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Post by Bing© in Buffalo Chairman on Dec 17, 2014 18:51:44 GMT -5
How about just a boob shot from Kelly with a Namath jersey on....got to ramp it up....no nipple is needed....handbra OK....ready....set.....
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Post by Bing© in Buffalo Chairman on Dec 17, 2014 19:16:21 GMT -5
How about just a boob shot from Kelly with a Namath jersey on....got to ramp it up....no nipple is needed....handbra OK....ready....set..... . Crickets.....
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Post by tbp on Dec 17, 2014 19:41:57 GMT -5
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Post by Raoul Duke on Dec 18, 2014 8:21:53 GMT -5
How's Atlanta this time of year?
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Post by frostlich on Dec 18, 2014 8:36:02 GMT -5
How's Atlanta this time of year? Southside needs to take one for the team and make the trip up to Duluth. It'll be like a Craigslist hookup...via The Hampur. What could go wrong?
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Post by Raoul Duke on Dec 18, 2014 8:38:55 GMT -5
How's Atlanta this time of year? Southside needs to take one for the team and make the trip up to Duluth. It'll be like a Craigslist hookup...via The Hampur. What could go wrong? LOL. Cool to see you here. I can hook you up with your old post count if you care about such petty things
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Post by frostlich on Dec 18, 2014 8:54:02 GMT -5
Southside needs to take one for the team and make the trip up to Duluth. It'll be like a Craigslist hookup...via The Hampur. What could go wrong? LOL. Cool to see you here. I can hook you up with your old post count if you care about such petty things I don't remember what it was. Not a big deal. Thanks Anyhoo.
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Post by Hotman on Dec 18, 2014 11:46:42 GMT -5
How's Atlanta this time of year? Southside needs to take one for the team and make the trip up to Duluth. It'll be like a Craigslist hookup...via The Hampur. What could go wrong? Duluth is fucked trust me I'm not so far from there.
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Post by I definitely have a cock~~~ on Dec 18, 2014 13:11:57 GMT -5
Back in the day, it was called the Border War. This time it will be more like the Border Snore -- at least in terms of the overall stakes. It means something to the New England Patriots (11-3), who can clinch home-field advantage in the playoffs, but it's strictly a pride game for the New York Jets (3-11). That said, it's Patriots-Jets, which means there's always intriguing subtext. The main storylines are Rex Ryan's final home game, presumably, and Darrelle Revis' return. NFL Nation reporters Mike Reiss, who covers the Patriots, and Rich Cimini, who covers the Jets, discuss the matchup. Cimini: Bill Belidick has faced Ryan more often than any AFC East coach. They’re polar opposites in terms of personality and coaching style, so I’m wondering: If you could inject Belidick with truth serum, what do you think he’d say about Ryan? Reiss: Reading Belidick’s mind is sometimes as difficult as a quarterback trying to get a read on Ryan’s spin-the-dial defensive schemes when Rex is at his best (e.g., the 28-21 road playoff victory over the Patriots in the 2010 season). But I’ll take a shot at it. I think Belidick has a pretty good feel for him personally after having his brother, Rob, on his staff in the early 2000s and I think he respects him as a defensive coach and a competitor. This hasn’t been the Harlem Globetrotters against the Washington Generals over the past six years; Ryan has given the Patriots quite a bit to handle. Now, if that truth serum were a really strong dose, I might envision a scenario in which Belidick rolls his eyes at some of the bravado and says something like: This has been very similar, both on and off the field, to coaching against his father Buddy back in the day. Like father, like son. Consecutive years the Patriots have won the AFC East, which ties for the second-longest division championship streak in NFL history behind the Los Angeles Rams (1973-79). In addition, the Patriots are the first team to win 11 division titles in a 12-year span. 22 The Jets' league ranking in points allowed without Darrelle Revis -- dating to Week 3, 2012, his final game as a Jet. The Jets ranked fifth during Revis' time with Rex Ryan. Ryan talked about