Official NFL Preseason Thread

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  • 1ke
    D.I.L.L.I.G.A.F
    • Mar 2009
    • 6641

    #31
    Were the Bungles that bad, or was Detroit that good?

    Comment

    • Buzzman
      Senior Member
      • Oct 2008
      • 6659

      #32
      Originally posted by 1ke
      Were the Bungles that bad, or was Detroit that good?
      Bengals are fucking awful. Andy Dalton is a POS.

      Comment

      • Scikotic
        Straight out the Asylum
        • Apr 2011
        • 369

        #33
        Originally posted by 1ke
        Were the Bungles that bad, or was Detroit that good?
        Moreso the Bengals suck, but Detroit is a team to watch....especially if Suh keeps attempting to decapitate opposing QB's even after the whistle is blown. I love this guy's nasty streak.

        Comment

        • PEYMAN18
          Suhn.
          • Jan 2009
          • 1683

          #34
          [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IEuBW1RfY0k&feature=player_embedded[/ame]


          Suuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

          Comment

          • Aso
            The Serious House
            • Nov 2008
            • 11137

            #35
            Andy Dalton is a poor mans Kevin Kolb and Kolb is only decent.

            Comment

            • Aso
              The Serious House
              • Nov 2008
              • 11137

              #36
              Redskins secondary looked bad against the Steelers, both DeAngelo Hall and Josh Wilson included.

              Comment

              • Aso
                The Serious House
                • Nov 2008
                • 11137

                #37
                Whoa, Merriman actually looked good. What happened there?

                Comment

                • 1ke
                  D.I.L.L.I.G.A.F
                  • Mar 2009
                  • 6641

                  #38
                  Originally posted by Aso21Raiders
                  Whoa, Merriman actually looked good. What happened there?
                  Da Bearz

                  Comment

                  • SHOGUN
                    4 WR 1 RB 0 TE. 24/7/365.
                    • Jul 2009
                    • 11416

                    #39
                    ~ Kevin Kolb looked OK in his debut. He brings some athleticism to the position.

                    ~ I am not encouraged by Beanie Wells getting stuffed four times in a row at the goal line.

                    ~ Skelton still hasn't figured out how to put touch on the ball. He's still throwing nothing but lasers.

                    ~ Todd Heap should have a big year if he remains healthy.

                    ~ AJ Jefferson looked good.

                    ~ Denarius Moore did work every time he touched the ball.

                    ~ Cam Newton actually looked fairly solid in his debut. He looks better than Jimmy Clausen - which isn't saying much. I expect to start sooner than later.

                     
                    "Sometimes I just want to be with my family and watch movie and eat some popcorn. But when I step on the mat I know there is no other place I'd rather be." - Marcelo Garcia

                    Comment

                    • Aso
                      The Serious House
                      • Nov 2008
                      • 11137

                      #40
                      I'm very interested in how Kolb and the cards offense fairs this season. Cardinals tackles are god awful in pass protection.

                      Comment

                      • SHOGUN
                        4 WR 1 RB 0 TE. 24/7/365.
                        • Jul 2009
                        • 11416

                        #41
                        Originally posted by Aso21Raiders
                        I'm very interested in how Kolb and the cards offense fairs this season. Cardinals tackles are god awful in pass protection.
                        They are indeed frustrating and there are still questions about who's going to take over at right tackle - Jeremy Bridges or Brandon Keith (who still hasn't fully recovered from knee surgery). With that said, no matter how bad they are I take comfort in knowing that 'Zona's situation is still better than Chicago's.

                         
                        "Sometimes I just want to be with my family and watch movie and eat some popcorn. But when I step on the mat I know there is no other place I'd rather be." - Marcelo Garcia

                        Comment

                        • Houston
                          Back home
                          • Oct 2008
                          • 21231

                          #42
                          30 mins till Texans 3-4

                          Comment

                          • Houston
                            Back home
                            • Oct 2008
                            • 21231

                            #43
                            Greg McElroy


                            Comment

                            • ThomasTomasz
                              • Nov 2024

                              #44
                              Originally posted by Aso21Raiders
                              Redskins secondary looked bad against the Steelers, both DeAngelo Hall and Josh Wilson included.
                              I didn't get a chance to watch the game at all as I was at work. Were they really that bad? I do know they were missing Landry, and I think Otogwe as well. Strange that Grossman performed like he did, however.

                              Comment

                              • ThomasTomasz
                                • Nov 2024

                                #45
                                Some cuts today......Maybin is :turrible: so that is not a surprise. Stinchcomb is, but like Jammal Brown last year, he is battling back from a lower body injury and the Saints have depth so they don't need to hold onto him.

                                PITTSFORD, N.Y. (AP)—The Buffalo Bills ran out of time and patience in waiting for linebacker Aaron Maybin(notes) to develop before being left with little choice but to waive the former first-round pick on Monday.

