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lemmiwinks

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Everything posted by lemmiwinks

  1. I would have to see him on another team before I would say he gets burnt alot....Det has no other support for the guy...One good one the rest suck..DL below avg...S and other CB...Below avg..Coaching....Do they even have coaches? What Im looking at is I have never seen him burnt right from the get go....I have seen him burnt when the QB has an hour to throw
  2. I really hope a 2nd round OT isnt our starting LT next year
  3. He should be the only RB you guys should be interested in...Him and BJ in the back field at the same time That makes the most powerful run game in the NFL!!!
  4. The only RB i want in the draft is Brian Leonard!!
  5. WOW....His right foot is so big they gave it a jersey
  6. lemmiwinks

    Eli

    Im not quite sure i know anyone who hasnt payed for sex in one way or another....
  7. I would love if we drafted Brian Leonard
  8. You say that like its a bad thing
  9. He isn't as much of a psycho as his brother
  10. Lets post some positive stuff on the Giants QB 2nd in NFL in 2nd half TD passes 0 INT's inside the 20 4th quarter + he completes 63.2% 3rd NFL in 4quarter TD passes
  11. Wow... I guess you dont speak "joking"
  12. Well he did do a good job with his son Carson
  13. That has got to be the best hurry up offence that I have ever seen
  14. Arnt you one of the guys that wanted to hire Fox, Belichick, Weiss, Payton....All ex Giants coaches....How many time did we wish we had hired from with in?
  15. When a QB loses faith in his blind side protection its all over....I don't care who the QB is...You could see that Eli became less confident in the protection and started to rush his passes. If you remember the Bears game we were doing good on O then Luke when down early and Eli when to shit
  16. Plucking Eagles' Spagnuolo BY ARTHUR STAPLE Tom Coughlin needed to interview only one candidate to find his new defensive coordinator: Steve Spagnuolo. Now Coughlin hopes the longtime Eagles defensive position coach can bring some of the aggressiveness and zeal from the system run by Philadelphia head coach Andy Reid and defensive coordinator Jim Johnson to a Giants defense that was never healthy and underperformed the past two seasons. "You guys have seen the Giants-Eagles games the last few years. That's the bulk of what I can bring, what I do," Spagnuolo said yesterday. "What I know about [the Giants' personnel] is real exciting." Tim Lewis, whom Coughlin fired after three seasons as defensive coordinator and who was hired as secondary coach for Carolina last week, had lots of weapons for an aggressive defense at his disposal, but the Giants never found a consistent way to attack opposing quarterbacks. Lewis took the fall for numerous injuries. The Giants lost six defensive starters to injury last season, including 2005 Pro Bowl ends Michael Strahan and Osi Umenyiora. Spagnuolo, 46, who has coached the defensive backs and linebackers in his eight seasons with the Eagles, knows how to get to a quarterback. He also helped turn Jeremiah Trotter into a perennial Pro Bowler and got good performances out of former Giant Dhani Jones and little-known Omar Gaither. His intimate knowledge of the Eagles doesn't hurt, either. "It was just such an attractive commodity to have someone who's worked with guys like Andy Reid and Jim Johnson," Coughlin said. "His philosophy is an aggressive philosophy." That is music to the ears of a couple of Giants defensive players. "We don't want a passive coordinator with the type of players we have," said LaVar Arrington, who added that the rehab on his torn Achilles tendon is ahead of schedule. "If [spagnuolo] is coming in with that Eagles style, that get-after-it style, that's a good thing for us." Coughlin, who arrived in Mobile, Ala., yesterday for Senior Bowl practices, said he will retain all of the defensive assistants.
  17. Eagles assistant bolts Reid's nest Linebackers coach Steve Spagnuolo has moved on. He's now the Giants' defensive coordinatior. By Bob Brookover Inquirer Staff Writer A byproduct of winning in the NFL has always been losing the people who helped you win. Eagles coach Andy Reid has learned to live with that fact, and he did so again yesterday when linebackers coach Steve Spagnuolo left Philadelphia to take the job of defensive coordinator with the NFC East rival New York Giants. Spagnuolo, 47, had worked with the Eagles since Reid took over as head coach in 1999. He initially held the title of defensive assistant, then was in charge of the defensive backs from 2001 to '03 before becoming the linebackers coach in 2004 after Ron Rivera left to become the defensive coordinator with the Chicago Bears. He replaces Tim Lewis, who was fired as the Giants' defensive coordinator shortly after New York's playoff loss to the Eagles on Jan. 7. After thanking Giants head coach Tom Coughlin for giving him the chance to be a defensive coordinator, Spagnuolo talked extensively about leaving the Eagles. "I want to thank publicly Andy Reid, [Jeffrey] Lurie, Joe Banner and Jim Johnson," Spagnuolo said during a conference call. "That is one class, great organization. I'll