The Bears have signed Butt Fumble Sanchez, presumably as a backup to Mike Glennon.
Warning: The posts of this forum member may contain trigger language which may be considered offensive to some.
Music was better when ugly people were allowed to make it.
Jay Cutler career stats:
Games: 139 Record:68-71-0, Cmp% 61.9, Yds 32467, Y/A 7.2, TD 208, Int 146
Mark Sanchez:
Games: 77 Record:37-35-0, Cmp% 56.7, Yds 15219, Y/A 6.7, TD 86, Int 86
You should know by now that my disdain for Jay has nothing to do with statistics.
I wanted to be a Monk, but I never got the chants.
RBP (03-27-2017)
NFL owners approve the Raiders moving to Las Vegas
RBP (03-27-2017)
Jay Cutler still lacking interest from QB-needy teams
Tony Romo's retirement to the broadcast booth took one quarterback out of this offseason's game of musical chairs.
Even with a dearth of capable quarterbacks on the open market and few pro-ready signal-callers in the draft, one man can't sniff a gig: Jay Cutler.
NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport reported Wednesday on Good Morning Football that Cutler's market is almost zilch.
"I've had a lot of conversations with general managers or head coaches talking about where these quarterbacks are going to land and it is unbelievable that Cutler's name rarely, if ever, comes up," Rapoport said.
With Romo out of the mix and Houston heading into the draft with injury-prone Tom Savage as the starter, the Texans have been pondered as a landing spot for Cutler. But Rapoport reiterated that the Texans don't view Cutler as a fit -- he added Colin Kaepernick is also not a fit for Houston.
If Romo's retirement can't get Cutler into the game, it might never happen. That could leave the 12-year pro with one option: retirement.
"There's really only a couple starting quarterback spots that are even available," Rapoport said. "The Browns would be one. It doesn't seem like Cutler would be interested in going there. The Texans would be another. It doesn't seem they have interest in him. So Cutler may face a similar situation, actually, to Tony Romo, which is to just chill, wait, and if something happens -- some horrible camp injury, like what happened to Teddy Bridgewater last year -- maybe Cutler's name would be called. But I do know he's talked to people that he knows pretty well about retirement being a possibility. He actually might have no choice."
If the call never comes for Smokin' Jay, at least he'll walk away having given us one more lasting image.
http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap300...-qbneedy-teams
I wanted to be a Monk, but I never got the chants.
Teh One Who Knocks (04-10-2017)
RBP (04-10-2017)
This is the lasting image to which he was referring.
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Jay Cutler still doesn't have a job. There are reports he might not even want one.
One could surmise this to be a time of great introspection for the man. For Cutler's entire life, football has dominated his being. What happens when you remove the compartment of your existence that, both internally and externally, defined you? The thing that made you ... you?
"'Good times, no tan lines. Let the sea set you free' - @tony2coats," Cutler's wife, Kristin Cavallari, wrote on Instagram.
http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap300...ing-jay-cutler
I wanted to be a Monk, but I never got the chants.
RBP (04-11-2017)
CBS 4 Denver
DENVER (CBS4) – While breaking records as a member of the Denver Broncos, Peyton Manning made “Omaha” famous. Now he’s revealing why.
We certainly appreciate all the love from #PeytonManning #OmahaOmaha
— Official Omaha Info (@VisitOmaha) January 12, 2014
The future Hall of Fame quarterback’s numerous shout outs to the the Nebraska city from the line of scrimmage were a bit of a mystery all the way up to and continuing on through to the day of his retirement.
In 2014 Manning kept a straight face when he asked about it.
“I’ve had a lot of people ask me what ‘Omaha’ means,” Manning said. “It’s a run play, but it could be a pass play, or a play-action pass, depending on a couple of things. The wind, which way we’re going, the quarter and the jerseys we’re wearing. It varies from play to play.”
Which, of course, got people more confused.
But now, more than a year removed from his retirement day, news is emerging that Manning has spilled the beans about what “Omaha” actually meant.
“Omaha was just an indicator word,” Manning said at a recent marketing summit. “It was a trigger word that meant we had changed the play, there was low time on the clock and the ball needed to be snapped.”
RBP (04-14-2017)
We knew that Peyton. It meant you were calling an audible. That's not the question. Why "Omaha"?
I wanted to be a Monk, but I never got the chants.