                                “He put so much into it, but there wasn’t any appreciable improvement,” coach Chan Gailey said following the team’s evening practice in suburban Rochester. “It was better to do it now than to do it later.”

                                In two short years, Maybin went from promising pass-rusher to the Bills’ latest first-round bust in a move made a little over three weeks into training camp and two days after he failed to make an impact in a preseason-opening 10-3 loss at Chicago.


                                Maybin’s departure did not come as a surprise, especially after Gailey had already described the player’s status as “tenuous” in January.

                                Selected 11th overall in the 2009 draft out of Penn State, Maybin failed to register a sack or even break into the team’s starting lineup in 27 career games.

                                He appeared in only 11 games last season, with the low point coming during a midseason stretch when he was listed as an inactive for five straight games.

                                Maybin had become such a notable disappointment that Bills fans had begun to refer to him as “Maybe.”

                                Maybin struggled keeping his weight up, which made it difficult for him to outmuscle opposing offensive linemen. He entered the NFL listed at 250 pounds, but had reported to camp last month listed at 228 pounds.

                                “That’s the big thing,” general manager Buddy Nix said, referring to Maybin’s lack of size. “I saw where somebody said that he didn’t fit the scheme. But I don’t know what scheme he fits at that size unless you’re a strong safety or something.”

                                Maybin had complained that his metabolism made it difficult for him to easily add bulk. And yet he struggled last year after the Bills made the switch from a 4-3 to a 3-4 defense, which was expected to better fit his style of play.

                                Nix insisted the Bills afforded Maybin numerous opportunities in part because of how high he was drafted.

                                “That’s the reason we took a little longer. We needed him and we wanted him to come through,” Nix said. “He did everything he could do. He practiced hard. He hustled. He did everything you asked of him. It just didn’t work out.”

                                Despite his on-field struggles, Maybin was mostly upbeat and jovial. He would often sing and joke with his teammates as he walked off the field following practice. And he often celebrated with a fist pump whenever he made a sack in practice.

                                That enthusiasm never translated into making an impact in games, where he saw most of his time playing on special teams.

                                Another consistent knock against Maybin was his ineffectiveness against the run, something that also led to coaches limiting his playing time.

                                The Bills were second guessed immediately after selecting Maybin, who entered the draft after three years at college, and with less than one full year as a starter with the Nittany Lions. A redshirt freshman, Maybin did lead the Big 10 with 12 sacks in only 10 starts during in his junior and final season.

                                Maybin becomes the latest in a string of disappointing first-round picks drafted by the Bills this past decade. It’s a group that includes offensive tackle Mike Williams, who was cut after only three seasons after being selected fourth overall in 2002. Other first-round picks who have failed to make an impact in Buffalo included quarterback J.P. Losman(notes) and defensive tackle John McCargo(notes).

                                The Bills inconsistent drafting is among the key reasons they’ve gone 11 straight years without making the playoffs. That’s tied with Detroit with the NFL’s longest active drought.

                                Buffalo has now lost three first-round draft picks since the start of training camp. Besides cutting Maybin, the Bills lost safety Donte Whitner(notes) (selected eighth overall in 2006) to free agency, and traded receiver Lee Evans(notes) (13th in 2004) in exchange for a fourth-round draft pick to Baltimore on Friday.

                                The Bills have four players they selected in the first round left on their roster, including rookie defensive lineman Marcell Dareus(notes) out of Alabama.

                                NOTES: WR Craig Davis is out indefinitely after he left practice and did not return. Without saying what Davis hurt, Gailey called the injury “a strain,” and added it’s going to be a while before he returns. … The Bills practiced under the lights and despite a heavy downpour that fell through much of the final hour of the two-hour session. … The Bills break camp on Thursday.

                                http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slu...s-maybinwaived
                                The New Orleans Saints released veteran right tackle Jon Stinchcomb(notes) today, clearing the way for Zach Strief(notes) or Charles Brown(notes) to claim the job.

                                According to the New Orleans Times-Picayune, it was a difficult move for general manager Mickey Loomis and coach Sean Payton as both men held the second-round pick from 2003 in high regard. Stinchcomb was the longest-tenured player on the roster.


                                "He's gonna be on the 'Wall of Fame' that we have down our hallway, and I think he should be in the Saints' Hall of Fame one day," Loomis said. "He's meant a lot to our organization, for a number of reasons, including his play on the field."

                                Strief figures to be the leading candidate for the job. He re-signed with the Saints after receiving at least one offer from another NFC club. Brown was a second-round pick a year ago, but Strief has experience playing in the system.

                                It will be interesting to see what happens with Stinchcomb. He was a Pro Bowl choice in 2009 but played through a knee issue last season and his performance struggled.

                                http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slu...jon_stinchcomb

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