This is just my opinion, but it appears that Trent Edwards has lost the Bills fanbase and support of the coaching staff. Although Jauron has stated that Edwards will start this week, our very own Pat Moran (who is pretty reliable) reported that Ryan Fitzpatrick would receive starting snaps. It is a possibility that the coaching staff backed off at the last second and decided to let Trent play.
However, don't put it past the Bills to make a move here. It would be completely out of character, but something that shouldn't be overlooked as being a possibility.
Buffalo has a plethora of capable wide receivers they can move. Roscoe Parrish comes to mind. Although the Browns have a good return man in Cribbs, they got rid of Braylon Edwards, and now have a weakness at the position. Eric Mangini has said before in press conferences that he respects Roscoe's play making ability and he is a player the Browns could use, while he is a player the Bills could lose.
If Buffalo, more specifically Ralph Wilson, were convinced that Quinn could be a good NFL quarterback in the near future, shipping off Roscoe and a mid range pick seems like a good deal.
Also, with Quinn, the Bills can focus on offensive line in the draft, which is undoubtedly what they need the most help on. More specifically left tackle.
Also, dont overlook a straight up Owens to Cleveland for Quinn trade. It is farfetched, but makes sense from a team need aspect.
I am not saying by any stretch of the imagination that I want Quinn, I am just saying that it makes sense from the Bills stand point. Especially if the staff has lost as much faith in Edwards as we have.
Here is how I see Quinn possibly being successful in Buffalo.
Brian Schottenheimer as head coach.
An offensive mind, a great head coach prospect, cheap and unproven just like Ralph likes them. Could help build a good offense around Quinn starting with the line.
Brian Baluga with our first round pick.
We need a dominate left tackle, he is it. Baluga, Levitre, Geoff, Wood, Butler gives Quinn good protection and he will have Lynch and Jackson to bail him out. Not to mention Evans, Hardy, Johnson and Reed.
That is the only way I could see a successful Quinn in Buffalo.
All speculation. state your opinions.
However, don't put it past the Bills to make a move here. It would be completely out of character, but something that shouldn't be overlooked as being a possibility.
Buffalo has a plethora of capable wide receivers they can move. Roscoe Parrish comes to mind. Although the Browns have a good return man in Cribbs, they got rid of Braylon Edwards, and now have a weakness at the position. Eric Mangini has said before in press conferences that he respects Roscoe's play making ability and he is a player the Browns could use, while he is a player the Bills could lose.
If Buffalo, more specifically Ralph Wilson, were convinced that Quinn could be a good NFL quarterback in the near future, shipping off Roscoe and a mid range pick seems like a good deal.
Also, with Quinn, the Bills can focus on offensive line in the draft, which is undoubtedly what they need the most help on. More specifically left tackle.
Also, dont overlook a straight up Owens to Cleveland for Quinn trade. It is farfetched, but makes sense from a team need aspect.
I am not saying by any stretch of the imagination that I want Quinn, I am just saying that it makes sense from the Bills stand point. Especially if the staff has lost as much faith in Edwards as we have.
Here is how I see Quinn possibly being successful in Buffalo.
Brian Schottenheimer as head coach.
An offensive mind, a great head coach prospect, cheap and unproven just like Ralph likes them. Could help build a good offense around Quinn starting with the line.
Brian Baluga with our first round pick.
We need a dominate left tackle, he is it. Baluga, Levitre, Geoff, Wood, Butler gives Quinn good protection and he will have Lynch and Jackson to bail him out. Not to mention Evans, Hardy, Johnson and Reed.
That is the only way I could see a successful Quinn in Buffalo.
All speculation. state your opinions.
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