RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (Full Version)

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Jeff Jesser -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/9/2016 8:41:34 PM)

You guys are just jealous. I just hope he named them 11 and 12 so he can remember their names the next time he's asked on camera. Tall order, I get that.




Jeff Jesser -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/9/2016 8:42:24 PM)

I wonder what this will do to AP so he can regain his "kid title" for the NFL. That guy is super driven. It may get interesting.




SoMnFan -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/9/2016 8:43:40 PM)

[&:][&:][&:][&:]




SoMnFan -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/9/2016 8:45:55 PM)

Think about our kids Jeff, (ya know, our 1, or 2, maybe that we have ...)
It'll be fun for them to see those kids come into the league in a couple decades ... it'll be fun seeing how many can get on one roster. Or against each other.
They'll be 25% of the league.




David Levine -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/9/2016 9:11:04 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

quote:

ORIGINAL: David Levine

Adam SchefterVerified @AdamSchefter
Antonio Cromartie welcomed twins on Sunday, his 11th and 12 children...

There's this thing they do to horny dogs ....


"Cromatie’s wife, Terricka, gave birth to a boy — Jynx Revell-Antonio — and a girl — J’adore Nayvi — on Mother’s Day. The twins are Cromartie’s 11th and 12 children with the eighth different woman, and they were conceived despite Cromartie undergoing a vasectomy ."




SoMnFan -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/9/2016 9:14:37 PM)

Well, its just bad luck then
My bad ... [&:]




thebigo -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/9/2016 10:11:22 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: David Levine

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

quote:

ORIGINAL: David Levine

Adam SchefterVerified @AdamSchefter
Antonio Cromartie welcomed twins on Sunday, his 11th and 12 children...

There's this thing they do to horny dogs ....


"Cromatie’s wife, Terricka, gave birth to a boy — Jynx Revell-Antonio — and a girl — J’adore Nayvi — on Mother’s Day. The twins are Cromartie’s 11th and 12 children with the eighth different woman, and they were conceived despite Cromartie undergoing a vasectomy ."


Hopefully he gets a quantity child support discount.




JT2 -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/10/2016 12:50:24 AM)

Hate to make a crossover political post, but I'm awful curious if you guys have a position on global overpopulation? Or is this a family values issue? Perhaps just a professional athlete thing? Maybe it's a religious thing? Maybe it's an anti Pro-Life issue? Maybe there is a racial issue here.

I rarely hear fallout when the catholic and the mormon reproduce in high numbers.




SoMnFan -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/10/2016 11:20:19 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: JT2

Hate to make a crossover political post, but I'm awful curious if you guys have a position on global overpopulation? Or is this a family values issue? Perhaps just a professional athlete thing? Maybe it's a religious thing? Maybe it's an anti Pro-Life issue? Maybe there is a racial issue here.

I rarely hear fallout when the catholic and the mormon reproduce in high numbers.

My wife comes from a family of 12 and I openly rip them as well.
I'm an equal-opportunity bitcher.
It was a slow day. Sue us. [:D]




thebigo -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/10/2016 11:41:12 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

quote:

ORIGINAL: JT2

Hate to make a crossover political post, but I'm awful curious if you guys have a position on global overpopulation? Or is this a family values issue? Perhaps just a professional athlete thing? Maybe it's a religious thing? Maybe it's an anti Pro-Life issue? Maybe there is a racial issue here.

I rarely hear fallout when the catholic and the mormon reproduce in high numbers.

My wife comes from a family of 12 and I openly rip them as well.
I'm an equal-opportunity bitcher.
It was a slow day. Sue us. [:D]


I came from a family of 10, Roman Catholics, my mom I'm pretty sure was in competition with her sisters, one of whom had 13 kids. The 10 of us siblings have only popped out 23 total.




Trekgeekscott -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/11/2016 7:52:10 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: thebigo

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

quote:

ORIGINAL: JT2

Hate to make a crossover political post, but I'm awful curious if you guys have a position on global overpopulation? Or is this a family values issue? Perhaps just a professional athlete thing? Maybe it's a religious thing? Maybe it's an anti Pro-Life issue? Maybe there is a racial issue here.

I rarely hear fallout when the catholic and the mormon reproduce in high numbers.

