The moment that turned the tide - Printable Version +- Cincinnati Bengals Message Board / Forums - Home of Jungle Noise (https://thebengalsboard.com) +-- Forum: Cincinnati Bengals / NFL (https://thebengalsboard.com/forum-3.html) +--- Forum: JUNGLE NOISE (https://thebengalsboard.com/forum-2.html) +--- Thread: The moment that turned the tide (/thread-28963.html) |
RE: The moment that turned the tide - fredtoast - 10-25-2021 (10-25-2021, 11:32 AM)Wyche Wrote: Yes, Geno was a consummate professional his entire time playing. I wish he could heal enough to get a shot somewhere.....even back here as a rotational piece. Geno will probably never play in the NFL again. If he does it certainly won't be here. He was one of the best 3T DTs in the league throughout his career then last year our genius defensive coaches decided to move him to a new position head up over the Center. RE: The moment that turned the tide - Awful Llama - 10-25-2021 The night in 1996 when Daddy Burrow and Mommy Burrow got freaky and made a baby. RE: The moment that turned the tide - sandwedge - 10-25-2021 (10-25-2021, 11:48 AM)fredtoast Wrote: Dunlap was a consumate professional and produced at a very high level for two different head coaches that have long winning careers in the NFL.Disagree with this whole post. Nothing professional about getting in a coach's face on the sideline, posting the line up on twitter and acting like a child. RE: The moment that turned the tide - Interceptor - 10-25-2021 (10-25-2021, 10:05 AM)SHRacerX Wrote: It's your profile, and you can do what you want, but isn't it time to get rid of that obnoxious signature graphic? Oh, I forgot I had sigs set to not see. I guess I will toss it because it is a new chapter with a new everything. Thanks for reminding me. RE: The moment that turned the tide - fredtoast - 10-25-2021 (10-25-2021, 01:53 PM)sandwedge Wrote: Disagree with this whole post. Nothing professional about getting in a coach's face on the sideline, posting the line up on twitter and acting like a child. Like I said, he had no problem with two head coaches with long winning careers. Only had a problem with one of the losingest staffs in league history that were not treating him fairly. I'd do whatever I had to to get out of a situation like that also. I don't respect incompetence. RE: The moment that turned the tide - Wyche'sWarrior - 10-25-2021 (10-25-2021, 11:48 AM)fredtoast Wrote: Dunlap was a consumate professional and produced at a very high level for two different head coaches that have long winning careers in the NFL. I'm just going off what was reported. He was quoted as saying he didn't understand what they were doing, and then there more than a few instances of him just mailing it in on the field....which is what ultimately got him benched. As it looks now, the inside eats up blocks, and the ends play a lot of contain, and they use sure tackling corners to make tackles outside and they free up the backers. Hendrickson and Hubbard (and Lawson to an extent) have/had no issues producing in this scheme. Either Los had age catch up with him, or he just didn't want to play here anymore. Either way, it's looking better here, and a tad gloomier than usual in Seattle. I appreciate Carlos for all he did here, but that last bit was bush league. That said, I won't dwell on the negative, and appreciate the good memories. However, I'm not gonna just overlook that. (10-25-2021, 11:50 AM)fredtoast Wrote: Geno will probably never play in the NFL again. If he does it certainly won't be here. He was one of the best 3T DTs in the league throughout his career then last year our genius defensive coaches decided to move him to a new position head up over the Center. We were razor thin at DT.... without him playing hurt all year, I'm not sure we had enough to even field a Dline. Geno may be finished, but he soldiered through it until he couldn't last year. Reader and Ogunjobi look good out there this year though, and we've got a top 5 unit so far. How stupid are these guys? RE: The moment that turned the tide - sandwedge - 10-25-2021 (10-25-2021, 02:37 PM)fredtoast Wrote: Like I said, he had no problem with two head coaches with long winning careers. I would agree with you if I thought he was doing his job. I think he chose when he should put in the effort. Just my opinion from watching his lack of effort on the field. RE: The moment that turned the tide - Tomkat - 10-25-2021 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VA104-niomk&ab_channel=HighlightYard Man, I could watch this, forever! The moment that said - "we will be your doormats and punching bags... NO MORE!" RE: The moment that turned the tide - Nate (formerly eliminate08) - 10-25-2021 (10-25-2021, 07:44 AM)SHRacerX Wrote: I have minimal computer skills, and you have to actually click the links to see the video (sorry, I am old, and while I am at it, get off my lawn!). Woof. Every time I watch that hit I get chills. RE: The moment that turned the tide - Nate (formerly eliminate08) - 