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Week 13: Other NFL Games


kungfoodude
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1 minute ago, hepcat said:

I mean yea those stories about Lawrence Taylor showing up to the stadium before a game in a bathrobe doing lines in the locker room probably did happen 

should have given carter the blessing to wear his number.  Also fug the giants. refused to throw the ball in the 4th quarter.  Dumbass Kafka

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1 hour ago, toldozer said:

should have given carter the blessing to wear his number.  Also fug the giants. refused to throw the ball in the 4th quarter.  Dumbass Kafka

Dude was also not going for it on 4th and short down 23 🤣 he getting the thanks but no thanks in five weeks

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8 hours ago, PantherChris said:

Dude was also not going for it on 4th and short down 23 🤣 he getting the thanks but no thanks in five weeks

Ended up all good, my parlay cashed thanks to pats finally given Henderson the ball and kafka trotting dart out there down 18 with 2 minutes left for some reason 

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10 hours ago, PantherChris said:

Lmfao wahhhh from interviews this kinda crap was legit normal in the 80s like there was some de I know I heard about who used to jerk off in meetings

You’re probably thinking of Charles Haley who was legit mentally ill and was traded from the 49ers because he fuged around with Jerry rice.

I don’t think anyone in the 80s was straight up masturbating in team meetings.

Aaron Hernandez used to watch gay porn on team flights tho lmao

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13 hours ago, PantherChris said:

Lmfao wahhhh from interviews this kinda crap was legit normal in the 80s like there was some de I know I heard about who used to jerk off in meetings

Not sure about meetings. You might be thinking about Jeffrey Toobin on CNN.

There were stories about Charles Haley touching himself in the Cowboys locker room while telling teammates he was thinking of their wives (Haley was a bons fide psycho).

With regard to Carter though...

Wesley Steinberg is not an actual journalist / insider / anything. Never take him seriously. 

Edited by Mr. Scot
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13 hours ago, LinvilleGorge said:

"47 yard attempt here by Younghoe Koo and he... stumbled!"

Pretty professional off the cuff take there. Certainly appreciated by the network over my "what the FUG was THAT??!!!"

Welcome to the world of Meme, where you will now reside forever.

 

