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Is Tepper is the worst owner in the NFL?


Zod
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4 minutes ago, GhostWhispah said:

Tepper earned his billions by making smart business decisions unlike most of you guys still working at Micky Dees or kids who still put ketchup on their hot dogs. Just cause he made a mistake on hiring a coach he admires who turn the team into a clown show doesn't mean it was from him directly. If anything, he should have fired Rhule much sooner.

If you ever own an NFL team which i doubt, you will be hands off and let your GM built your team for you as you keep your mouth shut and just pay the bill.

How smart does he look as an NFL owner? That's literally all I care about. 

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1 hour ago, GhostWhispah said:

2-2 at worst had Andy started all 4 games?!? Now i really want to know those teams we would have beaten with Andy??

I think Seattle has given up over 300 plus yard to every QB they faced this season, even to bad teams cause their secondary is atrocious.

Pick 2. Could have been any of the other 3. 

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2 hours ago, GhostWhispah said:

Tepper earned his billions by making smart business decisions unlike most of you guys still working at Micky Dees or kids who still put ketchup on their hot dogs. Just cause he made a mistake on hiring a coach he admires who turn the team into a clown show doesn't mean it was from him directly. If anything, he should have fired Rhule much sooner.

If you ever own an NFL team which i doubt, you will be hands off and let your GM built your team for you as you keep your mouth shut and just pay the bill.

Ok cool. Nobody gives a fug. He sucks as an owner.

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4 hours ago, GhostWhispah said:

Tepper earned his billions by making smart business decisions unlike most of you guys still working at Micky Dees or kids who still put ketchup on their hot dogs. Just cause he made a mistake on hiring a coach he admires who turn the team into a clown show doesn't mean it was from him directly. If anything, he should have fired Rhule much sooner.

If you ever own an NFL team which i doubt, you will be hands off and let your GM built your team for you as you keep your mouth shut and just pay the bill.

That you, SizzleBuzz?

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He probably currently is, but most owners were either born into their ownership and knew how franchise/football operations worked, or they've owned a team for many years.

Although he needs to start to cleaning up his act sooner rather than later, we need to remember he is still one of the newest owners in the league.

I remain cautiously optimistic because of his passion for the teams success, which seems to be rivaled by very few owners. He cares a lot more about winning than bottom line, which isn't as common as you'd think among franchise owners. He's admitted his failures with hiring a college coach and previous bandaid QB's, and took a different approach with our current QB and head coach. Even if they don't end up working out, he's clearly trying to learn from his mistakes, and change his approach, which is rare among NFL owners.

Over time, that should start to translate to team success. But right now, he's still trying to find his footing.

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On 10/4/2023 at 1:49 PM, GhostWhispah said:

Tepper earned his billions by making smart business decisions unlike most of you guys still working at Micky Dees or kids who still put ketchup on their hot dogs. Just cause he made a mistake on hiring a coach he admires who turn the team into a clown show doesn't mean it was from him directly. If anything, he should have fired Rhule much sooner.

If you ever own an NFL team which i doubt, you will be hands off and let your GM built your team for you as you keep your mouth shut and just pay the bill.

Just because you can fix anything with a motor doesn't mean you can perform heart surgery. Running a hedge fund has nothing to do with running an NFL team. 

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3 hours ago, Panthers Addict said:

He probably currently is, but most owners were either born into their ownership and knew how franchise/football operations worked, or they've owned a team for many years.

Although he needs to start to cleaning up his act sooner rather than later, we need to remember he is still one of the newest owners in the league.

I remain cautiously optimistic because of his passion for the teams success, which seems to be rivaled by very few owners. He cares a lot more about winning than bottom line, which isn't as common as you'd think among franchise owners. He's admitted his failures with hiring a college coach and previous bandaid QB's, and took a different approach with our current QB and head coach. Even if they don't end up working out, he's clearly trying to learn from his mistakes, and change his approach, which is rare among NFL owners.