10-25-2021 (10-25-2021, 01:41 PM)Awful Llama Wrote: The night in 1996 when Daddy Burrow and Mommy Burrow got freaky and made a baby. LMAO!!! RE: The moment that turned the tide - SHRacerX - 10-25-2021 (10-25-2021, 11:09 AM)fredtoast Wrote: The coaches wanted Dunlap gone after the 2019 season. He was never given a fair chance. He was outplaying the guys they sat him behind. Here's why I "turned on him". His play was selfish, lazy, and not what his coached asked him to do. He was still being paid over $10 million per season. I criticized his poor play, and his lack of assignment-sound football. Something a veteran should know. And then he acted like a child having a zoom call/ pressor where he sat there and ate potato chips. THAT is why I turned on him. Oh, and it looks like we supported the right people because they got BETTER without him. Your statement about Lewis and Zimmer is just plain dumb. They had been spending the same amount of cap money, but spent it on their own because they had drafted better. RE: The moment that turned the tide - Sled21 - 10-25-2021 (10-25-2021, 02:37 PM)fredtoast Wrote: Like I said, he had no problem with two head coaches with long winning careers. And yet here Hendrickson and Hubbard are flourishing under the incompetent because they play within the system as it is designed. RE: The moment that turned the tide - SHRacerX - 10-25-2021 (10-25-2021, 02:32 PM)Interceptor Wrote: Oh, I forgot I had sigs set to not see. I guess I will toss it because it is a new chapter with a new everything. Thanks for reminding me. Well done, sir. Thank you! RE: The moment that turned the tide - jason - 10-25-2021 (10-25-2021, 04:50 PM)Tomkat Wrote: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VA104-niomk&ab_channel=HighlightYard I don't like JuJu any more than the rest of us, but I can't lie.... It's impressive that that hit didn't even phase him. I'd be on the ground to this day from that. RE: The moment that turned the tide - Sled21 - 10-25-2021 (10-25-2021, 02:42 PM)Wyche Wrote: I'm just going off what was reported. He was quoted as saying he didn't understand what they were doing, and then there more than a few instances of him just mailing it in on the field....which is what ultimately got him benched. As it looks now, the inside eats up blocks, and the ends play a lot of contain, and they use sure tackling corners to make tackles outside and they free up the backers. Hendrickson and Hubbard (and Lawson to an extent) have/had no issues producing in this scheme. Either Los had age catch up with him, or he just didn't want to play here anymore. Either way, it's looking better here, and a tad gloomier than usual in Seattle. I appreciate Carlos for all he did here, but that last bit was bush league. That said, I won't dwell on the negative, and appreciate the good memories. However, I'm not gonna just overlook that. Dunlap didn't want to play contain, he just wanted to do what he wanted to do and that was pad his personal sack total. When he was asked to contain his running lanes, he checked out. RE: The moment that turned the tide - Tomkat - 10-25-2021 (10-25-2021, 09:01 PM)jason Wrote: I don't like JuJu any more than the rest of us, but I can't lie.... It's impressive that that hit didn't even phase him. I'd be on the ground to this day from that. Oh, I'd say it "phased" him just a bit! Here he is just a few moments after the hit, with his helmet off... He definitely felt it. RE: The moment that turned the tide - Destro - 10-25-2021 That moment is for mature audiences only. RE: The moment that turned the tide - jason - 10-25-2021 (10-25-2021, 09:17 PM)Tomkat Wrote: Oh, I'd say it "phased" him just a bit! I'd still be makin' that face on the ground to this day too. I was just impressed that he bounced right back up because he got de-cleated... Maybe it was the same as a boxer trying to convince himself he's fine after being dropped. RE: The moment that turned the tide - Nate (formerly eliminate08) - 10-25-2021 (10-25-2021, 08:55 PM)SHRacerX Wrote: Here's why I "turned on him". His play was selfish, lazy, and not what his coached asked him to do. He was still being paid over $10 million per season. I criticized his poor play, and his lack of assignment-sound football. Something a veteran should know. And then he acted like a child having a zoom call/ pressor where he sat there and ate potato chips. THAT is why I turned on him. Agree on Dunlap and I always liked him before. His over pursuit single handedly hurt the entire team. Not even to mention him acting like a child and being selfish. Happy we have Ends here now that know how to contain. This is why we have a good Defense up front. We seal the edge. Was a beautiful job we did against the Ravens yesterday, just beautiful. RE: The moment that turned the tide - Nicomo Cosca - 10-25-2021 This is my favorite version of the Juju hit https://www.reddit.com/r/bengals/comments/ki3yz6/juju_on_that_beat/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=mweb |