Iowa/Michigan

Spotlight #1: Iowa WR Marvin McNutt

Spotlight #2: Iowa CB Shaun Prater 

1st quarter

11:41: McNutt with a catch over the middle in stride. 20 yards. Smooth. Nice hands.

9:39: Prater has a dump off go to his side of the field. Good closing speed and instincts, though it was dropped because the throw was behind the receiver a bit.

9:20: McNutt catches one short and then is driven out of bounds.

7:42: Prater with a solid tackle after a short completion.

6:05: Prater sticks his nose in on a tackle after a gain of 8 on the ground.

5:04: Prater almost allows a short catch, but the receiver drops it, hearing Prater’s footsteps. Prater was able to get a hand on the ball after the drop as well.

4:56: Prater can’t wrap up the tight end in the open field.

0:39: False start penalty on Riley Reiff.

0:33: McNutt catches a slant short of the sticks on 3rd and 14. Nice catch, but can’t break it. 4th down.

2nd quarter

12:25: Iowa’s Broderick Binns with his 2nd pass deflection of the night.

11:37: McNutt catches one for 14, he didn’t have a lot of room and didn’t do much after the catch.

9:30: McNutt gets open quick on 3rd and 7, but drops a sure first down.

4:58: Prater with excellent coverage on a deep route. It might have been borderline pass interference, but it looked clean to me.

4:00: McNutt gets a few on an end around. He could have gotten a bigger gain had he been running full speed the whole time. He wasn’t because it was a designed pass. McNutt is a former quarterback.

3:01: Ryan Van Bergen with a tackle for a loss.

2:43: McNutt catches a screen, breaks one, but not enough for the first.

 

3rd quarter

14:31: Prater can’t get off a block on a sizeable run. 7 yards.

10:13: Prater blocked off the play on a quarterback run.

7:45: Prater in on a tackle for a loss.

7:03: Binns with his 3rd deflection of the night. The 6-1 255 defensive end could be drafted late as a 3-4 outside linebacker. He has 38 tackles, 8 for loss, 3.5 sacks, and now 6 pass deflections on the year.

4:57: McNutt thrown to, but he’s well covered. The quarterback makes a bad decision under pressure from a blitz.

4th quarter

14:10: McNutt just has one broken up. The true freshman has done a great job on him.

14:04: McNutt with a nice catch for a first down. Quick, strong hands to snatch it.

12:45: McNutt can’t quite break one after a short completion. 3rd and 2 now.

12:03: McNutt getting into a rhythm. Good chemistry with his quarterback, 3rd down conversion.

10:47: McNutt with a lazy break out of his route. This one was bad.

7:43: McNutt plucks an inaccurate ball out of the air for 24 yards.

1:54: Prater with an excellent deep coverage, runs stride for stride with the receiver, forces the route out of bounds. He had the best shot at the ball.

1:48: Prater defending Roundtree deep, beat after a poor jam at the line, but overthrown.

1:30: Prater allows a sizeable gain, but keeps the play in front of him, a key in a close game under 2 minutes.

0:00: Coming into this game, McNutt had 48 catches for 858 yards and 9 touchdowns in 8 games. He’s rising up boards and could be a day 2 pick. Tonight he had 9 catches for 101 yards and seemed to solidify himself as a day 2 pick. He looks like a solid possession receiver. He is big and has solid hands, catches the ball the right way, and gets open well, but he doesn’t seem to have a two gear on deep routes. He doesn’t look very fast.

He also had a few mental lapses, a dropped pass and a very lazy, poor route, though I’d have to see more tape to decide if that’s a habit or not. I think he’d be a nice #2 receiver at the next level, but I don’t know if there’s anything special here or not. He wasn’t all that good before this season and he doesn’t appear to have elite athleticism either.

Shaun Prater looked very solid as well, though his matchup wasn’t very tough. He was matched up with Roy Roundtree, who had 12 catches for 241 yards and 2 scores coming in, though he was much better last season. Roundtree had 2 catches for 37 yards in this game, though one of them was when he wasn’t covered by Prater. The other one was a late catch when Prater was playing off him, just trying to avoid the big play. Prater also could have surrendered a much bigger gain on a poor coverage by Denard Robinson overthrew his receiver.

