The Sioux Falls Storm scored 26 unanswered points to defeat the Green Bay Blizzard 61-42 in the Indoor Football League’s United Conference championship for a second straight season on Saturday.
The Blizzard (12-4) led three times and scored on its first eight possessions before Xavier Jordan returned a Donovan Porterie interception 10 yards for a touchdown to give the Storm a 48-36 lead with 1 minute, 24 seconds remaining in the third quarter.
After making his first five field-goal attempts of the game, Green Bay kicker Adrian Trevino then missed a 52-yarder and the Blizzard was stopped on downs on its next drive while Sioux Falls (16-0) scored TDs.
Not including its kneel down at the end of the game, the Storm scored TDs on eight of its 10 offensive possessions. Quarterback Chris Dixon completed 14 of 20 passes for 231 yards with five TDs and added two more scores on the ground.
Blizzard running back La’Ron Council rushed for 83 yards on 24 carries and had two scores, including one on the opening drive of the second half that gave Green Bay a 33-28 lead. Porterie was 12 of 22 for 165 yards with a passing and rushing TD.
The Blizzard, who has lost in a conference championship four of the past six seasons, stopped the Storm on back-to-back series in the first half with a fumble recovery on a kick return and a long missed field goal to stay within 28-26 at the half.
Saturday, June 30, 2012
Calming the Storm
ASHWAUBENON — An Indoor Football League offense averages about 10 possessions per game.
The Green Bay Blizzard likely will to need to score touchdowns on all of them when it plays the Sioux Falls Storm in the United Conference championship game Saturday in Sioux Falls, S.D.
Having already lost to Sioux Falls twice, the Blizzard (12-3) knows it has no room for error against the most efficient and highest-scoring team in the IFL.
“It’s tough to keep pace with that offense,” Blizzard coach Robert Fuller said. “They don’t shoot themselves in the foot, and that’s how they are able to beat a lot of good football teams.”
Read the rest
The Green Bay Blizzard likely will to need to score touchdowns on all of them when it plays the Sioux Falls Storm in the United Conference championship game Saturday in Sioux Falls, S.D.
Having already lost to Sioux Falls twice, the Blizzard (12-3) knows it has no room for error against the most efficient and highest-scoring team in the IFL.
“It’s tough to keep pace with that offense,” Blizzard coach Robert Fuller said. “They don’t shoot themselves in the foot, and that’s how they are able to beat a lot of good football teams.”
Read the rest
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Tale of the tape
A detailed looked at the United Conference
championship between the Blizzard and Storm, analyzing not only this season’s
stats and trends, but also how things have played out in the previous four
meetings over the last two years.
As the numbers show, Sioux Falls is an offensive juggernaut. You also have to remember the Storm’s numbers standout even against a Blizzard team that is no slouch offensively by any means as the No. 3 scoring team in the league.
Overall drive stats through 15 games
Sioux Falls
As the numbers show, Sioux Falls is an offensive juggernaut. You also have to remember the Storm’s numbers standout even against a Blizzard team that is no slouch offensively by any means as the No. 3 scoring team in the league.
Overall drive stats through 15 games
Sioux Falls
Possessions (Not including drives at end of
first half or a game)
162 possessions, 131 TDs, 12 FGs, 7 MFG, 1
Blocked FG, 7 INT, 4 FUMB
Scored TDs on 81 percent of its drives
Green Bay
Possessions (Not including drives at end of
first half or game)
170 possessions, 101 TDs, 15 FGs, 14 MFG, 2
Blocked FG, 18 INT, 5 FUMB, 1 Safety, 14 Downs
Scored TDs on 59 percent of its drives
-This
just shows you how efficient Sioux Falls is on its offensive drives. You’ll
also notice the Storm was never stopped on downs this season. It was 61 percent
(54-for-88) at converting on third down and 91 percent (10-for-11) at
converting on fourth down. The lone stop on fourth down ended in an
interception.
Finals
from first four matchups
Storm 57, Blizzard 38 from May 15, 2011
Storm 52, Blizzard 12 from July 9, 2011
Storm 73, Blizzard 43 from Feb. 26, 2012
Storm 66, Blizzard 39 from May 19, 2012
-More
interesting than the finals is the scores heading into the fourth quarter, as
the Storm had a two-touchdown lead by then each time. If the Blizzard is going
to win, it’s going to have to be within one score entering the final stanza.
