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As Spano intimates in his blog, it's at times like this that having an OC as a QB will potentially reap rewards. Spreading our coaching staff thin at what is far and away the hardest part of our schedule is less than ideal to say the least. This season really does seem to be throwing up some difficulties that we could do without. I just hope we don't come a cropper because of it. If we do go to the you-know-what-bowl then we won't have done it the textbook way.

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It's certainly been a memorable weekend in the NFL.

Regarding the Miami hazing, I was listening to Rich Gannon on the radio and he said that the Raiders had that kind of culture when he arrived and he managed to smooth it out by leadership. Also that there's a reason that you don't hear about this sort of thing in New England, or Green Bay, or Denver, or from the Giants: the hazing is only done by losers in situations where there's no leadership from the ownership on down.

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From MMQB

Why Jacksonville is so … well, troubled.

I was going to use a stronger word. But the suspension of their best player, wide receiver Justin Blackmon, for the rest of the season is an exclamation point on what a disaster the four-year reign of Gene Smith (2009-12) as general manager was.

Smith’s an honorable man and was a solid scout before the Jags promoted him to GM before the 2009 draft. But of the 26 players he selected in his four drafts, only three figure to be Jaguars starters (not including punter Bryan Anger) when the team comes off the bye Sunday at Tennessee. Here’s who they are, and how they rated versus their peers according to Pro Football Focus, which grades every NFL player relative to his position:

• Defensive end Tyson Alualu, a first-round pick in 2010, is rated 42nd of 47 4-3 defensive ends.

• Guard Will Rackley, a third-round pick in 2011, is 69th of 71 guards.

• Wide receiver Cecil Shorts III, a fourth-rounder in 2011, is rated the 36th-best wideout in the league, of 108 receivers ranked by PFF.

Smith made four top-10 picks in his tenure. Tackle Eugene Monroe (ninth overall, 2009) was a marginal starter who was traded to Baltimore last month. Alualu (10th, 2010) would be a backup on many NFL teams. Quarterback Blaine Gabbert (10th, 2011) has been a disaster and may not make the 2014 roster. And Blackmon (fifth, 2012) came into the draft with one DUI charge and has had three more substance-abuse-related occurrences since, the latest of which resulted in his banishment for the rest of the season. It’s in serious doubt whether Blackmon will ever play another snap for Jacksonville.

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"When you don’t get along with somebody as a head coach, or assistant coach, it usually falls under one of those couple areas: lazy, lack of passion and a lot of times lack of character. And he fits all three."

-- Washington coach Mike Shanahan, responding to departed defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth’s rips of him for being conniving and disingenuous when Haynesworth played for Washington.

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Yeah.

Through nine games, the Seahawks have had 11 punts returned for a total of 15 yards (longest was 10 yards).

Richard Sherman and Golden Tate have combined for 323 yards of punt returns.

That has to be a record for difference in return yards.

Edited by leviramsey
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It's certainly been a memorable weekend in the NFL.

Regarding the Miami hazing, I was listening to Rich Gannon on the radio and he said that the Raiders had that kind of culture when he arrived and he managed to smooth it out by leadership. Also that there's a reason that you don't hear about this sort of thing in New England, or Green Bay, or Denver, or from the Giants: the hazing is only done by losers in situations where there's no leadership from the ownership on down.

What about JPP dumping Prince in the cold tub?  Hazing/Bullying or just banter?  Fine line between these things and to be honest i think most of the time its going to be the coach asking the players to toughen up one of the others.

 

But i agree when it goes too far its a reflection on the influence of the ownership and coaching.

Edited by kkr
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Some early playoff picture scenarios that could play out over the next few weeks...

* Seahawks clinch the NFC West by winning their next three games (Vikings, Saints, @ 49ers), as that would make the Seahawks 12-4 at worst with a season sweep of the 49ers. The 49ers could still finish 12-4, but the season sweep would ensure that the Seahawks win a tiebreaker over the 49ers. The Cardinals could finish 12-4, but that would require a win over the 49ers in Week 17, so there's no chance of a 3-way tie at 12-4. Any scenario where the Seahawks tie the Cardinals at 12-4 would resolve in the Seahawks favor on division record (4-2 vs. 3-3).

* Chiefs clinch the AFC West by winning their next three games (@ Broncos, Chargers, Broncos) combined with a Patriots win over the Broncos. The Chiefs would be 12-4 at worst with a season sweep of the Broncos. The Broncos would be 12-4 at best.

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