I don't know whether or not patience is a virtue in the NFL. I do know that despite a recent drought under Bowlen's ownership the Broncos have gone to the playoffs 13 out of his 26 seasons. In order for McNair to match that the Texans would have to reach the playoffs next year and each year up to and including 2020. Do you think that's likely?

Bowlen has enjoyed a winning percentage of 60% as an owner. McNair's is 39%.

If McNair watches his team turn in yet another losing season this year without making changes at head coach and general manager then he does not deserve the support of the fans. It's that simple.

McNair and Kubiak are similar in that they are both good, likable guys who are completely ineffective in their respective roles with the team.
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  #23  
Old 12-06-2010, 11:16 PM
TheMatrix31 TheMatrix31 is offline
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You don't need to be a fiery leader to be a leader. That said, Cushing and Ryans lead the defense. They call the shots. They're in on everything. DeMeco is obviously not there right now, but either way, they're the guys.

On offense it's a different story. Schaub needs to hold his guys accountable when they don't do what's right. There's been some pretty piss-poor execution offensively at times. Schaub needs to rip into them if need be. Andre's Andre, and Arian stays busy writing poetry, so they're not the guys.
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  #24  
Old 12-06-2010, 11:34 PM
Arky Arky is offline
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Originally Posted by TheMatrix31 View Post
You don't need to be a fiery leader to be a leader. That said, Cushing and Ryans lead the defense. They call the shots. They're in on everything. DeMeco is obviously not there right now, but either way, they're the guys.

On offense it's a different story. Schaub needs to hold his guys accountable when they don't do what's right. There's been some pretty piss-poor execution offensively at times. Schaub needs to rip into them if need be. Andre's Andre, and Arian stays busy writing poetry, so they're not the guys.
Yep, that's pretty much it. Something tells me Mr. Dismissive Anonymous NFL Source wouldn't call Winston a "rah, rah fake tough guy" to his face....
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  #25  
Old 12-07-2010, 12:27 AM
barrett barrett is offline
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I don't think the problem is McNair or that the answer is Bowlen.

An NFL owner basically has one job, to hire someone to do everything. They get to do that job at most twice a decade. Much of their success is based on who is available when they make that hire. Very much a crap shoot.

Bowlen went young, untested, offensive mind twice in a row and was dead right and dead wrong. I don't think he got stupider from Shanahan to McDaniels or that he knew less about football the 2nd time around. I just think he got lucky the 1st time. Just like I think it would be easy to give Robert Kraft a ton of credit for hiring Bellachik, even though he gave his franchise to a guy who got ran out of cleveland. A lot of it has to do with luck and timing when picking the right guy. I also don't give Bowlen credit for firing McDaniels after he royally screwed up in hiring him in the 1st place 23 months ago. And I am pretty sure if Kubiak took over a winning team and then sold it for spare parts, lost all his games, broke NFL rules, and then was turned in by his own coaching staff, then McNair would have less patience.

I think the problem and the blame should be 100% on Kubiak. He is exactly what you said. A nice, intelligent, but ineffective guy. Fire him as soon as possible.
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  #26  
Old 12-07-2010, 01:01 AM
chuck chuck is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by barrett View Post
I think the problem and the blame should be 100% on Kubiak. He is exactly what you said. A nice, intelligent, but ineffective guy. Fire him as soon as possible.
Oddly, the latest rumor is that Denver wants Kubiak.

I never said intelligent, by the way.
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  #27  
Old 12-07-2010, 07:39 AM
nunusguy nunusguy is offline
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I'm only half joking when I ask if Bowlen fired his coach for the Broncos on field performance or if he was just looking for a reason to can him for drafting Tebow in the first round of Aprils Draft ? That was bizarre ?
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  #28  
Old 12-07-2010, 09:05 AM
barrett barrett is offline
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Originally Posted by nunusguy View Post
I'm only half joking when I ask if Bowlen fired his coach for the Broncos on field performance or if he was just looking for a reason to can him for drafting Tebow in the first round of Aprils Draft ? That was bizarre ?
No. Bizarre was trading for Brady quinn and then immediately going out and trading 3 draft picks to get Tebow.

Bizarre was trading a 2010 1st round pick to draft Alphonso Smith in the 2nd round in 2009 and then already getting rid of him.

Bizarre was signing Buckhalter and two other veteran backs two summers ago to deals with guaranteed money and then drafting moreno when they badly needed defense.