My wife comes from a family of 12 and I openly rip them as well.
I'm an equal-opportunity bitcher.
It was a slow day. Sue us. [:D]


I came from a family of 10, Roman Catholics, my mom I'm pretty sure was in competition with her sisters, one of whom had 13 kids. The 10 of us siblings have only popped out 23 total.


Kida are expensive. Having 10 I would love to do..but there is no way I could afford it. can barely afford the 3 I have and I have another coming soon.




David F. -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/11/2016 11:28:21 AM)

Every child is a miracle but we're heading for eight billion miracles and we're starting to run out of water.




Trekgeekscott -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/11/2016 11:40:02 AM)

And that folks is what the next great war will truly be about.

Food and water




El Duderino -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/11/2016 12:38:17 PM)

Food is not much of an issue any more. There's plenty of it, the only difficulty is getting it to people in remote areas or who live in corrupt places. Water on the other hand ... though that's more a matter of where people choose to live. People are going to have to start deciding if they want good weather or water.

BTW - there was a catholic family who lived down the road from me who had 17 kids. Yes, they were made fun of, though as one of 8 myself, I was not one to do so. Also, in Northern Arizona, there was definitely a noticeable sentiment that Mormons were insane for having such large families (among other things). I think it's just that different places have different demographics that have large families. And they also change with the times. Mexico, for example, has been seeing a significant reduction in the number of children families have as food production becomes larger scale and requires less labor.

Now, while I mentioned that I wasn't one to make fun, I will say that, having grown up in a large family myself, I think anyone who has more than three kids is insane, and at an elevated risk for being an inattentive parent (or worse). Honestly, the one that I have is all I can personally handle. Or, at least, all that I WANT to have to handle.




El Duderino -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/11/2016 12:48:51 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: JT2

Hate to make a crossover political post, but I'm awful curious if you guys have a position on global overpopulation? Or is this a family values issue? Perhaps just a professional athlete thing? Maybe it's a religious thing? Maybe it's an anti Pro-Life issue?


Global overpopulation is less of an issue than where the population is/will be and how resources are distributed. We have made tremendous strides in global hunger in the past 75 years, and could conceivably eradicate starvation as a significant cause of death in the next 20-30 years. Renewable energy gets cheaper and cheaper, so that's not really a limiting factor either. Water is a real issue, but not an insurmountable one.

As for WHY families have such large families, I think religion is the biggest factor. I don't think pro-life/pro-choice has as much to do with it as birth control, though. Catholics forbid birth control, and conservative protestants and mormons do their best to limit access to it. Mormons also have a deap seated imperative to multiply due to the persecution (much of which was due to repellant beliefs, but that's another issue) that they faced in their early years.

I think pro athletes aren't really that much more likely to have a ton of kids, but they're higher profile, so we hear about them in the news, whereas we don't hear about the family two towns over who just popped out their 8th kid.




Trekgeekscott -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/11/2016 3:14:54 PM)

Families had large numbers of children in the past because so few actually reached maturity or adulthood. It was common for families to have 15-20 kids and only 6-7 survive, plus all those hands were necessary to work the farm. Things have certainly changed. Religion is largely the reason behind large families now.




thebigo -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (5/11/2016 9:01:50 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Trekgeekscott

quote:

ORIGINAL: thebigo

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

quote:

ORIGINAL: JT2

Hate to make a crossover political post, but I'm awful curious if you guys have a position on global overpopulation? Or is this a family values issue? Perhaps just a professional athlete thing? Maybe it's a religious thing? Maybe it's an anti Pro-Life issue? Maybe there is a racial issue here.

I rarely hear fallout when the catholic and the mormon reproduce in high numbers.

My wife comes from a family of 12 and I openly rip them as well.
I'm an equal-opportunity bitcher.
It was a slow day. Sue us. [:D]


I came from a family of 10, Roman Catholics, my mom I'm pretty sure was in competition with her sisters, one of whom had 13 kids. The 10 of us siblings have only popped out 23 total.


Kida are expensive. Having 10 I would love to do..but there is no way I could afford it. can barely afford the 3 I have and I have another coming soon.


We had lots of beans in our chili, I remember 20 loaves of "day old" Roman Meal bread for $1 at the local thrift store.




