Re: Defense
oobernoober
05/14/26 05:34 PM
I actually agree with you (probably didn't sound like it... I don't THINK I'm just being argumentative). I don't think he was overrated and he took multiple defenses over that "good-to-great" hump.
I just also agree with the people on here that had specific gripes with our defense.
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Re: Defense
PitDAWG
05/14/26 04:53 PM
Some people insist on focusing on the rare exceptions to the rule rather than the rule itself. Somehow they have convinced themselves that changes the rule.
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Re: Defense
IrishDawg42
05/14/26 04:46 PM
The Jets only had 169 yards total offense in that game. The NOT So special teams are why the Browns lost that game giving up a kick return and a punt return for touchdowns in that game. Fair point about ST's, however... roughly 120 of those 160'ish yards happened in the 4th quarter. Our defense was squashing them like a bug until it came time to close out the game. 42 were on one TD catch by Breece Hall... More importantly, their offense took 11 minutes off the clock in the 4th qtr. There isn't a defense EVER that had 4 perfect quarters for every game on the schedule. If a coordinator is being called overrated because of a single quarter, then there are just some people that will never be satisfied and we need to stop trying. I get it, the Vikings game also happened. At the end of the day, he coordinated the 4th best defense in the league...and it wasn't the first time he did something like that with a defense. In fact, he did it consistently. When you do it with one team, one time, they can be called overrated. When you do it with multiple teams, multiple times, especially more times than not, they are just damn good.
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Re: Defense
oobernoober
05/14/26 03:51 PM
The Jets only had 169 yards total offense in that game. The NOT So special teams are why the Browns lost that game giving up a kick return and a punt return for touchdowns in that game. Fair point about ST's, however... roughly 120 of those 160'ish yards happened in the 4th quarter. Our defense was squashing them like a bug until it came time to close out the game.
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Re: Our National Parks
PitDAWG
05/14/26 02:51 PM
When an argument is based more on emotions and headlines and numbers without context than actual specifics, I consider that an extreme approach to a topic. (i.e, saying something happened because someone allegedly hates someone else and bringing up how one despises something.) You're the only one that said extreme issue in here. Bone has given you plenty of specifics. You posted this, not me. 2. When every topic is presented from one extreme or the other, I guess trying to look at things rationally seems contrarian. None of this has been presented from an "extreme" other than the current White House because it's never been an issue until now. If gas prices rise to the point where many can't afford travel to parks or the economy craters because we defaulted on our national debt, are the parks still being shared equally? If a frog had wings it wouldn't bump its ass every time it landed. You can come up with "ifs" all day. And none of that has anything to do with this. I know you reach on some topics but this is a Stretch Armstrong move. Most things aren't as simple as you try to make them. One might only understand a simplified version of something, but that doesn't make it the realistic version. There's more than one side to every story. I get the propensity for declaring every move Trump makes as horrible (many are), but it's just not that black and white. I'm not a fan of presupposition. I like to drill down to what the actual move is rather than just declaring it's horrible and evil because Trump did it (or someone claims some number means something.) So your idea is wait until something collapses or suffers obvious, tangible harm to address it? Because until then you have no idea if the moves made will harm it? It could be horrible. (It could be much ado about not all that much.) I'm trying to figure out the actual changes beneath the seeming histrionics. Hmmmm. What you've done to this point certainly doesn't appear that way. If someone gives an example of some irreplaceable natural feature being destroyed or horribly contaminated or even something meaningful being removed from a designation, I'll agree that's awful. If someone can give a non-biased cost/benefit analysis of the actual jobs being lost, I could form an opinion on how I felt about it. A biased article from an organization losing funding with a few surface numbers and inflammatory language doesn't actually tell me a whole lot. It does give me pause, so I ask questions and look for clarification. So the man running around the neighborhood with a hatchet screaming at the top of his lungs isn't a danger until he kills someone? Wait until major damage is already done and then let's talk about it? The next president, as he's leaving office, says your home and business and/or all shipping routes to and from are now in a national park and you have to leave and/or can no longer use the roads/water. Eminent domain, here's a lowball check. Nothing you can do about it. Are you okay with that? Or would you like the incoming president to take a look at whether that actually makes sense? (Not that I have faith in Trump/future politician actually being able to make a good decision there.) That seems like quite the dichotomy. Admitting you have no faith trump can be making a good decision while saying let's give the man you have no faith in masking a good decision. How many people were displaced from their homes do to expanding those wildlife areas? I'll tell you. Zero. The expansions, which protected over 550 million acres of land and water (mostly marine), did not involve seizing private homes. The lands were already managed by the federal government and were placed under stricter conservation rules. You're just riff on things that aren't even true to make some fantasy story. Allowing lame duck politicians to make irreversible decisions just seems like a horribly short sighted policy to me. Maybe you should have looked at the details of those policies first. I'm 100% sure you had no idea those lands were already being managed by the federal government and all this policy did was to strengthen the conservation rules.