Over time, that should start to translate to team success. But right now, he's still trying to find his footing.

It's his impatience and rash decisions at qb that have us in this mess. He hasn't learned anything. 

 

Start will Greer and have the first pick the next year, no let's sign teddy and win 5 games

Draft a qb and take your lumps and see if you can improve.  No let's give up 2 decent picks for a qb That's proven nothing,  we can fix him

Start Matt corral and see it he can play you traded up for him,  nah let's bring in a disgruntled qb to be coached by a guy everyone wants fired

Start Matt corral and see if he can play you traded up for him, nah let's trade the farm and our best offensive players and multiple picks to get an under sized guy.

 

Tepper knows modern offense wins but when given the chance we choose to trade away our two best offensive players for less then we could have gotten for our best 1 defensive players and hire an old school offensive coach instead of hiring an up and coming offensive mind. Tepper know what he needs to do but he's clueless on how to actually accomplish it. We just dig a deeper and deeper hole every fuging year 

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4 hours ago, Panthers Addict said:

He probably currently is, but most owners were either born into their ownership and knew how franchise/football operations worked, or they've owned a team for many years.

Although he needs to start to cleaning up his act sooner rather than later, we need to remember he is still one of the newest owners in the league.

I remain cautiously optimistic because of his passion for the teams success, which seems to be rivaled by very few owners. He cares a lot more about winning than bottom line, which isn't as common as you'd think among franchise owners. He's admitted his failures with hiring a college coach and previous bandaid QB's, and took a different approach with our current QB and head coach. Even if they don't end up working out, he's clearly trying to learn from his mistakes, and change his approach, which is rare among NFL owners.

Over time, that should start to translate to team success. But right now, he's still trying to find his footing.

if he really cared more about winning than his bottom line he wouldn't have installed ligament destroying turf so he could host more kenny chesney concernts

dudes a fuging hack. he didn't build a business or create anything; he made money by moving zeros and ones around a spreadsheet. When people like him so publicly and obviously eat poo, the thought shouldn't be "well clearly he must have a plan because he was so successful elsewhere." The thought should be "how have we structured society to the point where a dipshit like this can be worth 10 billion dollars." 

Same should be said for Elon as well 

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    • So the last guy who had the job got hired by his former team directly into a role he has no direct experience in?
    • Hard to pass up millions for a couple of days work per week for a coaching gig in the NFL that is 60-80 hours each week during the season and a more relaxed 50 hours a week during the off season. Yeah, I'd love to see him as our DC but hard to see him giving up the cushy job there if he gets it. And he's going to be a great commentator for the network.
    • Really, I think that is where negotiations come in. If you've got a QB getting you to 10 wins but statistically he's not a great performer, then you say look you can take $22 million or you can try it on the market. Because let's face it, out there, any leadership skills that we're seeing aren't going to be on the table, it's just going to be performance and that lands him in the QB2 market, which is much, much less lucrative (although any of us would love that money).  No one is saying that Bryce will be a $50 million QB, barring something short of a miraculous jump. I'm just saying that if we are winning somehow with him at the helm, then it would be fuging stupid to dive back into the rookie pool all over again. Let's say we do hit the 10 win mark, heck, let's call it 11 and a second round in the playoffs. I think we can all say that would be a really uplifting result and one that should be doable if we have good play. What do we do then? Here's what I would offer if I were Morgan and Tepper. $25 million a year for 3 years, each year with up to $10 million in incentives for touchdowns, wins, playoff depth, being under 10 interceptions, completing a full season, passing yardage milestones, taking less than 15 sacks. Look, Bryce isn't a Ferrari, he isn't a Corvette, or a mid-level BMW. He's probably a new Toyota Sienna that will definitely get you somewhere and bring the whole team along with it, no fuss but not a lot of pizazz.  And really, it's about the destination, not about what drove you there.
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