Quiet Speed
Mentor
I thought with the way the Eagles' offense looked in the first half, there was no way the could manage a couple of TDs to comeback. Way to go Ertz.
If that is happening, the coaching staff should tell them to knock it off or else, practice squad players will take their place. By tonight's practice players' performance that should be a real threat.Yes, can’t be long now before Josina Anderson reports that according to anonymous sources inside the Eagles locker room, there’s some concern that once again, Carson Wentz is targeting Ertz and Goedert way too much.
Realizing it might have been Eli's last NFL game, I decided to tune into the Giants last night during the second quarter. Then I saw their ultra-Caste roster, coupled with an Eagles team that was just as black, so I tuned out after about 3 minutes. Did not tune in until overtime began to watch/root for Wentz and Ertz. Glad that combo scored.
A lot of fans (Giants and general NFL fans) might be getting "nostalgic" about watching Eli play, but I've basically completely tuned out the Giants every week since 2004? So what is their to get "nostalgic" about? I've rarely watched his team play since the Sehorn/Dan Reeves years. The few times each year I tuned into a Giants game was to root for the other team. In Eli's 16 years, only time I cared about the Giants was when Peyton Hillis briefly played for them in 2013, then a bit in 2014. During Eli's entire career have the Giants even had one notable white defensive player or wide receiver? Best white defender I can think of is Chase Blackburn and he was mostly a spot starter and special teams mascot for several years? They had a talented, white rookie linebacker this season from Wisconsin that I tracked, but he suffered a ACL injury.
I was not sure if Eli ever had a completion to a white wide receiver?
I looked it up and Brandon Stokley had 1 reception for 7 yards for the Giants in 2011, I guess that might've been the only one in 16 years? In 2015, an undrafted white rookie from Richmond named Ben Edwards made his debut with the Giants and caught 1 ball for 9 yards, but that spiral came from his backup that night (Nassib) I believe? In 2017 the Giants had another undrafted goy at receiver named Ed Eagan, he played in 4 games, but only returned 4 punts and covered kicks.
Not blaming Eli for the lack of white receivers, that's on the front office's. Just saying I barely ever watched him (or his team) the last 16 years. So to me, it's almost like he barely existed in comparison to someone like Brady who I've watched play full games (or close to full) well over 100 times? Or even his brother Peyton, who teams (Colts, Broncos) seemed much less hostile to whites than the Giants.
The Giants owners love to brag about the waiting lists for seasons tickets. But even if they are sold, I love to see legions of "fans" at Giants games disguised as "empty seats". Perhaps if this organization wasn't so darn Caste, they might not see their fan base dwindling to the point people won't even show up with free tickets, that are doled out by corporations. By the way, for all the talk that the Giants season-tickets waiting list is decades long, how do they explain the Victor Cruz meets DWF's Commercial?
P.S: I wanted to post this in this year's "Giants Thread", until I realized there is none here at CF. Quite fitting.
Other than Jason Sehorn and a few quarterbacks, the only other Giants player I rooted for consistantly was Jeremy Shockey. He had that attitude about him and nobody messed with him. He was so athletic and so strong. He was alot like another tightend from the past in Mark Bavarro. Anyways, Shockey and Sehorn are my two favorite Giants that I've watched. Mostly I don't watch them like the rest of us here. Why bother to watch a crappy team decade after decade and they don't play our guys. No thanks. Better things to do with my time.
Nice replies, WL and PHFan. When Lightning was going through the names of some the players from the era prior to Eli arriving in 2004, I instantly thought about Joe Jurevicius, who Eli never played with.
Anyhow, I just did a quick search to check the spelling of Joe's not so easy to spell Lithuanian surname. I expected to find just football related links. However, most of the links were for a horrific incident last year that Joe thankfully survived. He was robbed at gun-point and terrorized for 30 minutes at his own house by a "misunderstood" 24 year old Yuff, looking to make a quick buck?