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Re: Cavs/NBA 2.0
Bard Dawg
05/14/26 02:45 PM
Gritty win. Some outstanding individual efforts. Let's ice it in The Land! We are finding out how tough we can be; our defense can improve more.
Great victory! Go,Cavs!
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Re: Defense
Homewood Dog
05/14/26 01:29 PM
I also remember that playoff game against Houston where they moved the ball on us fairly easy. But, in defense of our D, they were on the field an awful lot because of our anemic Offense last season and many times had to defend a short field because of turnovers. A more productive O will help our D immensely.
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Re: Defense
Day of the Dawg
05/14/26 01:28 PM
I may be overly influenced by the memory of the defense getting picked apart by Carson Wentz at the end of the Vikings game. And don't forget how we got absolutely run over by the Jets. I would say that Schwartz's defense had a couple things happen that shouldn't happen to a defense of that caliber. It was a championship-caliber defense that let us down a couple times but, overall, was a special defense that was held back by an anemic offense. Even if they had come through for us in those two games, nothing significant would've been gained in terms of the season. The Jets only had 169 yards total offense in that game. The NOT So special teams are why the Browns lost that game giving up a kick return and a punt return for touchdowns in that game. That is why the special teams coach was fired. The only time the defense struggled was right after Maliek Collins got hurt in the 49ers, Titans, and Bears games. Then they seemed to find their selves again down the stretch vs the Bills, Steelers, and Bengals.
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Re: Defense
oobernoober
05/14/26 01:16 PM
I may be overly influenced by the memory of the defense getting picked apart by Carson Wentz at the end of the Vikings game. And don't forget how we got absolutely run over by the Jets. I would say that Schwartz's defense had a couple things happen that shouldn't happen to a defense of that caliber. It was a championship-caliber defense that let us down a couple times but, overall, was a special defense that was held back by an anemic offense. Even if they had come through for us in those two games, nothing significant would've been gained in terms of the season.
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Re: I Thought Canada Was Going to be the 51'st State?
bonefish
05/14/26 12:31 PM
Greenland, no no I can't have it. They screwed me out of the Nobel Peace Prize.
Canada, I think I want it. Why not?
Cuba, oh I would like Cuba. Close Mar a large oo.
Venezuela mmm I love oil. Look Alcatraz can I have that?
What can I have my name on. How about passports?
Kim Jong Un what a swell guy. I wanna be Putin. Nap time.
