Jump to content
Washington Football Team Logo
Extremeskins

A New Start! (the Reboot) The Front Office, Ownership, & Coaching Staff Thread


JSSkinz
Message added by TK,

Pay Attention Knuckleheads

 

 

Has your team support wained due to ownership or can you see past it?  

229 members have voted

  1. 1. Will you attend a game and support the team while Dan Snyder is the owner of the team, regardless of success?

    • Yes
    • No
    • I would start attending games if Dan was no longer the owner of the team.


Recommended Posts

13 minutes ago, BatteredFanSyndrome said:

Just going on record, that Ron could win a Super Bowl here and I'm still not giving Dan an ounce of credit for his hire and would simply chalk it up to luck in that he eventually had to get something right, simply by the odds.  Just as I'll never pat him on the back for the other new hires that he was all but forced to make.   None of it will make up for the two decades of complete and utter suck that he's provided to both the fans and his employees.

I could even live with all the suck record-wise if I felt like a decent person was trying his best and trying to do the right things. That's never been Snyder. I agree he got the coach right, but if the Post story had not come out, Larry would still be there, the harassment culture would still be bubbling beneath the surface, etc., etc. He's trying desperately to shield himself from his own wrongdoings. I don't care how successful the team is, I personally won't let him get away with that. A sincere "mea culpa," and maybe I'd listen. But he has lied and continues to lie about all these things, go after victims, etc., etc. I hope the fan base is smart enough as a whole not to let him off the hook just because the team starts looking good again. 

  • Like 5
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Dissident2 said:

I could even live with all the suck record-wise if I felt like a decent person was trying his best and trying to do the right things. That's never been Snyder. I agree he got the coach right, but if the Post story had not come out, Larry would still be there, the harassment culture would still be bubbling beneath the surface, etc., etc. He's trying desperately to shield himself from his own wrongdoings. I don't care how successful the team is, I personally won't let him get away with that. A sincere "mea culpa," and maybe I'd listen. But he has lied and continues to lie about all these things, go after victims, etc., etc. I hope the fan base is smart enough as a whole not to let him off the hook just because the team starts looking good again. 

Thank you! 

 

Virtually every "change" he's made has been due to his hand being forced. The old boys club would still be running Ashburn if the sexual misconduct, sexual harassment, and cheerleader scandals hadn't come out. I truly don't think he would have hired a black man as the team president or a woman as the Larry Michael replacement if he wasn't trying to get out in front of the perception of being a racist or sexist organization. 

  • Like 5
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Dissident2 said:

I could even live with all the suck record-wise if I felt like a decent person was trying his best and trying to do the right things. That's never been Snyder. I agree he got the coach right, but if the Post story had not come out, Larry would still be there, the harassment culture would still be bubbling beneath the surface, etc., etc. He's trying desperately to shield himself from his own wrongdoings. I don't care how successful the team is, I personally won't let him get away with that. A sincere "mea culpa," and maybe I'd listen. But he has lied and continues to lie about all these things, go after victims, etc., etc. I hope the fan base is smart enough as a whole not to let him off the hook just because the team starts looking good again. 

Agreed on all of that.  It goes well beyond the horrendous w/l record and it's more about the entire picture with him.  It's abundantly clear he's a terd to the extent that his horrendous w/l record as owner is way down the list of reasons to dislike him.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I will eat crow. Early on I thought same old losers, the stench is too high for a coach to make a difference. And to be honest we still need to hire a real GM and act like an adult organization in that respect.

 

But Rivera has changed this culture 100% and it is showing. It doesn't mean we're Super Bowl bound, it doesn't mean we're in line for 5 playoff appearances in 6 seasons, but it does mean we look like we belong in the NFL as a professional franchise. It's a nice change from the Goose Allen **** show.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, BatteredFanSyndrome said:

Just going on record, that Ron could win a Super Bowl here and I'm still not giving Dan an ounce of credit for his hire and would simply chalk it up to luck in that he eventually had to get something right, simply by the odds.  Just as I'll never pat him on the back for the other new hires that he was all but forced to make.   None of it will make up for the two decades of complete and utter suck that he's provided to both the fans and his employees.

RR hired JDR.

How can we credit him for firing Bruce?  Considering he was basically forced to do so by the fanbase.

