I did not have a single special teams coach my entire career that could explain the fundamentals of kicking and punting, and I doubt I was the exception.https://twitter.com/BradDanPaul/status/1338255288420413442 …
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En réponse à @ChrisWarcraft
Then I guess the obvious question is — why aren’t more former kickers/punters employed by teams to work on stuff like this? Seems like a reasonable way to fix a problem rather than have a revolving door of kickers when things are going poorly.
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En réponse à @jabewley
Lol, as if the average NFL team is going to bother spending money on making specialists better. The only case I can ever remember was when the Saints brought Carney in as a consultant for a season, and then ended up using him for a couple games even though he was super old.
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En réponse à @ChrisWarcraft
The money was my guess, but it occurs to me that winning games that are decided by kickers as opposed to losing them *might* result in more wins and ultimately more money.
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En réponse à @jabewley
You’ll never make it as an NFL front office person with that kind of logical attitude!
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En réponse à @ChrisWarcraft
Imagine missing the playoffs or the Super Bowl due to a fundamental kicking issue and losing that subsequent revenue. Boy if that ever happened, I bet we’d see real change!
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Yeah, like what if a team missed a really short field goal and it cost them that chance? Whew. You’d definitely see them taking special teams more seriously.
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En réponse à @ChrisWarcraft
No kidding. Thank goodness these are just Twitter hypotheticals.
#whew0 réponse 0 Retweet 1 j'aimeMerci. Twitter en tiendra compte pour améliorer votre fil. SupprimerSupprimer
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