Combined
stats from four games
Yards-1,208 SF to 764 GB
Sacks-8 SF to 3 GB
Turnovers-7 SF to 4 GB
Pts off TOs-35 SF to 3 GB
3rd Down-11-23 (48%) SF to 11-42 (26%) GB
4th Down-5-5 (100%) SF to 4-10 (40%) GB
-These
pretty much show you how hard it is to get Sioux Falls’ offense off the field.
Also, the sack count is the closest thing to measure QB pressure, but if QB
hits were kept by the IFL, I’d venture to guess the Blizzard has totaled less
than 10 knockdowns against Chris Dixon.
How
offenses did in first-and-goal situations in four games
(Keep in mind first three were played at
Sioux Falls with the narrow end zones)
Sioux Falls
15 first-and-goal opportunities (14 TDs, 1 FG)
G1-2 (2TDs)
G2-7 (6TDs, 1 FG)
G3-3 (3TDs)
G4-3 (3TDs)
Green Bay
13 opportunities (5 TDs, 3 FGs, INT, 2 FUMB,
2 DOWNS)
G1-4 (2 FGs, DOWNS, INT)
G2-2 (2 FUMB)
G3-3 (2TDs, DOWNS)
G4-4 (3TDs, FG)
-Given
how shallow the end zones are at the Sioux Falls Arena, the success rate on
first-and-goal situations will be huge. Even though the Blizzard is a run-heavy
offense and has had a lot of success inside the 10, the shallow end zones mean
defenders will be in more of an enclosed area and the threat of the play-action
pass won’t be there the closer it gets to the goal line.
Possessions
in the first four games
Sioux Falls
G1-12 possessions (8 TDs, 1 FG, 3 Stops)
G2-10 possessions (7 TDs, FG, 2 Stops)*Doesn’t
include long MFG at end of first half
G3-10 possessions (9 TDs, FG)*" "
G4-10 possessions (9TDs, 1 Stop)*" "
Total: 33 TDs on 42 possessions (79%)
Green Bay
G1-13 possessions (3 TDs, 6 FGs, 4 Stops)
G2-11 possessions (TD, 2 FGs, 8 Stops)
G3-12 possessions (6 TDs, 1 FG, 5 Stops)
G4-11 possessions (5 TDs, 1 FG, 5 Stops)
Total: 15 TDs on 47 possessions (32%)
-This
just shows you how efficient the Storm has been offensively against the
Blizzard on a drive-by-drive basis.
The
B.J. Hill factor
While he has never taken one back for a score
against Sioux Falls, B.J. Hill has had ample opportunities for kickoff returns
against the Storm, who haven’t been hesitant to kick it to him like most teams are.
Game 1-4 returns for 67 yards
Game 2-4 returns for 29 yards
Game 3-4 returns for 78 yards
Game 4-5 returns for 86 yards
Final
analysis
After going through all the gaudy numbers
above, Saturday’s game is going to come down to the big guys up front who don’t
have any real measurable statistics – the offensive linemen. Coach Robert
Fuller said the key to Sioux Falls’ offense is the guys protecting Chris Dixon.
In order for the Blizzard to win, its going to have to get pressure on the
three-time league MVP.
Meanwhile, the Blizzard offensive line really
has to have its best game of the season, which is really saying something
considering how dominant it has been all season. Green Bay doesn’t necessarily
need to rush for over 100 yards, but it needs to average about 4 yards per
carry and keep quarterback Donovan Porterie upright in the pocket.
Something else to keep in mind is Green Bay
has never had a defensive or special teams’ TD against Sioux Falls. It has 14
D/STs scores on the season and maybe are do for one against the Storm that
could change the momentum of the game.
Sunday, June 24, 2012
Blizzard puts away Edge in final 6 minutes
ASHWAUBENON — The Green Bay Blizzard got its wish.
The Blizzard earned a third shot at the undefeated Sioux Falls Storm by defeating the Bloomington Edge for a third time this season in the quarterfinals of the Indoor Football League playoffs on Saturday.
Green Bay’s 51-30 victory over the Edge (10-5) at the Brown County Veterans Memorial Arena in front of 1,470 not only gives it a chance to redeem its two losses to the Storm, but sets up a rematch of last year’s United Conference championship game, which the Blizzard lost 52-12.