Why would I credit him for staying out of the draft room?  Seems a bit premature.

Same with empowering RR to do whatever he feels is necessary.  We're only in the honeymoon phase here.  A whole lot of premature credit being given out.

Objectively, when things go bad you blame the top so when things go well the top has to be given credit. The turnaround this team is in the process of making is due largely to 3 things:

1). Bruce is gone and management has been overhauled

2). RR was hired and given the keys to the kingdom

3). Scouting department and management (including RR) made solid player decisions (including releasing Guice, trading Trent and Dunbar). 

 

We don't have to like Snyder any more or less than before, but as the CEO, he oversaw these changes so he gets credit, same as he gets the blame for all of the losing seasons. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

25 minutes ago, kingdaddy said:

Objectively, when things go bad you blame the top so when things go well the top has to be given credit. The turnaround this team is in the process of making is due largely to 3 things:

1). Bruce is gone and management has been overhauled

2). RR was hired and given the keys to the kingdom

3). Scouting department and management (including RR) made solid player decisions (including releasing Guice, trading Trent and Dunbar). 

 

We don't have to like Snyder any more or less than before, but as the CEO, he oversaw these changes so he gets credit, same as he gets the blame for all of the losing seasons. 

 

I don't agree. People can succeed for brief amounts of time in spite of bad management. If this team were to win for a decade then I'd need to reconsider, but as of now I don't give Snyder any credit for this. 

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, kingdaddy said:

Objectively, when things go bad you blame the top so when things go well the top has to be given credit. The turnaround this team is in the process of making is due largely to 3 things:

1). Bruce is gone and management has been overhauled

2). RR was hired and given the keys to the kingdom

3). Scouting department and management (including RR) made solid player decisions (including releasing Guice, trading Trent and Dunbar). 

 

We don't have to like Snyder any more or less than before, but as the CEO, he oversaw these changes so he gets credit, same as he gets the blame for all of the losing seasons. 

My point is that we are 12 games into the Ron Rivera era.  It's a bit early to start handing out kudos to Dan Snyder.  We've done this song and dance here before, more than once, where things look okay for a second - and some folks are breaking their arm to pat Dan on the back.  There is still plenty of time for Dan to be Dan.  The real people who deserve a pat on the back are the fans that went the extra mile to voice displeasure, the folks who spoke out about the horrendous culture, and basically anyone that has been sounding the alarm about dysfunction junction that forced Dan Snyder's hand.  None of this stuff happens without all of these folks.

  • Like 4
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 minutes ago, BatteredFanSyndrome said:

My point is that we are 12 games into the Ron Rivera era.  It's a bit early to start handing out kudos to Dan Snyder.  We've done this song and dance here before, more than once, where things look okay for a second - and some folks are breaking their arm to pat Dan on the back.  There is still plenty of time for Dan to be Dan.  The real people who deserve a pat on the back are the fans that went the extra mile to voice displeasure, the folks who spoke out about the horrendous culture, and basically anyone that has been sounding the alarm about dysfunction junction that forced Dan Snyder's hand.  None of this stuff happens without all of these folks.

Yep, this dingleberry has ruined coaches like Marty, Gibbs, and Mike Shanahan. Nothing against Rivera, but if he can drag those guys into mediocrity-or-worse, Rivera is vulnerable as well. 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

https://www.yahoo.com/sports/ron-rivera-says-mountain-dew-taco-bell-helped-him-get-through-cancer-treatment-170641335.html

 

When Ron Rivera announced he had squamous cell cancer in his lymph nodes, he hadn’t coached a single game for the Washington Football Team yet. It was Aug. 20 and he was staring down two months of cancer treatment, which he’d have to balance with coaching his team.

On Oct. 26, Rivera finished his treatment and hadn’t missed a single game. It wasn’t easy, and in an interview with ESPN, Rivera gave the credit to his family, his team, and the doctors, nurses, techs, and therapists who worked with him. He was also grateful to a few special friends who helped him get through some of the hardest times: Taco Bell and Mountain Dew.......

 

**more at link

Edited by stoshuaj
  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

So here's the text from the most recent Post article. Apparently there was a harassment settlement in 2009 that Wilkinson (NFL lawyer) wants to disclose the details of. The plot thickens. Or sickens, take your pick. Interesting that she interviewed Snyder himself late last month. 

