Tim Tebow

NFLISFIXED!

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Bellicheck was stuck with an expansion team in Cleveland that was hard to win with. He admitted that he made some mistakes as a head coach and vowed to not make them again if he became a head coach again, but once he set the tone for who he was as a coach in the Cleveland lockerroom you really can't change that. I believe he still coached, just not as a head coach.

Believe what you want but youre WRONG.
He had a 5 year Hiatus, Let go in 1995.
Didnt coach again until Patriots in 2000 who soon went on a run after Israel attacked us on 911.



The Saints didn't reach the big show until 2009, Katrina happened before the 2005 regular season happened, and they had to pratice in high schools during that season, wouldn't have made more sense to let them win THAT year, with Aaron Brooks with like one White starter, instead of the next year with Drew Brees and a revamped team?. Did they know the oil spill was going to happen the next summer so they "let them" win the Superbowl? Drew Brees is a top qb, up there with Manning and Brady as well as Rodgers. In 2006 they made it to the NFC championship game and were humiliated by the Bears who had signs that said "we will finish what Katrina started".
Aints were the worst team in football forever, the Superbowl was a fix with them winning post Katrina.




You are discrediting everything White players have accomplished by saying this is all fixed. New England has been a very White friendly team. The turn around in New Orleans was the addition of Drew Brees and them bringing in 3 White linebackers, known as the Snow Patrol. They have slowly gone away from this and have been one and done in the playoffs the past few years. The Superbowl season they still had a somewhat White team with Fujita and Shanle on defense , and to mask the deficiency on the defense (the coal black secondary that couldn't cover) they blitzed alot , and got lucky. The offense was already great with Drew Brees, who has done the most with the least out of all the top qbs, majority sumo line and mediocre receivers. All they have to do is run the right route and catch the ball, no acrobatic jumping receptions where he just heaves it up for athletic receivers to grab, because non of the wideouts can do that. He has pin point accuracy, which has been proven over time. However, he had Shockey during the Superbowl and the Saints split him and David Thomas out wide like receivers quite a bit, and Sean Payton had already had plenty of success as an offensive coordinator in New York.
I discredit nothing, the game is fixed!
The whites you worship at your altar of bread and circus are pawns in the game.



So you are basically saying the whole thing was fixed, and frankly I don't see how you fix a play like the onside kick after half time where the (WHITE) Chris Reis gets the ball after the mediocre Hank Baskett had his hands on it, with Baskett's mudshark wife crying out of the venue. The same way it would have been hard to stage the blocked punt the WHITE Steve Gleason had during the season opener against the Falcons when the Dome first opened up after Katrina. If you ever played football you would realize how hard it would be to choreograph a play like that
.
Yes, the NFL like Nascar and NBA is fixed.



The only thing refs can do is throw flags to try and influence a game. You can't fix the entire thing. Teams can still outplay the refs, although sometimes getting flagged often leaves them down. The Saints were flagged quite a bit during the Superbowl season but didn't get down. This is where Brees' "zulu antics" come to help.
Holding calls alone, can change entire game outcomes, stop drives, give other teams momentum.


Patriots cheated, but pretty much every other team was doing the same thing, the Patriots got caught. The only thing they really got busted for was stealing signals for the redzone plays the Rams had. The Rams really never made it to the redzone in that Superbowl game and they knew about this before the game, so, they most likely changed signals.
Denial aint a river in Egypt mate.
Patriots cheated, Im not aware of any other charges made against any other teams (28) doing it. If so, please enlighten me...
Filming practice of opponants and radio communication of plays on gameday is pretty blatant and a huge handicap./edge.