The 5-11 195 Prater had a few nice plays against the run, but he also whiffed on a couple tackles and had trouble getting off a couple blocks. He looks like a solid player against the run and nothing more, although I will give him points for effort. At 5-11 195, the effort is what I like to see. He’s not a very big cornerback so he’s not going to be known for his ability against the run. Overall, I’d like to see him with a tougher matchup, like next week against DJ Cunningham, but he looks like the late day 2/early 3 day prospect people are making him to be.

Iowa defensive end Broderick Binns also stood out in this one. He can’t stay at defensive end at the next level at 6-1 255, but it was good to see him have 3 pass breakups. He also dropped in coverage on several occasions and looks like someone who could be a nice late round flier as a 3-4 outside linebacker. On the season, Binns has 38 tackles, 8 for loss, 3.5 sacks, and a whopping 7 pass breakups in 9 games. 

As for Michigan, both Ryan Van Bergen and Mike Martin had good games. Both are strong against the run and should be drafted in day 3. The 6-2 305 Martin has 5.5 tackles for loss and 3 sacks on the year and looks like a solid rotation 4-3 defensive tackle. Van Bergen has 8 tackles for loss and 3.5 tackles for loss on the year. At 6-5 285, he looks like a mid rounder as a 3-4 defensive end or 4-3 left end.

 

Jarret Johnson Chargers

 

Johnson won’t help the Chargers much with their pass rush, but he will help their defense as a two down run stuffing linebacker and compliment to situational pass rusher and team leader in sacks Antawn Barnes. The Chargers will hope that Shaun Phillips can have a bounce back season in 2012 and will probably still use a 2nd to 4th rounder on a pass rusher as depth and competition just in case.

As a run stuffer, Johnson is a great player. He has experience in both a 3-4 and a 4-3 and fits in the Chargers’ 3-4. Among 4-3 outside linebacker last year, Johnson ranked 2nd against the run and 5th overall according to ProFootballFocus. He’s 31 in August, but this is a reasonable contract (4 years, 19 million) with not a lot of guaranteed money (7 million).

Grade: A

 

Jets 38 Bills 14

By Steve Janis 

Wow. The Buffalo Bills are beyond pathetic/embarrassing. I am not sure exactly what is beyond that other than the Bills and I know it is ugly. This game was pathetic from the onset. There is no point to breaking it down or delving into this one. It was just under the Patriots SNF game from 2007. 

The worst part is there is no hope. At least after that game we were still 5-5 and Ralph wasn’t yet 90 (he’ll be 92 10/17). I don’t even want to ask if things can get worse because what if they can?

Worst case scenario is they leave Buffalo. Right now that doesn’t seem like that much worse. Perhaps after the numbing pain wares off that statement won’t be true but jeez. This is bad.

Best case scenario is what, Ralph lives a few more years and we continue to be mediocre? Nah he could have a succession plan and we could hit on a QB next year and Chan could be fired and Parcells could be brought it and Maybin could realize he is an NFL player or at least was drafted to be one and and eh fkk it.

http://wnywatercooler.blogspot.com 

 

Joey Porter Cardinals

 

 

The Cardinals needed rush linebacker help. They have been trying to transition to a 3-4 (smartly making a gradual transition rather than abruptly shifting schemes like the Bills did). As a 3-4 team, they would need to get a ton more pressure from their linebackers. They had 43 sacks last year, but their leaders in sacks from the rush linebacker position were Bert Berry with 6, Clark Haggans with 5, and Chike Okeafor with 4.5 and Berry recently retired. That being said, 17.5 million seems like a lot to pay a soon to be 33 year old rush linebacker. Yes, his 9 sacks would have led the Cardinals last year, but there wasn’t exactly a ton of offers out there for Porter because of his age and how he forced himself out of Miami. The only other team I heard out there interested in Porter was the Redskins, who I could see spending this much for him, but needing to outbid the traditionally cost careless Washington Redskins to get Porter is not an excuse for paying him this much money.

His age hurts the Cardinals in two ways. One, in the most obvious way, he could start to deteriorate very soon. His 9 sacks in 2009 were good, but down 8.5 from his 17.5 in 2008. He should continue slowing down like that and probably won’t finish this deal as a member of the Cardinals. Two, though the Cardinals needed a rush linebacker, they didn’t need another old rush linebacker. Both Haggans and Okeafor are 33 or older also. They needed a shot of youth at the rush linebacker position, to give them a future rush linebacker to pair with Brown, and Porter is certainly not that. I can only hope this doesn’t deter the Cardinals from pursuing guys like Jerry Hughes, who reminds me of a young Joey Porter, in the 2010 NFL Draft. This was not a good use of money.

