NFL Discussion Thread: Pats win SB XLIX. Offseason begins

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You dudes analyze every bit of these guy's lives...I give you a real life story about them instead of some PR BS they have on ESPN/NFL Network and you get mad I even mention it :lol:
 
Ashton ain't the baddest, but she would still get that work like John Mayer did to Katy Perry. Her actions screamed two can play that game to Russy. Cue Just Like Me with TI and Usher.
 
You dudes analyze every bit of these guy's lives...I give you a real life story about them instead of some PR BS they have on ESPN/NFL Network and you get mad I even mention it :lol:

Not that serious breh

That was just some female gossip ****....maybe people want that news but I was just directing you to a forum that specializes in it
 
 
[h1]Expect Capers to unveil new looks in opener[/h1]
September, 4, 2014
SEP 4

4:00

PM ET

By Rob Demovsky  | ESPN.com


SEATTLE -- You could tell Dom Capers was uncomfortable with the subject. 

It was three days before the Green Bay Packers' season opener against the Seattle Seahawks  on Thursday night at CenturyLink Field, and the team's defensive coordinator was holding his weekly session with reporters at Lambeau Field. 

And he knows we know. 

He knows we have seen it. 
 
[+] Enlarge
Elaine Thompson/AP ImagesSeahawks QB Russell Wilson is expecting the unexpected from Dom Capers' defense in Week 1.
He knows, as is the team's right per an agreement between the NFL and the Pro Football Writers of America, that we have been asked to keep any major scheme-specific changes out of our reports from practice. 

The most Capers will admit to is there are unscouted looks in every NFL game in Week 1, when coaches finally unveil what they spend all offseason concocting in their offices but refuse to put on film for others to see in the preseason. 

But anyone who has spent time around the Packers since they started workouts in April knows this one might be the granddaddy of all unscouted looks. 

"Well, I don't think it will be any different from any opening game,” Capers insisted this week. "There’s always a few unscouted looks in opening games. That's just kind of the nature of our business, so I don't think it will be any different from other openers, really." 

Really? 

Let's talk about that after everyone sees what he throws at the Seahawks. 

Maybe Capers will just send out his base 3-4 defense on first down followed by the nickel package (a 2-4-5 alignment) on second down and the dime on third down (a 2-3-6 look) like he did so often last season. But the Packers have no desire to field the 25th-ranked defense in the league again, so that's unlikely. 

The Seahawks surely know something new will be coming their way, even if they're not exactly sure what. 

"Well, you just have to trust your eyes, you have to trust what you see," Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson  said this week. "I think that obviously Coach Capers, the defensive coordinator for them, is a great defensive coordinator and he knows so many different things and you just study and be prepared. I've played a lot of football games and seen a lot of a lot of different things and so you just try to trust what you see and let rip and be on time, be consistent with your eyes and be consistent with what you're trying to do." 

That the Packers now have Julius Peppers, a rare high-priced veteran free-agent signing by general manager Ted Thompson, gives them flexibility on defense. Including Peppers, who will play outside linebacker rather than his old defensive end spot in the Bears' 4-3 scheme, the Packers have 11 linebackers and just five defensive linemen on their roster. 

Clearly, there's a reason for so many linebackers and so few linemen. 

"It'll be fun to see," Packers linebacker Clay Matthews  said this week. "I know, as I've seen over the years and as Dom has shown, we keep a multitude of defenses and schemes and formations and this is a team that presents the very same problems, so we'll look to unleash it in Week 1 and hopefully it works in our favor."
Capers finna do something awful...
 
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[h1]  [/h1]
In June, Cincinnati Bengals defensive tackle Devon Still learned his four-year-old daughter, Leah, has stage four pediatric cancer. Still missed offseason workouts to be with her, shaved his head in solidarity, and filled his Instagram with pictures of Leah and updates on her treatment.

Even when he was getting ready for preseason action, Leah was in his prayers. In one August Instagram post, he wrote:
Normally today would be filled with excitement because it's my first game back since my injury in December but because it is also the day my daughter starts her 3rd round of chemo and I can't be there it feels different...usually on game day I pray for safety and a good game but today I'm just sending up one prayer so God knows how important it is to me and that is he stay by my daughters side and comfort her and protect her since I can't be there....I'm going to handle my business on the field today and she's going to handle hers in that hospital #PrayForLeah
Still learned on Saturday that the Bengals had cut him, leaving him unemployed and potentially without health insurance. In a piece on Good Morning America  that aired today, Still admitted he understood why. He couldn't give football 100 percent.

But in a few days, everything changed. The Bengals signed Still to their practice squad, which means he'll receive health insurance and a weekly $6,300 salary. Plus, being on the practice squad means less time away from his family while still playing football.

"They could have washed their hands with me and said that they don't care about what I was going through off the field," Still said. "It's kinda like a blessing in disguise for me."

Leah started her fourth round of chemotherapy last week.

 
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