Bizarre was having every RB on the roster hurt last year and still giving Hillis only 2 carries all year.

Bizarre was trading for career underachiever Laurence Maroney (I don't know why anyone makes a trade with the Patriots. No matter how good it looks you are somehow being fleeced).

Bizarre was running Denver's two best players out of town.

Bizarre was hiring the videographer who was already caught cheating. Were there no other guys with camera experince?

Bizarre was getting rid of the defensive coordinator who gave them a top defense last year.

McDaniels 2 years in Denver may have been the worst personell and football management job in the history of the NFL. Simply amazing how bad he was and the way he destroyed that franchise on every level in such a short time.
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  #29  
Old 12-07-2010, 09:50 AM
nunusguy nunusguy is offline
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Judging from your impressive knowledge of Denvers recent player transactions, apparently you're a frustrated Broncos fan Barrett ?
Nevertheless I gotta say the Tebow pick is a real doozie ? I mean he's involved in rebuilding a team and uses his first round pick on a college
TE/LB who tryed to impersonate a QB in college, though I gotta admit the shuttling of franchise QB to ChiTown is also right there. And while Marshal is incredibly talented, he's really a problem child/head-case and I wonder how long before he's not screwing things up in FLA ?
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  #30  
Old 12-07-2010, 01:40 PM
barrett barrett is offline
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Not really a Broncos fan for any reason in particular, just always kind of liked them more than most teams. As far as knowing their personnell moves, I guess I just watch too much football. That and I can't stand McDaniels and kind of followed along hoping to see it turn out this way.

But I am all Texans fan and then the Patriots after that (from Massachussetts, but arrived in Houston via Fresno the year before the Texans started and fell in love with the Texans 100x more than any team in any sport. And I haven't even started to grow bitter about a decade of losing yet. In Boston that is like an appetizer).

Last edited by barrett; 12-07-2010 at 02:04 PM.
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  #31  
Old 12-07-2010, 03:18 PM
nunusguy nunusguy is offline
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Originally Posted by barrett View Post
Not really a Broncos fan for any reason in particular, just always kind of liked them more than most teams. As far as knowing their personnell moves, I guess I just watch too much football. That and I can't stand McDaniels and kind of followed along hoping to see it turn out this way.

But I am all Texans fan and then the Patriots after that (from Massachussetts, but arrived in Houston via Fresno the year before the Texans started and fell in love with the Texans 100x more than any team in any sport. And I haven't even started to grow bitter about a decade of losing yet. In Boston that is like an appetizer).
Funny you should mention being from Mass, because while watching the Pats-Jets game last night I told my wife, a Texas native who's lived multiple times in Boston and tells me her impression was that basketball & hockey were the big sports up there, it's a shame that such a great NFL franchise was wasted on an area that's really not a football hotbed. And before coming down here years ago, I'm from around the KC, Mo area where nothing ever compared to the popularity of the Chiefs and you know how people feel about football here.
I mean there's little doubt the Texans have aroused the most interest, the most passion, been the most popular sports team since since the other pro football team, the Oilers, and yet they've just barely sniffed some success with last years first winning record.
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  #32  
Old 12-07-2010, 03:48 PM
barrett barrett is offline
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Originally Posted by nunusguy View Post
Funny you should mention being from Mass, because while watching the Pats-Jets game last night I told my wife, a Texas native who's lived multiple times in Boston and tells me her impression was that basketball & hockey were the big sports up there, it's a shame that such a great NFL franchise was wasted on an area that's really not a football hotbed. And before coming down here years ago, I'm from around the KC, Mo area where nothing ever compared to the popularity of the Chiefs and you know how people feel about football here.
I mean there's little doubt the Texans have aroused the most interest, the most passion, been the most popular sports team since since the other pro football team, the Oilers, and yet they've just barely sniffed some success with last years first winning record.
Yep. My family are all classic Boston bred sports nuts. My grandpa died in his early 40s and called my mother in to his deathbed instead of his wife. His actual last words (God's honest truth), was to make her swear that she wouldn't die until she saw the Red Sox win the world series. That is how big Baseball is there. Of course the Celtics are an institution as well. Bruins and Hockey are local favorites. The patriots were a distant 4th when I lived there in the 80s. And so was football in general.

That may be why I could fall in love with the Texans when the franchise started. Nobody cared enough about the Patriots to make it feel like betrayal.