Hat's off to Joe, for not being a total Cuck. Here's the video of Joe going through all the negative issues he's dealt with since he retired and asking the Cleveland judge for the harshest sentence possible. In the link posted, the Yuff goes crazy after getting 43 years and chaos breaks out. Interesting to note, while Joe is talking, the Yuff's very obese black lawyer can clearly be seen sleeping. Hope Joe and his family are doing better. He's had a lot bad breaks in his life since he left the Giants.
PHFan: Fascinating note on Boss. While he was still playing with the Giants, his brother was a backup goalie for the New York Red Bulls (MLS). The Boss' were from rural Oregon, yet both were pros playing in the same city and same stadium briefly, in different sports. Turns out Terry Boss' pro career was destroyed by injuries.
The Patriots got jobbed see above. But I won't succumb to panic just yet and the positive from this game is Edelman going over 1,000 yards. Ryan Clark of ESPN dished Edelman and took a stab at Adam Schefter who mentioned Edelman having HOF credentials a year or so ago. If Edelman doesn't get into the HOF they should just disband the damn thing. I don't get caught up in these geeky stat fools who rate mediocre black wide receivers who compiled stats over the years, many of whom have been targeted 1,ooo times in any given season. Edelman is one of the greatest clutch post season players in the history of the NFL. No one can dispute that. Kelce by the way as mentioned above is close too 1,000 and he will set a TE record if he reaches that number.
I watched that video on YouTube and the perception amongst dwfs is that Edelman is only "schemed" open and only goes against safeties and linebackers. It's amazing no other team can scheme people open like that except the Patriots and even the Patriots can't seem to do that with any other receivers besides him this year. Not to mention he's been double teamed this year and goes against the team's number 1 corner and still puts up numbers. On NFL films top 100 players multiple corners said he was the hardest person to cover. Since he has become a starter in 2013 he's averaged enough for 1000 yards each season, he just happened to miss games a few years. Guys like Marvin Harrison and Reggie Wayne who dominated in the regular season have less postseason yardage than him in MORE games. Edelman has 18 postseason games but 5 of them he was sparingly used. Yet dwfs will laugh at you if you compare him to those 2.
It's a pretty good analysis but I think if anyone could figure it out, it would be Bellicheck. Perhaps it won't be until the postseason though . One solution would be to utilize Burkhead more in the passing game. It would be awesome if they convinced Jordy to come out of retirement but that won't happen.Here's a few tidbits on the New England offense from a fantasy football writer who studies a lot of film. Belichick has moved too far away from a proven winning formula by adding too many upsiders who can't adjust to what Brady looks for from his receivers:
The Patriots lack receivers who can earn consistent separation as perimeter threats and Tom Brady's accuracy against tight coverage is average, at best. Brady and this offense win when it earns at least two-steps of separation on a defender, which is more like "college open" than "NFL open."
This offense is built on earning this massive separation by means of its receivers making pre-snap, post-snap, and mid-route adjustments to coverage that match what Tom Brady sees. All teams expect this from receivers to some degree but the Patriots take it to another level that many receivers cannot hack. It's why we've seen so many receivers of note fail out of New England.
Outside of Julian Edelman, the Patriots receivers aren't earning consistent separation and they're not making reliable adjustments to the defensive coverage. Phillip Dorsett is the most disappointing because he's a veteran with some tenure who has the speed to win outside but he's not on the same page as Brady.
When a defense knows that most of its opponent's receivers can't get separation early in a route or can't spot the same necessary adjustments as its quarterback—a quarterback who has a great pocket presence but lacking the athletic skill to win with his legs—that defense will win with aggressive tactics.
On Sunday, the Chiefs ran overload blitzes that gave them a man-on-man advantage against one side of the Patriots line and Brady's receivers either didn't or couldn't execute quick adjustments for Brady to find them.
Week 16's matchup with Buffalo could prove troublesome for fantasy players who have Brady and Edelman. The Bills limited Brady to 150 yards and an interception in Week 4 and after watching the Chiefs hold Brady to 169 yards, an interception, and a flea-flicker touchdown to Edelman, don't count on Bill Belichick "figuring out," a solution this year because he lacks the personnel on offense to do so.