#Alex Palazzolo
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soccerstl · 3 years ago
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St. Louis City SC MLS Next Pro Academy Players
St. Louis City SC MLS Next Pro Academy Players
How about a look at the local lads who have been called in from the City Academy roster and other sources, such as the college grads and a high school sophomore among others. St. Louis City SC MLS Next Pro Academy Players With the six Academy lads named to the roster, the adjusted U17 roster is available below. Michael Creek: Missouri State grad, he was the MVC Tournament MVP in 2021, United…
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nofatclips · 5 years ago
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Family Song by Okkervil River from the compilation album Silence Is Not An Option (turn this up) by ATO Records
100% of net proceeds from this digital playlist will be donated to causes supporting the Black Lives Matter global human rights movement: Black Lives Matter Greater NY, Color of Change, and Innocence Project
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marcocaridad · 3 years ago
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This Wolf Sun ☀️ Shirt will be part of #GiftShopXTheWolfsonian - A pop-up curatorial project and store that explores the distinction between exhibition and retail space. Challenging ideas about the value of art, the art objects included, singular or in multiples, reflect the 19 participating artists’ practices and unique creative approaches to this central idea.Included in Gift Shop are wearables (jewelry and shirts), limited-edition sculptures and prints, and many other exciting small items. The installation will run October 30–December 22 and features national and international artists Pip Brant, Belaxis Buil, Marco Caridad, Alex Del Canto, Gianna DiBartolomeo, Michael A. Fernandez, Jose Luis Garcia, Anna Goraczko, Luna Huang, David Olivera, Qinza Najm, Luna Palazzolo, Erin Parish, Devora Perez, Juan Requena, Denis Rovinskiy, Ronald Sanchez, Paul Shortt, and Laurencia Strauss. (at Wolfsonian Museum Miami Beach) https://www.instagram.com/p/CVIcCcRrX2grhl_2qrnHobwKpPUvyGqEvxowTQ0/?utm_medium=tumblr
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junker-town · 5 years ago
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The Chiefs’ razzle dazzle goal-line play came straight out of the 1948 Rose Bowl
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The depth of Andy Reid and Eric Bienimy’s football knowledge knows no bounds.
The Chiefs not only won Super Bowl 54, they were a blast to watch. No, their offense didn’t really come alive until the fourth quarter, but it wasn’t for a lack of innovation. Or should I say, a really inspired bit of throwback trickery.
On their way to a late first quarter touchdown on Sunday night, the Chiefs ran this razzle-dazzle direct snap to running back Damien Williams to get down to the 1-yard line.
pic.twitter.com/OKmp3egykZ
— Steve Palazzolo (@PFF_Steve) February 3, 2020
Chiefs or the Backstreet Boys? pic.twitter.com/MUNyqtvD8R
— rone’s gamblin corner (@_rone) February 3, 2020
The way that the players coordinated their spin moves inspired comparisons to early-aughts boy band dancers, but the play is even more retro than that. After the game, offensive coordinator Eric Bienimy said that the Chiefs ripped the play from an old USC-Michigan Rose Bowl. Banner Society’s Alex Kirshner did some sleuthing and found Fritz Crisler’s “Mad Magicians” Michigan team running almost the exact play on New Year’s Day, 1948.
i *think* you are right and they were actually going off this play, which i'd overlooked on my first trip through the highlights. more inside run path here. love the idea, anyway pic.twitter.com/tzs2VSXMBz
— Alex Kirshner (@alex_kirshner) February 3, 2020
(Kirshner originally highlighted this play, which also looks similar. Either way, the comparison is really cool).
The play is a tribute to Andy Reid’s legendary depth of football study. He is known as one of the most innovative coaches in the history of football, but that “innovation” largely reflects a mind that is better at researching, absorbing and adapting to new ideas that already exist within the football landscape.
Essentially, Reid has succeeded by incorporating college football principles into his offensive gameplans more quickly and seamlessly than his peers. That said, I think few people were expecting to see football’s cutting-edge principles from just after World War II cropping in the year Two Thousand Twenty.
Then again, you could do a lot worse than cribbing from Fritz Crisler. The 1947 Michigan team is one of the very best in program history, capping a 10-0 season with a 49-0 win over the Trojans and being voted No. 1 in the AP Poll over Notre Dame.
Apparently in order to end a 50-year championship drought, the Chiefs had to pull off the double feat of recalling more than 70 years of history and making Michigan football relevant in a major bowl game.
