
jri111
Apr 20, 2008 Aug 07, 2008 48 425
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Wilson, Brandon and Players Issued Subpoena
Nick Mendola / Joe Buscaglia Reporting
nick@wgr550.comhttp://wgr550.com/Wilson--Brandon-and-Players-Issued-Subpoena/2358285
The Buffalo News is reporting the police are expected to subpoena Bills owner Ralph Wilson, chief operating officer Russ Brandon along with three players among others to divulge their knowledge of the hit-and-run accident involving a vehicle registered to running back Marshawn Lynch's name.
The players are said to include rookie wideout's James Hardy and Steve Johnson, along with offensive lineman Christian Gaddis. Three other Bills executives will also be questioned.
Buffalo police officer Allan Kasprzak and three other officers arrived at One Bills Drive today at 2 pm looking for answers. Kasprzak were there for an hour and a half, investigating into the hit-and-run accident involving Marshawn Lynch's sport utility vehicle and a woman May 31 on Delaware Avenue.
Police conducted a probe of the accident that injured a 27-year old Ontario woman, and say they've received no cooperation from Lynch and little from his teammates, according to The Buffalo News.
"I expect [Bills players] to be cooperative and truthful,” Clark said before arriving. “If I get any indication that they are anything less than cooperative and truthful, I will go to the grand jury, which will compel them to testify.”
Lynch was on the practice field today but remained mum on the situation. After practice, Lynch walked past a wall of reporters ignoring them as he walked towards the locker room.
Bills Vice President of Communications Scott Berchtold met with the media after practice and commented on how the club has handled the ongoing investigation.
"We've cooperated fully and will continue to cooperate fully with the authorities."
The players were not quick to jump to any conclusions regarding Lynch, leaving questions to be answered by the coaching staff.
"That's nothing I think to do internally with the team. Thats something that the coaches are going to handle. I mean who really knows exactly what happened if you weren't there," said WR Josh Reed. "All I know is that he is coming out here and he's working 100 percent with the rest of us."
In other Bills news, Lee Evans, Jon Banks and Jason Peters were not in attendance at Thursday's minicamp. Evans prepared to practice but never made it to the field due to illness.
Head Coach Dick Jauron told the media after practice that the clubs final day of mini camp practice would be cancelled as a reward to the players for their hard work and strong attendance throughout OTA's and the mini-camp. Owner Ralph Wilson Jr. addressed the team this morning on the field but was not made available for comment.
4 comments | 0 recs
Lee Evans discusses the Patriots, JP Losman, his relationship with Trent Edwards, and Lynch's alleged hit-and-run
about 1 month ago
jri111
5 comments
0 recs
Donte Whitner Expects Big Things From The Bills
2 months ago
jri111
8 comments
0 recs
Walsh’s tapes show that the Patriots recorded the signals of offensive and defensive coaches in regular-season games against the Miami Dolphins, the Buffalo Bills, the Cleveland Browns and the San Diego Chargers and against the Pittsburgh Steelers in the 2002 American Football Conference championship game. In that game, the tape has been edited to show Steelers coaches signaling plays, followed by two different camera angles of the actual plays that were called.
The New York Times reports that Walsh handed over eight tapes in total. There was no evidence that the Patriots taped the Rams walk through practice before the Super Bowl.
3 months ago
jri111
6 comments
1 recs
Trading down and grabbing McKelvin too?
First, I would like to preface this by saying that I liked the McKelvin pick. This “fan post” is not intended to bash the front office. This is something that I have thought about since the draft and have not had the time to write it up and post it until now.
The question is: Could Buffalo have traded back and still have gotten McKelvin?
I think the answer may have been yes. Buffalo picked at 11. The teams that picked 12-14 were the Broncos, Panthers, and Bears. None of those teams needed a CB. It just wasn’t going to happen. Neither did Detroit at 15 (the subsequently traded out of their pick w/ KC, see below).
Arizona at 16 had a pressing need for CB and took my personal favorite (insert sarcasm here) DRC. The Chiefs originally has the 17th pick and they traded up to 15 to grab o-lineman Brandon Albert. The Chiefs actually vastly overpaid the Lions to move up those two spots by giving them a third AND a fifth. Those two picks, along with the 17th overall pick actually adds up to about the value of the 11th overall selection, not the 15th.
So what do we know?
1. We know that of the 6 teams picking between 12-17, four of them absolutely were not taking CBs in round 1, one desperately needed a CB and the other was targeting O-line.
2. We know that the Bills did have a trade partner in KC and that they could have at least gotten an extra 3rd and 5th round pick out of the trade down.