Edited by Mr. Scot
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    • Panthers' Chuba Hubbard could teach us all a lesson on handling disappointment Scott Fowler, Charlotte Observer The chant rose up from the crowd - unlikely and unbidden - during a Carolina Panthers offensive series where most football fans know you're supposed to be quiet so the players can hear quarterback Bryce Young's snap count. But the fans at Bank of America Stadium couldn't help themselves in the third quarter of what turned out to be an extraordinary, 31-28 win over the Los Angeles Rams Sunday. They chanted "Keep!! Pounding!!" first across the stadium. And then a yell organically sprung up for the man who would carry the ball eight times on that one drive, who would be one of the stars of the upset win and who has given us all a lesson in the graceful handling of disappointment over the past few weeks: "Chuba! CHUBA! CHUBA!!" Panthers running back Chuba Hubbard got demoted earlier this year. In a very public way. Hubbard was benched in favor of the little-known Rico Dowdle, who had begun the season as his backup but was now the hotter back. And while it was the right thing for head coach Dave Canales to do, because Dowdle was simply playing better and his first loyalty must be to the team, that didn't make it any easier for Hubbard. The Canadian is being paid very well to be one of Carolina's stars and he had clearly been Carolina's best offensive player in 2024 (1,195 rushing yards, 11 total TDs). Now he was hardly getting the ball at all . In a four-game stretch before Sunday, these were Hubbard's total carry totals for the day: 5-3-4-3. Fifteen carries in four games! The fifth-year back used to sometimes get 15 carries in a single half of a single game. In the meantime, Dowdle was getting the ball handed off to him 15-20 times a game for the surprising Panthers, who are 7-6 after Sunday's win and in the playoff hunt as they enter their bye week. So what did Hubbard do when he got demoted and disappointed? First, let's step back for a moment and ask ourselves regarding our own jobs: "What would I do?" If tomorrow you got demoted, or fired, or didn't get the promotion you thought you should, or didn't get the praise or the raise you think you're entitled to, what would you do? Blame somebody else? Lash out at the boss? Sulk? Call in sick for a few days? See if you can get other co-workers on your side to commiserate about how unfair it all is? I probably would do at least one of those things. Hubbard did none of them. Said Canales on Monday: "I just love the way Chuba went right back to work…. He's just a first-class pro." Hubbard kept saying he just wanted to win, and that's understandable because every team he's been on since the Panthers drafted him in 2021 has lost and lost and lost. He had already missed two games this year with a calf injury - this was when Dowdle first shone (with 206 and 183 rushing yards in back-to-back games) - and it looked like Hubbard might be Wally Pipp-ed forever out of the starting job. Hubbard would later admit he rushed back a little from that injury, and when he came back he wasn't as explosive. Canales tried to alternate Hubbard and Dowdle series by series, but Dowdle was way more explosive. After a couple of games of that, Dowdle got the ball 25 times against Green Bay and Hubbard only five. It was hard to argue with the results. "Rico has been amazing," Hubbard said. For the past month, it's been like that. But as Hubbard has gotten healthier, some trends have emerged. He's a better blocker in pass protection than Dowdle, for instance. And while he's not going to break off a big run - Hubbard has 111 carries this year and the longest one only went for 14 yards - he's good in the passing game, where he has scored three times this season and went for a 35-yard TD on a well-blocked perimeter screen Sunday. After close to a month of Dowdle dominance, Canales blew it and barely ran the ball at all in a 20-9 Monday night loss to San Francisco on Nov. 24. Dowdle got only six carries; Hubbard got three. This was legitimately bad play-calling and game-planning, which Dowdle criticized with a carefully placed emoji. Canales and his staff, smarting from that defeat, tweaked the game plan again vs. the Rams. This time Hubbard would be the full-time third-down back, and Dowdle would often carry the ball on first and second downs. And occasionally Hubbard would get a series to himself. What resulted was an even split, where Dowdle carried the ball 18 times for 58 yards and Hubbard 17 for 83 and the Panthers played such good ball-control offense that they won a game almost everyone (including me) thought they would lose. Said Canales of Hubbard: "In the last couple weeks, he's looked really strong. Really powerful. Just making sure that he's a weapon for us in different ways. And for Rico, giving him, the lion's share of some of those first and second down (carries), that is a great way to just get him the ball. So I like where we're at. I like the balance." Which brings us back to those third-quarter chants. "I did hear a little bit of that," Hubbard said. "It was definitely cool." On that drive, Hubbard carried the ball eight times, and they were all bruising runs. The yardage, in order: 5-2-6-6-10-9-2-4. In a fairytale, that last carry would have been into the end zone. Instead, that last carry was wiped out due to a holding call on tight end Ja'Tavion Sanders, and then came a Young sack, and then Carolina had to punt. Still, Hubbard proved himself over the entire afternoon. Dowdle was good. And now the Panthers have two potential No. 1 backs for the final four games of the season as they try to make a playoff push. Hubbard attributed his restraint during this trying season to his faith. "I've been praying, I've been keeping faith, staying close to the Word, and I just attribute everything to Him," Hubbard said after the game Sunday. "I would not be able to get through this or be here without Him." As for Canales, he recognizes Hubbard as one of the team's leaders and remains appreciative as to how selfless Hubbard has been. "I'm just really proud of the way that he's worked himself back in," Canales said. "All he wants to do is win. All he wants to do is help his teammates. I love that about him."
    • Like you’re posting offensive stats like it wasn’t a defensive bloodbath in six inches of mud It fuging ruled. Was the best panthers game since 1999 season finale. 
    • Caleb Williams is hardly completing passes to anyone. His downfield accuracy is some of the worst in the league   
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