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The From the dust returned are an italian progressive rock/metal band, born in Rome in 2015 from a Alex De Angelis idea, who proposed his project to Marco Del Bufalo (Sumera’s singer), Gianluigi Uzzo Costa (ex Reinwen’s bassist, band in which Alex was been singer), Dario Palazzolo (keyboardist) and Eddie Parenti (Southern Drinkstruction and Corpsefucking Art’s drummer). Different events brought the band to several line-up changes, before taking the current mark. First the coming of Miki on bass, joined by second bassist Luigi, Carlo on guitar and Flavio on drums, then the surrending of the idea of playing with two basses simultaneously and, at last, Flavio and Carlo’s commitments with their band (Nitro), led the Dust to review their line-up during the recording of their debut EP “Homecoming” (2016). It was during the making of their first album that the band fixed finally its line-up, with Danilo Petrelli (Graal‘s keyboardist) and Cristiano Ruggiero (Graal’s drummer) additions. The EP after being recorded, unfortunately, was completely lost due to a mistake of the sound engineer, so the From the dust returned were forced to re-record it in a new studio, led by Danilo Petrelli. The EP, produced by From the dust returned themselves and published by Sliptrick Records, trying to blend the musical personality of each member of the band, shows the combination of typical elements of heavy metal, hard rock, progressive and psychedelic music through six songs that call back 70’sounds going by dark atmospheres to acoustic melodies. Songs are all composed by Alex De Angelis and were arranged by Alex with Miki Leandro Nini, the band's bassist and Danilo Petrelli, keyboardist and sound engineer. The album has as its theme several inner problems like schizophrenia, clinophobia, depression, selfishness, fear to love. Each theme becomes the song’s main subject. But the real focus of this EP is in the opposite duality represented by the contrast of different elements that are: two opposite kind of  voices,  Alex different clean voice and Marco’s growl, acoustic guitars against distorted ones, constant changes of atmospheres. Duality is in every issue as complementary and opposite elements. The album title was chosen by Marco Del Bufalo and was inspired by a chapter of the fix-up fantasy novel written by Ray Bradbury titled "From the dust returned". The title refers to the meeting between the band members, who came from different musical backgrounds.
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frowncod73-blog · 6 years ago
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“Mediocre” is not bad
Yesterday Steve Palazzolo of Pro Football Focus had a tweet that drew the ire of many Eagles fans.
Because it’s fun to refute people’s claims with their own work, or “clapback” as the kids say, I had a little fun.
Palazzolo’s point isn’t completely wrong (though his claim that cornerback is the most valuable position on defense is hilariously wrong), but his framing ignores the whole picture, which can just as easily be spun as a positive. Yes, no one would argue that the Eagles cornerbacks are elite, though two of the starters were good enough to win the Super Bowl with, which is really the only barometer that matters.
Palazzolo overlooks an important factor, though it’s there lurking in his point: they’re young. Really young. Ronald Darby is the old man of the group at 25. Jalen Mills, Rasul Douglas, and Cre’Von LeBlanc are 24. Avonte Maddox is 23. Sidney Jones is 22. That’s why they’re nearly all cost controlled, most of them are on their rookie contracts.
And it’s a reason why PFF thinks they “mediocre” (I’m not even going to get into a discussion of the value of their player grades.) Darby and Mills pretty much are who they are, though again that is literally “good enough to win a Super Bowl with.” They’re also young enough that improvement is possible. But the rest aren’t in their prime yet. Sure, the Eagles would benefit from the addition of an elite corner, but then so would every team in the league. It’s like when people criticized Carson Wentz in his rookie year for playing like Alex Smith. Are you kidding me? Playing like Alex Smith when you’re a rookie is a good thing. It’s when you’re playing like Alex Smith in your fifth year that it’s a problem.
From a talent perspective, no, the Eagles aren’t “set.” But from a roster perspective, where is a high draft pick going to play? Darby and Mills are the starters. Maddox is going to get his playing time, though it may be at safety. Jones and Douglas aren’t going anywhere this year. LeBlanc might have been a flash in the pan last year, but even if he is I just listed five guys ahead of him on the depth chart. If at some point on Day 3 of the draft there is a corner available that is head and shoulders ahead of the rest of their board, sure, grab him, especially if it’s a guy who can play safety. As we saw last year, you can never have enough depth. But this team has bigger draft needs. That’s what people mean when they say they’re “set.”
