You're too busy "waiting for the pads to come on".I don't care.
To lose to the Cowboys again? Wouldn't that be a tasty morsel?
Oh! My nips just got hard!
I dunno... Buffalo is on the rise. They have some talent on that team now.He's an idiot, and he'll lose in Buffalo (of course), but can't fault him for bashing our simplistic and predictable offense of the past.
He'll blame the game plan, or the team wants balls going to other receivers, or something.As much as he is talking, he better hope he balls out. If not then he is going to look like a fool.
LOL! Right? I love former players that the team had to give them more than one chance to make it in the NFL to dog them repeatedly.Last Beasley thread people got offended by something he didn't actually say. Now he's criticizing JG/Linehan's offense - a popular thing here - and they're offended again.
Cole Beasley expects to get more opportunities in Buffalo
Posted by Charean Williams on June 10, 2019, 4:40 PM EDT
https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.c...expects-to-get-more-opportunities-in-buffalo/
For seven seasons, Cole Beasley was beloved in Dallas. He grew up in a suburb north of Dallas, played at SMU and became a big part of the Cowboys offense despite being only 5 foot 8 and going undrafted.
Now, though, he is the enemy.
Unafraid to speak his mind on social media or in interviews, Beasley has rubbed Cowboys Nation the wrong way since he signed a four-year, $29 million deal with the Bills. Dallas offered Beasley a contract but didn’t value the position as much as the Bills did, with the Cowboys instead signing free agent Randall Cobb to a one-year, $5 million deal
I mean if you listen to what he's saying he is basically ripping the old offensive scheme which is what everyone else here is doing. Maybe if he stuck around here then he would see more opportunities with Moore running the offence. But it's all a moot point now. Basically it's just another validation that Scott Linehan needed to go
He's actually more specifically ripping on the organization, I think.
Either way, though, his most productive season will still be one from his time in Dallas when his career is all said and done.