So what don't we know?
1. Whether McKelvin was the first CB on Arizona’s board.
2. Who Buffalo’s second rated CB was (DRC?) and how much lower of a rating did he have as opposed to McKelvin
3. Whether another team (like the Eagles) would have been tempted to trade past Buffalo at 17 if McKelvin started to fall into the mid-teens.
Since we don’t know the answer to these questions it’s hard to make a determination on whether the Bills should have traded down or not. I am less risk-adverse that the current regime though, so I would have traded down and taken my chances. At the very least the Bills would have gotten the second CB on their board. They even had the option of grabbing their top rated WR (Devin Thomas presumably) at 17 if the CB they wanted was not there.
2 comments | 0 recs
Leodis McKelvin seems like the "it" pick of the moment for the Bills. Here's a look at possibly the newest Bill...
3 months ago
jri111
9 comments
1 recs
Kansas City: The Perfect Trade Partner?
I stated earlier this week that I cannot remember a time where trading down has been more prevelant. Of course, if the Bills wish to trade down, they will need to find a trade partner. Kansas City obtained the #17 pick via the Jarad Allen trade earlier this week, could they be the perfect trade partner for Buffalo?
It Started with a Highway Robbery
The Jarad Allen trade was ridiculous, any way you look at it. $70+ million contract ?! $30 million in guarantees?! Giving up a first, and two third round picks?! Like I said, ridiculous!
How would you like to have KC's draft picks? Thirteen overall pick, including two first round picks, three third round picks, and six in the top 100 selections. Talk about ammo!
And to top it off, I think the Chiefs have a real possibility of landing arguably the best player in the draft to replace Jarad Allen: Chris Long. How? Well the other Long is already a Dolphin and it looks more and more like Dorsey will be a Ram. Atlanta will either go Ellis, Ryan, or McFadden. Oakland is will either go with Gholston or McFadden. That would leave KC with Allen's replacement AND still 12 more picks, including the 17th overall pick! Crazy! If I were a Chief fan, I would be giving a thousand thanks to the Vikings organization.
Here are Kansas City's picks and their "value":
5th overall (1st round) - 1,700
17th overall (1st round) - 950
35th overall (2nd round) - 550
66th overall (3rd round) - 260
73rd overall (3rd round) - 225
82nd overall (3rd round) - 180
105th overall (4th round) - 84
136th overall (5th round) - 38
140th overall (5th round) - 36
170th overall (6th round) – 23.4
187th overall (6th round) – 16.6
210th overall (7th round) – 7.4
239th overall (7th round) - 0
Is a Trade Likely?
From John Clayton over at espn.com:
Trading places: Expect the Chiefs to actively shop for a trade that could put them into the top 12 of the draft in order to get one of the top offensive linemen. One possible trade partner could be the Buffalo Bills. With the 11th pick, the Bills are looking at wide receiver Devin Thomas and one of the three top small-college cornerbacks. By moving back, the Bills could maybe pick up a third-round pick and still have a choice of one cornerback and possibly Thomas.
The Thomas interest aside (I think they are targeting McKlevin at 11), I think the Bills trading down with KC makes perfect sense for both teams. KC's biggest need is offensive tackle – it was before the Allen trade – and it remains their biggest need after the trade. Kansas City cannot pass on a guy like Chris Long though, and there really are not any offensive tackles worth the 5th overall pick (with Jake Long off the board). The next tier of OTs (Albert, Otah, Clady, and Williams) have a good chance of being gone by the time the Chiefs pick at 17. The Chiefs have more then enough picks (13) to be able to trade up and not lose much. It goes without saying that the Bills have all the incentive in the world to trade down and trading down to 17 would still give them a chance at one of the top CBs and probably the top WR on the board.
According to the original trade value chart Buffalo's 11th pick is worth 1250 points and Kansas City's 950 points, a difference of 300. Looking at the point values above, you can obvious see any number of possible pick combinations to get to 300. Buffalo could easily get a high 3rd AND 5th round pick for the number 11 overall selection from Kansas City. My favorite combination: the 66th overall pick (3rd pick in the third round) + 136th pick (the 1st pick in the fifth round) for the 11th pick.
6 comments | 2 recs
Bills Draft Board/Strategy
PART I: THE DRAFT BOARD
Note: This is a post that is based on Brian's front page story. I was going to post it as a reply, however, it got too long. What follows below is how I believe the Bills draft strategy is unfolding:
Well I attempted to do an "overall" list, however, I realized I couldn't do that until I ranked the players by position, so here are my positional rankings, the way I think the Bills have it (first round grades only):
The positional orders are based on need (i.e. WR is first on the list because that is the biggest need. CB follows that, and so on...)
