Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Bills release an experienced guard


Mr. Scot

Recommended Posts

Quinton Spain, a Titan for his first few years and a full-time starter last year in Buffalo. He was starting this year until they replaced him with Cody Ford.

He has experience and is a decent blocker, but health might be an issue. He's sat out the last few weeks injured.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

He would be a great pickup for us, but the Chiefs, Ravens, Bears, Pats and Cowboys all pretty desperately need G help right now so I’m not going to get my hopes up on this one.

Also I find it very strange that an experienced and recently very solid G wasn’t even able to fetch a 7th in a trade when so many teams need IOL help. He had just signed a 3 year extension as well. He did lose his starting job, but you would have to be crazy to give up high quality OL depth for nothing when your team is a playoff and potential SB candidate without an extremely good reason especially given COVID and the need to potentially replace a starter on basically no notice just for contact tracing. I’d be trying to find out what that reason is. Something doesn’t smell right to me.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Bartin said:

He would be a great pickup for us, but the Chiefs, Ravens, Bears, Pats and Cowboys all pretty desperately need G help right now so I’m not going to get my hopes up on this one.

Also I find it very strange that an experienced and recently very solid G wasn’t even able to fetch a 7th in a trade when so many teams need IOL help. He had just signed a 3 year extension as well. He did lose his starting job, but you would have to be crazy to give up high quality OL depth for nothing when your team is a playoff and potential SB candidate without an extremely good reason especially given COVID and the need to potentially replace a starter on basically no notice just for contact tracing. I’d be trying to find out what that reason is. Something doesn’t smell right to me.

Injury is the only thing I've seen, but yeah it's always "buyer beware" on these things.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Mr. Scot said:

Injury is the only thing I've seen, but yeah it's always "buyer beware" on these things.

Could be something as simple as Beane keeping a promise that he would let him go if he wasn’t a starter, but I would definitely call Beane before I’d called the agent on this one. If things checked out I probably would also offer Beane a 7th at the same time because lack of talent and COVID are killing our IOL right now.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Mr. Scot said:

Injury is the only thing I've seen, but yeah it's always "buyer beware" on these things.

There is an article about it and it mentions nothing about injury.  

https://buffalonews.com/sports/bills/bills-gm-brandon-beane-explains-release-of-guard-quinton-spain/article_2d617fce-13b9-11eb-a701-fff06586eb31.html

Makes it sound as if there is more to the story, but he might be worth a look.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

56 minutes ago, Davidson Deac II said:

There is an article about it and it mentions nothing about injury.  

https://buffalonews.com/sports/bills/bills-gm-brandon-beane-explains-release-of-guard-quinton-spain/article_2d617fce-13b9-11eb-a701-fff06586eb31.html

Makes it sound as if there is more to the story, but he might be worth a look.  

The injury is mentioned here

Spain started every game for the Bills at left guard during the 2019 season and opened this year as their starter as well. He was replaced by Cody Ford when Buffalo shuffled its line in Week Three, saw some time in Week Four and sat out the last two weeks with a foot injury.

From the article you linked...

Quote

Spain announced the decision on Twitter, followed by the team's announcement. However, in a cryptic tweet that was later deleted, Spain wrote, "If only they knew the real reason but I'm going to leave it at that."

:thinking:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Mr. Scot said:

The injury is mentioned here

 

 

From the article you linked...

:thinking:

It looks like this has been in the planning stages for a few days and the player was aware it was coming.  Does make me wonder what is really going on.  But at least he knew it was coming.

Doubt he comes here anyway, but he is slightly more interesting than most players that get cut at this time of year.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, bull123 said:

What is his contract like?...is he good enough to contribute?...

id have given a 7th if he fits

He just signed a 3 year, $15M deal this offseason which makes it extra weird. That’s market value for a guy like him so he’s not overpaid or anything.

If we traded for him it would be like $3M for the rest of the year and $5M each of the next two. He’s not cheap but that is very reasonable.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • I thought he had a few really nice flashes.  I can see him showing out this year 
    • I have heard that before--when standing in front of a full body mirror at Old Navy.  I said it, actually. Seriously, Let's go on what we know. There is reason for optimism that exceeds random opinions and negativity: 1. Last year, the offense was the priority and the interior offensive line was the focal point. Morgan addressed it in free agency and the draft. They improved.  2.  Last year, Canales pulled Young after 2 games and replaced him with an established veteran.  Instead of giving up on Young, he developed him, primarily focusing on his footwork and timing.  Continued development in his fundamentals should result in improved play.  (this is significant because some athletes rely on natural ability and do not adapt well.  They resort to old habits. This means that Bryce is "teachable" and is willing to face adversity and fight through it.  That is what you want in a QB.) 3. Morgan drafted a raw talent at WR; and we all knew he was raw.  Huddlers are already calling it a bust, but his productivity numbers were in line with the other WRs drafted around where he was drafted.  So, yes, he was a bit disappointing, but what part of "Raw" is not understood here?  Evil Bryce, then inconsistent Dalton, then good Bryce--all while facing the top defensive backs--and let's not forget about his lingering injuries--and we should understand XL's productivity.  Morgan was looking for a home run based on XL's 1-season productivity and his freakish athleticism, but I always thought we would not know what we have until year 2.  TMac alone will make XL better--a solid #2. 4.  If you blame Morgan for drafting XL, you must give him credit for making Coker a priority free agent.  In my view, he addressed WR in 2024 pretty effectively in the long view.  5.  Let's look at the rest of the draft.  Brooks?  The best RB in the draft in round 2?  Morgan was attempting to build a solid run game behind Bryce.  Wallace was a very solid third round pick at LB. Sanders is a strong TE for a fourth round pick. 6.  Not much is being said about the development of Chau Smith-Wade.  His improvement mirrors Bryce Young's, actually.  In his first 8 games, his PFF rating was 36.5.  In the final 9 games, his PFF rating was 66.7.   7.  With so many needs, Morgan hit the UDFA market with success. In addition to Coker, Demani Richardson got 400+ snaps and had a 60.1 PFF grade, including an interception. 8.  In free agency, Morgan spent big bucks on Guards, a move that made his QB better. He added David Moore, Nijman,  He signed Clowney, Wonnum, Robinson, Jewel, Chaisson, Fuller, Scott, D. Jackson, Dionte Johnson, etc.  A few years of Fitterer left him with more holes that players.  Some did not work out, but he did all this on a budget (after he splurged on Lewis and Hunt).  It is hard to get a free agent to come to a team that loses--so in some cases, Morgan had to overpay or accept questionable players. Morgan's first year as a GM demonstrated an understanding of the game like we have not seen since Polian, before his lost it. Canales, on the other hand, should be rated by the improvement of players.  Zavala, Ekwonu, Mays, Young, Smith-Wade, Coker, Wallace--all improved.  He had to overcome major losses such as D. Brown, Shaq, Dionte Johnson, Corbett--and we saw growth.  Despite all this team went through, after 8 games of disarray, This team finished 4-5 with close losses to both Super Bowl teams.  Frankly, I do not know how he did it. This year was better.  The WR room is solid with depth.  The OL room is solid with depth.  The TE room is as good as it has been in a while.  The RB room has the potential to be as good as it was when we had 28 and 34.  DBs?  Better.  DL?  Better.  Edge?  better.  The bottom of the roster?  Much better. We really don't know what we have yet, and that makes this offseason exciting.      
    • Here you go. 2 yards. Bryce Sneak.mp4
×
×
  • Create New...