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Possibly....but you don't know...an injury away from having 3-4th pick for him.
We could of had seattles pick this year.
If he pans out in camp then we can pull the trigger.
A contender would love to have him on their roster.
do you really think the Bills sat in a vacuum and didn't try to move him? How many RBs were moved and how many were drafted? Yes, he could have some value if somebody somewhere in the league gets hurt. Even then a 3rd or 4th is a major risk for a team on a guy who is one strike from a season long suspension. The guy is worthless.
For all the education and practice each of us undergoes, the achievment of mastery is ultimately the outcome of a personal quest for understanding.
do you really think the Bills sat in a vacuum and didn't try to move him? How many RBs were moved and how many were drafted? Yes, he could have some value if somebody somewhere in the league gets hurt. Even then a 3rd or 4th is a major risk for a team on a guy who is one strike from a season long suspension. The guy is worthless.
yes right now....but i think we want to see if bell is there real deal....first. if he is they will move him.
Hold on to Lynch until some team has an injury the the RB position during training camp. His value is low right now but after an injury or two will go up.
Lynch will not be a Bill next year. He'll either get traded or cut.
If they cut him Nix and Gailey are flat out ****ing ******ed
He doesnt cost that much, there is no way you can convince anyone that the 3rd RB you are keeping over him is even close to him in talent, and if they truly didnt want him here that bad enough to cut him they would have taken the two 4ths that were offered up for him
Second, Lynch had minimal value before we drafted Spiller and has zero value now that we have Spiller. Every team in the league knows there's a chance he'll get cut, and with the possibility of a 1 year suspension, they won't give up anything significant for him.
Third, remember Xavier Omon? If not, Google him. I hope this Bell turns out to be a diamond in the rough, but let's be realistic. UDFA's from DII schools don't often come in and replace first round draft picks.
With Chris Johnson in Tennessee holding out and no end in sight, when he comes back cold he'll have a good chance to get injured. If I were Tennessee I'd get an insurance policy right now, ala Lynch.
Third, remember Xavier Omon? If not, Google him. I hope this Bell turns out to be a diamond in the rough, but let's be realistic. UDFA's from DII schools don't often come in and replace first round draft picks.
They are going to keep Lynch and bring back the old triple wing or single wing offense of the 50s. The Dolphins did it with the wildcat and the Bills are going to do it with the triple wing. They don't need a QB for that, so here we go!!!!
Not true at all... Any #1 RB in the league gets injured and Lynch becomes a #1 target. He has proven that he is a workhorse RB and is also very good in the redzone. Not to mention his ability to catch out of the backfield.
Food for thought: 3 of 4 teams, who had three backs with at least 300 yards each, went to the playoffs.
The New Orleans Saints and Indianapolis Colts advanced to Super Bowl XLIV three months ago with disparate approaches at running back.
The Saints won the championship with a three-pronged running attack, essentially a tailback for every possible situation, the model of specialization. The Colts, who chose Donald Brown last spring to presumably help split the running game, turned largely to Joseph Addai after the former Connecticut standout and first-round draft pick was injured twice during the season.
New Orleans was one of three teams in 2009 with three running backs (Pierre Thomas, Mike Bell and Reggie Bush) who rushed for more than 300 yards each. A fourth team, the Cleveland Browns, had a trio of 300-yard rushers, but one of them was Josh Cribbs, who gained most of his yardage as a Wildcat quarterback. The three franchises with a trio of 300-yard backs all qualified for the playoffs.
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