At which point you should have approached the board and modified her writing, so that it instead read "I suck sweaty donkey balls" with an arrow pointed at your professor...
Oddly enough, and I didn't realize it until I read about it today, A.Thomas was on the sidelines for most of the game yesterday and only gave an "ask the coach" answer when questioned about it. I would think that with the Colts down to 2 WRs and running the ball well, he would have been the perfect cover for Dallas Clark since he could cover and help out with the run defense. (By the way, how do the Colts only carry 4 WRs?)
He opened his mouth to the media and said some things about Baltimore that got Ray Lewis all fired up. As a consequence, he's in Belichick's doghouse at the moment.
I don't think that's the case at all. Does it sound like BB to put punishing one of his best players who got involved in some bullshit bitch fight between former teammates ahead of doing everything possible to achieve his main objective: to beat the Colts and get the inside track on home field? For one reason or another he thought that Thomas wouldn't fit well into the game plan or (I haven't seen this mentioned) maybe A.T has been injured but not on the injury report.
Thank god I don't have any bandwagon jumping Pats fans or Red Sawx fans in my family. The only 2 New England fans I know are pretty tame for fans who root for those two teams.
No, I get that. I know sports fans are biased and that you guys dislike Bill for turning down your HC job and making a divisional rival great. But it's humurous that literally everything he does (even a perfectly normal handshake with an opposing coach) is cited as evidence that he's Hannibal Lecter. It's getting to the point where I'm expecting to hear that he's a litterbug.
He is. What do you think he does with those sleeves he cuts off of the sweatshirt? :lol: Believe it about Adalius. Saying something that ends up on another team's bulletin board is a cardinal sin to Bill Belichick. It's a really big deal to him.
They gave Rodney Harrison the job of defending Dallas Clark... and he did a good enough job that I'm not second guessing the choice. Clark ended with 2 receptions for 15 yards, with Rodney getting an interception. A. Thomas did get in on occasion to spell the defensive ends, to keep the pass rush fresh.