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Who is the best football you’ve seen play? |
Posted by: Housh - 12-22-2023, 11:50 PM - Forum: JUNGLE NOISE
- Replies (63)
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Ngl guys I’m at my job bored and want to have a convo.
No real limits to this question. Also it’s not restricted to guys you’ve seen LIVE. The wording was a bit confusing .
Can be anyone you’ve seen on TV.
Iv got 2 categories
First one is FOR ONE GAME
Second is all time.
So the best guy Iv seen have one good game was Joe Burrow in college in the championship game VS Clemson. Iv never seen a QB be that accurate and that correct with every read.
He was 31-49 5 pass TDs and 1 rush TD. Looking at the box score seeing he has 18 incompletions doesn’t even feel right with how he dominated but to me that was the best individual game I’d ever seen one guy play.
Then for the all time best football player Iv ever seen it’s between Brady, Ray Lewis and Darrell Revis.
I’d go for Revis.
Iv never seen a guy dominate the secondary like him. He’s better than Woodson, Polomalu, Reed, everyone.
Revis could play nickle, boundary, he also had some Mike Hilton in him VS the run. He was so good it was honestly a bad idea to even throw it to his side of the field. I don’t think i have seen another football player be so good at so many things.
Only reason Ray Lewis didn’t win is because he was really that dominate against the pass.
But Ray Lewis is my fave linebacker ever tho. Iv never seen a guy be able to get involved in so many tackles. He was a football genius for sure.
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Dominique Davis signed to 53 |
Posted by: pally - 12-22-2023, 03:29 PM - Forum: JUNGLE NOISE
- Replies (3)
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Dominique Davis, to the great pleasure of many posters here, has been signed to the 53. Someone is getting cut next week to make room for CTB.
WR Shedrick Jackson and DB Sidney Jones have both been elevated from the PS for the game
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Big, BIG Balls!!! |
Posted by: Science Friction - 12-22-2023, 02:10 AM - Forum: JUNGLE NOISE
- Replies (16)
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Fellas, I first noticed it in the JAX game and it has become even more clear now. Our guy , Jake, has IT ! "IT" is that intangible that all successful NFL QB's have. Whether it's Burrow, Brady, Montana, Esiason, Rodgers, Mahomes, or any other highly success QB in the history of the league. They all have a confidence, bordering on arrogance. They are not afraid of the big moment. In fact, they usually thrive in the biggest moments of a game. For example, the Bengals have that terrible play/throw by Boyd for the pick six in the Jacksonville game, yet Browning leads them back from a deficit and a OT win. We gave up the lead in a bad two minutes of the first half against Indy and what does Browning do? Two straight TD drives to begin the second half. More late heroics in the Minnesota game. We go down late and Jake leads us down the field for a game-tying TD with less than a minute remaining.
Folks, in order to win in this league, a QB has to be fearless, has to be confident, almost to the point of being arrogant. In other words, a winning QB in the NFL must have big, BIG balls! I present to you, Jake Browning, a guy with a pair as big as grapefruits!!! I'm not saying Jake is a Burrow, Brady, or Montana. What I am saying is that he does possess the big set of balls that all those guys all had. If you don't have a pair of " big boys, you ain't winning nothing in this league.
Agree?
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More details on Joe's injury |
Posted by: KillerGoose - 12-21-2023, 08:18 PM - Forum: JUNGLE NOISE
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Recovery time is 4-6 months. Bradley Beal also tore this ligament, a player in the NBA for the Washington Wizards. Here is a doctor discussing the success rates of repairing this ligament...
Quote:BF: What is the success rate of various types of surgical procedures to repair the scapholunate ligament?
Dr. Rozmaryn: I’m not sure exactly what repair Beal had, and there are about 20 different procedures to address it. And I’m going to startle your readers, but the success rate of scapholunate ligament surgery is only 75 to 80 percent, even with the best of hand surgeons. The thing is that many of these repairs fall apart. They may fall apart a year or five years after surgery.
EDIT - Link to the article for the above quote.
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