By the way, there is no rule that a coach can't go to another teams practice and watch the signals, they just can't record it. They can write it all down on paper. Instead of the White friendly offense we see now, they have a White friendly defense that stopped Marshall Faulk, who was the key to the greatest show on turf. So by saying this you are denying that the talent of those White players had anything to do with the win.
Guess you dont understand the importance of film then.
White players are pawns just like the negroes, except they get glorified. NFL is fixed. Get a new religion to worship , the Negro Felon League will not save your soul, nor will the white players you worship.


like someone said, putting both New York teams in the Superbowl would have done much more for the cause. Because I remember after 9/11 the Giants whooped the Saints (yes a lot of flags were thrown against the Saints but they weren't exactly great either) and everybody was happy, much happier than when the Patriots won the Superbowl.
I can only give you the letters, you must spell the words.
NY had no teams called PATRIOTS, as in the PATRIOT ACT that was forced upon us, or drumming up war for Israel in the Mid East hence they werent used post 911.
 

NFLISFIXED!

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NFL

The Spygate lawsuit

Carl Mayer is a New York Jets season ticket holder. He is also a lawyer. When it was discovered that the New England Patriots were videotaping their opponents’ coaching signals – a scandalous event later dubbed “Spygate†that shook the NFL in 2007 – it happened to come to light during a Jets-Patriots game.

Mayer sued, seeking $185 million in damages on behalf of all Jets ticket holders. His claim was that due to the Patriots’ actions, the games between the two franchises were essentially rigged since Patriots Head Coach Bill Belichick took control of the team in 2000. In early 2010, the case reached the U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals.

In May 2010, the appeals court judges tossed the case. The Senior Judge of the three judge panel Robert E. Cowen wrote in his precendential opinion (which you can read here), “We do not condone the conduct on the part of the Patriots and the team's head coach, and we likewise refrain from assessing whether the NFL's sanctions (and its alleged destruction of the videotapes themselves) were otherwise appropriate.†But the reason why Cowen and the other judges decided against Mayer was because, “At best, he [Mayer] possessed nothing more than a contractual right to a seat from which to watch an NFL game between the Jets and the Patriots, and this right was clearly honored.â€

Cowen went on to write, "Mayer possessed either a license or, at best, a contractual right to enter Giants Stadium and to have a seat from which to watch a professional football game. In the clear language of the ticket stub, ‘[t]his ticket only grants entry into the stadium and a spectator seat for the specified NFL game.’ Mayer actually was allowed to enter the stadium and witnessed the ‘specified NFL game’ between the Jets and Patriots. He thereby suffered no cognizable injury to a legally protected right or interest.â€

He then concluded, "We do not condone the conduct on the part of the Patriots and the team’s head coach, and we likewise refrain from assessing whether the NFL’s sanctions (and its alleged destruction of the videotapes themselves) were otherwise appropriate. We further recognize that professional football, like other professional sports, is a multi-billion dollar business. In turn, ticket-holders and other fans may have legitimate issues with the manner in which they are treated….Significantly, our ruling also does not leave Mayer and other ticket-holders without any recourse. Instead, fans could speak out against the Patriots, their coach, and the NFL itself. In fact, they could even go so far as to refuse to purchase tickets or NFL-related merchandise….However, the one thing they cannot do is bring a legal action in a court of law. [emphasis in original].â€

Mayer’s lawyer, Bruce Afran, disagreed. He believed consumer fraud had occurred. He said, “(The opinion) seems to suggest that no matter how much ticket holders pay, they can be defrauded by NFL teams. And it puts the NFL on the same level as professional wrestling.â€

Because there is no law outside of the loose interpretation of fraud from preventing a league from fixing its own games, Afran’s conclusion is correct. One cannot fix a sporting event for gambling purposes; that is illegal. And one cannot fix an intellectual contest for entertainment purposes; that was made illegal after the quiz show scandal of the 1950s.

But fix a sporting event for entertainment purposes? Completely legal.

What’s worse, the lawyer representing the NFL, Shepard Goldfein, actually argued in court that “fans likely would buy tickets even if they knew the Patriots were stealing signals.†In other words, the NFL realizes that much like pro wrestling, even if fans knew the football was rigged, they still pay their money to see it.

In March 2011, the Supreme Court refused to hear Mayer's appeal thereby affirming the lower court's findings.

