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mrcompletely11

HUDDLER
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Everything posted by mrcompletely11

  1. I would say 3 inches and 40 pounds is a bit more then a "tad".
  2. "so yeah, Its um, yeah, I was wrong, uh, thats on me, and you know, I have to get better, its um yeah, its you know on me and I have to keep working and you now get better"
  3. the cope is you trying to justify him throwing across his body with both his feet off the ground, but you be you guy, I love it
  4. pretty basic episdoe IMO, he acknowledge the good throws in the rain, acknowledged the bad misses and says his footwork needs to be worked on in the offseason to help with his velocity The throw at the end of the first half was probably imo his best one as a pro
  5. There is no scenario where a nfl qb should be throwing the ball with both his feet off the ground. But cope all you want. The kid has to fix his mechanics.
  6. what in the holy fug is going on here? Eyes closed - check Both feet off the ground - check Hips misaligned - check This poo has to get correct asap for him to have any chance of succeeding, I mean seriously what the fug is going on here?
  7. How exactly would that work? He sits for 2 full years?
  8. I never understood the quantity over quality concept that he adheres to. Seems pretty stupid quite honestly.
  9. If our dumb asses arent going to pay him 30m per I doubt we can fleece another team into doing it.
  10. You have defended him endlessly for not trading Burns. Still feel that way?
  11. In the future he needs to learn to shut the fug up because the more he talks the more he has stuff that can be used against him. IE. "We dont plan to be picking in the top 10 again"
  12. 100% but to me the worst moves (or non moves) was not taking the burns deal and Corral. The dude is literally out of the league and he had, as person points out, a ton of red flags.
  13. fug you fat fitt, you are one dumb motherfuger. I mean truly one of the worst GM's the nfl has ever seen. https://theathletic.com/5150382/2023/12/20/panthers-gm-scott-fitterer-future/ Pretty fair article from Person as usual The burns and corral piece of this is truly baffling The bad Turning down the Los Angeles Rams’ offer for Brian Burns The Panthers were in transition mode last year at the trade deadline. Tepper had fired Rhule two weeks earlier and Fitterer had already moved All-Pro running back Christian McCaffrey and wide receiver Robbie Anderson ahead of the deadline (more on both of those later). But the deal that looks questionable a year later is the one Fitterer didn’t make. The Rams offered two future first-round picks — in 2024 and ’25 — plus a third in ’23 for Burns, who was in the midst of a career-best, 12 1/2-sack season. Trading Burns would have left the Panthers without their best player on a defense that has kept them in a lot of games the past two seasons. But the Panthers might have been able to flip the two firsts to Chicago, allowing them to trade for the No. 1 pick without giving up their own first in ’24 and wideout DJ Moore, who would have been an invaluable weapon for rookie quarterback Bryce Young. Advertisement The decision to keep Burns was further complicated by the Panthers’ inability to sign him to a long-term contract. With Fitterer unwilling to meet Burns’ contract demands — around $30 million a year, according to sources — Burns essentially cut off negotiations once the season started and likely will be looking at a franchise tag this offseason. Moving on from Christian McCaffrey This was a tough call for Fitterer and the organization because of how effective the multi-talented McCaffrey is when healthy. But the 2017 first-round pick had played in only 10 games in 2020 and ’21 and the big money on his contract was about to hit in ’23. San Francisco gave up four picks for McCaffrey, although none was a first-round selection. The Panthers used a second from the 49ers in the deal to acquire the first overall pick from Chicago. They packaged a third and fourth from the Niners to trade up for Oregon edge rusher DJ Johnson with the 80th overall pick, considered a reach by most draft experts. Johnson has 14 tackles and no sacks in 10 games. Meanwhile, McCaffrey has yet to miss a game with San Francisco, leads the NFL in rushing and should get MVP votes while playing for Kyle Shanahan, who babysat McCaffrey and his brothers as a teenager and runs an offense well-suited for McCaffrey’s skill set. With each 100-yard or multi-touchdown game, it seems clear the Panthers didn’t get enough for McCaffrey, who — like Moore — would have been a godsend to a rookie QB. This year’s free-agent group Given control of the 53 after Reich’s arrival, Fitterer had the final say in personnel decisions this year. The results have been underwhelming. The Panthers were the only team to pay a free-agent running back, and Miles Sanders has not made much of a case for more spending at the position in the future. Advertisement Sanders, who signed a four-year, $25.4 million contract, has become an afterthought behind Chuba Hubbard while struggling to get untracked. Tight end Hayden Hurst had not found much of a role before suffering a season-ending concussion at Chicago on Nov. 9, while DJ Chark has failed to emerge as a consistent vertical stretch. The Panthers on Tuesday released veteran edge rusher Justin Houston, who managed a half-sack in seven games before getting hurt. Reich wanted to bring Houston in for his leadership and productivity, while former running backs coach Duce Staley is said to have backed the signings of Sanders and Chark. But Fitterer had to sign off on all of them. Trading up for Matt Corral Former Panthers GM Dave Gettleman used to warn against “shopping hungry,” which is what the Panthers did during the 2022 draft while looking to upgrade the QB position (after previously missing out on Matthew Stafford and Deshaun Watson). The Panthers talked to the Cleveland Browns during the draft about trading for Baker Mayfield, while thinking about taking a shot on a mid-round quarterback. After Malik Willis went to Tennessee in the third round, the Panthers traded up for Matt Corral, the Ole Miss quarterback who had not interviewed well and exhibited “unreliable behavior” in college, according to the NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport. The Panthers took Corral over former UNC quarterback Sam Howell, who has started 14 games for Washington this year, and the Niners’ Brock Purdy, who, in fairness, was not viewed as a mid-round prospect. Corral sustained a season-ending foot injury during a preseason game as a rookie, and was released during final cuts before this season. Corral signed with New England before leaving the team before Week 1 for a personal matter. He has not resurfaced for as much as a tryout since.
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