Still, you have to agree, our "new & improved" run game is more likely to help Sanchez & Co. than the other way around.
Is all the Ambien gone? Damn...this place is dead on a Saturday nite. Ok...off to watch Marquez get beat up some.
no he isnt that type of receiver, and wasnt in college. i think in a few years he can be a special player in terms of converting 3rd and 3-6's though.
tuckie no tuckie I am looking for a link to rex ryan's quote "Tuckie, No Tuckie. It makes fat guys look slim, slim guys look big. It's like a thermos, keeps hot things hot, cold things cold. How do it know?" Does anyone have a link to this on youtube or something? Thanks if you reply with it!
U see that written on a football board and u took it in a sexual manner? I think you're the one who needs to come out the closet lol
I've read this a couple of times, and it still reads like drivel. I'm a little drunk, so the fault probably lies with me. My bad. I don't know who the flamer zebra you're talking about is. Is it Holmes? When I'm thinking about chemistry, or rather, the lack thereof, I'm usually thinking about Plaxico, as he's the newest addition. I'll try to give a more recent example of the difference good chemistry can make. Against the Cowboys, Sanchez saw Plax run a fly route in single, tight coverage. I believe it was to the blind side. Sanchez lead Plax with the pass, and the pass was knocked away. Against the Bills, Sanchez saw Plax run a fly route in single, tight coverage; this one was to the strong side. You remember the play; Sanchez threw back shoulder, Plax expected a back shoulder throw, so he stopped, gained separation, jumped, caught the pass and bulled through the corner and safety to the one-yard line. That's chemistry. That's a quarterback and wide receiver operated on the same wavelength. That takes time to develop, and the more time a quarterback and a wide receiver play together, the more these plays just get dismissed as "good execution" by fans that don't fully understand the intricacies of the QB-WR relationship.
That wasn't chemistry, that was textbook offensive interference. Sanchez isn't consistent enough to detect whether he's developing this chemistry thing with anybody. He's playing better because the whole team is playing better. Go ahead and call it chemistry. p.s. I was kinda drunk when I wrote that drivel. Maybe you and I are developing some kind of chemistry.
...and yeah, I was thinking Plaxico as the flaming gazelle. Maybe the issue is why Plaxico's and Holmes production are virtually identical half way through this season. This chemistry thing is weird.