old-timer wrote:JSPB22 wrote:At the end of training camp, I don't remember anyone complaining about our draft, or the fact that we had picked up Jason Taylor.
Then you don't have a very good memory. With regard to Jason Taylor, many of us called it a bad move from day one. Many of us howled when a team with so many glaring needs drafted a TE when this is one of the few positions at which we are well set. Second tight ends can be picked up as FA's, and Todd Yoder is perfectly suitable as a second TE in any case. Davis may or may not be a good NFL TE, but surely any FO with any competence could have traded the pick to a team which ACTUALLY NEEDED a TE, in exchange for a player on the OL or DL who actually may have done us some good. Common sense, but that's way to much to ask from OUR FO.
There was some grumbling about the price, but no one could argue about what he brought to the table.
That's a very dubious proposition. Trading two picks, one of them a 2nd rounder, for a 34-year old DE is unarguable? I beg to differ. Many people, including myself, argued that it was a poor decision at the time and constantly afterward, until our point was made manifestly obvious and prove on the field and in reality. I think all of us who so argued have been vindicated.
I'll respond to these first two together, since the second is predicated by the first. You are
still grumbling about the price, not what he brought to the table. He was the current NFL active sacks leader, and hadn't missed a game in 10 seasons. There was no way of knowing at the time that would not continue to be a sack machine. I'll give you the TE pick, but I still don't remember people complaining about the draft at the time. Even though we already had

ey, people thought Davis was a good prospect, and Kelly and Thomas were highly touted prospects as well.
old-timer wrote:JSPB22 wrote:Then the wheels came off with one freak play against the Rams, and suddenly all the naysayers came out of the woodwork.
That's not fair. I was a naysayer long before the Rams game. I was just temporarily in remission when we went 6-2, hoping I had been proved wrong. I wasn't, apparenty (unfortunately). As managers, Vinny and Danny suck. This is not a theory to be argued, but a fact (check our record for the last 10 years) to be explained. Saying they suck is no more anti-Redskin than saying that Brandon Lloyd sucks. And the contention of some to the contrary is insulting and stupid.
I was talking about this particular season. By the time we were 6-2 the Rams game was three games in the past. By your own admission, when we had finished with Dallas and Philly and were 4-1 (lines of my post you left out), you were quiet in your naysaying. Like me, you probably thought we were looking pretty strong, and I doubt you were saying we sucked. And, to use your own words, your contention to the contrary is insulting and stupid.
old-timer wrote:JSPB22 wrote:The armchair GMs knew it all along. They would have done things differently, and the Skins would be poised to win their fourth SuperBowl right now if we had only done what they now knew was the right course of action. Stuff happens! Deal with it. If there was someone who knew every right move to make, their team would win the SB every year. Here's a news flash: Only one team wins the SB each year, and no team has ever won it more than twice in a row.
So your point is what, that we should be satisfied with the chronic mediocrity that Snyderatto has brought to this team, because 'only one team can win the Super Bowl'? Is that your point? Or would you like to re-phrase that?
No, my point is that hindsight is 20/20, and if you are so prescient to know all the right moves you would be working for an NFL franchise, making millions of dollars, and your team would win the SB every year. All your bitching and moaning here at THN won't do a thing to help the Skins win, and it grows tiresome. Every year there are 31 teams that aren't satisfied with the way their season ended.
old-timer wrote:JSPB22 wrote:Do I wish we were still playing? Damn straight! But I'm not going to second guess every move the franchise makes if we don't win every game.
I believe that's what the rhetoriticians call a 'straw man' argument.
JSPB22 wrote:Don't you think they want to win every bit as much as you want them to?
Yes, I do - but primarily for gratification of their own egos - not for the good of the Washington Redskins franchise. And that's why Snyderatto is a failure as an NFL FO - Snyderatto would rather lose their way than win it by some other person's way. There's a lack of humility there that is staggering. Cooke was at least as smart as Snyder in business, and he knew damn well not to dabble in things he knew nothing about. He hired a GM and let the GM run the franchise. Snyder thinks this whole franchise is nothing but his personal toy, ala George Steinbrenner. And as long as he continues to run this franchise as his personal hobby horse, we had all better get used to failed seasons and reduced expectations. That's the only way we can remain Redskin fans and not be disillusioned.
And I agree with all of that, but I was talking about the team, and the coaches, not the FO. Still, what do you propose as a solution to our ownership problem?
old-timer wrote:JSPB22 wrote:People make mistakes, and you have to take the good with the bad, and hope for the best.
So if they keep making stupid mistakes and decisions year after year, we should all be good and just 'hope for the best'? Puhleese.
No, by all means continue to go on whining about it and feeling sorry for yourself, and see how far that gets you.