Read the rest
The Blizzard earned a third shot at the undefeated Sioux Falls Storm by defeating the Bloomington Edge for a third time this season in the quarterfinals of the Indoor Football League playoffs on Saturday.
Green Bay’s 51-30 victory over the Edge (10-5) at the Brown County Veterans Memorial Arena in front of 1,470 not only gives it a chance to redeem its two losses to the Storm, but sets up a rematch of last year’s United Conference championship game, which the Blizzard lost 52-12.
Read the rest
Thursday, June 21, 2012
Playoff ponderings
La’Run Council
La’Ron Council broke the IFL single-season rushing records for yards (1,040), attempts (256) and touchdowns (32) in a 72-41 victory against Wichita on June 16 by rushing for 148 yards on 30 carries and five TDs.
Council became the eighth player in any indoor league to reach the 1,000-yard plateau (See the list). Marquette Smith of the Green Bay Bombers in 2000 was the first. The last player before Council to accomplish the feat? Fred Jackson, who is now with the Buffalo Bills. That’s a pretty good omen for Council’s future.
Council needed only 45 yards to break the IFL record, which he accomplished midway through the second quarter. However, he was able to get to a 1,000 and break the TD record because Andrew Verboncouer sustained an injury in the team’s walk-through and was held out.
All-IFL teams
With the league downsizing this season, earning a spot on the all-IFL squad was a lot tougher this season with only 16 squads.
Council was an obvious first team choice at running back. Other Blizzard players getting recognized were offensive lineman Seth Smalls and defensive back/kick returner B.J. Hill on the second team.
Hill, the special teams player of the year last season, had limited return opportunities this season. He still returned four kicks and one missed field goal for scores, while also setting a league record for kick return average in a season (23.3 yards).
Getting an Edge
The Blizzard’s playoff opponent on Saturday is a familiar one.
The Blizzard defeated Bloomington twice in a seven-day span this season. It won 69-56 at the Resch Center on April 28 and 34-21 at Bloomington on May 5.
The Edge is led by veteran quarterback Dusty Burk, who came out of retirement this season at age 32 and surpassed the 10,000-yard mark for his career. Burk was third in passing yards (2,849) and fourth in TDs (57) this season in the IFL.
Bloomington also has a dominant defense, which led the league in sacks (40) and forced fumbles (14) in addition to be third with 24 interceptions. However, half of those picks belonged to James Temple, who was released last week (Bloomington Pantagraph article).
The Edge still has three players left on its defense who earned league honors, including defensive end Jeff Sobol, linebacker Ameer Ismail and defensive lineman Antonio Ficklin, a former Blizzard player. Ismail led the league with 167 tackles this season.
The interesting thing about Bloomington is it only played a total of six teams over the course of a 14-game season. Only three of those games were against teams who finished with a winning record and all three resulted in losses (two against Green Bay, one against Wichita).
Receiving help
The Blizzard has run into a rash of injuries at wide receiver. After Desmond Tardy was placed on season-ending IR two weeks ago, Bryan Pray sustained a separated shoulder late in the game against Wichita that ends his season.
With Pray being placed on IR, the Blizzard signed Daryl Robinson out of Temple this week. Robinson was briefly with the Lehigh Valley Steelhawks at the start of the season.
Playoff history
La’Ron Council broke the IFL single-season rushing records for yards (1,040), attempts (256) and touchdowns (32) in a 72-41 victory against Wichita on June 16 by rushing for 148 yards on 30 carries and five TDs.
Council became the eighth player in any indoor league to reach the 1,000-yard plateau (See the list). Marquette Smith of the Green Bay Bombers in 2000 was the first. The last player before Council to accomplish the feat? Fred Jackson, who is now with the Buffalo Bills. That’s a pretty good omen for Council’s future.
Council needed only 45 yards to break the IFL record, which he accomplished midway through the second quarter. However, he was able to get to a 1,000 and break the TD record because Andrew Verboncouer sustained an injury in the team’s walk-through and was held out.
All-IFL teams
With the league downsizing this season, earning a spot on the all-IFL squad was a lot tougher this season with only 16 squads.
Council was an obvious first team choice at running back. Other Blizzard players getting recognized were offensive lineman Seth Smalls and defensive back/kick returner B.J. Hill on the second team.