Being “mediocre”, young, and cheap is a much better situation than a lot of the league. For example, PFF’s own grades say that they’ve got the best group of CBs in the division. OverTheCap says they have the 8th cheapest group of CBs. And for the first time since Sheldon Brown and Lito Sheppard took over as starters 15 years ago, the Eagles outlook at corner is on the up. No Nmadi Asomugha and Dominque Rodgers-Cromartie checking out. No Cary Fletcher and Bradley Williams predictable struggles. We’ve seen what this group of corners is capable of, and it’s exciting.
*end rant*
Let’s go over the week that was
Bad Times at the El Lambeau
Packers management was the last to realize it but we all knew that despite winning a Super Bowl that Mike McCarthy is not a good coach. But oh boy is this dirty laundry airing piece on what went wrong between him and Aaron Rodgers bad. None of the major players come out of this looking good.
It reminds me, just a little, of the story earlier in the year of Carson Wentz being a bad teammate in 2018. There was a lot in that piece that was hilariously wrong, and we’ve gone over that several times and I’m not interested in rehashing the whole thing. But there was some truth in it, and Wentz acknowledged that he was not at his best. I bring this up not because there’s a direct comparison between the Eagles and what happened in Green Bay, as Doug Pederson laps McCarthy in every facet of their jobs, but because it is a stark reminder that things are not always what they seem to be and that in the close knit world of professional sports (and in a lot of walks of life), relationships matter a great deal.
RIP the AAF
Sadly the AAF folded earlier this week. A whole lot of people got screwed over. The players, the coaches, and the staffs are suddenly out of a job, and while some of them are already finding work, most won’t. There just aren’t enough options out there. But the story goes beyond that. Vendors haven’t been paid, and never will be since the league doesn’t have any money. There were two games and the playoffs left, and there were people who would have worked those games that can’t anymore. I drive by the stadium where the Atlanta Legends play every day on the way to work, more than once commenting to myself “they want $20 to park at these games?” but now that parking lot will sit vacant tomorrow. That may not mean anything to you or me, but there were people staffing that lot, there were people selling fans food and drink, there were people working merchandise stands. And now they won’t be, they won’t be working tomorrow. Which means they won’t be paid for tomorrow.
In good hands on draft day
Announcing picks for the Eagles on Day 2 of the draft this year will be Mike Quick and Brent Celek. Good choices. My guess is that Quick will have good energy, maybe try and pump up the crowd a bit, while Celek will be mundane. If they get to make an announcement. It wouldn’t be surprising if their respective pick is dealt.
Mocking some mocks
It’s one of my favorite times of the year: mock draft season. Let’s riff on a few real quick.
Mel Kiper:
No. 25: Johnathan Abram, S, Mississippi State — Time to start thinking about a Malcolm Jenkins replacement? He’s 31. Abram is my No. 1-ranked safety.
Mel you dummy, the veteran safety most likely to be replaced is Rodney McLeod.
Todd McShay:
No. 25: Deandre Baker, CB, Georgia — Philly gets a super-instinctive cornerback here for a defense that was No. 30 in passing yards per game last season.
Todd, we just talked about this.
Tweet of the Week
Source: https://www.bleedinggreennation.com/2019/4/6/18298126/philadelphia-eagles-cornerbacks-young-ronald-darby-jalen-mills-avonte-maddox-pro-football-focus-pff
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roselleparknews · 7 years ago
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Four score and two years ago, in January of 1936, Roselle Park High School (RPHS) included wrestling in its sports program. 82 years later – with an overall average of more than one win a month without fail – Roselle Park Wrestling reached a significant milestone of 1,000 dual meet wins. A review shows that Roselle Park appears to be only the fourth high school in history to be recognized for achieving such an accomplishment and the just second from the Garden State. The other three other high school wrestling teams to achieve 1,000 wins were Granite City High School from Illinois, Vacaville High School in California, and Paulsboro High School – who had its 1,000th win in 2011 – from New Jersey.
Under the direction of eight coaches, the latest being current coach Ryan Rooney who took over the program in 2016, Roselle Park wrestlers have steadily made their mark over the decades.