As these two court cases prove, it is time to see the NFL in a completely different light. It is not a loosely organized group of teams fighting tooth-and-nail to beat their rivals. No, the NFL is a well-organized machine out to maximize its profits by doing everything within their power to make people consume their product: the games.
 

whiteathlete33

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The Spygate lawsuit

Carl Mayer is a New York Jets season ticket holder. He is also a lawyer. When it was discovered that the New England Patriots were videotaping their opponents’ coaching signals – a scandalous event later dubbed “Spygate†that shook the NFL in 2007 – it happened to come to light during a Jets-Patriots game.

Mayer sued, seeking $185 million in damages on behalf of all Jets ticket holders. His claim was that due to the Patriots’ actions, the games between the two franchises were essentially rigged since Patriots Head Coach Bill Belichick took control of the team in 2000. In early 2010, the case reached the U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals.

In May 2010, the appeals court judges tossed the case. The Senior Judge of the three judge panel Robert E. Cowen wrote in his precendential opinion (which you can read here), “We do not condone the conduct on the part of the Patriots and the team's head coach, and we likewise refrain from assessing whether the NFL's sanctions (and its alleged destruction of the videotapes themselves) were otherwise appropriate.†But the reason why Cowen and the other judges decided against Mayer was because, “At best, he [Mayer] possessed nothing more than a contractual right to a seat from which to watch an NFL game between the Jets and the Patriots, and this right was clearly honored.â€

Cowen went on to write, "Mayer possessed either a license or, at best, a contractual right to enter Giants Stadium and to have a seat from which to watch a professional football game. In the clear language of the ticket stub, ‘[t]his ticket only grants entry into the stadium and a spectator seat for the specified NFL game.’ Mayer actually was allowed to enter the stadium and witnessed the ‘specified NFL game’ between the Jets and Patriots. He thereby suffered no cognizable injury to a legally protected right or interest.â€

He then concluded, "We do not condone the conduct on the part of the Patriots and the team’s head coach, and we likewise refrain from assessing whether the NFL’s sanctions (and its alleged destruction of the videotapes themselves) were otherwise appropriate. We further recognize that professional football, like other professional sports, is a multi-billion dollar business. In turn, ticket-holders and other fans may have legitimate issues with the manner in which they are treated….Significantly, our ruling also does not leave Mayer and other ticket-holders without any recourse. Instead, fans could speak out against the Patriots, their coach, and the NFL itself. In fact, they could even go so far as to refuse to purchase tickets or NFL-related merchandise….However, the one thing they cannot do is bring a legal action in a court of law. [emphasis in original].â€

Mayer’s lawyer, Bruce Afran, disagreed. He believed consumer fraud had occurred. He said, “(The opinion) seems to suggest that no matter how much ticket holders pay, they can be defrauded by NFL teams. And it puts the NFL on the same level as professional wrestling.â€

Because there is no law outside of the loose interpretation of fraud from preventing a league from fixing its own games, Afran’s conclusion is correct. One cannot fix a sporting event for gambling purposes; that is illegal. And one cannot fix an intellectual contest for entertainment purposes; that was made illegal after the quiz show scandal of the 1950s.

But fix a sporting event for entertainment purposes? Completely legal.

What’s worse, the lawyer representing the NFL, Shepard Goldfein, actually argued in court that “fans likely would buy tickets even if they knew the Patriots were stealing signals.†In other words, the NFL realizes that much like pro wrestling, even if fans knew the football was rigged, they still pay their money to see it.

In March 2011, the Supreme Court refused to hear Mayer's appeal thereby affirming the lower court's findings.

As these two court cases prove, it is time to see the NFL in a completely different light. It is not a loosely organized group of teams fighting tooth-and-nail to beat their rivals. No, the NFL is a well-organized machine out to maximize its profits by doing everything within their power to make people consume their product: the games.


Your spamming is getting extremely annoying and it's pretty obvious who you are.
 

NFLISFIXED!

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Your spamming is getting extremely annoying and it's pretty obvious who you are.

Dude, go away.

Im a New member. I invited the Mod to check my IP address and do his own homework.
Maybe you need to do your own or present a better arguement to the table.
Judges even agree with me on the fixing of the NFL, but not the brilliant minds on this board, like yours who cant even figure out Im a new recent member...Spygate, read of it..