WR:
- Devin Thomas
- Malcolm Kelly
- James Hardy
- Limas Sweed
- Leodis McKlevin
- Antoine Cason
- Brandon Flowers
- Mike Jenkins
- Aquib Talib
- DRC
There are no tight ends with a 1st round grades (have Bennett rated highest however)
C:
There are no centers with a first round grade
FB:
There are no fullbacks with a 1st round grades
DE:
- Chris Long
- Vernon Gholston
- Derrick Harvey
- Phillip Merling
- Sedrick Ellis
- Glenn Dorsey
1. Kenny Phillips
LB:
- Keith Rivers (devalue)
- Jerod Mayo (devalue)
- Jake Long
- Brandon Albert (devalue)
- Ryan Clady (devalue)
- Jeff Otah (devalue)
- Chris Williams (devalue)
- Gosder Cherilus (devalue)
1. Matt Ryan
RB:
- Darren McFadden
- Rashard Mendenhall
- Jonathan Stewart
- Sedrick Ellis - DT
- Glen Dorsey - DT
- Leodis McClevin - CB
- Derrick Harvey - DE
- Antoine Cason - CB
- Devin Thomas - WR
- Brandon Flowers - CB
- Brandon Albert - G/T
- Keith Rivers - LB
- Ryan Clady - OT
17 comments | 0 recs
Reopening the WR Trade Market?
[editor's note, by Brian Galliford] Bumped from the diaries. Excellent points brought up as usual by jri111. End Note
From Saturday's Buffalo News:
Give us your thoughts on our Buffalo Bills pick -- Tennessee State CB Dominique Rogers-Cromartie. You might be surprised I didn't give the Bills a wide receiver. Don't be. Word is the Bills don't have a receiver rated high enough to warrant the 11th overall selection. I sense that the Bills might try to trade for a veteran wideout before the draft.There are two major roadblocks to such a thought, however. First, the WR trade market is nearly non-existent. Other teams like Philly have tried unsuccessfully to trade for big names such as Roy Williams and Larry Fitzgerald without much luck, and there is little chance that other teams would have better luck. Second, issue of money. Money, of course is always a concern when it involves the Bills. Any WR Buffalo trades for would most likely require a large contract. That's hard to justify when your own star receiver is entering his contract year without a new deal. So why am I wasting my time with this if it can't be done? Because it can be done.
Of course, it would not be easy. Buffalo would simply have to "make an offer they can't refuse" to teams such as Detroit or Arizona for the likes of Roy Williams or Anquan Boldin. What is that offer? Well, most players are not traded for very high draft picks anymore because of the overly large contracts. The highest draft pick given up is usually a second rounder or some combination of a second round pick and a later or future pick. So to get over this, Buffalo would have to offer a higher pick than normal: how's the 11th overall pick sound? They would also have to pony up the big money for whoever they trade for. That's a lot to give up. Many would say too much. I would say they were wrong.
Buffalo is a a young team with some vets entering the prime of their careers (Evans, McGee, Crowell, etc.). Their window is starting to open. However, in today's NFL, the window is smaller than ever. Can the Bills afford to wait three seasons for a guy like Devin Thomas or Malcolm Kelly to develop into the receiver they need to be successful? With the exception of CB, the defense is in place. A young QB with potential is entering his second year in the league and a star running back is about to be born. They have one star WR locked up for at least two more seasons (considering the franchise tag) and are one or two weapons away on offense from having a contender.
So why not? Trade the 11th pick! We all agree that there is not good value for Buffalo there anyways. Turn it into value. Pay the money. And reap the rewards. If the Bills want to pro actively get better, they may have to look at other ways of doing so at the WR position aside from the draft. The trade market is currently non-existent for wideouts. If they want it, they'll have to create it. They create a market by making a hard and solid offer. Make teams like Detroit or Arizona at least think long and hard about it before they reject it.
The Bills are in a quandary at the 11th pick this year. They have a dire need at WR, but no player worth taking at that pick. The worst thing about this, however, is not the value of the players - that can be argued - it's the overall talent. The top end talent is just not there and taking one of those players would require taking on a lot of question marks. Admittedly, this is a far reaching and fantastical idea. However, sometimes it requires great ideas to achieve great things. We all dream of the Bills achieving great things. They now need a great idea to get them there.
24 comments | 0 recs
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