#1
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Zzzzzzzzz
This free agency approach by the Colts sucks. Are they trying to bore their fan base to death in the offseason?
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#2
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Boredom in March typically means excitement in September-February, at least it has for the last 20 or so years.
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apballin (03-17-2019), Dewey 5 (03-17-2019), Luck4Reich (03-17-2019), Oldcolt (03-17-2019), Racehorse (03-17-2019), VeveJones007 (03-18-2019) |
#3
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Quote:
It's tough to go only through the draft when you're drafting at the end of the first round. Polian had a few years where he drafted high like we did last year to restock on some stud players. Even if you draft well, there's nothing wrong with supplementing that with some outside free agent talent. Hopefully for starters, but if nothing else, at least for quality depth. |
#4
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Ballard has added some FA's. He just not going to overpay like some teams. Last edited by Dewey 5; 03-17-2019 at 10:48 PM. |
#5
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Corey Simon, and that 2005 team should've won the Super Bowl and likely would've had Dungy's son not committed suicide and had Harper's wife not stabbed his leg in the week(ish) leading up to the game.
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Discflinger (03-18-2019) |
#6
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Quote:
I know he's added some decent FA's last year, and apparently he's willing to overpay for an average WR for a year, so why not overpay for 1 or 2 guys who are actually good players? They need more talent on defense, and enough of it comes from the draft. I'm not advocating him being stupid and signing every available FA, but acquiring a few talented players isn't a bad thing. Last edited by Maniac; 03-18-2019 at 12:52 AM. |
#8
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Double digit spread lines were almost unheard of in the NFL until that team.
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#9
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Colts team? ‘85 bears was most dominant team I ever saw. Then Dallas teams. That Houston Oilers team Reich upset was one of the best teams I ever saw that didn’t win a SB.
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#10
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Five of the six lightest-spending teams made the playoffs last year, and two of the three lightest spenders played in the Super Bowl. Ten of the 12 playoffs teams from last year are in the bottom 14 in spending thus far. And two of the four in that cluster that didn’t make the playoffs (Atlanta, Carolina) have been in the Super Bowl and made the playoffs multiple times over the last four years.
• That leaves two of the 18 heaviest spenders that made the playoffs. One was eighth (Philly), the other was 12th (Baltimore). • It’s not unusual that it’d skew this way—good teams don’t spend because they’ve already paid a lot of their own guys and likely don’t feel as desperate. But a quick look at the recent past shows that this year the divide between the habits of the haves and have-nots was much more pronounced. So how do you explain it? Well, that part’s simple too. “It’s just a bad class,” said one NFC exec. “This class was always ‘buyer beware.’ Even the guys who got franchised, not that they’re one-year wonders, but players like Frank Clark, Dee Ford—it’s more just that you wouldn’t be sure if you would want to go invest significantly in them.” And maybe that’s why Bill Belichick was in Barbados while the rest of us were getting all hysterical back here. https://www.si.com/nfl/2019/03/18/fr..._medium=social |
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