not coming into the AFC East to kiss Bill Belidick’s rings. How would you sum up what he has accomplished in the past six seasons? Cimini: You're right. Ryan was full of bravado when he arrived in 2009, vowing to tilt the balance of power in the division. It hasn't worked out the way he planned, as the Jets have finished as also-rans every year. I really thought they had a chance to close the gap on the Patriots after beating them in the 2010 divisional playoffs, the Jets' biggest victory since Super Bowl III, but Ryan & Co. slid back down the mountain. Ryan is 4-8 against the Patriots, plus that memorable postseason win -- not a very good showing. But Ryan has fared better than his predecessors, and I think that should count for something. He gave it his "best shot," as he likes to say, but he's had the misfortune of being in a division with arguably the greatest coach-quarterback tandem in history. The site of Revis in a Patriots uniform probably will nauseate many Jets fans. So what do you think: Will Revis stick around beyond this year, or will he chase the money elsewhere? Reiss: The Patriots are going to take their best shot to re-sign him, and my viewpoint has been that if New England is competitive with the best offers from a total dollars, structure and guaranteed-money standpoint, they will have the tiebreaker edge based on the positive experience that Revis has had in 2014. But they have a team philosophy as it relates to the salary cap that is extremely disciplined, and it’s hard for me to see them blowing that up for one player if the bidding gets to extremely high levels. As for Revis, I would expect him to attempt to maximize his financial opportunity, but I don’t sense that he would “chase the money” if it meant landing in a place that he viewed as being similar to a 2014-Oakland-Raiders-type sitaution. So there’s a balance there. In the end, it’s impossible to answer this question without knowing what the market will dictate. One interesting aspect to it would be if Ryan is let go by the Jets, lands with a new team as head coach, and that team makes a big run at Revis. That would certainly affect the market for Revis and potentially make it tougher for the Patriots to re-sign him. Few saw 3-11 as where the Jets would be. How would you sum up what has led to this? Cimini: It's pretty simple, and I'm going to break out another Ryan quote to illustrate my point. He always says the two positions that can win (or lose) games faster than any others are quarterback and cornerback -- and the Jets lost a bunch of games because of poor play at those spots. General manager John Idzik mismanaged the cornerback position in the offseason, leaving his head coach with a thin and talent-deprived unit. To play his scheme, Ryan needs man-to-man corners the way humans need water and oxygen. At quarterback, Geno Smith hasn't developed as well as they had hoped, throwing the offense out of whack. They've been operating with a small margin for error, hurting them in close games. They're 3-6 in games decided by eight points or fewer. For the Jets to pull off the upset, they have to play their best game of the year and “hope something is missing” from the Patriots, according to Ryan. What could possibly be missing for them? Reiss: We saw it Oct. 16, when the Jets came into the Patriots’ home stadium and nearly pulled off the upset -- shoddy tackling on defense, and a time-of-possession edge for the Jets of 40:54 to 19:06. If the Patriots can’t stop the running game, that would be one ingredient that could produce a carbon copy of what we saw in mid-October, and maybe this time the Jets could pull off the victory. The other thing that comes to mind is shaky play by the offensive line, which has had some ups and downs in recent weeks. If the Jets can get to quarterback Tom Brady early and capitalize on some of the O-line miscues we’ve seen, that would be another area they could have an edge. A win over the Patriots would mean a lot to Rex Ryan and this team. What are the key areas you see that could help the Jets spring the upset? Cimini: Basically, this is the Jets' playoff game -- and, yes, I do think they have a chance to win. It would take a ball-control offense and a plus number in the turnover margin. As the Jets proved in the previous meeting, it takes more 200 rushing yards and a 40-minute possession time to knock off the Patriots. They need a couple of field position-changing plays, either on offense or defense or special teams -- or all of the above. The X factor could be Percy Harvin, who didn't play in the first game. That could depend on the condition of his sprained ankle. He didn't do much last week. If they can get a big play or two out of him, the Jets might have a chance. > espn.go.com/b...s-new-york-jet