The Spygate lawsuit

Carl Mayer is a New York Jets season ticket holder. He is also a lawyer. When it was discovered that the New England Patriots were videotaping their opponents’ coaching signals – a scandalous event later dubbed “Spygate†that shook the NFL in 2007 – it happened to come to light during a Jets-Patriots game.

Mayer sued, seeking $185 million in damages on behalf of all Jets ticket holders. His claim was that due to the Patriots’ actions, the games between the two franchises were essentially rigged since Patriots Head Coach Bill Belichick took control of the team in 2000. In early 2010, the case reached the U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals.

In May 2010, the appeals court judges tossed the case. The Senior Judge of the three judge panel Robert E. Cowen wrote in his precendential opinion (which you can read here), “We do not condone the conduct on the part of the Patriots and the team's head coach, and we likewise refrain from assessing whether the NFL's sanctions (and its alleged destruction of the videotapes themselves) were otherwise appropriate.†But the reason why Cowen and the other judges decided against Mayer was because, “At best, he [Mayer] possessed nothing more than a contractual right to a seat from which to watch an NFL game between the Jets and the Patriots, and this right was clearly honored.â€

Cowen went on to write, "Mayer possessed either a license or, at best, a contractual right to enter Giants Stadium and to have a seat from which to watch a professional football game. In the clear language of the ticket stub, ‘[t]his ticket only grants entry into the stadium and a spectator seat for the specified NFL game.’ Mayer actually was allowed to enter the stadium and witnessed the ‘specified NFL game’ between the Jets and Patriots. He thereby suffered no cognizable injury to a legally protected right or interest.â€

He then concluded, "We do not condone the conduct on the part of the Patriots and the team’s head coach, and we likewise refrain from assessing whether the NFL’s sanctions (and its alleged destruction of the videotapes themselves) were otherwise appropriate. We further recognize that professional football, like other professional sports, is a multi-billion dollar business. In turn, ticket-holders and other fans may have legitimate issues with the manner in which they are treated….Significantly, our ruling also does not leave Mayer and other ticket-holders without any recourse. Instead, fans could speak out against the Patriots, their coach, and the NFL itself. In fact, they could even go so far as to refuse to purchase tickets or NFL-related merchandise….However, the one thing they cannot do is bring a legal action in a court of law. [emphasis in original].â€

Mayer’s lawyer, Bruce Afran, disagreed. He believed consumer fraud had occurred. He said, “(The opinion) seems to suggest that no matter how much ticket holders pay, they can be defrauded by NFL teams. And it puts the NFL on the same level as professional wrestling.â€

Because there is no law outside of the loose interpretation of fraud from preventing a league from fixing its own games, Afran’s conclusion is correct. One cannot fix a sporting event for gambling purposes; that is illegal. And one cannot fix an intellectual contest for entertainment purposes; that was made illegal after the quiz show scandal of the 1950s.

But fix a sporting event for entertainment purposes? Completely legal.

What’s worse, the lawyer representing the NFL, Shepard Goldfein, actually argued in court that “fans likely would buy tickets even if they knew the Patriots were stealing signals.†In other words, the NFL realizes that much like pro wrestling, even if fans knew the football was rigged, they still pay their money to see it.

In March 2011, the Supreme Court refused to hear Mayer's appeal thereby affirming the lower court's findings.

As these two court cases prove, it is time to see the NFL in a completely different light. It is not a loosely organized group of teams fighting tooth-and-nail to beat their rivals. No, the NFL is a well-organized machine out to maximize its profits by doing everything within their power to make people consume their product: the games.
 

whiteathlete33

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Dude, go away.

Im a New member. I invited the Mod to check my IP address and do his own homework.
Maybe you need to do your own or present a better arguement to the table.
Judges even agree with me on the fixing of the NFL, but not the brilliant minds on this board, like yours who cant even figure out Im a new recent member...Spygate, read of it..