SoMnFan -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (7/14/2016 2:47:48 PM)


ESPN NFL Insiders



Would you rather have Andrew Luck, Cam Newton or Russell Wilson as your team's quarterback for the next 10 years? Which rookie will be the Class of 2016's best in five years? Will the NFL have a new franchise in the near future?

After the release of the new edition of the Future Power Rankings, our NFL Insiders take a stab at predicting the future of the league:


1. Which team has the most talented "young" roster in the NFL?



Editor's Picks



NFL Future Power Rankings: Projecting the next three seasons

Louis Riddick, Mike Sando and Field Yates team up to rank every NFL team based on which are best positioned to be successful for the long haul.




Clayton's 30 NFL projections for the next three years

Among John Clayton's prognostications for the NFL until 2018? The league's next top-paid player; the Patriots' biggest looming roster decision; and the 49ers' future answer at quarterback.





Matt Bowen, NFL writer: Jacksonville. A young, developing quarterback with a big arm, playmakers at wide receiver and a core of fast and explosive future studs on defense.

John Clayton, senior NFL writer: Seattle. Its entire core is under contract for a few more years and most of its best players aren't close to their 30s. Plus they reloaded big-time in the draft.

Mike Sando, senior NFL writer: Seattle. It has zero stars over the age of 30 and several in the 23-28 range.

Aaron Schatz, editor-in-chief of Football Outsiders: Jacksonville, although that answer may give a bit too much credit to players who haven't yet taken a snap in the NFL (Jalen Ramsey, Myles Jack and Dante Fowler Jr.).

Field Yates, NFL Insider: It's scary to think, but my answer is Seattle. Consider the list of players on its roster who are 27 or younger: Russell Wilson, Earl Thomas, Bobby Wagner, Doug Baldwin, Thomas Rawls, Jermaine Kearse, Tyler Lockett, K.J. Wright, Jeremy Lane and a host of others. Deep and talented.






Andrew Luck, the league's highest-paid player, is only 26. He could be the Colts' starter for many more years to come. AP Photo/AJ Mast

2. Which QB would you want for the next 10 years?

Bowen: Cam Newton. Freakish size and talent. A game-plan nightmare. And only 27 years old. Newton is ultra rare for the position.

Clayton: Andrew Luck over Russell Wilson. Despite Luck's physical decline last season, he can run, throw and put up a lot of points for the Colts.

Sando: Luck over Wilson because I think his size will matter more when both players are aging.

Schatz: Luck because he's a year younger than Wilson, but this is closer than most people think.

Yates: Despite his struggles last season, Luck. When given time and space to operate from the pocket, he possesses lethal accuracy and field vision. When he breaks the pocket, he's innovative and mobile enough to stress a defense on ad-libbed plays.


3. Which team would you most want to coach right now?

Bowen: Seattle. Swagger, speed and a suffocating defense.

Clayton: Oakland. This is a team on the rise with a great young quarterback in Derek Carr, young stars in Khalil Mack and Amari Cooper, plus a great offensive line.

Sando: Seattle for the roster, owner, stadium and location.

Schatz: Pittsburgh has a surprising amount of young talent to work with, the best triplets (QB-WR-RB) combination in the league, and a consistently strong front office.

Yates: Carolina because the roster has been constructed in a way that aligns with my belief that building up the middle is a foundation for success in the NFL. Carolina has game-altering talent on both sides of the ball, and that talent is matched by players who exude exceptional passion and effort on every down.


4. Which rookie would you most want on your roster for the next five years?

Bowen: Jacksonville defensive back Jalen Ramsey. Track speed, size and versatility. He can do it all.

Clayton: Ramsey. He may not have the speed of top shutdown corners, but he can be a fixture in the secondary as a corner now and later as a safety.

Sando: Dallas running back Ezekiel Elliott because the next five years should be his highest-value years, with instant impact.

Schatz: Ramsey, I guess. There really isn't an obvious transcendent rookie talent this season.

Yates: I'll go a bit outside of the box here and select Indianapolis center Ryan Kelly. While rookies always face an inherent adjustment, I believe he's a plug-and-play high-level starter. I won't have to worry much about having him anchoring my offensive line from an early stage.




Chip Kelly has a second chance at NFL greatness after the 49ers hired him this offseason. Can he turn them around? AP Photo/Ben Margot

5. Which coach hired this offseason will be looked at as the best hire five years from now?

Bowen: Cleveland's Hue Jackson. Innovative, personable and competitive. He's going to challenge his players. And the locker room will respect him for it.