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Re: Defense
Bull_Dawg
05/14/26 05:48 AM
I think Schwartz was overrated, but Rutenberg is an unknown. I like the "scheme," which we're supposedly keeping, but the in game adjustments and moment to moment play calling left me wanting better from Schwartz, and I don't think Rutenberg has had to do that yet. So, we'll see. We are going to disagree on Schwartz, I don't think he was overrated at all. As for in game adjustments, the Browns gave up fewer yards (ave. 186 first half to 106 second half) and TDs were 2 to 1 first half to second half last year. I don't recall the defense doing many things to lose many games. The defense was put into a lot of bad field position situations, yet they still held the other team on many occasions. I don't recall ever having issues in the second half caused by a lack of adjustments. Giving up fewer yards in the second half happens when teams focus more on burning clock than scoring points. Especially when an atrocious offense wasn't keeping it close. I may be overly influenced by the memory of the defense getting picked apart by Carson Wentz at the end of the Vikings game. It didn't happen all the time, but when teams figured out how to handle the fastball, we got torched. Fortunately some teams couldn't handle the fastball, so we didn't need to adjust. Myles made the defense go more than the play calls made the defense go, in my opinion.
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Re: Our National Parks
Bull_Dawg
05/14/26 05:01 AM
Since when did protecting and funding federal lands and our national parks become a matter of "extremes"? People of all religions and all political viewpoints share equally in the enjoyment and reward of those lands and protecting them and preserving our natural wonders. Maintaining them have been continued and carried out by every president and administration for decades.
Now it's an extreme issue? Maybe you need to pause and ask yourself why it's now an extreme issue when it never was before? None of this is as complicated as you're trying to make it sound. I think even you know that. When an argument is based more on emotions and headlines and numbers without context than actual specifics, I consider that an extreme approach to a topic. (i.e, saying something happened because someone allegedly hates someone else and bringing up how one despises something.) You're the only one that said extreme issue in here. If gas prices rise to the point where many can't afford travel to parks or the economy craters because we defaulted on our national debt, are the parks still being shared equally? Most things aren't as simple as you try to make them. One might only understand a simplified version of something, but that doesn't make it the realistic version. There's more than one side to every story. I get the propensity for declaring every move Trump makes as horrible (many are), but it's just not that black and white. I'm not a fan of presupposition. I like to drill down to what the actual move is rather than just declaring it's horrible and evil because Trump did it (or someone claims some number means something.) It could be horrible. (It could be much ado about not all that much.) I'm trying to figure out the actual changes beneath the seeming histrionics. If someone gives an example of some irreplaceable natural feature being destroyed or horribly contaminated or even something meaningful being removed from a designation, I'll agree that's awful. If someone can give a non-biased cost/benefit analysis of the actual jobs being lost, I could form an opinion on how I felt about it. A biased article from an organization losing funding with a few surface numbers and inflammatory language doesn't actually tell me a whole lot. It does give me pause, so I ask questions and look for clarification. The next president, as he's leaving office, says your home and business and/or all shipping routes to and from are now in a national park and you have to leave and/or can no longer use the roads/water. Eminent domain, here's a lowball check. Nothing you can do about it. Are you okay with that? Or would you like the incoming president to take a look at whether that actually makes sense? (Not that I have faith in Trump/future politician actually being able to make a good decision there.) Allowing lame duck politicians to make irreversible decisions just seems like a horribly short sighted policy to me.
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Re: Our National Parks
PitDAWG
05/13/26 07:32 PM
Since when did protecting and funding federal lands and our national parks become a matter of "extremes"? People of all religions and all political viewpoints share equally in the enjoyment and reward of those lands and protecting them and preserving our natural wonders. Maintaining them have been continued and carried out by every president and administration for decades.
Now it's an extreme issue? Maybe you need to pause and ask yourself why it's now an extreme issue when it never was before? None of this is as complicated as you're trying to make it sound. I think even you know that.
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Re: Our National Parks
Bull_Dawg
05/13/26 07:27 PM
Let's be clear here. trump targeted national park and monument regulations to open protected public lands to fossil fuel extraction, mining, and commercial use—and to reshape how American history and environmental science are presented in federal educational exhibits. Lobbyists are nothing more than part of a corruption network. That begins with the money from those who benefit. In the end who goes along reaps the rewards.