Maybe you need to give up the lies. IP address can easily be changed. There are numerous websites which you can use to change your IP address. Did you really think members here are that stupid?
 

dwid

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1996 Bill Bellicheck was the assistant head coach and secondary coach for the Pats, 97 to 99 he was the assistant head coach to the Jets and also the secondary coach. Yes he did nothing from his time off from the Browns and time head coaching the Patriots. You act like no team has ever turned themselves around in the entire history of football, except for the fact that the Patriots went to the Superbowl in 85, on the back of Craig James. The Saints were playoff contenders in the 90's with multiple winning seasons but choked in the playoffs due to their all black team gassing out. Somehow winning the Superbowl correlates to Katrina when it was 5 seasons afterwards.

I really can't take you seriously if you think they can choreograph plays like that, you obviously have not played a down of football.

Um there were many whispers around the league about cheating like the Patriots, no team is going to come out and say "hey we did that too!" The same with bountygate, other players admitted to having a samee incentive program for big plays, and it followed Gregg Williams back to every team he ever coached with as a d coordinator.

ooh but the saints have a clever nick name, the "aints", which means it must be true. What about the Bucs, who had just as bad of a history, what was the conspiracy behind them winning the Superbowl? Or any other Superbowl in between the Patriots and the Saints? Why hasn't a black qb been able to win since Doug Williams in a strike season in the 80's (where he didn't even lead his team there, he just played the post season).
 

NFLISFIXED!

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1996 Bill Bellicheck was the assistant head coach and secondary coach for the Pats, 97 to 99 he was the assistant head coach to the Jets and also the secondary coach. Yes he did nothing from his time off from the Browns and time head coaching the Patriots. No team has ever turned themselves around in the entire history of football, except for the fact that the Patriots went to the Superbowl in 85, on the back of Craig James. The Saints were playoff contenders in the 90's with multiple winning seasons but choked in the playoffs due to their all black team gassing out. Somehow winning the Superbowl correlates to Katrina when it was 5 seasons afterwards.

I really can't take you seriously if you think they can choreograph plays like that, you obviously have not played a down of football.

Um there were many whispers around the league about cheating like the Patriots, no team is going to come out and say "hey we did that too!" The same with bountygate, other players admitted to having a samee incentive program for big plays, and it followed Gregg Williams back to every team he ever coached with as a d coordinator.

In 1971, former NFL star Bernie Parrish wrote, “With $139 million at stake for the owners, $84 million for the television networks, and up to $66 billion for organized crime’s bookmaking syndicates, and with what I learned as a player, no one will ever convince me that numerous NFL games aren’t fixed.”
(26)

Now, thirty years later, with the dollar figures 10 times what they were then, one would have to be naïve to believe that the NFL would leave everything – its name, its money, its very existence -- up to chance.


'Pro football provides the circus for the hordes.” - J E W Congressman Emanuel Celler








The NFL is a business, first and foremost. In 1996, Financial World magazine valued the worth of the average NFL franchise at $174 million. Consumers spent $3 billion dollars on NFL team related merchandise. On average, more than 12 million viewers watch a regular telecasted game.

And it is television that feeds the most money to this ever hungry beast. Originally, each NFL team sold its broadcast right individually. However in 1961, thanks in part to President John F. Kennedy, Congress passed the Sports Antitrust Broadcast Act, which paved the way for the NFL to market its games as a package. This first package was sold to CBS for $4.65 million. Three years later it was up to $14.1 million. By 1974, with the addition of Monday Night Football, it was a robust $57.6 million. A 1978 poll showed that 70% of the nation’s sports fans followed football, compared to 54% pursuing baseball.
The prices escalated accordingly. By 1984, the networks were paying the NFL $434 million. In 1998, CBS paid $4 billion dollars for eight years, ESPN shelled out $600 million and ABC added an additional $550 million a year all on top of the $1 billion the FOX network had already paid out to the NFL.


Try again, Mr Dwid.
 

NFLISFIXED!

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Maybe you need to give up the lies. IP address can easily be changed. There are numerous websites which you can use to change your IP address. Did you really think members here are that stupid?

