Marrone may have to take a number and wait in Buffalo... | Syracusefan.com

Marrone may have to take a number and wait in Buffalo...

McCoy might be the front runner for the Bears.
 
And then there is this...
Peter King@SI_PeterKing
Happy Valley alert: I hear Bill O'Brien is strongly considering interviewing with an NFL team.
 
And then there is this...
Peter King@SI_PeterKing
Happy Valley alert: I hear Bill O'Brien is strongly considering interviewing with an NFL team.

yup...i was watching a show were the hosts claim O'Brien was not happy being lied to about the sandusky info. they supposedly told O'Brien that the situation there was criminal not institutional and no sanctions were coming their way.
 
yup...i was watching a show were the hosts claim O'Brien was not happy being lied to about the sandusky info. they supposedly told O'Brien that the situation there was criminal not institutional and no sanctions were coming their way.

i wouldn't hire o'brien just based upon him being stupid and believing there would be no sanctions.
 
The Buffalo Bills are going the “Moneyball” route, crunching player data in hope of victory.

shutterstock_56287057.jpg

Can data-analytics software win a Super Bowl?
That’s what the Buffalo Bills are betting on: the NFL team will create an analytics department to crunch player data, building on a model already well established in professional baseball and basketball.
“We are going to create and establish a very robust football analytics operation that we layer into our entire operation moving forward,” Buffalo Bills president Russ Brandon recently told The Buffalo News. “That’s something that’s very important to me and the future of the franchise.”
The increased use of analytics in other sports, he added, led him to make the decision: “We’ve seen it in the NBA. We’ve seen it more in baseball. It’s starting to spruce its head a little bit in football, and I feel we’re missing the target if we don’t invest in that area of our operation, and we will.”
But other team executives aren’t exactly rushing to embrace analytics. General manager Buddy Nix told the newspaper: “It’ll be something I’ll have to get used to because I go a lot on feel and what I see.”
The Buffalo Bills aren’t the first professional football team to crunch data in the name of a competitive edge. According to the NFL, the Baltimore Ravens rely on back-office analytics, and Chicago Bears general manager Phil Emery has indicated a love for stats.
The book Moneyball, later adapted into a 2011 movie starring Brad Pitt, highlighted the Oakland Athletics’ use of “sabermetrics” to predict the value of players and, ultimately, boost team performance. Sabermetrics relies on objective statistics such as on-base percentage to determine player success; in theory, team managers can use those metrics to determine which players on the market are undervalued and snatch them up for a relative pittance, allowing the franchise to field a team capable of competing on equal terms against better-funded rivals.
In the wake of Oakland’s success, other professional baseball teams began to emulate that model, hiring full-time analysts and mining data with the enthusiasm of a tech company.
While other sports have embraced statistical analysis, there’s a good deal of debate among analysts over the accuracy of various models and tools. Sports analytics conferences now feature owners, coaches, and analysts discussing the merits of their respective platforms.
But in the end, for many owners, the success of a particular analytics model boils down to one thing: does it help the team win? The Buffalo Bills are the latest team to hope so.

slashdot (http://s.tt/1xSFu)
 
The Buffalo Bills are going the “Moneyball” route, crunching player data in hope of victory.

shutterstock_56287057.jpg

Can data-analytics software win a Super Bowl?
That’s what the Buffalo Bills are betting on: the NFL team will create an analytics department to crunch player data, building on a model already well established in professional baseball and basketball.
“We are going to create and establish a very robust football analytics operation that we layer into our entire operation moving forward,” Buffalo Bills president Russ Brandon recently told The Buffalo News. “That’s something that’s very important to me and the future of the franchise.”
The increased use of analytics in other sports, he added, led him to make the decision: “We’ve seen it in the NBA. We’ve seen it more in baseball. It’s starting to spruce its head a little bit in football, and I feel we’re missing the target if we don’t invest in that area of our operation, and we will.”
But other team executives aren’t exactly rushing to embrace analytics. General manager Buddy Nix told the newspaper: “It’ll be something I’ll have to get used to because I go a lot on feel and what I see.”
The Buffalo Bills aren’t the first professional football team to crunch data in the name of a competitive edge. According to the NFL, the Baltimore Ravens rely on back-office analytics, and Chicago Bears general manager Phil Emery has indicated a love for stats.
The book Moneyball, later adapted into a 2011 movie starring Brad Pitt, highlighted the Oakland Athletics’ use of “sabermetrics” to predict the value of players and, ultimately, boost team performance. Sabermetrics relies on objective statistics such as on-base percentage to determine player success; in theory, team managers can use those metrics to determine which players on the market are undervalued and snatch them up for a relative pittance, allowing the franchise to field a team capable of competing on equal terms against better-funded rivals.
In the wake of Oakland’s success, other professional baseball teams began to emulate that model, hiring full-time analysts and mining data with the enthusiasm of a tech company.
While other sports have embraced statistical analysis, there’s a good deal of debate among analysts over the accuracy of various models and tools. Sports analytics conferences now feature owners, coaches, and analysts discussing the merits of their respective platforms.
But in the end, for many owners, the success of a particular analytics model boils down to one thing: does it help the team win? The Buffalo Bills are the latest team to hope so.

slashdot (http://s.tt/1xSFu)
They're keeping buddy nix. He's the opposite of data driven

Sent from my DROID RAZR using Tapatalk 2
 
Was he the OC last year? If so he'd better go kiss Mannings feet and buy him a car because their offense was vacant last year.
A lot of the interest McCoy is generating is based upon not only getting along with mcdaniels, but made Orton look all pro. But his best magic trick to date, was totally reconstructing an offense in a very unorthodox style, to suit the strengths of tebow, thus making the playoffs.
 
There's no question Chip Kelly is Buffalo's #1 choice and they're going to do everything they can to land him. Beyond that, who knows...
 
Was he the OC last year? If so he'd better go kiss Mannings feet and buy him a car because their offense was vacant last year.
In fairness, that was mainly when Tebow took over. Orton put up some big numbers before taking a seat on the bench.
 
I think the citizens of Buffalo will attack Ralph Wilson Stadium with axes and pitchforks if the Bills choose Doug for HC. He'd be the next in a long line of cheap hires that the fans have grown tired of.
 
I think when it's all said and done the Bills hire Ray Horton. Whaley who is the GM in waiting knows him well from there Pittsburgh days together. IMO not a sexy hire but I would love it
 
i wouldn't hire o'brien just based upon him being stupid and believing there would be no sanctions.
Kind of like our big balogne thinking that syracuse was going to be one big doug fest
 
Bills want Kelly, Kelly probably does not want the Bills. Bills want McCoy, McCoy gets a better job. This leaves them with Lovie (who it seems they don't want), or the AZ guys. If I had to bet, they go Wiz.

The reports say the next Bills era will be Wiz and Alex Smith until their drafted QB is ready... SHOOT ME
 
In fairness, that was mainly when Tebow took over. Orton put up some big numbers before taking a seat on the bench.

Then Fox decided to put in a qb that wasn't nearly as good? I don't get it because that offense was brutal and the defense is what kept them in games.
 
I think Kelly should go to SD where he can have a constant fast track.
 

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