(01-27-2019, 11:15 PM)Natifan Wrote: HAHAHAHA
Against their peers.lol
Hey when nothing else works pull out the "against their peers" rating
Thanks for the laugh
Against their peers is the best measuring stick you can use.
"The measure of a man's intelligence can be seen in the length of his argument."
(01-27-2019, 11:15 PM)Natifan Wrote: HAHAHAHA
Against their peers.lol
Hey when nothing else works pull out the "against their peers" rating
Thanks for the laugh
You're welcome for the laughs and you'll fit right in.
(11-25-2018, 07:01 PM)car91 Wrote: Andy has no heart. He needs to go. He is the perfect reflection on the Bengals ownership. Good when there is no oressure. Folds when things get tight. The perfect qb for Mike Brown.
Your right, no hart..Im also done with the following Bengal players cause they also have no hart.
AJ Grean
Joe Nixon
John Hoss
Byler Toyd
Nick Vigilante
Peno Atcins
(01-28-2019, 09:43 AM)Natifan Wrote: So since Babe Ruth ranked the best against his peers he would be a better player than Ken Griffey jr.
If babe Ruth was born in 1969 and had the same training and nutrition as Junior then he would have been one of the greatest hitters of all time. He would never have had Griffey's speed, but the same things that made him a great hitter in the 20's (vision, hand-eye coordination, etc) would have made him a great hitter in the 90's.
It's probably a wasted endeavor to look this far ahead, but assuming the teams that are expected to pick a QB this year do end up taking one (Broncos, Raiders, Dolphins, Redskins, Jaguars), who would the Bengals be competing with in 2020 should they choose to go QB next year?
Brees, Roethlisberger, Brady, Stafford, and Rivers aren't getting any younger, so I would think that'd put their respective teams in the market next year.
(01-27-2019, 12:28 PM)BengalChris Wrote: Just more excuses. When a player takes years and years of excuses at some point you have to understand that player is not at the high end.
Ken Anderson won passing titles. In today's game Dalton is a 1,000 to 2,000 yards behind the passing leaders. That's how you can rank him with all those pass enhancing rules we now have, none of which existed when Anderson won the passing title two years in a row back in the 70s.
We'll see how Taylor does with him. Getting back to the playoffs would be a good start. Not folding in the playoffs would be better.
That's a pretty big range. In 2015, with a decent offensive line and some experienced starters, he was on pace to eclipse 5,000 yards.
Until this past season (and Hill's rookie season) the Bengals had one of the worst rushing attacks in the NFL. That also has to factor in.
I get it....people just won't get over their hate for him for whatever game or playoff loss, but for what he is paid, and for what he is capable of doing with a good line and decent coaching, I think he is the least of our problems.
(02-05-2019, 08:16 PM)McC Wrote: And maybe there won't be much to hate on after this year.
Given a strong Free Agency and or NFL Draft, we should expect to see the Andy of 2015 back in action. All the guy needs is protection. It’s not that hard to figure out. I hope this isn’t hard to see for Taylor. If we want to compete in 2019, we will solidify the right side of the o-line.