Please go away, Moran

Ive not changed anything, But I am J E W wise, and I played Big 10 football.
Also got screwed because of my color though I played in many games and started an entire season.
I also have acute insight into sports, know the betting angle and understand the J E W perhaps as well as anyone on this board.
 

dwid

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so what you have is one former player making a vague reference to "numerous" games being fixed. Nothing in particular on how they are fixed.

really, which big 10 team? which position? which year? or just say under which coach. what kind of offense did you run, what kind of defense

don't you think you would have gained more credibility by starting off with that you played big time football and noticed something shady?

The main thing that is fixed is refs throwing flags so the bottom feeder teams can get closer to .500 so fans stay interested and keep buying tickets and merchandise, thats about it in my opinion.

If anything, COLLEGE football is more corrupt with the refs, but hey, you played big 10 football, you should know that right? but you seem focused on the NFL. There is a reason the SEC keeps winning. Colt McCoy goes out with a mysterious arm injury that still hasn't been explained and they still almost win.
 
Last edited:

NFLISFIXED!

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Ive actually got alot more than that, it was only that that I referenced to make a point. Thanks for taking the bait.

NFL has had gambling scandals in the past: the 1946 NFL Championship Game, the 1958 NFL Championship Game, the suspension of both Paul Hornung and Alex Karras in 1963, and Art Schlichter's entire career just to name a few.

None of these "isolated incidents" means a game was or was not actually fixed...or so the NFL would claim.
Do you really believe that in a multi billion dollar industry that is public Entertainment #1 that no fixing takes place (enter Spread betting, Holding penalty which can be called on every play et al) ?

Im just curious, Do you believe that your Govt never lies to you either?
Do you believe th official story/lie of 911?
 

dwid

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nice job on trying to attack me on other fronts getting away from your original point. Can you name something in the modern NFL age, you know, since the AFL and the NFL merged together. If you want to just name a few, just name ALL of them, I am all ears.

Im still curious to hear all about your big 10 playing days

btw, it would be more effective to post all of this on your nfl is fixed thread, instead of repeating the same thing over and over in various other threads, this has been derailed, as it has nothing to do with Tebow now.
 

FootballDad

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Tebow was offered a contract by an NFL team, but to play a different position. He declined, saying that he will accept a QB role only. Here is one of the articles:

[h=1]Tim Tebow reportedly turns down NFL team’s inquiry at position other than quarterback[/h]

I commented below the article the following, which I'm sure will be lambasted by DWFs, which is nothing new on my posts:

"Good for Tebow. They won't let him run one of the new-fangled read-option offenses that are being tailored to Kaepernick, RG3, Smith, Wilson, Manuel, and next year to Boyd, Bridgwater, etc. Tim is missing one key qualification required to be allowed to run one of these........"
 
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Tebow was offered a contract by an NFL team, but to play a different position. He declined, saying that he will accept a QB role only. Here is one of the articles:

Tim Tebow reportedly turns down NFL team’s inquiry at position other than quarterback



I commented below the article the following, which I'm sure will be lambasted by DWFs, which is nothing new on my posts:

"Good for Tebow. They won't let him run one of the new-fangled read-option offenses that are being tailored to Kaepernick, RG3, Smith, Wilson, Manuel, and next year to Boyd, Bridgwater, etc. Tim is missing one key qualification required to be allowed to run one of these........"

The comments in that article are so stupid it is mindblowing.Probably 85% are either caste media hype that is constantly bad or straight out LGBT hate.A few people realize that he is hated for being a Christian and there are even a handfull of aware commentors that ask how all the black QBs get to run a option offense but Tebow is being ran out of the league.
 

Extra Point

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Black quarterbacks Terrelle Pryor and Geno Smith have been awful yet the media still supports them.

Meanwhile, Tim Tebow, who took his last team to the playoffs gets bashed by the media constantly.

Tebow is a better quarterback than Pryor and Smith yet he doesn't get a shot but they do.

The reason is that Tebow is white and Pryor and Smith are black.

The NFL and the sports media is black supremacist and anti-white. They have a genocidal agenda to replace all whites with blacks.
 