 

 

Quote

 

The NFL’s investigation into allegations of workplace sexual harassment at the Washington Football Team uncovered a confidential settlement from a decade ago, court records show, and an emergency motion filed Monday said team owner Daniel Snyder plans to intervene in a legal dispute over which details surrounding the settlement can become public.

 

The name of the complainant in the settlement, that person’s job and the nature of the allegations have not been made public, but the available records show lawyer Beth Wilkinson, who is leading the league’s probe into the team’s workplace, encountering resistance from the team’s former lawyer.

David P. Donovan, who served as the team’s general counsel from 2005 to 2011, sued Wilkinson last month in federal court in Virginia to stop her from disclosing information pertaining to a 2009 confidential agreement to which Donovan is a party. In the suit filed Nov. 9, Donovan sought to keep private all court records, including any public notice of the lawsuit itself, arguing that making the proceedings public would “undermine public confidence in the enforceability of confidential agreements between private parties.” That request was denied Nov. 17.

 
Donovan dropped the suit Nov. 23, but Wilkinson’s lawyers urged the court to decide which documents in the case could be unsealed “so the public can understand what [Donovan] is trying to accomplish through this lawsuit and how it relates to the investigation writ-large.”

Court records over what information should be redacted from the public record refer to the agreement as a “settlement” and make reference to the characterization of “the nature of misconduct.”

After Wilkinson submitted some redacted filings to the court, Donovan filed an emergency motion Monday, seeking to delay those disclosures, saying Snyder and the team intend to intervene in the case for the purpose of “asserting privilege and privacy or related interests over information that is under seal.” U.S. Magistrate Judge Ivan Davis granted the motion Monday afternoon.

 
Snyder has pledged to cooperate with the investigation and to release current and former employees from nondisclosure agreements for the purposes of talking to investigators.

 

Donovan declined to comment. Wilkinson and her attorneys also did not reply to requests for comment. Washington Football Team spokeswoman Julie A. Jensen did not respond to requests for comment. Snyder did not reply to requests for comment sent to a public relations representative and an attorney he has hired. The NFL also did not respond to a request for comment.

The existence of the 2009 settlement might never have entered the public record had Donovan not sought an injunction against Wilkinson from the Eastern District of Virginia in Alexandria. Wilkinson filed sealed affidavits in support of her motions from three people, including Lisa Friel, the NFL’s special counsel for investigations. Friel did not respond to a request for comment.

 
“Simply because parties don’t like allegations don’t mean those allegations are sealable,” Davis told Donovan’s lawyers at a Nov. 20 hearing, according to a transcript requested by The Washington Post after news of the dispute was reported by Law360.com. “The fact that these details may come out, your client shouldn’t file a federal lawsuit.”

 

Wilkinson was scheduled to interview Snyder on Nov. 18, court records show.

 

In his court filings, Donovan describes himself as a “party” to the settlement, though it’s unclear whether Donovan simply negotiated the deal or was involved in another way.

 

Donovan, who also served as the team’s chief operating officer for three years, was a partner in the WilmerHale law firm on and off for more than 25 years until his retirement in 2018.

 

Davis laid out a complicated set of rules describing which court documents would be made public and which words in those documents would be redacted. According to his Nov. 25 ruling, the phrases “settlement” and “settlement agreement,” the name of the “complainant,” that person’s title and “references to the matter giving rise to allegations” should be redacted. Other requests to block information from the public were denied.

 

Wilkinson was hired by Snyder to conduct an “independent” investigation, following a July report by The Post in which 15 women said they were sexually harassed while working for the team. A month later, another 25 women made similar claims in another Post report, which also described lewd videos produced by the team from outtakes of cheerleader calendar shoots in 2008 and 2010.

 
Snyder has pledged to address problems in his team’s workplace culture.
 

The league assumed oversight of Wilkinson’s probe in August. The Post reported that some former team employees said they had been approached by private investigators, who at times did not identify themselves or whom they were working for. Joe Tacopina, an attorney representing Snyder, said in August that activity by private investigations was related to Snyder’s defamation suit against an India-based news company — Media, Entertainment, Arts, WorldWide — not Wilkinson’s investigation.

