Ray Lewis and Ed Reed WOW!!!
I can hardly wait for the three Amigos to get this team stocked with players of this caliber. Not only will it be fun to watch, it will be fun to brag on how good our team is. The day that we will be favorites to win our division will be the day I may purchase my first season ticket. Even though these guys are gonna be tough to beat, they are beatable. I just hope we get no one injured in this quest to kick the sh*t out of those birds.
This is a FanPost and does not necessarily reflect the views of Arrowhead Pride's writers or editors. It does reflect the views of this particular fan though, which is as important as the views of Arrowhead Pride writers or editors.
9 comments
|
0 recs |
Do you like this story?
Comments
Hey!
The answer: Larry Johnson, Jamaal Charles and Dwayne Bowe
A fancy rock video can make anyone seem good. Players’ abilities peak at some point. Some of the Ravens players have been good in the past. But before and after the peak, players don’t play as well. Until Sunday show me otherwise, I believe the Chiefs have a chance to grow into a team that can beat anyone on any given Sunday. This week at the Ravens included. Are the Ravens in one of their declines as shown by W-L over the past few seasons? Are the Chiefs far up enough their improvement curve to win this Sunday? Possibly, yes.
I’m impressed with the way LJ, DBowe, Charles, Vrabel, Hali, Cassel and others have worked hard to be prepared for this week. I’m not impressed with fancy videos of opponents playing games in the past. But if we must go down that road, here’s a few shots of Larry. And this year, he may be serious again. Go Chiefs!
<img src=“”425" height="344">"/>
by sunny D on Sep 9, 2009 11:43 PM CDT reply actions 1 recs
Cheap Shot
Speaking of videos, Raven LB Antwan Barnes lays a cheap shot on a punter from the blind side in this video.
Not Worried...
Like Sunny said, this crap doesn’t matter. Impressive, sure, but two players does not a defense make. Sure, they’re damn good, but I believe with Haley’s mentality and spit-fire attitude, we can pounce on these guys early and then bury them with our defense. Counting down the days ’til kickoff…
Put this in your pipe and smoke it:
1. Chiefs will be at least 8-8 and vie for division champs
2. DJ will break out and finally have his year
3. LJ returns to form
4. DBowe drops will reduce
With Ray and Ed out there.
We have a legitimate shot at winning every game we play. Ed Reed has not lost a step, he has a nerve impingement in his neck, which it took him a little time to get used to last season, but once he learned how to play with it, we all saw what happened. Ray Lewis has one of the most dominant defensive linemen in front of him in Haloti Ngata and we love it!
I am honestly a diehard fan of my Ravens, I love them, the same way you guys love your Chiefs. With that said I’ll admit I dont make a point to research other teams as much as I do my own, Its more of an obsession issue, rather than research for me. But with that said, what happened with Glenn Dorsey last season? He was the talk of the draft, I was sold on seeing him all over sports center highlights and whatnot, and I understand a D-lineman isnt going to step in and automatically be a great pplayer (Haloti Ngata being the exception.) but how has he been? I didnt hear anything about him after the draft.
Scott Hines
This is kind of a dead horse issue for us, but since your "company" here's the post -
Most of us think Dorsey is doing just fine, but the media seems to think he is more suited to the 4-3. Historically, his stats for a rookie are better than average:
http://www.arrowheadpride.com/2009/6/27/927352/the-dorsey-thing-again
Negative Ghost Rider the pattern is full...
Thank you.
I mean I love following players, and I guess I just got so caught up in our season last year I kind of put him to the side, even though I had intentions on following him. I mean 50 tackles, a sack and a forced fumble are very solid for a rookie. And considering hes only in his 2nd year, a change shouldnt affect him too much, hes far from his peak, so he can easily adjust.
Scott Hines

by 