Hill, the special teams player of the year last season, had limited return opportunities this season. He still returned four kicks and one missed field goal for scores, while also setting a league record for kick return average in a season (23.3 yards).
Getting an Edge
The Blizzard’s playoff opponent on Saturday is a familiar one.
The Blizzard defeated Bloomington twice in a seven-day span this season. It won 69-56 at the Resch Center on April 28 and 34-21 at Bloomington on May 5.
The Edge is led by veteran quarterback Dusty Burk, who came out of retirement this season at age 32 and surpassed the 10,000-yard mark for his career. Burk was third in passing yards (2,849) and fourth in TDs (57) this season in the IFL.
Bloomington also has a dominant defense, which led the league in sacks (40) and forced fumbles (14) in addition to be third with 24 interceptions. However, half of those picks belonged to James Temple, who was released last week (Bloomington Pantagraph article).
The Edge still has three players left on its defense who earned league honors, including defensive end Jeff Sobol, linebacker Ameer Ismail and defensive lineman Antonio Ficklin, a former Blizzard player. Ismail led the league with 167 tackles this season.
The interesting thing about Bloomington is it only played a total of six teams over the course of a 14-game season. Only three of those games were against teams who finished with a winning record and all three resulted in losses (two against Green Bay, one against Wichita).
Receiving help
The Blizzard has run into a rash of injuries at wide receiver. After Desmond Tardy was placed on season-ending IR two weeks ago, Bryan Pray sustained a separated shoulder late in the game against Wichita that ends his season.
With Pray being placed on IR, the Blizzard signed Daryl Robinson out of Temple this week. Robinson was briefly with the Lehigh Valley Steelhawks at the start of the season.
Playoff history
The Blizzard is 8-7 in the playoffs,
including 4-2 at home. It would advance to its fifth conference championship
game in its 10-year history with a victory against Bloomington, who is 0-3 in
its previous trips to Green Bay.
The Edge (formerly known as the Extreme) is
2-5 all-time in the playoffs, including 0-3 since the inception of the IFL in
2009.
Playing in the old barn
This will be the first playoff game the
Blizzard has hosted at the Brown County Veterans Memorial Arena. The Resch
Center is being used by the Green Bay Gamblers junior hockey team for tryouts
this week.
The Blizzard played its first game in team
history at the BCA in its home opener this season, which it won 64-12 against
Cedar Rapids on March 9. The last indoor football game played at the BCA prior
to that was the Green Bay Bombers’ final home game in 2000 against the Dayton
Skyhawks in the playoffs.
The BCA holds about 3,000 less people for
indoor football compared to the Resch, so it should seem like a more intimate
feel and make things a little bit louder. The scoreboard hanging a little lower
and a different backdrop might also give B.J. Hill a chance for a return
against veteran kicker Peter Christofilakos.
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Council's record night stokes Blizzard's rout
ASHWAUBENON — It was tough to tell which team was playing for the right to host a playoff game and which one had nothing to gain in postseason seeding on Saturday.
With the No. 2 seed in the United Conference and a home game locked up, the Green Bay Blizzard (11-3) tuned up for the Indoor Football League playoffs with a 72-41 pounding of the Wichita Wild in front of 3,037 fans at the Resch Center in the regular-season finale.
"We wanted to finish strong and put an exclamation mark on the regular season," said Blizzard coach Robert Fuller, whose team will host the Bloomington Edge at Brown County Veterans Memorial Arena at 7 p.m. Saturday.
La'Ron Council provided that exclamation mark by playing his way into the IFL record books.
Read the rest
With the No. 2 seed in the United Conference and a home game locked up, the Green Bay Blizzard (11-3) tuned up for the Indoor Football League playoffs with a 72-41 pounding of the Wichita Wild in front of 3,037 fans at the Resch Center in the regular-season finale.
"We wanted to finish strong and put an exclamation mark on the regular season," said Blizzard coach Robert Fuller, whose team will host the Bloomington Edge at Brown County Veterans Memorial Arena at 7 p.m. Saturday.
La'Ron Council provided that exclamation mark by playing his way into the IFL record books.
Read the rest
Saturday, June 9, 2012
Blizzard breaks franchise-scoring mark
ASHWAUBENON — The Green Bay Blizzard will be at home when it starts the playoffs for a third straight season.