Mark Maske and Alice Crites contributed to this report.

 

 

 
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Radio stuff realting to Dan of late

 

 Russell said in a segment that he's fairly certain that Lafemina was pushed hard at Dan back in the day from the NFL Office.

 

Keim today doubled down that for this team to turn the corner over the long haul then Dan has to stop interferring like he's done in the past.  He implied in recent years he's still been involved in infusing himself into football decisions but he's nowhere as meddlesome as he was years back. 

 

He said it should help Rivera if they win early because Dan doesn't argue against success so Dan might leave things alone in that case.  He also said Dan knows he has to turn this thing around. 

 

Edited by Skinsinparadise
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Washington Football’s only path to genuine integrity is without Daniel Snyder

For the first time, you can feel what it might mean if Washington’s football team could be pried out of Daniel Snyder’s seedy, success-strangling hands. For now, the franchise remains on a strangely contradictory course. On the field, first-year coach Ron Rivera and his young team are performing like a strong, fresh breeze. Off it, Snyder continues to recirculate his bad air and give the organization an unsavory whiff. For the good of all — the town, the market, the league — the NFL should clear the noxious Snyder out of the building, as it has every right and reason to, so the franchise can truly move on and be whole.

 

With their upset of the unbeaten Pittsburgh Steelers on Monday night, Rivera and his crew allowed you to imagine that this team might truly be competitively remade. Now imagine the unlimited future it might have under a new owner who didn’t run his affairs like a crapulent mini-Caligula.

Full cooperation and a new leaf is what Snyder superficially pledged when the league began investigating serial sexual harassment in his organization, the soft porn vids and other scummy workplace abuses. What the NFL apparently got instead is bullying obstruction and unrepentant dodging. On the same day that Washington beat Pittsburgh, an emergency court filing revealed Snyder intends to intervene in a legal dispute involving what details of a “misconduct” settlement uncovered by a league investigator should be made public.

 

Commissioner Roger Goodell and the other team owners are learning what everyone who associates with Snyder inevitably does: No one who deals with him emerges clean or intact; everyone walks away choked on his fumes, feeling violated, cheated, misled. Think about it. His livid business partners, led by Dwight Schar, are trying to sell stakes in the team, alleging mismanagement and a withheld dividend. The city of Richmond had to use millions from a school fund to help cover a sour training camp deal. He bankrupted Six Flags, after taking it over by stockholder coup. He foisted expired beer and old airline peanuts on fans, sued a 72-year-old grandmother for just $66,000. The list is endless. The man has all the conscience of a muddy lawn gnome.

 

But no one has been more maltreated and exploited than Washington’s cheerleaders and other female employees. Fully 40 have come forward, some in the face of intimidation. No doubt league investigator Beth Wilkinson has developed a thick file, and if the cryptic legal filings that came to light Monday are any indication, it contains more than what has already been disclosed, such as cheerleaders being subjected to the circulation of surreptitious nipple and crotch shots without permission, and the routine, leering sexual harassment at every level.

You don’t need to see inside sealed legal filings to understand that the foulness wafted down from the top.

 

All you have to do is watch Snyder say one thing and do another. He frantically tries to rebrand himself publicly, hiring attractive newcomers and spouting platitudes about a new “respectful and inclusive culture,” and in the next breath he complains it’s all a “hit job,” hires private eyes who paid menacing visits to female complainants — coincidentally just as Wilkinson began her inquiry — and files reams of serpentine, entangling legal suits.

 

Everyone in the Washington football club’s building, from Rivera to team president Jason Wright, should understand this: They’re nothing more than temporary body men, shields to absorb this mud and flak for the owner.

They also should understand that if Snyder remains, they don’t have a chance. Every new coach and GM thinks he’s the guy who can handle this owner. They all start out thinking, “He’s not so bad; he’s nice to me.” They’re wrong. Snyder is an insurmountably malign influence on the team, and he will turn. He eagerly promises the world when he needs you, and as soon as he doesn’t or is displeased, he reneges and schemes and disposes of you. Rivera and Wright are lucky that Snyder is in an exceptionally needy and distracted cycle.