Last night, in front of a packed crowd of fans – both old and new – at the T. Ralph ‘Pug’ Williams gymnasium, 13 young men from Roselle Park took to the mat to make history. The Roselle Park Panthers face the Scotch Plains Raiders in a meet that was originally scheduled to take place at Scotch Plains-Fanwood High School but in an honorable show of sportsmanship, the Raiders accommodated the Panthers to allow for a possible 1,000th win at home.
Dylan Camillo was first up against Timothy Roden in the 145 lbs. weight class and started the night with a Major Decision win for the Roselle Park Grapplers.
Elvin Guerrero followed for Roselle Park and bested Scotch Plains’ Michael Ramos in the 152 weight class with a 3-point Decision win to have the Panthers take the lead 7-0.
Roselle Park was up by 10 after Abel Crespo won a Decision over Zachary Fleischman in the 160 weight class.
Raider Nicholas Palazzolo gave Scotch Plains six (6) points when he won against Panther Jefferson Garcia with a pin fall in the 170 lb. category.
Roselle Park’s Devin Hilburn won his 183 weight class match against Alex Oslislo with a 3-point Decision.
Scotch Plains’ Sam Wustefeld closed the gap for the Raiders when he secured a 5-point Technical Fall against Grappler Ryan Urban to make it 13-11 with the Panthers still in the lead.
A forfeit win for Scotch Plains’ Bobby Mount in the 220 weight class gave the Raiders the lead for the first time last night with a score of 13-17.
Sean Matthews brought the Panthers within one point with his three-point Decision win over fellow 285 weight class wrestler, Raider Walter Thomas to make it 16-17.
The Panthers were back on top 23-17 when Gabriel Leo in the 106 lb. category won by Fall against Kyle Rigney.
113 weight class Scotch Plains Raider Michael Fleck earned his team six (6) points when he defeated Roselle Park Grappler Antonio Antonucci with a Fall and, once again, had Scotch Plains in the lead by one point at 22-23.
Eddie Hummel returned the Panthers back to the lead with his Fall win over Kyle Robinson in the 120 weight class match with a score of 28-23.
The Panthers continued on their lead when Matthew Armamento garnered a four-point Major Decision win in his 126 weight class match over Raider Jeremy Lenart to make it 32-23.
Roselle Park never looked back as 132 weight class Panther Mark Montgomery pinned Jacob Perone from Scotch Plains for six points and made it 38-23.
The meet ended with a final Fall win by Panther Jon A. Mejia against Raider Mateo Velez to close the evening with a 42-23 victory.
After each team met again in the center of the mat to congratulate each other the gymnasium pack audience took to the court to celebrate in their hometown team’s 1,000th win. Well-wishers, friends, family members, former coaches, former wrestlers, photographs, pats on the back, hugs, a banner, a plaque, and even balloons graced the gymnasium with the Roselle Park Panthers at the center of it all.
Although they appeared a bit tired from their matches, the team was in-the-moment as they were congratulated for their milestone victory. Amid the accolades, it seemed that the Roselle Park Panthers knew it was just a moment. Last night was last night and tomorrow is another day and they need to continue to finish the season, knowing that the most important win is the next one.
Photographs from the meet are available below. Click to enlarge.
Roselle Park Wrestling Achieves Its 1,000th Win Four score and two years ago, in January of 1936, Roselle Park High School (RPHS) included wrestling in its sports program.
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junker-town · 6 years ago
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Saban asked media to talk about Bama weaknesses. Here are 6.
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No team is perfect, not even the Tide.
So Nick Saban wants a list of everything his team does wrong, does he?
After his team ripped another opponent limb from limb — Texas A&M this go-around, by the score of 45-23 — Saban said (unprompted):
“One thing I’d like to say to everybody — and I don’t wanna get into the rat poison again — we got a good team, but our team needs to do a lot of things to improve,” Saban said.
“So I’d appreciate it if you would sort of look at some of things we didn’t do so well and write about that, so maybe I can show it to the players and say ‘look here man, here’s something you can do better.’”
This is in a long line of Saban railing that the media thinks his team is too good. Earlier in A&M week, Saban said it was good that his team didn’t read the newspaper. And he blamed the media for feeding his team “rat poison” during the title run in 2017.
Therefore, at the behest of Alabama’s leading man, here’s a list of things that Alabama can do better.
1. They’re relatively susceptible to big plays.
Even before Week 4, my colleague Bill Connelly was telling you that Alabama could be gotten at via the big play.
The Crimson Tide’s offense is terrifying at the moment, ranking first in efficiency, ninth in explosiveness, and third in overall Off. S&P+. That’s unfair.
