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Damn, Jimmy G this is some serious good quarterbacking.

Do Not Sell My Personal Information
This was pretty predictable and anyone who was comparing JG to other Brady backups has lost some QB evaluation points in my book of scouts

Garrapollo was always quite obviously leaps and bounds ahead of the undrafted free agents that people lazily compared him to
 
Not the left
Yes I totally agree
Daisy-Ridley-family-siblings-sister-Kika-Rose-Ridley-1.jpg
 
No clue who these girls are but I’d run a sexual obstacle course on them until the floor looked like someone spilled a Family sized bowl of egg drop soup in the room.
 
It's like picking between one of the Ridley sisters
1qo4wufa8g2z.jpg

Judging by that picture it's the right, but I can't see other important factors like the ass.


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Two weeks before the Nov. 1 trading deadline, Belichick met with Kraft to discuss the quarterback situation. According to staffers, the meeting ran long, lasting half the day and pushing back Belichick's other meetings. The office was buzzing. The meeting ended with a clear mandate to Belichick: trade Garoppolo because he would not be in the team's long-term plans, and then, once again, find the best quarterback in the draft and develop him. Belichick was furious and demoralized, according to friends. But in the end, he did what he asks of his players and coaches: He did his job. One morning in late October, Belichick texted San Francisco 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan and asked him to call. Belichick had long admired Kyle's father, Mike, who not only had been one of the NFL's smartest tacticians but had also personally defended Belichick to commissioner Roger Goodell during the Spygate scandal. At the combine this past February, Kyle, weeks into the 49ers job after being the offensive coordinator for the Falcons, met with Belichick for hours to learn from his team's humiliating Super Bowl loss. Belichick believed that Garoppolo would excel under Shanahan, and when he and Shanahan connected on the phone, Belichick offered the quarterback for a second-rounder.

It was a steal, leaving Patriots staffers stunned and confused. Why would the game's shrewdest long-term strategist trade two backup quarterbacks in a two-month span when his starter was 40 years old and banged up? And why did Belichick practically give away a quarterback whom the coaches saw as a potential top-10 player for much less than he could have gotten last spring? It made no sense. Belichick handled the trade as he always does, by not explaining it to the coaches and by burying them so deep in work that they didn't have time to gossip.

http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/pag...-brady-bill-belichick-internal-power-struggle
 
Realistically, the Browns had

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"Belichick, according to the report, has "taken pride" in Garoppolo's hot start with the 49ers and also essentially took the "find him a good home" philosophy when it came to trading Garoppolo."

Cleveland is not a good home.
 
"Belichick, according to the report, has "taken pride" in Garoppolo's hot start with the 49ers and also essentially took the "find him a good home" philosophy when it came to trading Garoppolo."

Cleveland is not a good home.

Don't tell Jamie Collins that.
 
Also Joe Thomas talks a lot like a player who's done. Could be wrong though but if he is that's the second biggest hole on the roster at LT.
 
Also Joe Thomas talks a lot like a player who's done. Could be wrong though but if he is that's the second biggest hole on the roster at LT.

Mike McGlinchey could be an option at 4.
 

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