Poor ******* mustve really pissed on BB. Traded from 7-1 to 0-8 Cleveland for a third round pick. Wtf.
Doesnt make sense...
1.) The Patriots are a team primed to win "right now", and their only weak link is the defense. So why trade their best defensive player?
2.) As smart as Beli may appear, his draft history is less than stellar. In fact, he does bettter with FA's and castoff's. So how much value is he getting from a 3rd round pick??
Just screams arrogance to me.
Poor ******* mustve really pissed on BB. Traded from 7-1 to 0-8 Cleveland for a third round pick. Wtf.
The Pats just traded for Kyle Van Noy this week as well to fill his spot on the roster.
They are coming up on some decisions on defense contract-wise and Belichick is already 2-3 steps ahead and planning where he needs to be.
Our team doesn't plan worth ****. When a problem comes up we can all see 2-3 years from now, our team will throw top draft picks at it in droves and be 2-3 years late in finally fixing it.
We saw it with the O-line. We saw it with the linebackers (still not fixed despite throwing all those picks at it). We see it with the DB's.
WOW, Collins is a very good player. He can rush the passer, cover, or tackle well. I'd take him for a third, but New England to too smart to trade him to the Steelers, and the Browns will offer better 3rd round pick.
I like this move as it weakens the cheaters.
The Pats just traded for Kyle Van Noy this week as well to fill his spot on the roster.
They are coming up on some decisions on defense contract-wise and Belichick is already 2-3 steps ahead and planning where he needs to be.
Our team doesn't plan worth ****. When a problem comes up we can all see 2-3 years from now, our team will throw top draft picks at it in droves and be 2-3 years late in finally fixing it.
We saw it with the O-line. We saw it with the linebackers (still not fixed despite throwing all those picks at it). We see it with the DB's.
**** New England, so sick of hearing everyone, everywhere suck their balls.
This is classic Hoodie and Pats, however, I question the timing. Once a player takes the position of "I want paid market value" they get shipped out. They do this consistently: Ty Law, Richard Sherman, Revis, on and on. So, in talks, they must have found out Collins had no intention of agreeing to a bargain deal. As I saw in a "behind the scenes" video - a meeting of BB, Kraft and GM - Kraft asked about a player, "Does he want to be a Patriot" and it seemed obvious that was code for "Will he accept a deal for less than market value." I am not even criticizing the tactic; it seems to keep them contending year after year after year. But why move Collins now instead of getting play out of him during a season where they are obviously contending for another ring? That makes no sense, unless Collins was poisoning the locker room, being negative and hurting team chemistry. That is the only thing I can think of that makes this move logical.
No, no, no, ALL of Pats success is from cheating. Haven't you been around here long enough?
This team is pretty horrid at planning ahead, especially under Cool Shades. And don't forget the **** position they put us in at QB after the 1995 season. We had years of Korky, Tomczak, Miller, Maddox and FrankenGraham.
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"Errrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr, fire blitzes bad!"
"We must tell Master FrankenCowher about it."
Doesnt make sense...
1.) The Patriots are a team primed to win "right now", and their only weak link is the defense. So why trade their best defensive player?
2.) As smart as Beli may appear, his draft history is less than stellar. In fact, he does bettter with FA's and castoff's. So how much value is he getting from a 3rd round pick??
Just screams arrogance to me.
Let's review.....since the beginning of the Belichick era in NE, there has been numerous infractions identified AND punishment given. We won't delve into the entire fallout from Spygate because we will never know the amount of rules violations, since the full scope of evidence was destroyed to "save face" for the NFL. But there have been others well documented and obviously the stigma is permanently attached to Krafts franchise until the coach retires or he leaves. What other franchise has the same stigma? Besides the Saints bounty gate, which by far was more heavily scrutinized than Spygate, I don't see any other franchise having such significant problems. The Dallas/Redskins salary cap penalties was due to taking advantage of the CBA situation, but no where near the magnitude of repeated actions from the NE franchise.
BTW, Most already know this but I will conclude by reminding that the QB's mentioned (and pictured) have absolutely nothing to do with the current head coach or team president. That was Cowher and Tom Donohoe. We all know how that turned out. So try to keep your agendas on the correct topic.
Maybe it was a case like Blount and the steelers. Rather than just release him , they actually got something for him
Sorry but I don't recall Mel Blount ever playing for anyone but the Steelers. Did we have another Blount at some point?
Terrible trade by the Pats that will be called brilliant because the Pats did it. Collins is pretty much their only great player on defense, Sure, they may not be planning on signing him long term but you're still trying to win the Super Bowl this year. This smacks of arrogance. They think they don't need him.
Great move for Browns. Collins is young and will be the heart of their defense for years. If the browns can find a QB for next year, they are better than the Bengals and Ravens
Yeah, those patriots really are geniuses when trading assets
And they're right on track to win the top seed in the AFC again all while playing four games without their quarterback.
So, you mean the "wrong doing" that was so routine that coaches around the league said it was no big deal, and most every team did something along the same lines, including Bill Cowher? Next, you will tell me deflate-gate was such a big deal, that AFTER the balls were given proper pressure, is when the Pats THEN put up 28 points AFTER the balls were inflated? Is that what you are going to tell me?
The prior post made mention of how this TEAM (regardless of coach or GM) makes a habit of ignoring future needs, and not planning ahead very well, mentioning OL and CB as examples. I responded, in kind, that the QB position was also not addressed well enough post 1995 until we finally got Ben. If I am not mistaken, the team was under the same ownership in both the post-1995 era and the post-Cowher era. So while the coach and GM may have changed, the ownership remained consistent, and both eras failed to plan well enough with certain positions. We all know the Rooneys are active in making draft and (inactive) in free agent moves. I brought up the QB position, and how it was mostly ignored, in the span of 1996 through 2001. The reluctance to plan and act for the future by ignoring certain units could be illuminated in the OL, CB in QB positions. It matters not who the HC and GM were, the point remains consistent. The Rooneys have a track record of once a unit is hailed as needing attention from fans and media, they dig their heals in to prove the people wrong, usually at the expense of their own team's success.