But a younger-than-normal defense, with a totally rebuilt secondary, has suffered at least a few glitches. They are only 28th in rushing marginal efficiency, for instance (good, but mortal) and they are 63rd in marginal explosiveness — 83rd against the pass and 83rd on standard downs. Granted, you have to create a lot of big plays to keep up with this offense, but it’s technically possible.
And against A&M, it happened.
Kellen Mond’s 54-yard run in the first quarter was one of only two 50-yard runs the Tide have given up since October 2015.
Alabama’s playing man coverage here, and the QB spy in the middle of the field is unable to defeat the cut block.
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Poor downfield tackling extends the play. The Tide players probably should have seen this coming, given the game situation, and been ready. Instead the defensive line allows itself to fly upfield and play right into Mond’s hand.
A different bust occurred on the longest play Alabama has allowed this season. The 75-yard touchdown by Ole Miss on the first play was poorly defended by the Alabama secondary — a unit that is suspect and unproven, relative to the rest of the team.
DB Saivion Smith (at the bottom of the screen) gets himself set up outside and completely turned around with his hips opening up at the snap. In press coverage, Smith can’t allow this to happen.
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As one of the preeminent defensive back coaches in the history of college football, Saban cannot be happy with that effort.
2. They were poor on third down against Texas A&M.
Bama had a season-low 40 percent third down conversion rate against the Aggies. They were four of 10 with an average distance to go of 8.8 yards. They only had one third down of less than four yards to gain against A&M.
On the first third down — with 11 yards to gain, the result of a poor first and second down — Alabama failed to execute.
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Right guard Alex Leatherwood gets beat to the inside, and it forces Tua Tagovailoa to bail from the pocket — but he is moving to his left, the favored side on a rollout for a lefty QB.
But whether it was a miscommunication between Tagovailoa and receiver Jerry Jeudy, or just the stud QB’s fault, he misses this throw ... badly. Tagovailoa had been 13 of 13 through the air on third downs to this point this season. This was a really long third down, but Jeudy was open.
This has to be a completion.
3. Tagovailoa’s not quite perfect yet.
Here’s a really nice throw by No. 13 — you cannot take that away from him, because he put it exactly where only his receiver could make the play — and I must remind everyone he is still just a sophomore.
Look at the precision on this throw by Tua pic.twitter.com/vDTfNn9bjf
— Steve Palazzolo (@PFF_Steve) September 15, 2018
But what can be nitpicked here is the timing. Tagovailoa’s got a bit of a hitch while working through progressions on that side of the field. With his skill in ball placement, you know he can put it where it needs to be, but this ball should be out before his receiver has come out of his break, not after.
4. They can still bring their late-game python death grip up to Saban standards.
Alabama’s scored double digits in quarters one, two, and three in each of its first four games. But the Tide have let off the gas in the fourth quarter in each game. The Tide only scored three points in the fourth against Ole Miss, and were held scoreless in the fourth against Texas A&M.
Now, of course, the Tide had hefty leads in each game and were playing backups by then, but to be considered in the rarified air of Saban’s best Tide teams, they must finish the drill each Saturday.
Saban said it himself after the 45-23 win:
“We may throw it l as well as anybody that we’ve ever had, but that’s not all there is to it. If you finish the game at the end and run the ball like you’re supposed to, they don’t get the ball back. ... I’m not pleased with the way we finished the game.”
Part of what Saban’s getting at has to do with a control of the game beyond the scoreboard. A&M ran more plays and controlled more of the clock than the Tide did. Saban doesn’t want his defense exposed like that. He wants opposing offenses off the field as much as possible, so his team can kill the game.
5. They’re penalized too often.
The Tide are 107th right now in penalties, and have been flagged 31 times; 7.8 penalties per game and 72 penalty yards per game signals undisciplined play from the Tide.
That’s uncharacteristic for a team that’s ranked in the top 30 at penalty avoidance in almost every year under Saban.
6. The kicking situation is, well, a Bama kicking situation.
This shouldn’t surprise anyone.
In addition to two missed field goals, Alabama has missed three extra points this season. Only two teams in FBS have missed more through Week 4.
The silver lining is that only one team has attempted more extra points, which means the Tide are still finding the end zone more often than almost any other team.
Maybe this woman can get some run in practice one of these days. It’s certainly worth a shot.
