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notorious 10-22-2013 07:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mother****erJones (Post 10113187)
I hope it's snowing glaciers for our games in 50 mph wind

Expanded your post.

The Bad Guy 10-22-2013 07:47 AM

This is cute all the Bronco lemmings defending their garbage d. Reminds me of 2003.

DaFace 10-22-2013 07:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MagicHef (Post 10113184)
Yes it does.



Anything touching out of bounds is fully out of bounds. Therefore, Clark is fully out of bounds when his hand touches the white. Walden is touching Clark, and is also out of bounds. If doesn't matter that the ball is live. If Clark were not there and Walden recovered the ball while it was in bounds, but a part of Walden's body was out, the ball is then out.

I'm pretty sure you're a little off on that, but I can't say that with 100% confidence. By that logic, there could be a string of guys holding hands, and they'd call the ball OOB at midfield.

You're definitely correct that a player OOB touching the BALL is considered to be out, but I've never heard that an OOB player touching an in-bounds player makes the in-bounds player OOB.

MagicHef 10-22-2013 07:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaFace (Post 10113263)
I'm pretty sure you're a little off on that, but I can't say that with 100% confidence. By that logic, there could be a string of guys holding hands, and they'd call the ball OOB at midfield.

You're definitely correct that a player OOB touching the BALL is considered to be out, but I've never heard that an OOB player touching an in-bounds player makes the in-bounds player OOB.

I'm going off of memory, but I'm about 90% sure. It happened, and was explained that way, in a Broncos game a few years ago.

notorious 10-22-2013 07:56 AM

Nope.


Players have touched the ball runner while standing OB a million times and the runner is not called out.

RunKC 10-22-2013 08:06 AM

Elway better hope and pray that Manning gets him a ring bc he hasn't done shit to build that team. Without Manning they are 4-12.

Honestly, aside from the layup draft pick of Von Miller, he really hasn't done that much. Weaker came bc if Manning, not Elway

Pasta Little Brioni 10-22-2013 08:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Von Dumbass (Post 10112279)
The defense played pretty well, they were just put into bad spots. We had two turnovers inside our own 20 yard line, we gave the Colts great field position all game and even had a safety. The defense actually kept us in the game but the ball just didn't bounce our way.

Another embarrasing excuse...pathetic

Pasta Little Brioni 10-22-2013 08:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MagicHef (Post 10112813)
Ha ha, no. That doesn't make sense anyway, he has more INTs than Manning. You can keep Smith, forever and ever.

What I'm saying is that if Holiday doesn't fumble, we have a good shot at winning. If Hillman doesn't fumble, we have a good shot at winning. If neither fumble, we likely win easily. Obviously, that's not what happened, though.

Why aren't you counting the 80 yards more Indy would have had if Luck wouldn't have missed an easy TD to Wayne? How embarrasing would giving up 46 on National TV have been ROFLThat is more fluky than a slapdick RB fumbling.

Pasta Little Brioni 10-22-2013 08:45 AM

What is RG3 going to do this week? He's getting back into form and faces a D that Henne feasted on.

mr. tegu 10-22-2013 09:03 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PGM (Post 10113330)
Why aren't you counting the 80 yards more Indy would have had if Luck wouldn't have missed an easy TD to Wayne? How embarrasing would giving up 46 on National TV have been ROFLThat is more fluky than a slapdick RB fumbling.

Plus two other 50 yard dropped TD passes.

mr. tegu 10-22-2013 09:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MagicHef (Post 10113184)
Yes it does.



Anything touching out of bounds is fully out of bounds. Therefore, Clark is fully out of bounds when his hand touches the white. Walden is touching Clark, and is also out of bounds. If doesn't matter that the ball is live. If Clark were not there and Walden recovered the ball while it was in bounds, but a part of Walden's body was out, the ball is then out.

Yeah this isn't correct. You must also think Decker's ball in the front corner of the endzone was a touchdown also.

Pasta Little Brioni 10-22-2013 09:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mr. tegu (Post 10113377)
Plus two other 50 yard dropped TD passes.

JFC they are awful

Sweet Daddy Hate 10-22-2013 09:11 AM

You may now begin addressing Hef as "Peytons Prostate". We are WINNING this goddamned division.

Pasta Little Brioni 10-22-2013 09:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sweet Daddy Hate (Post 10113391)
You may now begin addressing Hef as "Peytons Prostate". We are WINNING this goddamned division.

You're god damned right

loochy 10-22-2013 09:24 AM

http://www.sportsgrid.com/nfl/despit...rm-looks-weak/

Despite What Peyton Manning Says, His Arm Looks Weak And It Could Be A Major Issue
by Eric Goldschein | 12:06 pm, October 21st, 2013

The Broncos finally lost last night — to the Colts, of all teams. Perhaps it was the emotion of Peyton Manning returning to Indianapolis, or the fact that Andrew Luck played like an absolute stud, but at the end of the day, the Broncos lost and a loss is a loss.

If you didn’t watch the game, you might think that, on paper, Peyton Manning played extremely well, while his offense line failed to protect him at critical junctures and his team got called for tons of stupid penalties that amounted to over 100 yards lost. This is, to a point, not false: Manning had almost 400 yards and threw for 3 TDs, and you can’t argue with those numbers.

But his arm looked, in a word, terrible. Particularly after Robert Mathis got to Manning, hit him during his windup, and forced a safety (via @jose3030):
http://d3j5vwomefv46c.cloudfront.net...gif?1382319793

Manning’s passes were often under-thrown, and no pass over 10 yards had anything resembling a spiral to it. Thankfully for Manning, he has an incredibly talented receiving corps that made some fantastic plays on his poor balls, like Demaryius Thomas did here (via GIFD Sports):

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Go9mkWJjMB...thomastdgt.gif

Or like Eric Decker did here:

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-VdUxbVAdbH...s400/djugg.gif

The Colts secondary was also depleted by injuries by the fourth quarter, and mostly played a prevent defense to protect their large lead (which they almost gave up, but were bailed out by Ronnie Hillman’s red zone fumble). Basically, Manning lucked (no pun intended) out.

The fact that the Broncos almost still won this game is a testament to their talent and skill. They’re still an elite team. But the shine is coming off Peyton Manning after he started the season blazing hot. Despite what his teammates might say, NFL insiders testify that his arm strength isn’t nearly what it used to be. And if you think a 37-year old with neck issues is going to get stronger as the weeks pile up, you’re clearly a Broncos fan.

The Broncos have their toughest stretch of schedule coming up, with two games against the Chiefs in a three week span and a game in Foxboro in between them. And come playoff time — Manning’s long-time Achilles heel — the Broncos will face nothing but quality teams. It’s doubtful that the kind of passes Manning threw for touchdowns last night will end up in his teammates hands with the same regularity as they did yesterday.

After the game, Manning was asked about his arm strength issues, to which he replied: “I throw a lot of wobbly passes. I throw a lot of wobbly touchdowns, too.” Oh, snap, he done told us. But seriously, those wobbly passes will become wobbly interceptions if he keeps throwing them at this rate (read: every time he throws). Besides an undisciplined defense and ball security issues (both fixable), Manning’s arm could end up being the Broncos undoing.


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