Grade: C

 

Kamerion Wimbley Titans

 

My only question with Wimbley is how he’ll fit in Tennessee. He’s played rush linebacker in a 3-4 and the joker (4-3 defensive end/outside linebacker) position in Oakland. He’ll be an every down stand up defensive end in Tennessee it seems and I just wonder how he’ll handle that. As a pass rusher, he’ll probably be fine.

As an outside linebacker, he was ProFootballFocus’ 2nd rated pass rushing 4-3 outside linebacker with a +16.4, which would have ranked 9th among defensive ends, as he had 6 sacks and 40 pressures last season. He could struggle against the run with a position change and position changes are always a risk and a projection. Given that, 35 million over 5 years with 13.5 million guaranteed seems a bit rich, though they need really need a pass rusher.

Grade: B

 

LaDainian Tomlinson Jets

 

LT comes to the Jets to replace Thomas Jones, begging the question, was this necessary? Thomas Jones was the 3rd leading rusher in the league last year and he only one year older than LT and he got paid 5 million over 2 years to go to the Chiefs after the Jets cut him. Now the Jets pay roughly the same amount, slightly more, to LT who averaged 3.3 YPC last year. Granted, he was running behind a horrible offensive line, but why would the Jets sign a worse and only slightly younger running back to replace Jones, who they could have had for the same price if not cheaper. LT could turn around him career behind a drastically better line in New York, but I doubt he’ll be anything like what Jones could have been. The only possible reason I could think of LT being better than Jones for the Jets is if Jones refused to take a secondary role to Shonn Greene and LT was fine with this. I do find that a bit hard to believe though, considering LT said himself that he still considers himself a feature back.

Grade: C

Lions Preview 2011

 

9/3/11: The Lions won their last 4 last season to close 6-10, but had a points differential of a team that should have finished 8-8. They added Nick Fairley, Stephen Tulloch, and Justin Durant to their front 7 and they get Matt Stafford back from injury. The questions were, can Stafford stay healthy and is Stafford even that good? Stafford has yet to prove himself as a franchise quarterback after 2 injury plagued seasons after going #1 in 2009. However, he looked amazing this preseason and the Lions as a whole did as well. I’m sneaking them into that 6th playoff spot in the NFC at 10-6.

In 2008, the Lions won no games. If they had forfeited every game, their record would have been the same. However, that seems like a long way away now. Bottoming out was what this team needed after a long stretch of terrible play. Bottoming out allowed them to start fresh with new personnel in the front office (and no more Matt Millen) and at head coach. It also gave them the first pick and allowed them to select their savior, quarterback Matt Stafford out of Georgia.

The Lions won their final 4 games last season to finish 6-10. Their point differential of minus 7 suggests that with better luck (leave it to the Lions to have terrible luck), they really should have been a 7 or 8 win team in 2010. In fact, 7 of their 10 losses came by 8 points or fewer. And this was all without “savior” Matt Stafford, with the exception of 3 games (only finished 1 though).

Stafford is healthy now, but seems to have the toughness of, as one of his teammates put it, a “china doll.” It seems like every time he hits the turf his shoulder separates. Even if Stafford can play a 16 game season, he’s still largely an unknown commodity. He sucked as a rookie, throwing 20 picks to 13 touchdowns, completing just 53.3% of his passes and averaging 6.0 yards per attempt. However, even Peyton Manning sucked as a rookie.

In limited action in 2010, Stafford completed 59.4% of his passes for an average of 5.6 yards per attempt and 6 touchdowns to 1 interception, but that was in very limited action. The point is, there are a lot of unknowns with Stafford. Can he stay healthy? If he even good? However, there’s a lot of upside here and if they can win 6 games with bad luck without him, imagine what they can do if he’s a legitimate franchise quarterback.

You can also add in the fact that the Lions drafted well to the list of reasons why they are sleepers this year. However, those draft picks need to stay healthy. They’ve already lost one of their top 3 draft picks, Mikel Leshoure, for the season. Meanwhile, first round pick Nick Fairley, who was supposed to add to what looks like one of the best front 7s in the league, could be in doubt for the start of the season with a foot injury. Receiver Titus Young is the only one of their top rookies who will definitely be ready for week 1.

Young will man the slot for the Lions, at least to start the season. If marginal veteran Nate Burleson struggles or Young particularly impresses, Young could move into the starting lineup opposite “Megatron” Calvin Johnson. Calvin Johnson is the type of receiver you create in Madden when you want to cheat. You know, when you set all his attributes to 99 and you make him 7 foot tall and 400 pounds, that’s essentially Calvin Johnson.

