(01-03-2023, 03:10 PM)casear2727 Wrote: [ -> ]The fact you come on here as a non-Bengals fan just to trash the coaches is annoying. Also the straight out lies about posters dissing Burrow. And yes there are many examples of your patheticness. Just go away.
I talked to a high official in the SEC about OU joining the SEC. I said my experience with LSU fans wasn’t good. He laughed. He said LSU fans are the filthiest,trashiest, most degenerate SEC fans and that the other schools aren’t like them and not to worry. So there you go. A high ranking SEC official. Imagine that? So it shouldn’t surprise anybody. Lincoln Riley almost went there instead of USC but according to my source the wives visited and said you’ll go without us.
(01-03-2023, 05:20 PM)Destro Wrote: [ -> ]Most know I am not the biggest Zac Taylor fan, and I found zero issues with him last night. From the good play calling to start the game to his conduct following the injury. No fault, at all. Perfect.
Awesome Destro.
(01-03-2023, 05:29 PM)Sled21 Wrote: [ -> ]They are talking about this (obviously) on Moving the Chains. They are crediting the Bengals doctor with saving this kids life on the field.
Great on him. What a job these guy's have...
(01-03-2023, 05:51 PM)SladeX Wrote: [ -> ]I am more than willing to “put up with” whatever shortcomings ZT has as a coach going forward. Actually felt this way for quite a whole now, but this incident has cemented into place that I would run through a wall for the guy, so to speak. As to lsu dude, whatever man.
Well said SladeX. Feel the same, this cemented Zac as my HC for a long time. That is what you want to see from your HC.
Total class.
(01-03-2023, 01:48 PM)LSUfaninTN Wrote: [ -> ]I get what you’re saying, it was a tough situation and he handled it with class, but game management and play calling is kind of a big deal for a head coach. He’s 11-4 (prob would’ve been 12-4 had last night not gone that way) so it’s fine, but, this whole incident doesn’t make him a better head coach.
If you don't think that character is the foundation of success in coaching (and really, everything else), you don't know much about coaching.
To the OP: This is a great thread, KiJana. Thank you.
Pat Kirwan stated he was talking to a coach (didn't say which team) but the coach said the Team Capitans for both teams were awesome. They were the ones conveying the team's thoughts to the HC. So shout out to:
Joe Burrow
Michael Thomas
Joe Mixon
Ted Karras
DJ Reader
Vonn Bell
Sam Hubbard
I am never ever going to make another critical statement about Coach Taylor.
What a great human being.
I'll just say this, there was a reason Joe Burrow all of a sudden started warming up throwing while Allen got a sick look on his face. The 5 minute deal happened. It may have come from the league, or more likely from the ref who was just doing his job restarting rhe game after the injured player is removed, but it happened.
(01-03-2023, 09:49 PM)casear2727 Wrote: [ -> ]Someone is lying, no way Joe Buck says that 4 times without someone telling him. Im not betting on the honesty of the league executives trying very hard to cover their butts.
Playing peacemaker, but there could have been an automatic trigger of "well, what happens now," when he went down. That is what everyone was going by. That's what Buck was using. Of course, the situation changed as the seriousness ramped up, but no one was giving a game status update, as they didn't have one. I lean more towards everyone was trying to figure out what was what and not worrying about whatever Joe Buck was saying on TV.
(01-03-2023, 10:12 PM)Luvnit2 Wrote: [ -> ]That is encouraging.
Prayers are a powerful thing, please keep praying for this young man and his family.
When Dan Orlovsky prayed today live on ESPN to close his show with Laura Rutledge and Marcus Spears I about fainted.
(01-03-2023, 07:08 PM)Speedy Thomas Wrote: [ -> ]If you don't think that character is the foundation of success in coaching (and really, everything else), you don't know much about coaching.
To the OP: This is a great thread, KiJana. Thank you.
Dittos on the message to the OP. What a great thread to start.
I think the most likely reality is that both sides are being truthful, and that someone in the exchange didn't have a nuanced interpretation of the communication. The NFL will probably give teams a standard 5-minute period (or so) in the wake of significant injury timeouts, and when the ESPN broadcast team was looking for answers that's what they were told. Then Joe Burrow started tossing a football around, and it seemed confirmatory. The NFL could have still decided somewhere up the chain that the players would need more time than that (not necessarily so much time that the game is cut short, but more than 5 minutes) and communicated that to the officials and the head coaches.
I don't have much trust for ESPN or the NFL either, and if there really is a liar among them then I'd guess the NFL is the liar first. I don't think ESPN would have a sensible motivation to lie about this (certainly not Joe Buck or the broadcast team while covering the matter in real time). I believe the following reflects reality, in order of probability to be true:
1 - both sides legitimately believe they are telling the truth, and something wasn't communicated effectively
2 - the NFL is lying and trying to save face
.
.
.
3 - ESPN is lying
(01-03-2023, 11:12 PM)JaggedJimmyJay Wrote: [ -> ]I think the most likely reality is that both sides are being truthful, and that someone in the exchange didn't have a nuanced interpretation of the communication. The NFL will probably give teams a standard 5-minute period (or so) in the wake of significant injury timeouts, and when the ESPN broadcast team was looking for answers that's what they were told. Then Joe Burrow started tossing a football around, and it seemed confirmatory. The NFL could have still decided somewhere up the chain that the players would need more time than that (not necessarily so much time that the game is cut short, but more than 5 minutes) and communicated that to the officials and the head coaches.
I don't have much trust for ESPN or the NFL either, and if there really is a liar among them then I'd guess the NFL is the liar first. I don't think ESPN would have a sensible motivation to lie about this (certainly not Joe Buck or the broadcast team while covering the matter in real time). I believe the following reflects reality, in order of probability to be true:
1 - both sides legitimately believe they are telling the truth, and something wasn't communicated effectively
2 - the NFL is lying and trying to save face
.
.
.
3 - ESPN is lying
Gonna have to go with Number 2.