She wins by first-round TKO pic.twitter.com/XWQT5ddNJT
— Yahoo Sports College Football (@YahooSportsCFB) September 22, 2018
Look, Bama is an incredible team, but even the most elite teams have warts.
I’m sure during their private film studies, Bama can find dozens of things that are amiss, play-in, play-out.
But, as requested, I’ve listed some of the glaring things that Bama can do better at. Happy now, coach?
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junker-town · 7 years ago
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Bills GM couldn’t find “negative things” about Allen? Really?
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And I mean, there’s plenty more out there. All you need is an internet connection.
The Buffalo Bills traded up on Thursday night to draft Wyoming quarterback Josh Allen with the No. 7 overall pick. Allen was long believed to possibly be the No. 1 overall pick, and as he began falling, the Bills swooped in to pick him up.
After the selection, Bills GM Brandon Beane had an interesting and definitely not true statement:
#Bills GM Brandon Beane: We can't find one negative thing anybody had to say about [Josh Allen] today
— Joe Buscaglia (@JoeBuscaglia) April 27, 2018
[clears throat]
Here are negative things that have been said about Josh Allen, whether fairly or not.
“A handful of tweets from 2012 and 2013, when Allen was a high school student, contained racist language.”
“Like Darnold, Josh Allen was only a two-year starter in college. But Allen’s statistics are horrifying compared to Darnold’s.”
“Josh Allen was hyped for a full year before the 2018 NFL Draft as a potential No. 1 pick, and he went No. 7 to the Bills, all to the bafflement of pretty much everyone not employed by the league.”
“There are also plenty of reasons not to draft Allen in the first two rounds or so, including his completely mediocre stats and his alarming number of not-so-nice throws.”
“Josh Allen is a car bought by someone who does not buy cars often.”
“Josh Allen is a C student with two excellent test scores.” (lmaooooooooooo)
“Josh Allen is Jamarcus Russell.”
“If we bypass Darnold, Mayfield, and *gulp* even Rosen for an oft-injured *worse* Derek Anderson clone, we are the dumbest franchise in sports.”
“Well, if you ask him, he’s more like Aaron Rodgers. Sure, guy. That’s like the intramural hoops all-star who thinks he can take on Collin Sexton.”
“May have too much hero in his blood”
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Not even FiF!
Josh Allen is going to be a top-15 pick despite a bunch of racist tweets *and* being a completely mediocre college quarterback. The NFL is a special place
— Alex Kirshner (@alex_kirshner) April 26, 2018
Top 5 draft team front office source to me on QB Josh Allen's tweets: "That's not going to be good. You can't go into a locker room w/ black players & that be cool with all of them. All it takes is one person taking it the wrong way...Different if he was already established."
— Josina Anderson (@JosinaAnderson) April 26, 2018
Go look at Locker’s scouting reports coming out of UW. You could replace his name with Josh Allen and you wouldn’t know the difference.
— Geoff Schwartz (@geoffschwartz) April 5, 2018
Josh Allen had multiple NFL-caliber players surrounding him in 2016 and he ranked 101st out of 133 qualifiers in adjusted completion percentage#NFLDraft
— Steve Palazzolo (@PFF_Steve) April 15, 2018
Worst final FBS season off-target rates among top QB prospects last 3 years: Josh Allen 16.3% DeShone Kizer 14.5% Jeff Driskel 14.4% Connor Cook 13.5% C Hackenberg 13.4%
— Mike Clay (@MikeClayNFL) February 4, 2018
NFL passer rating on deep passes in 2017: Human Howitzer All-World Arm Josh Allen: 84.6 (31.0% complete), 37th in the draft class@bakermayfield : 134.8 (56.7% complete), 13 TDs, 1 INT, led the draft class. Oh, Mayfield had more passes dropped too. #ArmTalent.
— Sam Monson (@PFF_Sam) April 12, 2018
So the latest I heard in terms of making things up to make the narrative work is: Josh Allen's receivers dropped a lot of balls. Here's the draft class ranked by drop rate: pic.twitter.com/fqe1fXK3Ls
— Neil Hornsby (@PFF_Neil) January 23, 2018
Baker Mayfield and Josh Allen ... I mean, maybe it’s a small target ‍♀️ pic.twitter.com/pbVldFeDkh
— Nicki Jhabvala (@NickiJhabvala) January 24, 2018
This post could go on for a long time, but you get the point.
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