Don Wassall

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Encouraging article about Tebow, though the figure given of "hundreds of thousands of reps" working out is unclear. Is that hundreds of thousands of reps a day, a week, or the total over five months? If it's the latter that's possible, but not as a daily or weekly regimen.

Tim Tebow Reveals Insane Workout Regimen in Pursuit of NFL Dream


Former NFL quarterback Trent Dilfer, who starred at Fresno State and won a Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens, said Tim Tebow was one of the best quarterbacks in college football without even knowing how to throw a football properly.

Now, according to Dilfer, Tebow can throw the football like an NFL quarterback and deserves a shot on an NFL roster. He predicted that Tebow would eventually make an NFL roster again.

In a segment for ESPN, Dilfer said that Tebow wanted Dilfer to give him an objective evaluation. Dilfer went to USC's campus and profiled Tebow's intense devotion to bettering himself as a quarterback. Tebow spent 10 hours a day for six days a week training doing hundreds of thousands of reps. And he did that for five months to make himself a better quarterback. He pushed himself to the limit every day because he just "wants it." In addition to not wanting to be associated with the intense reaction Tebow gets from those who value his embrace of his Christian faith and those rankled by it, NFL teams have complained that Tebow was not able to make "NFL-type throws" while in the league.

Now, Dilfer said that NFL scouts would not the know the difference between Tebow's spiral and those of other NFL quarterbacks, and he said teams should at least consider that.

Though Tebow is now an ESPN analyst for the network's SEC Network, he reportedly has an "out-clause" in his contract that will enable him to leave the network for the NFL if a team shows interests.

In the offseason, former quarterbacks Chris Weinke and Vinnie Testaverde reportedly helped Tebow work on his footwork to make him a better passer. And a quarterback guru who has helped those like Drew Brees, Tom Brady, Joe Flacco, and Alex Smith said Tebow said he has not seen anyone who is as relentless and motivated as Tebow since Nolan Ryan.

http://www.breitbart.com/Breitbart-Sports/2014/01/07/Tebow-Dilfer
 

MetalHed

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Encouraging article about Tebow, though the figure given of "hundreds of thousands of reps" working out is unclear. Is that hundreds of thousands of reps a day, a week, or the total over five months? If it's the latter that's possible, but not as a daily or weekly regimen.

Tim Tebow Reveals Insane Workout Regimen in Pursuit of NFL Dream


Former NFL quarterback Trent Dilfer, who starred at Fresno State and won a Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens, said Tim Tebow was one of the best quarterbacks in college football without even knowing how to throw a football properly.

Now, according to Dilfer, Tebow can throw the football like an NFL quarterback and deserves a shot on an NFL roster. He predicted that Tebow would eventually make an NFL roster again.


http://www.breitbart.com/Breitbart-Sports/2014/01/07/Tebow-Dilfer

The same Dilfer who slobers over every mediocre black quarterback performance week in and week out.... He just gained back my respect!
 

BeyondFedUp

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Encouraging article about Tebow, though the figure given of "hundreds of thousands of reps" working out is unclear. Is that hundreds of thousands of reps a day, a week, or the total over five months? If it's the latter that's possible, but not as a daily or weekly regimen.

Tim Tebow Reveals Insane Workout Regimen in Pursuit of NFL Dream


Former NFL quarterback Trent Dilfer, who starred at Fresno State and won a Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens, said Tim Tebow was one of the best quarterbacks in college football without even knowing how to throw a football properly.

Now, according to Dilfer, Tebow can throw the football like an NFL quarterback and deserves a shot on an NFL roster. He predicted that Tebow would eventually make an NFL roster again.

In a segment for ESPN, Dilfer said that Tebow wanted Dilfer to give him an objective evaluation. Dilfer went to USC's campus and profiled Tebow's intense devotion to bettering himself as a quarterback. Tebow spent 10 hours a day for six days a week training doing hundreds of thousands of reps. And he did that for five months to make himself a better quarterback. He pushed himself to the limit every day because he just "wants it." In addition to not wanting to be associated with the intense reaction Tebow gets from those who value his embrace of his Christian faith and those rankled by it, NFL teams have complained that Tebow was not able to make "NFL-type throws" while in the league.