He doesn’t quite get ranked on the same level as Andre Johnson because he never has had the consistent quarterback Andre has. However, discounting 2009 when he was hurt, he has 155 catches for 2451 yards and 24 touchdowns in his last 2 seasons even though his quarterbacks were Daunte Culpepper, Dan Orlovsky, Jon Kitna, Drew Stanton, Shaun Hill, and 3 games of Matt Stafford (2 of which he didn’t even finish). Stafford is by far the best quarterback of that bunch. He has by far the best arm and is thus best suited to make full use of Megatron’s amazing deep threat abilities. I’m really, really excited to see what Stafford and Johnson can do if both stay healthy. Stafford must be thrilled to have Calvin at his disposal.

At tight end, former 20th overall pick Brandon Pettigrew is an overrated player, at least as a pass catcher. He’s a good run blocker, however. He did catch 71 passes on 103 targets last year, but he also committed 10 penalties and dropped 12 passes. Stafford won’t look his way as much this season as Shaun Hill and Drew Stanton did last year because Stafford has a stronger arm and will be looking downfield more often.

In two tight end sets, Tony Scheffler comes in. Scheffler was once a talented starting tight end in Denver before Josh McDaniels came in and decided that pass catching tight ends were stupid and shipped him to Detroit for some spare change. Scheffler caught 45 passes last season, but that number should also drop this season. Hill/Stanton threw to tight ends 174 times in 2010. That won’t be the case in 2011 if Stafford can stay healthy.

Speaking of keeping Stafford healthy, a lot of that will fall on the offensive line. Stafford needs to be kept upright. He’s too fragile to take a lot of hits, or at least he’s proved to be that way so far in his career. Left tackle Jeff Backus bounced back from 18 combined sacks allowed in from 2008-2009, rewarding his coach’s blind faith by only allowing 4 sacks in 2010. He is, however, 34 in September and currently hurt. He’s also a free agent, but the Lions passed on drafting his replacement in 2010 because they liked 2010 4th round pick Jason Fox, as well as Corey Hilliard.

Left guard Rob Sims is a decent pass protector, but like center Dominic Raiola and right guard Stephen Peterman, he is not very good as a run blocker. There’s a reason why this team struggled to run the ball last year. These guys weren’t opening holes. At right tackle, Gosder Cherilus has never lived up to his billing as the 17th overall pick in 2008 (over Jeff Otah). However, he’s a decent starter, provided he stays healthy.

Running behind this poor run blocking offensive line will be lead back Jahvid Best. Best averaged a mere 3.2 yards per carry in 2010, not entirely his fault. You can blame a lot of that on the line and the rest can be blamed on turf toe sapping the rookie 1st round pick’s explosiveness. Best is reportedly dropping jaws in training camp once again so he should be poised for a big season.

He’s not a true every down back so the Lions drafted Mikel Leshoure in the 2nd round. Unfortunately, and rather ironically considering Best was the one with injury problems, Leshoure tore his Achilles in camp and is out for the season. The Lions signed Mike Bell and Jerome Harrison to compete for the #2 back job behind Best, a battle Harrison should definitely win.

Bell has a career average of 3.7 yards per carry, while Harrison rushed for 561 yards and 5 touchdowns in the final 3 games of the 2010 season, lost his starting job to Peyton Hillis the next season and then was traded to Philadelphia where he averaged 6.0 yards per carry as LeSean McCoy’s backup, including 99 yards on 21 carries as the starter week 17. Why this guy is not a starter in this league, I don’t know and I also don’t know why he was available in free agency for so long, but credit the Lions for picking him up. He’s definitely better than Bell, who should be battling with veteran Maurice Morris for the #3 back role.

 

Defensively, one of the things that has so many people so excited about Detroit as a sleeper is their front 7. They had 44 sacks last season and figure to improve upon that total even more this season. Ndamukong Suh had 10 sacks as a defensive tackle as a rookie last year. That’s unheard of. If Sam Bradford wasn’t looking like a franchise quarterback and savior in St. Louis, there would be calls in St. Louis for people to be fired for passing on Suh for Bradford. We shouldn’t expect anything less of Suh this season.