But in recent years, the Patriots have obviously made strides in popularity just by winning. Plus the NFL has exploded eveyrwhere in recent years.
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  #33  
Old 12-07-2010, 04:17 PM
NBT NBT is offline
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Most native Texans, or adopted ones, have thirsted for years, decades, hell half a century in my case, for a Pro Football winner. We love our football, from Friday night lights to long suffering U of H and Rice, to the old Oilers; and now the address called the Texans. Frustrated we may be, but we will always think, this year it's our turn, whether it does or not.
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  #34  
Old 12-07-2010, 09:25 PM
nunusguy nunusguy is offline
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Originally Posted by barrett View Post
My grandpa died in his early 40s and called my mother in to his deathbed instead of his wife. His actual last words (God's honest truth), was to make her swear that she wouldn't die until she saw the Red Sox win the world series.
That's quite a story. Sorry he had to leave so early in life.
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  #35  
Old 12-07-2010, 09:45 PM
HPF Bob HPF Bob is offline
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Barrett is dead on about McDaniels' personnel moves. What started the downhill slide is that Cutler felt mentored by Shanahan so he and McDaniels got off to a rather cold start. But then when it came out that McDaniels was working to bring Matt Cassel to Denver, it completely destroyed any trust on Cutler's part. McDaniels had already started to replace Broncos players with former Patriots which had drawn the ire of the Denver clubhouse. Surely if McDaniels had told Bowlen he wanted to replace Cutler, he'd have never been given him the job.

The Spygate II incident simply allowed Bowlen to sack McDaniels "for cause" and void the rest of his contract. It's not what caused McDaniels to get canned, rather the excuse needed to take him out now, rather than later.
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  #36  
Old 12-07-2010, 11:41 PM
barrett barrett is offline
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One final thing regarding Denver that should say everything anyone would need to know about McDaniels. This is from an ESPN blog article.

After Sundquist was fired (as GM), Shanahan promoted the father-son team of Jim and Jeff Goodman. When Shanahan was gassed, the Goodmans stayed and were part of the group that hired McDaniels. They were abruptly fired less than two months after McDaniels was hired. This was a bad sign. McDaniels played a role in firing two people who were part of the decision-making team that just hired him. He had too much power for a 32-year-old first-time head coach.

How is something like this even possible? Bowlen had to be asleep at the wheel to go along with this.
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  #37  
Old 12-08-2010, 03:22 PM
painekiller painekiller is offline
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If the Texans lose on Monday night and do not shut Mario down then they have no clue how to run a team. Mario needs to be ready for next season, and a sports hernia can take some time to fully recover from.

You are out of it if the Ravens win, so start doing the things that are needed to see what you have for next season.
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  #38  
Old 12-08-2010, 04:06 PM
Joshua Joshua is offline
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Originally Posted by painekiller View Post
If the Texans lose on Monday night and do not shut Mario down then they have no clue how to run a team. Mario needs to be ready for next season, and a sports hernia can take some time to fully recover from.

You are out of it if the Ravens win, so start doing the things that are needed to see what you have for next season.
If they lose Monday night, I suspect Kubiak will be in full-blown panic mode where his number one goal is saving his, or his BFFs/assistant coaches' jobs. Don't see him putting his ass on the chopping block to get Mario ready for next year.
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  #39  
Old 12-09-2010, 03:25 PM
NBT NBT is offline
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I think PK may be right since KUbe may think he has the Denver job as backup.
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  #40  
Old 12-09-2010, 06:25 PM
Fonz the Boss Fonz the Boss is offline
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Mario with a sports hernia? Damn, I thought it was a nagging groin injury. That explains alot about his recent play. As someone who was diagnosed with a sports hernia let me tell you it is a bitch have. Last year I kept playing soccer with what I believed was just a pulled groin or something. It got to the point where I was doing a shuffling drill to warm up and I ended up slipping. As soon as I slipped I felt as if someone had completely ripped off the right testacle from my body. It was hell and I knew right away that it was no ordinary groin injury. The diagnosis pretty much confirmed what I had. I did not get a surgery and eventually it went away slowly. I still jog and enjoy the occasional pick up game of basketball but I have a psychological thing where I dont explode to a full sprint from a complete stop. Im scared that i might feel that ripping testacle sensation again hahaha. But mad props to Mario for playin because it is painful. Unlike me, he is a professional athlete and needs to explode off the line of scrimmage. He will likely need the surgery to ensure it doesnt come back again next year.
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