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Paul G's avatar

The overall continuity on offense from 2022 is encouraging. If nothing else, it tells me that JSPC like the roster. The defense is a different story, but...I like the commitment to young players, the boldness of turning over the interior DL, and the amassing of a physical type at EDGE. They may not have a Nick Bosa, but there’s a lot of interchangeable guys with speed and athleticism. Over the course of a 17-game season, the pass rush should give fits to a lot of OLs, plus it should be fit heading into the playoffs.

It’s hard to overstate the importance of depth and health in the modern NFL. The league originated with a 12-game season and no playoffs; today, the Super Bowl winner could play as many as 21 games. Yes, there have been great strides in travel conditions, fitness training, and overall health care* since then, but the point remains. That JSPC appear to grasp this critical point bodes well for the team this year and in the future.

* I read somewhere that medical historians have concluded that health care became a net plus only in the 1950s, when the widespread deployment of vaccines combined with greater understanding of public health and advancements in treatment learned during WW2. Before that, doctors and hospitals were killing more people than they saved. As Bones McCoy one told Jim Kirk, “20th Century medicine was barbaric!”

https://youtu.be/UtllgbUiTt0?si=TylfD7f-NX2z7rL6

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zezinhom400's avatar

I think the Russell Wilson trade was such a seismic re-set button that we really need to start tracking vs the 2022 roster -- all the "spending" (draft picks and salary cap) associated with turning the page and resetting (rather than rebuilding) the 'Hawks. Much less worried about 2021 survivors than 2022-2023 survivors -- we've essentially shot our wad of draft picks and salary cap now, would be hugely disappointed to be jettisoning players like the Pats have recently done. On the other hand, delighted to see how many of the 2022 and 2023 classes are on the 53.

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