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  2. They're just pissed they couldn't pummel her in a presser. They seem to have a real fetish for it. Could be a weird sex kink. Idk. In Bongo's case maybe she turned down his medical advice to do surgery in favor of a weight loss drug.
  3. After seeing how things played out and how Vrabel acted, it's hard to call firing him a mistake. That said, the roster was most definitively the biggest factor in all of the losses and they way things have gone since his firing only cement that.
  4. Maybe it was a contractual thing? Maybe getting the extension shifted Robinson's MO/changed him to an absurd degree? Maybe she thought giving the extensions would help spur them to doing a better job, like a carrot on a stick? None of those explanations are particularly satisfying, and the easy scary answer is that her decisions are motionally driven as they look incongruous coming after the extensions, but without vital info all we're left with are speculations. Even if she is driven by her emotions, at least they're driving her on the right side of the road. It's not they're driving her toward head on collisions like firing Jimmy Johnson or trading Micah Parsons... you know, batshit stupid decisions. They're still the decisions people wanted her to make or that she needed to make.
  5. I don't know if it had been posted, but how would ya'll like to have Amy on the headset. I know the coaches probably hate it. She makes some good points though. Shit.....she is spending her money. Thoughts?
  6. I think looking back the Robinson firing was 100% emotional bc AJ just embarrassed us. Her promoting Robinson was the wrong move. her promoting and extending Carthon made 0 sense what so ever bc there was never once when he was here that he acted or sounded competent.
  7. How about the fact Robinson and Carthon were extended and promoted right before they were fired? Especially Carthon?
  8. Because the team has been so well ran in the past few years… you don’t fire Callahan for that one singular decision; you fire him for putting what is possibly the worst team in titans history on the field. He followed that up by putting a team worse than last year on the field btw…
  9. Lol, now I see what you did there! I got a kick out of that. You're pretty Slye!
  10. Today
  11. Steve Largent had a worse RAS than Streppo and he is in the HOF and the Oilers cut him too.
  12. Texas the highest profile Job? Lol what? Incorrect
  13. Sweat has some serious value right now.
  14. I think Sneed is gone too. Only thing we'll have is Safties. We will need three CBs in the draft and FA
  15. They're massively outnumbered. We as a country shouldn’t allow this shit. ICE agents deserve to have their asses beat. They are masked cowards.
  16. I don't have an issue with them trading McCreary; I will have an issue if they don't sign an equal or better CB in free agency, or if they sign a guy who ends up a worse player (but has longer arms!). Because that's been exactly what's happened the last few years.
  17. Classic making things up in your head
  18. The new stadium seat pricing will cover this whole in her purse.
  19. Jets get: CB Jarvis Brownlee Jr., 2026 seventh-round pick Titans get: 2026 sixth-round pick Jets grade: A- Titans grade: C With free agent signing Brandon Stephens struggling and limited depth behind him, the Jets waded back into the trade market for a young cornerback with experience. Stephens, who was signed to a surprisingly expensive three-year, $36 million deal this offseason despite having a poor season in Baltimore in 2024, has allowed 1.5 yards per coverage snap thus far this season, per NFL Next Gen Stats, well above the 1.1 average for outside cornerbacks. So the Jets brought in Brownlee, a 2024 fifth-round pick who has already started 16 games and who brings decent numbers. Brownlee has allowed 1.0 yards per coverage snap in his young career, slightly better than average. His 15% target rate is roughly average, and his EPA allowed (+12.6) and completion percentage allowed over expectation (+2%) are positive, though those stats are unstable and unreliable indicators of future performance. Brownlee has also graded very favorably in run stopping, according to Pro Football Focus. The second-year corner does get flagged quite a bit, as he has recorded a penalty on 1.1% of his defensive snaps since the beginning of last season, 17th most among defensive backs with at least 300 snaps. He has been penalized three times in two games this season. But it's not completely untenable, as his penalty rate lags behind old teammate L'Jarius Sneed(1.9%) and is slightly behind new teammate Sauce Gardner (1.2%). Brownlee has been a success story considering his draft position. With his experience and nearly three cheap years remaining on his rookie contract, I'm surprised the Jets got him for so little. At worst, he's a good depth option (my colleague Rich Cimini indicatedBrownlee could provide depth at nickel, as well) with both short- and long-term upside -- especially if Stephens continues to struggle. I don't get why the Titans would want to deal Brownlee for so little right now. Rebuilding teams should acknowledge who they are and deal veterans for draft capital -- but that's not Brownlee! He is a young starting corner who netted very, very little in return. Perhaps the Titans got tired of Brownlee's penalties, or maybe there is another factor we aren't seeing. Brownlee missed the Titans' Week 3 game with an ankle injury, but that seems unlikely to be a major consideration. Either way, this move leaves the Titans with -- according to their new depth chart -- Darrell Baker Jr. as the starting outside cornerback opposite Sneed. Baker has made 15 starts in his career and his nearest defender numbers are solid: a 1.1 yards per coverage snap and a much lower career penalty rate (0.05%). But even if Tennessee felt good about Baker, Brownlee's youth and remaining cheap contract meant they let a lot walk out the door for almost nothing in exchange.
  20. PK, Buck and Bongo said we should be outraged at AAS, What else is there to know?
  21. It's not like the decisions to fire these guys didn't all have legitimate justifications behind them. Argue the optics of making the decisions when they were made all you want. Maybe the timing wasn't the most optical on some of them, but it's not like they were made in the middle of Super Bowl runs or in spite of great executive decisions. They were, all things considered, the right decisions. Maybe at some point we'll get more detail for why Callahan was fired mid-season the way we did with the other firings, and maybe some of them will be moments. But either way it was a decision most everyone agreed had to be made, and one many were begging to be made. Bitching her out because she made the move you thought she needed to make/wanted her to make is some real Janus-faced nonsense.
  22. Even if you aren’t a fan of Sweat, his trade value is minimal right now. It makes more sense to wait for him to get into shape and improve that trade value in the offseason or next year.
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