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Post by I definitely have a cock~~~ on Dec 18, 2014 13:41:29 GMT -5
-- The best player of the Rex Ryan era is coming to town this weekend for what probably will be the final home game of the coach's tenure. If life were a storybook, Ryan and Darrelle Revis still would be together, the mad-scientist coach and the shutdown corner combining their unique talents to disarm opposing offenses. As we all know, Revis was ripped from Ryan's arms two years ago and now, given the sad state of the New York Jets, it's fashionable to play the blame game: Who ran Revis out of town? Was it owner Woody Johnson? How about Johnson's general manager? John Idzik, the human pinata, gets blamed for everything, so it's easy to throw him under the bus -- except he's not the reason. The person most responsible for the Revis divorce is Revis. Revis was all about the money, and his refusal to bend in contract negotiations left the Jets with little choice but to trade him to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2013. He was adamant about a $16 million-a-year deal, and he ended up getting what he wanted from the Bucs, if only for a season. Revis is a terrific businessman, but let's not paint him as the victim in the break-up. For six years, he squeezed as much money out of the Jets as humanly possible -- which is his right -- but it got to a point where the organization got tired of being an ATM. Johnson, fed up with the contract squabbles, went into the 2013 offseason with a desire to trade his most valuable asset, and he found a GM willing to carry it out. One candidate who interviewed for the GM job, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said Johnson made it clear his preference was to deal Revis to the highest bidder. It was a sound business decision. Revis was coming off major knee surgery and wasn't interested in giving the Jets a hometown discount. The Jets, after a 6-10 season, saw him as a bargaining chip to accelerate the rebuilding process. Truth be told, Idzik did a good job, extracting a first-round pick for an injured player and using the pick to select Sheldon Richardson -- the GM's one shining moment. Where Idzik may have dropped the ball was last offseason, spurning a potential Revis reunion when the player's people reached out as soon as he was released by the Bucs. I didn't criticize Idzik at the time, assuming he had a legitimate fallback plan to restock the cornerback position. Who knew the plan was Dimitri Patterson? Naturally, Revis ended up with the New England Patriots, making it worse. Still, the Jets felt they made the right call, saying privately they wanted to stay away from one-year rentals and build with long-term players. It sounded reasonable at the time. Now, of course, they look like fools. They're playing with third-string corners, finishing out one of the worst seasons in franchise history, and Revis could be on his way to the Super Bowl. "I’m over here, that ship has sailed," Revis said Wednesday, responding to a question about whether he could've helped the Jets. "I missed that boat. I caught the New England Patriots boat" The real loser is Ryan, who hasn't been the same without his best player. He has coached the same number of games with Revis as without him, and the results aren't close. From 2009 to 2012, Revis played 47 games with the Jets. They went 27-20 with a defense that ranked fifth in points allowed. In the 47 games without Revis, counting games he missed because of pre-trade injuries, Ryan is 18-29 and the defense is 22nd in points allowed. A better post-Revis plan by Idzik would have helped level the numbers. The Patriots? For a change, they have a real defense. "He's had a great season," Ryan said of his former star. "He's playing well, there's no question about that." He'll never say it because he's a good company man, but Ryan wanted a Revis reunion. In his introductory news conference, Ryan called Revis the best corner in football at a time when no one else was making that claim. Ryan knew what he had, a once-in-a-generation talent. Everything changed on that fateful day in Miami, September, 2012, when Revis wrecked his knee in what became his final game as a Jet. He could've returned, of course, but this is a business. No one knows that better than Revis. > espn.go.com/b...an-on-an-island