 

But unfortunately, a big win tends to awaken Snyder’s need to tamper. He can’t tolerate being a marginal figure in an exciting run. He’s hands-off with the losers. His worst tendencies emerge when they win a little. That’s when he starts turning up in the draft room and cultivating locker room informants. There have been fresh starts with new coaches on the field before, and none lasted. All of them descended into organizational fracture laced with spite within five years.

 

Imagine if Washington could be free of him, free of this tiresome, shabby, dirty cycle. Imagine if the league did what it should, compelled a sale because of Snyder’s “conduct detrimental to the welfare of the league or professional football.”

Imagine if the club was owned by a straightforward businessman of sound practice and decency. One who knew his role and his place — and knew it wasn’t in the locker room or creeping out cheerleaders. One who could get a deal done for a new stadium, right in D.C., which at the moment won’t trust Snyder with a dime of money or a foot of free land. One who behaved as a steward of an iconic organization, instead of treating it like his personal party boat. One who would treat ticket holders as valued underwriters of the team instead of saps to be gouged.

It’s a good week to imagine that. Maybe someday it will become reality.

 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2020/12/08/washington-footballs-only-path-genuine-integrity-is-without-daniel-snyder/

Edited by Skinsinparadise
  • Like 4
  • Thanks 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Funny how the tunes change. Suddenly we're looked at as having a talented young roster around the league. Nobody said this when Gibson wasn't beasting early and we weren't winning. 

Eyes will start getting fixated onto the person who built this young talented roster and we must do whatever it takes to keep him around. This successful Free Agency and multiple successful drafts are more than enough to promote Kyle Smith to GM. 

Edited by Burgundy Yoda
  • Like 5
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, Skinsinparadise said:

Washington Football’s only path to genuine integrity is without Daniel Snyder

For the first time, you can feel what it might mean if Washington’s football team could be pried out of Daniel Snyder’s seedy, success-strangling hands. For now, the franchise remains on a strangely contradictory course. On the field, first-year coach Ron Rivera and his young team are performing like a strong, fresh breeze. Off it, Snyder continues to recirculate his bad air and give the organization an unsavory whiff. For the good of all — the town, the market, the league — the NFL should clear the noxious Snyder out of the building, as it has every right and reason to, so the franchise can truly move on and be whole.

 

With their upset of the unbeaten Pittsburgh Steelers on Monday night, Rivera and his crew allowed you to imagine that this team might truly be competitively remade. Now imagine the unlimited future it might have under a new owner who didn’t run his affairs like a crapulent mini-Caligula.

Full cooperation and a new leaf is what Snyder superficially pledged when the league began investigating serial sexual harassment in his organization, the soft porn vids and other scummy workplace abuses. What the NFL apparently got instead is bullying obstruction and unrepentant dodging. On the same day that Washington beat Pittsburgh, an emergency court filing revealed Snyder intends to intervene in a legal dispute involving what details of a “misconduct” settlement uncovered by a league investigator should be made public.

 

Commissioner Roger Goodell and the other team owners are learning what everyone who associates with Snyder inevitably does: No one who deals with him emerges clean or intact; everyone walks away choked on his fumes, feeling violated, cheated, misled. Think about it. His livid business partners, led by Dwight Schar, are trying to sell stakes in the team, alleging mismanagement and a withheld dividend. The city of Richmond had to use millions from a school fund to help cover a sour training camp deal. He bankrupted Six Flags, after taking it over by stockholder coup. He foisted expired beer and old airline peanuts on fans, sued a 72-year-old grandmother for just $66,000. The list is endless. The man has all the conscience of a muddy lawn gnome.

 

But no one has been more maltreated and exploited than Washington’s cheerleaders and other female employees. Fully 40 have come forward, some in the face of intimidation. No doubt league investigator Beth Wilkinson has developed a thick file, and if the cryptic legal filings that came to light Monday are any indication, it contains more than what has already been disclosed, such as cheerleaders being subjected to the circulation of surreptitious nipple and crotch shots without permission, and the routine, leering sexual harassment at every level.

You don’t need to see inside sealed legal filings to understand that the foulness wafted down from the top.

