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  2. Your mistake was reading Facebook and Twitter comments.
  3. OK, I don't know exactly what you mean. I heard the music but was working on my tablet while it was playing and only glanced at the TV a couple of times. Was it the video they had the music over or just the music itself? I was a Queen fan back in the day and I still love to listen to their music. But I did notice that the images in the video flashed and went by quickly but don't specifically recall what I saw. i think I recall seeing images of Cmac and Brycie flash by but other than that, not so much.
  4. Never know. I'm just thinking who could be QB2-3. As things stand now, Simpson seems to have the scouts' eyes. Mendoza next. Dante Moore is there if he opts in the draft (that's a target with a legit arm). He is probably the only guys in range R1 if we can't land Mendoza. A 2nd-3rd rounder on Maiava/Nuss/Mateer may be what we're looking at.
  5. And most importantly don't give up your only offense weapons and futures picks to trade up to do so. You never go full retard.
  6. Some other team will sign him to a deal, if/when we finally wise up and cut bait. Depending on the time frame, don't be shocked it's our friends down I-85 that take that shot. If it is a trade, expect a similar package the Jets and Broncos put together with a late round pick swap to facilitate the trade.
  7. If he has kids one day and goes into a full dad bod mode, he'd still just max out at like a 34 waist lol
  8. The only question now is what to Dave and Dan do? Bring in a Winston type and draft a guy? Move up in the draft for immediate starter? Push it off another year and look QB in 2027?
  9. No thanks on Mendoza. I don't want another Bryce-like trade up deal and that's what it would take to land him.
  10. i read facebook and twitter comments and wonder what panthers these guys watch. 90% still commentinf byoung just needs time or better coaching better supporting cast...they cant watch the same games i watch. he doesnt havr thr athletic ability to be qb1 for this team its that simple. its hard enough to be a panther fan as it is but i cant stomach another year of young its just not doable
  11. Out of pie but agreed. I think I used defensive tackle but yeah. You just don’t do certain things at 1.1.
  12. https://x.com/TexansCommenter/status/1993170063571210497?t=-KWEka2er-mNmaXm0zyQ2w&s=19
  13. Me too. The first thing that will get me to turn against you is trading future 1sts for a draft slot. It is a rule and set in stone. And That is what they did with it? Insane
  14. Yeah I can agree with the starting gig take. But it would be fun if someone proved us wrong on that but it's too much IMO too. If we were smart they would have IRed him after thr Atlanta game. I still think that crew is all in which makes them dumber than what we are expecting from other teams next year...
  15. Totally agree. They have no 'plan b' in the QB room so BY playing the entire season barring injury is going to happen. Maybe it's some master plan by DC to prove to DT that BY is garbage?? I have no idea who will be available in free agency, but we might be attractive to some FA's with our O line, Tet, and RB situation.
  16. FYI: You’re absolutely right to be concerned — what you describe (vomiting after a head-impact in football) is a serious red flag that warrants immediate medical attention. Let’s break this down into two key parts: 1. What we know happened with Jaycee Horn Horn, cornerback for the Carolina Panthers, was evaluated for a concussion during the game vs the San Francisco 49ers after what was described as a head impact (or likely head/neck-whip event) and was seen vomiting on the sideline after his second interception. The team reported that during halftime he began to feel nauseous, and that prompted their training staff to rule him out for the remainder of the game. So yes — vomiting is confirmed in this case, and the concussion protocol has been triggered. 2. What vomiting after a concussion typically indicates Vomiting in the context of a head injury is not automatically a guarantee of catastrophic brain damage, but it does significantly raise concern and changes the urgency and level of monitoring required. Some key points: Vomiting (and nausea) are listed as possible symptoms of a concussion. Importantly: Vomiting right after a head impact, with no other cause (e.g., not from food poisoning, motion sickness alone) is considered a warning sign. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) lists “vomiting right after the injury without other cause” among the signs to watch for. In older literature, post‐traumatic vomiting has been associated with a statistically higher risk of skull fractures and more serious intracranial injury. For example one study showed that in patients fully alert at presentation, vomiting doubled the relative risk of skull fracture. Practically: vomiting suggests that the brain’s regulation of nausea/vomiting centres, or intracranial pressure, or vestibular/inner‐ear/balance systems might be affected by the trauma. However, having one episode of vomiting alone without other worsening signs doesn’t necessarily mean a catastrophic injury — but it raises the bar for “must perform full evaluation, imaging if needed, strict monitoring”. For example, one article notes: “While isolated vomiting is unlikely to predict a clinically important brain injury by itself, when combined with other symptoms it becomes much more concerning.” 3. What it means: in the sports / concussion‐protocol context Given the above, if a player vomits after a head impact: They must be removed from play right away (which appears to have happened with Horn). They should be evaluated by qualified medical personnel (team physician, athletic trainer) for concussion and also for possible more serious intracranial injury (e.g., bleeding, skull fracture) depending on mechanism. They should undergo concussion protocol: rest, no sport until cleared, graded return to activity (physical / cognitive) under medical supervision. Additional imaging (CT, MRI) might be considered if there are further alarming signs (worsening headache, repeated vomiting, seizures, unequal pupils, increasing confusion, focal neurologic deficits). The presence of vomiting may also predict a longer or more complicated recovery (so implementing conservative management is prudent). It heightens the need to watch for “second-impact syndrome” if return to play is rushed and another head trauma occurs before full recovery. 4. My summary answer to your specific question It’s not always a guarantee of the worst (e.g., massive bleed or catastrophic brain injury), but it is very serious and should be treated as though it could be a major concern. Vomiting increases the risk profile of the injury and demands more caution, stricter monitoring, and likely more conservative management. The fact that Horn vomited means his injury should be managed under the highest standards of sports‐concussion care and shouldn’t be down‐played.
  17. The Golden Calf of Bristol and the endless love and hype ESPN constantly gave him. (see The Golden Calf of Bristol, Tim TEEEBOW)
  18. I should have been more precise. I don’t think there is a starting job in his immediate future. I would say never.. but never say never. But yes, someone could turn to him due to an injury or very poor performance getting someone benched. if we are smart (no faith in that) we will come up with a phantom injury if he has another good game, and put him on the market once the new league year commences. Sell him off that and Atlanta.
  19. I can't believe that no one has started a 2026 QB thread yet, at least not 1 that I've seen. I'm not much of a college football guy, but I've been digging around a little bit over the last few weeks, and it sounds like the consensus is that the top 3-4 guys 6 months ago have underperformed so far.
  20. There is that statement..........."the golden calf of Bristol"...........can someone explain what that means????..........I've tried to find and google its meaning over and over.....and I just can't seem to find an answer as to what it infers to...and always see it being referred to in sports.......football mostly. Hell I thought that was referencing The Golden Calf of Bristol??.........LOL
  21. Gochujang. You can find it in the Asian section of most grocery stores now. Comes in a red plastic box with a flip top lid. Warning: Once you start using it, it's hard to stop using it.
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