Now, Dilfer said that NFL scouts would not the know the difference between Tebow's spiral and those of other NFL quarterbacks, and he said teams should at least consider that.

Though Tebow is now an ESPN analyst for the network's SEC Network, he reportedly has an "out-clause" in his contract that will enable him to leave the network for the NFL if a team shows interests.

In the offseason, former quarterbacks Chris Weinke and Vinnie Testaverde reportedly helped Tebow work on his footwork to make him a better passer. And a quarterback guru who has helped those like Drew Brees, Tom Brady, Joe Flacco, and Alex Smith said Tebow said he has not seen anyone who is as relentless and motivated as Tebow since Nolan Ryan.

http://www.breitbart.com/Breitbart-Sports/2014/01/07/Tebow-Dilfer

It just shows us who controls the whole ball of wax. The fact that this is from breitbart and not nfl.com or espn.com, et al shows undeniable proof that the scumbuckets in charge hate this guy like there's no tomorrow. If he were even a quarter Black or a liberal then this would be front page news on all of the sports sites and the media hordes would say he'll be back on a roster "guaranteed" next season. The NFL is fixed against this guy because of their hatred for who and what he is, not in regard to his talent or especially his potential. Look how many chances black quarterbacks get that have half his talent, potential, and work ethic...
The League is over, it's just waiting for the final bell to be sounded like a distant siren.
 

Leonardfan

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Despicable uppity n-word afleet Lesean McCoy takes unnecessary shot at Tebow.

http://www.tmz.com/2014/04/13/lesean-mccoy-tim-tebow-video-son-toddler

I really wouldn't shed a tear if McCoy suffered a season ending injury and had his job taken away by Sproles.
Meanwhile, maybe some team has the balls to give Tebow a shot in training camp.

I saw that to PHillisFan, I wouldn't mind to see that ***** get injured either. As far as Tebow I think he has been blacklisted and is done with the NFL unfortunately. Any optimism I had for Tebow left when the Patriots cut him. Again as I say with many things I do not believe this to be an indication of his talent or potential, but just a realistic viewpoint of the caste system and Tebow being one of the most well known victims of it. I wish it was not the case as many a negro as been given chance after chance in the NFL. Jamarcus Russel was given more of an opportunity than Tebow ever got.
 

PHillisFan

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I saw that to PHillisFan, I wouldn't mind to see that ***** get injured either. As far as Tebow I think he has been blacklisted and is done with the NFL unfortunately. Any optimism I had for Tebow left when the Patriots cut him. Again as I say with many things I do not believe this to be an indication of his talent or potential, but just a realistic viewpoint of the caste system and Tebow being one of the most well known victims of it. I wish it was not the case as many a negro as been given chance after chance in the NFL. Jamarcus Russel was given more of an opportunity than Tebow ever got.

If all those reports about Tebow working with a qb coach and improving his mechanics are true, there's always a chance he'll sniff some teams training camp within the next couple of years.
 

PamelaOC

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Tebow was a double threat because of his Christianity and his style of play that's "supposed" to be For Blacks Only (TM). (BTW, it's annoying dealing with lamestream conservatives who rightly object to the Christian-bashing but are blind when it comes to race). He attacked cultural Marxist dogma on two fronts. The ivory-tower elites who rule us were never going to tolerate that. I'm surprised they let him play for as long as he did.
 

PHillisFan

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It's become clear that the nfl prefers a different kind of circus that's over the rainbow in Michael Sam.
 

WSTD14

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May 12, 2014
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If all those reports aboutthe box working with a qb coach and improving his mechanics are true, there's always a chance he'll sniff some teams training camp within the next couple of years.

There's around 15 younger quarterbacks coming into the league every year. The more time that goes by, the less likely he'll get a shot.

He should have switched positions while continuing to work with the QB coach on the side, or played in the CFL. Relishing his position as a bruising running back or wstd would have gone a long way in exhibiting his hunger and love for the game. That fact that he stubbornly took his ball and went home pretty much sealed his fate.
 
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