miss them all." Spagnuolo is the third assistant coach to leave Reid's staff to become an NFL coordinator with another team. The Eagles also lost Dave Toub, who became the Bears' special-teams coordinator in 2004. Reid lost offensive coordinator Brad Childress last off-season when he became the Minnesota Vikings' head coach. Childress could be courting Eagles secondary coach Sean McDermott to be his defensive coordinator. Mike Tomlin spent last season as the Vikings' defensive coordinator but was named the head coach of the Steelers yesterday. The Giants ranked 25th in yards allowed and 24th in points allowed this season, so Spagnuolo has his work cut out for him. "When you're in the business I'm in, you aspire to be in certain positions, and coordinator was one that I wanted," Spagnuolo said. "There's only 32 of them in this league." Spagnuolo said he had an emotional conversation with Eagles linebacker Jeremiah Trotter yesterday. "I was touched by it, I can tell you that," he said. Reid, who is at the Senior Bowl in Mobile, Ala., this week, traditionally moves quickly when he loses a member of his staff. One in-house candidate is Mike Reed, a Wilmington native who has spent the last four seasons as a defensive assistant and quality control coach. He has assisted Spagnuolo in working with the Eagles' linebackers
  18. The Giants, whose championship hopes this season collapsed when their defense collapsed, turned to their bitter rivals, the Philadelphia Eagles, for a new defensive coordinator. Steve Spagnuolo, the Eagles’ linebackers coach and a defensive assistant for the team for eight years, was hired yesterday to replace the fired Tim Lewis. In a teleconference yesterday, Coach Tom Coughlin said he had researched many potential successors but had interviewed only Spagnuolo. Coughlin spoke from Mobile, Ala., where he is monitoring daily practice sessions for the Senior Bowl. He said he was impressed by Spagnuolo’s achievements with the Eagles. “I was looking for a guy who had an opportunity to work with outstanding people in the league,” Coughlin said, “not just an aggressive system, because the system here has been aggressive. It is a plus that he knows our division, and is also a plus that he comes from a program that has Andy Reid as a head coach and Jim Johnson as a defensive coordinator.” Spagnuolo, 47, played wide receiver at Springfield (Mass.) College. He graduated in 1981 and started his coaching career a year later. He joined the Eagles in 1999 as a defensive assistant/quality control coach.
  19. rong english is more gooder
  20. Stoopid Eagles.com/assholes Steve Spagnuolo Position: Linebackers Coach Years With Eagles: 8 Steve Spagnuolo is in his third season as the club's linebackers coach. During his first two seasons in that role, Spagnuolo (pronounced SPAG-no-low) oversaw two consecutive Pro Bowl berths by middle linebacker Jeremiah Trotter, who led the Eagles in 2005 with 169 tackles, including 13 for a loss. In fact, the Eagles led the NFL with 60 tackles for a loss in 2005 and 25 of those were made by the linebacking corps. Spagnuolo originally joined the Eagles coaching staff in 1999 as a defensive assistant/quality control coach working specifically with the team's safeties. Two years later, he was promoted to defensive backs coach, where he spent three seasons tutoring the likes of Pro Bowlers Brian Dawkins, Bobby Taylor, Troy Vincent and Michael Lewis. In those three seasons, the Eagles pass defense ranked in the NFL's top 10 in three telling statistical categories: 3rd down defense, touchdown passes allowed and net yards per pass attempt. Now in his eighth season as a defensive assistant, Spagnuolo is the only coach to work under defensive coordinator Jim Johnson during his entire tenure in Philadelphia. During six of his seven campaigns with the Eagles, he has coached a player who earned Pro Bowl honors. Prior to joining the Eagles, the 46-year-old Spagnuolo spent 15 seasons in the collegiate coaching ranks and two years in NFL Europe. He spent the 1998 season as the defensive coordinator of NFL Europe's Frankfurt Galaxy, who finished second in the league in total defense en route to a World Bowl appearance. In fact, four of the six linebackers and nine of the 11 defensive starters he tutored went on to play in the NFL. Spagnuolo also served as the defensive line and special teams coach of the Barcelona Dragons in 1992. A native of Grafton, MA, Spagnuolo has served as a defensive coordinator on the college level with Connecticut and Maine. In addition, he served as assistant coach at Massachusetts, Lafayette, Rutgers and Bowling Green. Prior to his stint at Maine, Spagnuolo spent four months as a scout for the San Diego Chargers under then-general manager Bobby Beathard. His first NFL experience came in 1983 as an intern with the Washington Redskins under then-assistant general manager Charlie Casserly. Born December 21, 1959 in Whitinsville, MA, Spagnuolo attended Grafton (MA) HS. He earned a bachelor's degree in physical education from Springfield (MA) College and a master's degree in sports management from the University of Massachusetts. He and his wife, Maria, reside in Philadelphia.
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