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Post by I definitely have a cock~~~ on Dec 18, 2014 14:22:05 GMT -5
Rex Ryan shares his heartfelt message for the Jets faithful It was love at first sight for Rex Ryan and Jets fans, the big, bawdy, tough-talking coach, a Jets fan just like them once, their Rexterminator coming for Bill Belidick. Even though four straight years out of the playoffs and this current 3-11 nightmare has led to the impending divorce, he thanks them from the bottom of his heart, and vows to try his darnedest to give them one lasting memory Sunday against the Patriots in his last home game as their coach. Ryan hasn’t gotten mushy in front of his team about this not-so-Merry Rexmas, doesn’t want any sympathy or sentimentality from anyone. But when you ask him what he would like to say to Jets fans now, at the end of six roller-coaster seasons, it is easy to see how much being their coach meant to him. “Shoot, I respect them beyond belief, and I think part of it is ’cause I grew up … I was just like them, just one of them,” Ryan told The Post. “I think that’s big. And obviously I was given an unbelievable opportunity that every Jet fan would jump at, they would have loved to have been the head coach of this team as well, their team, and I think I was given that opportunity. “But I respect the heck out of ’em, I appreciate ’em, they’ve been there. I’ve actually made calls, and they’ve been there. “And I felt like they supported me from the day that I took this job.” He was Teflon Rex when Woody Johnson gave him a stay of Rexecution and replaced general manager Mike Tannenbaum with John Idzik. He did the job in 2009 and ’10, and again last season with a rookie quarterback and no offensive playmakers, but this season has been a veritable butt-fumble, and there are no mulligans left for him, nor should there be. His time is up, and everyone knows it. Including him. But just because Sunday is Penalty Flag Day, when yellow towels blaring “Attention Woody, Fire Idzik! Clean House!” will be waving for the owner to heed, doesn’t mean that disenchanted Jets fans shouldn’t call a timeout and give Ryan an ovation, standing or otherwise, for the good times he gave the franchise, even if they seem like a distant memory. He gave them everything he had, always. “He deserves their respect,” receiver Jeremy Kerley said. “He’s the Coach of the Year to me, every time he goes out there he pours his heart out. “A standing ovation, I think that’d be everything for him.” Ryan wants this one in the worst way. His players want it in the worst way. For themselves first. But for their coach as well. Modal TriggerRyan talks to Jets players on the sideline during last week’s win over the Titans.Photo: AP “He takes it to a different level when it comes to the Patriots, you know,” safety Calvin Pryor said. Once more, with feeling. “He’s real fired up, he’s passionate about playing against these guys, you can hear it in his voice,” Kerley said. What did he say Wednesday that resonated? “It’s that game,’” Kerley said. “Throw out the records, it doesn’t matter. It’s the Jets against the Patriots.’” Unfortunately for Ryan, he can’t throw out the records. “We owe these guys, man,” Pryor said. “We gave ’em the game last time. They know it and we know it.” Ryan was never Belidick, but at least he never kissed his rings. “I might be the only one that had the guts to say something about it, but that’s how I am, that’s how I feel this week too,” Ryan said. Ryan recognized that the last meeting — Patriots 27, Jets 25 — was his last chance to turn around a season ruined mostly by the play of his quarterback and the performance of his GM. “It’s kind of sad the position Rex is in right now,” Darrelle Revis said from his Island off Foxborough. “Like Revis said, you do got to feel for him, man,” Sheldon Richardson said. “It’s just tough being in a situation where the 28th might be his last coaching job coaching here, especially ’cause he loves it here.” Ryan will leave ’em laughing on his way out the door, joking that he couldn’t bear to watch the TV copies of Tom Brady’s recent F-bomb flurry. “To be honest with you, I couldn’t watch all of a game — I was offended by the language I saw,” Ryan deadpanned. “I’m thinking, ‘Boy, that fine’s got to really be hefty, because that’s one, two, three, four, five of those bad boys, I think.’ I couldn’t even get through the game.” Richardson has a sense for how Jets fans feel about Ryan. “Most people love him, some people hate him,” Richardson said. “Just the way it is.” It would be nice if, for one fleeting moment Sunday, the ones who love him are heard above the ones who hate him. “It’s gonna be a lot of great times in the near future for Jet fans, I truly believe that,” Ryan said. For Rex Ryan, that future will have to be Sunday. > nypost.com/20...-jets-faithful/