The Blizzard's 89-27 victory over the Reading Express on Friday in front of 2,532 fans at the Resch Center made sure of that.
Green Bay (10-3) broke a franchise record for points scored to secure the No. 2 seed in the United Conference and will host the Bloomington Edge when the Indoor Football League's postseason begins in two weeks.
Read the rest
Just a few additional items to mention that I didn't put in the P-G game article.
-The Blizzard rushed for 168 yards a week after rushing for a franchise-record 177 at Lehigh Valley. Andrew Verboncouer had 73 yards on eight carries, with Council tallying his 77 yards on 15 attempts. Green Bay now has 1,302 rushing yards on the season and can move into third all-time in IFL history with 62 yards next week. The top two teams (Billings in 2009 and Siux Falls in 2011) both had Chris Dixon at quarterback.
-Council now has 892 rushing yards on the season and can break the IFL single-season record with 45 yards against the Wichita Wild in the regular-season finale. His franchise-record five touchdown runs puts him at 27 on the season, which moved him into second in a single season in IFL history , where the league record in is 31. Council is also 16 carries away from breaking that IFL record.
-The Blizzard has yet to have a 100-yard receiver in a game this season, as John Halman had 83 yards, Bryan Pray had 79, Scott Burnoski 45 and Desmond Tardy 28. Those four guys are really unselfish and great blockers in the run game.
The Blizzard's 89-27 victory over the Reading Express on Friday in front of 2,532 fans at the Resch Center made sure of that.
Green Bay (10-3) broke a franchise record for points scored to secure the No. 2 seed in the United Conference and will host the Bloomington Edge when the Indoor Football League's postseason begins in two weeks.
Read the rest
Just a few additional items to mention that I didn't put in the P-G game article.
-The Blizzard rushed for 168 yards a week after rushing for a franchise-record 177 at Lehigh Valley. Andrew Verboncouer had 73 yards on eight carries, with Council tallying his 77 yards on 15 attempts. Green Bay now has 1,302 rushing yards on the season and can move into third all-time in IFL history with 62 yards next week. The top two teams (Billings in 2009 and Siux Falls in 2011) both had Chris Dixon at quarterback.
-Council now has 892 rushing yards on the season and can break the IFL single-season record with 45 yards against the Wichita Wild in the regular-season finale. His franchise-record five touchdown runs puts him at 27 on the season, which moved him into second in a single season in IFL history , where the league record in is 31. Council is also 16 carries away from breaking that IFL record.
-The Blizzard has yet to have a 100-yard receiver in a game this season, as John Halman had 83 yards, Bryan Pray had 79, Scott Burnoski 45 and Desmond Tardy 28. Those four guys are really unselfish and great blockers in the run game.
Friday, June 8, 2012
Running wild
This article for the P-G wasn't posted on its site for some reason and it was cut in half due to space issues of the hard copy version of the paper.
Seth Smalls figured he would need to work on his pass-blocking skills when he decided to give indoor football a try.
After playing in a triple-option offense in high school and a run-oriented attack at Coastal Carolina University, the offensive lineman assumed his experience as a run blocker wouldn’t be utilized much in the 50-yard game.
That was until he met Green Bay Blizzard coach Robert Fuller.
“I thought the indoor game was nothing but passing,” Smalls said. “I get here and coach Fuller tells me I need to work on my run blocking if I’m going to play for him.”
Following a 41-33 victory at Lehigh Valley last Saturday where the Blizzard set franchise rushing records for attempts (41) and yards (177), it’s easy to understand why Fuller placed an emphasis on the ground game at the start of the season.
Powered by a rushing attack that averages 94.5 yards per game and features the Indoor Football League’s leading rusher in La’Ron Council, Green Bay (9-3) finds itself in position to clinch a home playoff game tonight when it hosts the Reading Express (2-11) at the Resch Center.
“With coach Fuller being a former offensive lineman, I knew it would be a fun offense to play in,” Blizzard center Shannon Breen said. “Being able to run the ball is huge to show scouts and teams different stuff that you wouldn’t get to do with other teams.”
The Blizzard has a run-to-pass ratio of 58-42 this season and with two games remaining in the regular season has gained 1,134 rushing yards to eclipse the previous franchise record of 953 set in 2010.
“When I first came here I honestly wondered what the fans would think of our offense and how they would receive a balanced attack or a little bit of a run-first type of approach,” Fuller said.
