So Henne is free to take the field against the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday and, as coach Tony Sparano puts it, ``cut it loose.'' Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/09/19/1831486/message-to-henne-take-some-shots.html#ixzz0zxKcx3xj
The dude was born to throw a football...it's a no brainer...Let him free, and live or die.. He's learning inside out.
ill take an extension of what we've seen instead of the extreme, but thats the conservative in me comin out...I wanna eventually pound them.
sounds like henne will truly be tested this season. Hope the best for both him and the team and Im so hyped for the game im not even going to sleep hahahaha!!!!
Reading that gave ME a headache. Do this but don't do that, but do this. Be aggressive. Be cautious....wow. I say let him loose, throw caution to the wind (sort of) and see what we can do in our passing game. Conservative passing (just over 5 yards per attempt) isn't going to win any games against the better teams. We have to attack down field - ala Danny boy. We can't continue to be conservative when throwing the rock.
cut him loose. I can live with a int as long he 3TD for 1 int. That why we draft stud defensive players.
That phrase is in my friend's circle vocabulary....so funny, Gotta boy who stands up, shout's it in his best Liam Neason voice, with full accentuation of the consenants, and say's "RELEASE THE KRACKEN''!!... and than beelines it to the John...
Henne showed us last season he can win games for us with his arm, Vikes' secondary is the bunch to do it against because with their front 7 you aren't going to have a heckuva lot of success running the ball. Gotta loosen up their D with the passing game, THEN shove the ball up their gut with R&R Express. The only decent part of the Bills D is their secondary, that's why we were so conservative last week, I think Tony just showed us his game plan for this week.
Sounds like coach and staff are going to take the training wheels off. Henne given Sunday baby...Henne given Sunday. Go Phins!
The big thing is understanding the game situation. Doug Flutie was great at that. Nobody would claim he was a great NFL QB, but he was still able to win some big games just b/c he understood when to take the risk. I once heard him talk about how before each play he would think about how risky he should be on that play. He was very good at his game management and could estimate how many more chances he would have if they were behind or how much time he could run off if they were ahead.