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Post by I definitely have a cock~~~ on Dec 19, 2014 6:01:38 GMT -5
- As expected, wide receiver Percy Harvin (ankle) practiced on a limited basis Thursday. There was a slight limp, but barring a setback, he should be ready to play Sunday when the New York Jets meet the New England Patriots. Harvin has impressed with his toughness. Two weeks ago, he suffered a third-degree ankle sprain (the most severe), according to Rex Ryan. Harvin had to be carried up the stairs on the team plane for the return trip from Minneapolis, where he was injured. He played in a limited role last week at wide receiver, volunteering to return a kickoff. "Percy's tough as boot leather," special teams coach Thomas McGaughey said. There was one addition to the Jets' injury report -- wide receiver Saalim Hakim, who was limited with a quadriceps injury. He plays exclusively on special teams, working as a gunner. Nick Folk (hip) practiced fully and is expected to return to kickoff duty. Punter Ryan Quigley handled it last week. New York Jets Limited: Harvin, Muhammad Wilkerson (turf toe), S Jaiquawn Jarrett (shoulder), Hakim (quadriceps). Full: Folk (right hip), G Willie Colon (knee), S Antonio Allen (hand), RB Chris Johnson (knee), C Nick Mangold (finger), S Calvin Pryor (shoulder). New England Patriots Out: DE Dominique Easley Limited: LS Danny Aiken (finger), CB Kyle Arrington (hamstring), RB LeGarrette Blount (shoulder), G Dan Connolly (knee), WR Julian Edelman (thigh, concussion), T Cameron Fleming (ankle), LB Dont'a Hightower(shoulder), DE Chandler Jones (hip), WR Brandon LaFell (shoulder), DE Rob Ninkovich (heel), RB Shane Vereen (ankle), LB Chris White (ankle). Full: QB Tom Brady (ankle). > espn.go.com/b...as-boot-leather
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Post by I definitely have a cock~~~ on Dec 19, 2014 6:48:51 GMT -5
New England’s “game-plan offense” is well-outlined in a piece by Mike Reiss, who called it “an attack that morphs itself into something completely different each week.” The principle is simple -- if your opponent struggles in a particular area, that’s probably the area you’re best served to attack. How heavily has New England’s play-calling reflected this strategy, one that requires such versatility in personnel? Measuring that starts with defining the opponent’s strengths and weaknesses. Yards are a misleading measure -- for example, is a team that allowed the fourth-most passing yards per game (like the Cardinals) a bad pass defense? Defensive efficiency, which measures the impact of each play on a team’s scoring margin, is a better measure of how effective a team’s defense is. Arizona’s pass defense has the fifth-best defensive efficiency rating in the league. Yards alone won’t account for the Cardinals’ 18 interceptions (fourth most) or the fact that they’ve allowed touchdowns on only 40.5 percent of red-zone possessions (second best in the league). Defensive efficiency accounts for both of those and more. Defensive Efficiency Ranks of Patriots' Opponents This Season Rushes Dropbacks Dolphins 21st 10th Vikings 23rd 16th Raiders 15th 27th Chiefs 20th 9th Bengals 31st 12th Bills 13th 1st Jets 12th 28th Bears 26th 30th Broncos 9th 14th Colts 18th 6th Lions 1st 4th Packers 19th 17th Chargers 11th 22nd The efficiency ranks of each Patriots opponent are split out by rushing and passing in the chart to the right. When the team has been successful, it hasn’t just reached season averages in play-calling. The Patriots called more than half of their plays to target the opponent’s defensive weakness in 9 of the team’s 11 wins. Both of the wins in which New England didn’t were against divisional opponents, and might have had interesting game-specific reasons. In Week 15, the Dolphins had just placed starting safetyLouis Delmas on IR before the game, and New England still rushed on a higher percentage than their