Interior Department orders directed reviews of public lands with the intent to increase drilling, fracking, and commercial logging in areas previously safeguarded from development. Downsizing Monuments: Using the Antiquities Act, Trump drastically reduced protected areas like Utah’s Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments to exclude them from federal land regulations.
trump attacks anything Obama did. He is consumed with hatred for him. He has targeted removal or censoring of displays detailing the historical realities of slavery, the Civil War, and the mistreatment of Native Americans. The removal of references to climate change and climate science from park materials. Hell he attacked the displays at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. He had installed the controversial deployment of QR codes instructing park visitors to report signs or exhibits deemed "anti-American."
He has attacked free speech almost daily. His game is more than obvious with Comey or anyone who opposes him.
I despise partisan politics. When something is obviously wrong I could care less what party is doing it.
trump will go down as the worst president this country has ever had. Not because he is republican but because of him and who he is. If the OP had focused on the fossil fuel extraction, mining, and commercial use aspect, I'd likely have taken a different approach. I agree with you on lobbyists. I think you are more consumed with hatred for Trump than Trump is consumed with hatred for Obama at the moment. Trump is playing politics. Trump is too busy counting his money to hate an individual that acts as a useful political tool/target. Honestly, I get your hate. I'm not a fan. I just think your hate bleeds into a negative bias that has an effect on your objectivity at times. But negative biases are a part of the human condition. Unfortunately, Trump going down as the worst depends on when the history is written. Could get worse. (That's probably my bias towards politicians.)
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Re: Our National Parks
Bull_Dawg
05/13/26 07:04 PM
I could get on board with this argument if there was at least a shred of consistency. Looking back over this admin, saving money and promoting efficiency has largely just been words. Accumulation of federal debt has accelerated since the beginning of this admin. OBBBA is adding significant debt that will continue to accelerate, costs of this war that shows no signs of slowing or stopping (quite the opposite at this point), repercussions of the tariff nonsense, so on and so forth. It appears that the outcome of DOGE (this feels like decades ago) is going to end up being a cost with having to hire back significant portions of the federal workforce laid off. But your comment only applies if you are [1] Paying attention to details. [2] Not trying to come up with contrarian angles on every topic. 1. Saying what I would like was not referring to what those in power are doing. So it really depends on if the details being paid attention to are the ones being talked about. 2. When every topic is presented from one extreme or the other, I guess trying to look at things rationally seems contrarian. Thinking people are going too far towards one extreme on a specific topic does not mean I agree with everything the entity they are arguing against does. I wasn't arguing for the government's (lack of) "efficiency." I agree with you, oober, that the current administration's approach has been a mess. Still, I think less big government is ultimately good if done correctly. Yes, slack would have to be picked up locally in many instances. Yet, I think most issues are better handled with local knowledge than through sweeping bureaucracy. Just because the government is doing a horrible job of something doesn't mean the original/underlying idea was wrong. Efficiency is good, everything else being equal. I think the idea of national parks is great. I think I have different ideas than others what that should look like. I'd do away with the commercialized/touristy stuff altogether. That's my preference. I don't need shrines to America or someone's version of a history lesson. I prefer being able to appreciate things as they are rather than being told what I should be taking away. Others are welcome to feel differently. While I think natural /"historical" areas should be preserved, I don't think giant blocks are necessarily the best way to do it. They do need a certain minimum size, but 1.36 million acres in one go seems overkill to me. I am for creating more smaller, protected natural areas. I don't mean that we should just make them all smaller, but that we should go back towards populated areas and create/designate more, but with an eye towards balance and locality over sweeping, near impossible to manage monstrosities. I just feel like focusing on a percentage reduction doesn't really tell me anything without knowing the specifics of what the numbers actually represent on the ground. If the actual Buttes were no longer in the park that would be a problem for me. If the outlying area that possibly shouldn't have been included in the first place which blocked pre-existing commercial traffic was reduced, I'd feel differently.
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Re: Defense
IrishDawg42
05/13/26 06:40 PM
We have a very talented defense, the question is on our new DC Mike Rutenberg!  That's what worries me....
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