Nick Fairley is supposed to start next to him. Fairley could miss a few games, but he’ll be back sooner rather than later. He’s a rookie and will be hurt by the lockout, but he’s an extremely talented player who had 12.5 sacks for Auburn last season and only dropped because of bullshit “durability issues” (he sounds like he can’t breathe when he talks so maybe that’s why those “issues” exist).

Next to Suh, he should dominate. You won’t be able to stop both of them. They will wreak havoc. Don’t forget, the Lions also have solid players in Corey Williams and Sammie Lee Hill on their depth chart at defensive tackle. They might have the most defensive tackle depth in the league. Gone are the days when this team was starting a 36 year old Grady Jackson at defensive tackle.

At defensive end, the Lions use a rotating trio of Kyle Vanden Bosch, Cliff Avril, and Lawrence Jackson. Vanden Bosch is the veteran of the group. Vanden Bosch turns 33 in November, but he’s a leader on the field and a favorite of Head Coach Jim Schwartz, under whom Vanden Bosch had his best success when Schwartz was the defensive coordinator in Tennessee. He only had 4 sacks last season, but makes up for it by being strong against the run.

Avril is undersized and gets washed against the run, but you take the good with the bad with him. He put up 8.5 sacks and a whopping 43 quarterback pressures last season despite only playing 651 snaps. Lawrence Jackson is currently listed as a 2nd stringer, but that was the case last season and he still found opportunities to get on the field. The former 1st rounder was given up on way too soon by Seattle, who sent him to Detroit last offseason. He put up 6 sacks on 337 snaps.

Between their 4 talented defensive tackles and their 3 talented defensive ends, they have 7 talented defensive linemen that they can mix and match and use to really punish opposing quarterbacks. The defensive line was a strength of this team last year and will be a bigger strength next season. However, linebacker, once a strength of this team, was a weakness last season. This season it figures to be a strength once more.

The reason behind their new found strength at the position is two underrated free agent signings, Stephen Tulloch and Justin Durant. Tulloch was 2nd in the league in tackles last season, yet the Lions were able to get him for a mere 3.35 million over 1 year. He must have taken some kind of discount to play for Jim Schwartz, his former defensive coordinator in Tennessee, because they got him at a bargain. He’ll immediately make a noticeable difference in their linebacking corps and he’s familiar with Schwartz’ system, a plus coming out of a lockout shortened offseason.

Justin Durant, meanwhile, comes over from Jacksonville. He’s a talented player when healthy, but he’s never played more than 14 games in a season missing 14 games in his 4 years as a pro. If, and when, he gets hurt, rookie linebacker Doug Hogue, a 5th rounder out of Syracuse, could step into the lineup. Durant and Tulloch combine with DeAndre Levy to form a very formidable linebacking group. Levy, an incumbent starter from 2010, was the lone bright spot at the position for the Lions in 2010 and figures to have another strong season in 2011. There are simply no holes in their front 7. They have more defensive line depth than any team in the league, depth the coaching staff knows how to use effectively.

The Lions are hoping their pass rush and their overall strength up front can mask their deficiencies in the secondary. Despite 44 sacks, they still ranked 26th against the pass thanks to terrible coverage. Chris Houston could be an adequate #2 cornerback in the league, but he had to be their #1 last year because Alphonso Smith and Nathan Vasher split time as the #2 cornerbacks. Neither of them were very good.

The Lions signed Eric Wright in free agency to be their new #2 cornerback. Wright, however, had the 2nd worst quarterback rating against of any eligible cornerback in the league last year, only behind Dallas’ Michael Jenkins. Wright surrendered a 66.5% completion percentage and 6 touchdowns to 1 interception. He is still just 26 and he’s been better in the past so maybe a change of scenery and a better pass rush in front of him is all he needs to become a legitimate starter again. Even if that happens, the Lions won’t have a legitimate #1 cornerback, so they should struggle in pass coverage once again.

Louis Delmas, a 2009 2nd round pick, is the most talented of their defensive backs. He’s not great against the pass, but he’s not terrible either and his strength is against the run. Meanwhile, at strong safety, CC “Cant Cover” Brown is no longer the starter, very good news. However, that’s where the good news ends. 2010 3rd round pick Amari Spievey will start at the position this year. He struggled mightily as a rookie. He could bounce back in his 2nd season, but I have doubts about his ability to do so.