season average. Entering Week 6, the Bills ranked fourth in defensive efficiency against the pass and fifth against the run. With no significant difference between the pass and rush defense, New England’s play calling (38 percent rush, 62 percent dropback) was almost exactly at its season average (39 percent rush, 61 percent pass). Play Calling in Patriots Wins This Season Opponent Rush Pct Dropback Pct Vikings 63%<< 37% Raiders 43% 57%<< Bengals 52%<< 48% Bills 38% 62% Jets 28% 72%<< Bears 44% 56%<< Broncos 32% 68%<< Colts 57%<< 43% Lions 27% 73%<< Chargers 34% 66%<< Dolphins 43% 57% >>Over half of plays targeted defensive weakness Based on New England’s tendencies this season, what should be expected on Sunday against the Jets? As the first chart shows, New York ranks 12th against the run, no surprise given the quality of defensive linemenMuhammad Wilkerson and Sheldon Richardson. But the Jets pass defense ranks 28th in efficiency for a reason. Only the Redskins (31) and Bears (33) have given up more passing touchdowns than the Jets (29), while only the Chiefs (four) have intercepted fewer passes than New York (five). The Patriots have already noticed this once. Tom Bradydropped back to pass on 72 percent of snaps in New England’s Week 7 win over New York, its second-highest percentage this season. Barring a game-specific occurrence (like Wilkerson missing a fourth straight game with a toe injury), recent history suggests Brady will be busy. > espn.go.com/b...oiting-weakness
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Post by I definitely have a cock~~~ on Dec 19, 2014 6:52:33 GMT -5
-- Marty Mornhinweg walked carefully through a minefield Thursday as he addressed one of the hot-button issues of the New York Jets' season -- the run-pass balance on offense and, by extension, his philosophical alignment with Rex Ryan. Mornhinweg arrived two years ago with a reputation for being a pass-first play caller, vowing to bring an aggressive style to the Jets. It hasn't worked out that way, as they reverted to the style that Ryan espoused in his early years -- Ground & Pound. Basically, they're an Odd Couple, and it has fueled speculation of a rift. Mornhinweg, in a chattier mood than usual, made a few cryptic remarks that left the impression he isn't on board with the direction of the offense. The Jets' coordinator stopped short of criticizing, but he ventured into a gray area that he had previously avoided. Consider this exchange with reporters: On whether he's had an attacking offense like he wanted: "Well, earlier in both seasons we have. If you look at that, and then [we] chose to play a certain style from that point on." Running the ball, he meant. On why they decided to choose that style: "Just the way we're built." Is it an edict from Ryan? "Rex and I talk each week, every day." On whether he'd prefer to have an attacking offense: "Well, you need to score points to win pretty consistently. With a few exceptions." Mornhinweg's oft-stated belief is that you have to throw to score points and, naturally, you have to score points to win. The Jets are running the ball -- and running well (second in the NFL) -- but they're not scoring many points. And we know they're not winning much. He touched on a few reasons why they've shifted away from the pass and toward the running game. He mentioned Eric Decker's early-season hamstring injury, a three-deep backfield with Chris Ivory, Chris Johnson and Bilal Powell and, of course, Geno Smith's turnover issues. Mornhinweg all but aknowledged that Smith's slow development has tied his hands. "Well, certainly there is a developmental process with every young player at every position," he said. "The quarterback is such an important position that you certainly have to do certain things there. I know it sounds crazy -- and Geno has been up and down just a little bit throughout this first year-and-a-half, going on two years -- but he's a young, talented guy. Every quarterback develops at a little bit [of a] different rate. There are some terrific quarterbacks that have been through a little bit more then Geno has. So, we’ll see." Sounds crazy? Now there's a telling phrase. > espn.go.com/blog/new-york/jets/post/_/id/47482/marty-mornhinweg-opens-up-a-little-on-offensive-struggles
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Post by Bing© in Buffalo Chairman on Dec 19, 2014 7:20:55 GMT -5
= Oo========> -----~~~~~~~~~~~~
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