“But I was pleasantly surprised at the amount of people that come up to me after a game and tell me how much they enjoy seeing the running game in indoor football.”
With 815 yards on the season, Council is 122 shy of breaking the IFL record. He rushed for 119 yards last week to break the Blizzard’s single-game record for a third time this season and his 26 carries was a league high this year.
“He is an NFL talent, and I’d be awfully disappointed if he didn’t get a look from somebody,” said Fuller, who compared Council to Fred Jackson of the Buffalo Bills.
Fuller coached against Jackson when he played for the Sioux City Bandits in 2004 and 2005. He said one of the things Council shares with Jackson is a willingness to cover kicks and block on special teams.
“That sets La’Ron apart from the pack,”Fuller said. “There are a lot of great running backs out there. But he’ll do whatever is asked of him and do it to the best of his ability.”
Council has also made an impact in the run game when he reverses roles and acts a lead blocker for Andrew Verboncouer, like he did last week in order to allow Verboncouer to cap a drive with a TD.
“He deserved it because he was the workhorse on that drive,” Council said. “Whatever I can do to help my teammates, I’ll do it.”
Smalls feels unselfish plays like that is why Fuller’s running philosophy is successful.
“Everyone is involved in it,” he said. “It’s the wide receivers out there blocking their behinds off to get us those tough yards down the field and ultimately winning games. I just enjoy being here and playing in this scheme.”
Seth Smalls figured he would need to work on his pass-blocking skills when he decided to give indoor football a try.
After playing in a triple-option offense in high school and a run-oriented attack at Coastal Carolina University, the offensive lineman assumed his experience as a run blocker wouldn’t be utilized much in the 50-yard game.
That was until he met Green Bay Blizzard coach Robert Fuller.
“I thought the indoor game was nothing but passing,” Smalls said. “I get here and coach Fuller tells me I need to work on my run blocking if I’m going to play for him.”
Following a 41-33 victory at Lehigh Valley last Saturday where the Blizzard set franchise rushing records for attempts (41) and yards (177), it’s easy to understand why Fuller placed an emphasis on the ground game at the start of the season.
Powered by a rushing attack that averages 94.5 yards per game and features the Indoor Football League’s leading rusher in La’Ron Council, Green Bay (9-3) finds itself in position to clinch a home playoff game tonight when it hosts the Reading Express (2-11) at the Resch Center.
“With coach Fuller being a former offensive lineman, I knew it would be a fun offense to play in,” Blizzard center Shannon Breen said. “Being able to run the ball is huge to show scouts and teams different stuff that you wouldn’t get to do with other teams.”
The Blizzard has a run-to-pass ratio of 58-42 this season and with two games remaining in the regular season has gained 1,134 rushing yards to eclipse the previous franchise record of 953 set in 2010.
“When I first came here I honestly wondered what the fans would think of our offense and how they would receive a balanced attack or a little bit of a run-first type of approach,” Fuller said.
“But I was pleasantly surprised at the amount of people that come up to me after a game and tell me how much they enjoy seeing the running game in indoor football.”
With 815 yards on the season, Council is 122 shy of breaking the IFL record. He rushed for 119 yards last week to break the Blizzard’s single-game record for a third time this season and his 26 carries was a league high this year.
“He is an NFL talent, and I’d be awfully disappointed if he didn’t get a look from somebody,” said Fuller, who compared Council to Fred Jackson of the Buffalo Bills.
Fuller coached against Jackson when he played for the Sioux City Bandits in 2004 and 2005. He said one of the things Council shares with Jackson is a willingness to cover kicks and block on special teams.
“That sets La’Ron apart from the pack,”Fuller said. “There are a lot of great running backs out there. But he’ll do whatever is asked of him and do it to the best of his ability.”
Council has also made an impact in the run game when he reverses roles and acts a lead blocker for Andrew Verboncouer, like he did last week in order to allow Verboncouer to cap a drive with a TD.
“He deserved it because he was the workhorse on that drive,” Council said. “Whatever I can do to help my teammates, I’ll do it.”
Smalls feels unselfish plays like that is why Fuller’s running philosophy is successful.
“Everyone is involved in it,” he said. “It’s the wide receivers out there blocking their behinds off to get us those tough yards down the field and ultimately winning games. I just enjoy being here and playing in this scheme.”
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