The Lions are many people’s top sleeper for 2011. I think it’s best to temper expectations right now for them. They did play well enough to be an 8-8 team in 2010 and they are getting quarterback Matt Stafford back from injury, but people act like the only question mark with Stafford is his health. It’s not. Plenty of #1 overall quarterbacks have busted before. We’re skeptical about guys like Cam Newton and Sam Bradford after they get drafted, but we seem to be giving Stafford a free pass even though he’s yet to prove himself one way or another.

I’m not going to predict the playoffs for the Lions, though I’ll admit I could easily be wrong. If Stafford can play 16 games and be a legitimate franchise quarterback for them, they could easily win 11 games and make the playoffs as a wild card and be a tough first round out. They have enough non-quarterback talent to do that. However, I’m going conservative with my prediction for them this season.

Quarterback: B-

Running backs: B-

Offensive line: C+

Receiving corps: B

Run defense: B

Pass rush: A

Pass coverage: C-

Coaching: B-

Projection: 10-6 2nd in NFC North

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Martez Wilson Scout

 

Middle Linebacker

Illinois

6-4 250

Draft board overall prospect rank: #26

Draft board overall middle linebacker rank: #2

Overall rating: 83 (late 1st)

40 time: 4.44

3/28/11: Martez Wilson has been much hyped since he was the #5 overall high school player in 2007, committing to Illinois as an end and moving to linebacker. He definitely has the upside and the natural athleticism, but doesn’t always live up to it. He showed a lot of upside as a backup as a freshman, before disappointing as a starter as a sophomore, and then being hurt as a junior, before finally putting at all together this year as a redshirt junior.

He had 111 tackles, 4 sacks, and a pick as primarily a middle linebacker this year, though he can play outside some and he showed that natural athleticism big time with a 4.44 40 at 6-4 250. He is a former end, so he is an above average pass rusher for his position. He can’t play rush linebacker or another, but he is above average as a blitzer so that’s just like a cherry on top to his game.

His major concerns are of course his durability and also his instincts and his work ethic. He has really never lived up to his upside, so it’s important not to fall in love with his athleticism and make him a true first rounder. I have a late first round grade on him, remember middle linebackers rarely get picked early, and I think that’s going to be where he goes. His absolute ceiling in terms of being drafted is 26th to Baltimore, but he’ll likely go in the early 2nd round.

NFL Comparison: Karlos Dansby

 

 

Middle Linebackers 2012

Updated 4/4/12

QB RB FB WR TE OT G C DE RLB DT NT 3-4 DE OLB MLB CB S K P 

Scoring System

100 Once in a decade prospect 
95-99 Elite talent 
90-95 Solid top 10 pick 
85-90 Solid first round pick 
80-85 Late 1st-early 2nd 
75-80 Solid 2nd round pick 
70-75 Solid 3rd round pick 
65-70 3rd-4th round pick 
60-65 4th-5th round pick 
55-60 5th round pick 
50-55 6th round pick 
45-50 7th round pick 
40-45 Undrafted, invite to training camp 
<40 No NFL Future

  

1. Luke Kuechly (Boston College) 91

2. Dont’a Hightower (Alabama) 84

3. Mychal Kendricks (California) 72

4. Tank Carder (TCU) 63

5. Audie Cole (NC State) 57

6. James-Michael Johnson (Nevada) 57

7. Chris Galippo (USC) 56

8. Jerry Franklin (Arkansas) 51

9. JK Schaffer (Cincinnati) 49

10. Austin Johnson (Tennessee) 46 

11. Vontaze Burflict (Arizona State) 45

 

18. Max Gruder (Pittsburgh) 43<p> </p><p id=”dontshowthis”> </p>

Must win Bills

By Steve Janis 

Yes, this is a must win for the Buffalo Bills. They are 0-8, they want the #1 overall pick, they are already out of the playoffs and every L they get moves them closer to Andrew Luck (hopefully). I get all that. But do we really wanna go 0-16? I don’t and one victory won’t end our chances at the top spot in the draft any way.

Looking at the schedule this will be the last game the Buffalo Bills are favored all season. Etch that into a piece of wood. This is there last good chance at a victory. Stafford is out, the Lions have lost 24 straight on the road and the game is actually in Erie County.

We’re all about numb to all of the losing at this point but zero triumphs in an entire season? That is beyond disheartening it is beyond embarrassing. I couldn’t stomach it. Losing to Shaun Hill and an albatross of a squad as the Detroit Lions would be icing on a poop popsicle. Don’t we want to leave the Ralph once this season after a win? I for one miss having a post game beer in celebration rather than to drowned my sorrows. Win one for the gipper!

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