 

All you have to do is watch Snyder say one thing and do another. He frantically tries to rebrand himself publicly, hiring attractive newcomers and spouting platitudes about a new “respectful and inclusive culture,” and in the next breath he complains it’s all a “hit job,” hires private eyes who paid menacing visits to female complainants — coincidentally just as Wilkinson began her inquiry — and files reams of serpentine, entangling legal suits.

 

Everyone in the Washington football club’s building, from Rivera to team president Jason Wright, should understand this: They’re nothing more than temporary body men, shields to absorb this mud and flak for the owner.

They also should understand that if Snyder remains, they don’t have a chance. Every new coach and GM thinks he’s the guy who can handle this owner. They all start out thinking, “He’s not so bad; he’s nice to me.” They’re wrong. Snyder is an insurmountably malign influence on the team, and he will turn. He eagerly promises the world when he needs you, and as soon as he doesn’t or is displeased, he reneges and schemes and disposes of you. Rivera and Wright are lucky that Snyder is in an exceptionally needy and distracted cycle.

 

But unfortunately, a big win tends to awaken Snyder’s need to tamper. He can’t tolerate being a marginal figure in an exciting run. He’s hands-off with the losers. His worst tendencies emerge when they win a little. That’s when he starts turning up in the draft room and cultivating locker room informants. There have been fresh starts with new coaches on the field before, and none lasted. All of them descended into organizational fracture laced with spite within five years.

 

Imagine if Washington could be free of him, free of this tiresome, shabby, dirty cycle. Imagine if the league did what it should, compelled a sale because of Snyder’s “conduct detrimental to the welfare of the league or professional football.”

Imagine if the club was owned by a straightforward businessman of sound practice and decency. One who knew his role and his place — and knew it wasn’t in the locker room or creeping out cheerleaders. One who could get a deal done for a new stadium, right in D.C., which at the moment won’t trust Snyder with a dime of money or a foot of free land. One who behaved as a steward of an iconic organization, instead of treating it like his personal party boat. One who would treat ticket holders as valued underwriters of the team instead of saps to be gouged.

It’s a good week to imagine that. Maybe someday it will become reality.

 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2020/12/08/washington-footballs-only-path-genuine-integrity-is-without-daniel-snyder/


She totally nails it here. We need national attention and calls for this from the folks at ESPN and other national outlets for this to manifest

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, Skinsinparadise said:

Washington Football’s only path to genuine integrity is without Daniel Snyder

 

This does amuse me. 

 

People, "genuine integrity" and "National Football League" do not go together. The NFL is a largely barbaric and exploitative enterprise run by a cartel of billionaire owners hiding behind "they know what they signed up for" even though these are largely poor players jacking themselves up with painkillers to go destroy each others' bodies for our entertainment.

 

Dan Snyder maybe be the worst of the bunch, though more likely, he's just the most publicly bad of the bunch. But this is really a rotten enterprise all around.

 

We watch because we enjoy it in spite of everything else. Like how I eat meat even though I know how cruel factory farms are to animals.

 

But please do not moralize about "genuine integrity" in talking about the NFL. People will probably look back on the NFL in the future the way we look back at Roman gladiators. AKA, "I can't believe that **** was legal"

 

Edited by CapsSkins
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not sure where to put this, but every now and then I try and figure out to get the Eagles under the cap for 2021 and it just makes me smile.  It's basically impossible.

 

https://overthecap.com/calculator/philadelphia-eagles/

 

Compare that to our situation and we've got plenty of cap space to make some moves.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Alcoholic Zebra said:

Not sure where to put this, but every now and then I try and figure out to get the Eagles under the cap for 2021 and it just makes me smile.  It's basically impossible.

 

With moves like slay their FO sold out for this season, and they are going to pay for it next yr.

 

There is no way they can get down low enough w/ just cuts and re-structures. They need some trades. Ones where they bring back either draft picks, small salaries or non G contracts they can quick cut. Keep in mind they will have to get well under the cap for seasonal movement budget, rookie contracts,  and FAs to fill holes.

 

Our FO should be eyeballing other rosters hard and scouting almost every current NFL player. A lot of teams will need to let a few guys go and if we have already done our homework and identified good fits, we can be the first one in line with our available cap space. We badly need a GM sooner rather then later as this will be a premium time to set our team up for future success, not just current. We need a guy w/ the long term on his mind.

Edited by FootballZombie
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...