Clayton: San Francisco's Chip Kelly. No coach is covered as well as Chip. If it doesn't work out with the 49ers, he could go back to college and make more than $7 million a year.

Sando: Philadelphia's Doug Pederson might have the best combination of owner, roster, cap situation, promising quarterback and general manager invested in his success.

Schatz: Jackson will be so well-respected that Madden will have to include the Emory and Henry formation in the Cleveland playbook. (That last part may be wishcasting on my part because the Emory and Henry formation is awesome.)

Yates: Kelly. He's still a gifted offensive coach and should have time working on his side in San Francisco. If the organization is willing to be patient -- and this roster isn't ready to win right now -- Kelly can help architect a turnaround.





6. What will be looked at as the NFL's worst contract in three years?

Bowen: Miami's Ndamukong Suh. Quarterback money for a defensive tackle. And cap issues that won't go away.

Clayton: Suh. The Dolphins gave him quarterback money and the defense got worse, dropping to 25th along with an inability to stop the run.

Sando: Suh's deal will still look bad then.

Schatz: In 2019, Suh will be a 32-year-old defensive tackle with a cap number of more than $28 million. Yikes.

Yates: He's not going to regress too dramatically as a player, but given the team's needs around the roster, a cap hit of $28.1 million for Suh is lofty in Miami. Given the construction of football contracts, teams have far more wiggle room to adjust and get out from them, so this isn't a cause for major concern.


7. In the next 10 years, will there be an NFL team in a city that currently doesn't have a team?

Bowen: Yes, in Las Vegas. The NHL just opened the door for an NFL team to land in the desert.

Clayton: Put some money down on Las Vegas in the short term and maybe London in the next decade.

Sando: Yes, and it could be the Raiders a lot faster than that.

Schatz: Viva Las Vegas!

Yates: Yes. Las Vegas or London.




Bill Jandro -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (7/25/2016 6:47:01 AM)

http://deadspin.com/ezekiel-elliotts-girlfriend-posts-photos-of-bruises-cl-1784124894




JC2015 -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (7/26/2016 7:42:31 AM)

Now or never for Josh Gordon

http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/17140776/nfl-reinstates-josh-gordon-cleveland-browns-indefinite-suspension-conditional-basis




JC2015 -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (7/26/2016 7:48:51 AM)

QUOTE: Pro Football Focus stating that Sherman allowed the third-lowest completion percentage among cornerbacks who had at least 60 passes thrown their way, at 48.4 percent (Darrelle Revis was first at 46.5 and Patrick Peterson next at 47.4).

The Seahawks should open the year steadier in the secondary with Jeremy Lane healthy and expected to be the right cornerback, and without the kind of upheaval generated by Chancellor’s holdout.

Still, Sherman could again be asked to move around and cover an opponent’s No. 1 receiver as needed with the Seahawks now seeing it as something that could give them a strategic advantage rather than just needing to do it out of necessity.

http://www.seattletimes.com/sports/seahawks/seahawks-richard-sherman-rose-to-the-challenge-last-season-locked-down-top-receivers/




Tim Cady -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (8/31/2016 11:13:00 AM)

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000692899/article/mingo-excited-to-leave-browns-for-stacked-patriots

6th overall in 2013 Belichick gets him for a 5th rounder. The rich get richer.




SoMnFan -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (9/7/2016 2:18:55 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Tim Cady

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000692899/article/mingo-excited-to-leave-browns-for-stacked-patriots

6th overall in 2013 Belichick gets him for a 5th rounder. The rich get richer.

[sm=thumb.gif]
Smart org.




Black 47 -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (9/9/2016 3:53:32 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Tim Cady

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000692899/article/mingo-excited-to-leave-browns-for-stacked-patriots

6th overall in 2013 Belichick gets him for a 5th rounder. The rich get richer.

Are you saying that derogatorily? I'll admire them for their brilliance.




JTC2017 -> RE: Around the NFL (News) - 2013 Season (9/10/2016 9:55:39 AM)

Don't know if there is anything more ridiculous than Ray Lewis calling out Kap

Ray, go sit your double murdering ass down somewhere before you speak




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