Eagles release Desean Jackson

Chip is used to the dictatorship of college football. A professional baller can tell him to go fuck himself. if he can't manage NFL egos then he needs to return to college football where it's his way or the highway. you cannot rid yourself of your best talent and expect to win in this league.

Exactly

He has success this past season but he better pray he can keep it up or he will be back in college faster than he can blink an eye

That dictator shit doesn't work in the NFL ask Saban
 
Chip is used to the dictatorship of college football. A professional baller can tell him to go fuck himself. if he can't manage NFL egos then he needs to return to college football where it's his way or the highway. you cannot rid yourself of your best talent and expect to win in this league.

its gonna wear thin.
 
Exactly

He has success this past season but he better pray he can keep it up or he will be back in college faster than he can blink an eye

That dictator shit doesn't work in the NFL ask Saban

its gonna wear thin.

plus fam, foles is still relatively unproven

we've seen countless backup qbs do well and finish a season

but then that next year and beyond they look like complete shit

and now foles doesnt have his dude to take the top off the defense

lmaoooooooooooooooooooooo

the nfc east is like this right now:

1973985_697434596969898_1047729555_o.jpg
 
plus fam, foles is still relatively unproven

we've seen countless backup qbs do well and finish a season

but then that next year and beyond they look like complete shit

and now foles doesnt have his dude to take the top off the defense

lmaoooooooooooooooooooooo

the nfc east is like this right now:

1973985_697434596969898_1047729555_o.jpg

Foles had mccoy running 30 times a game
and desean jackson stretching the field

80% of his big plays were off of play action passes.

with all the fucking time in the world.

NOW let's see what happens when people actually bring pressure.

when everyone stacks the box cause your wr's are slow as FUCK all of them. lol

ive disliked kelly since he used vick as a guinea pig to begin the season

i ain't stupid, i knew what he was doing. he wanted foles all along. he comes out there the first few games running all this wild shit making a checklist of what works and what doesn't then foles is in and they don't do none of that wild shit no more.. why?
 
Foles had mccoy running 30 times a game
and desean jackson stretching the field

People overlook that part. The eagles had the number one rushing attack in the league. That makes the passing game a whole lot easier because the play-action pass becomes deadly. Draw those linebackers up and the middle of the field is wide open (Cooper) or deep (jackson) because the safety bit...

you take away Jackson (and not replace him with a similar talent), a lot of things change for that team...

and like someone else said... teams will have an entire offseason to evaluate the eagles' offense and also Noles...
 
Foles had mccoy running 30 times a game
and desean jackson stretching the field

80% of his big plays were off of play action passes.

with all the fucking time in the world.

NOW let's see what happens when people actually bring pressure.

when everyone stacks the box cause your wr's are slow as FUCK all of them. lol

ive disliked kelly since he used vick as a guinea pig to begin the season

i ain't stupid, i knew what he was doing. he wanted foles all along. he comes out there the first few games running all this wild shit making a checklist of what works and what doesn't then foles is in and they don't do none of that wild shit no more.. why?

Dude, Foles is a backup QB. He folds when he has just regular pressure and his 1st option is taken away.

The Eagles faced a shitload of backup QBs and wobbly knee-d RG3 twice last year and barely beat our terrible asses for the NFC East title.

Chip and Co. are gonna get a rude awakening next year.
We're probably gonna be garbage next year too. :smh:
 
People overlook that part. The eagles had the number one rushing attack in the league. That makes the passing game a whole lot easier because the play-action pass becomes deadly. Draw those linebackers up and the middle of the field is wide open (Cooper) or deep (jackson) because the safety bit...

you take away Jackson (and not replace him with a similar talent), a lot of things change for that team...

and like someone else said... teams will have an entire offseason to evaluate the eagles' offense and also Noles...

The Iggles are gonna be okay without Jackson. McCoy and Sproles in the backfield. They'll have Sproles split wide. Maclin back and the white boy. Plus Celek. Chip Kelly's offense is plug and play. With Maclin back from his knee on a 1yr contract, they'll probably draft a WR in the first 4 rounds.

They'll have Sproles returning kicks now too.
 
This is purely speculation on my part but don't be surprised if Jackson ends up being repped by Roc Nation.

My friend works there and she's been sharing a bunch of shit re: Jackson's release from the Iggles on social media. She is no sports fan, but she is fam with Jay Z. Her sharing all these news stories regarding dude means something.

Once again, pure speculation on my part.
 
The Iggles are gonna be okay without Jackson. McCoy and Sproles in the backfield. They'll have Sproles split wide. Maclin back and the white boy. Plus Celek. Chip Kelly's offense is plug and play. With Maclin back from his knee on a 1yr contract, they'll probably draft a WR in the first 4 rounds.

They'll have Sproles returning kicks now too.

Totally disagree. His offense worked because he almost always had the speed advantage at Oregon. Jackson gave him that advantage in the nfl.

Sproles split wide ain't gonna do shit unless he becomes a real wr. he's 5ft nothing and will be getting cracked running short routes because everything now is focused on keeping them from breaking loose

celek
maclin
cooper
all slow and don't scare anyone and you don't have to worry about them taking the top off.

and with riley being the clear #1 for that team his whole world is going to change.

i don't predict horrible season and all that but being ok? no. no they won't be.
 
Totally disagree. His offense worked because he almost always had the speed advantage at Oregon. Jackson gave him that advantage in the nfl.

Sproles split wide ain't gonna do shit unless he becomes a real wr. he's 5ft nothing and will be getting cracked running short routes because everything now is focused on keeping them from breaking loose

celek
maclin
cooper
all slow and don't scare anyone and you don't have to worry about them taking the top off.

and with riley being the clear #1 for that team his whole world is going to change.

i don't predict horrible season and all that but being ok? no. no they won't be.

Once Foles became the starter in Week 6, Jackson's number fell off precipitously. Chip Kelly wouldn't have signed off on his release if he didn't think 1.) they would be okay w/o him and 2.) he had some sort of plan.
 
This is a very deep WR draft

They will draft a fast /elusive guy but you can't expect a rookie WR to contribute significantly off the bat

They usually don't
 
Once Foles became the starter in Week 6, Jackson's number fell off precipitously. Chip Kelly wouldn't have signed off on his release if he didn't think 1.) they would be okay w/o him and 2.) he had some sort of plan.

I don't dispute that's what he thinks
but just because that's what he thinks doesn't mean he's right.

the #1 quality of all nfl coaches is arrogance.

sometimes they have the right

most times it bites them in the ass.
 
This is a very deep WR draft

They will draft a fast /elusive guy but you can't expect a rookie WR to contribute significantly off the bat

They usually don't
Just need a 4.4 speed dude. Have him run those Go routes in order to have the safety peel off and open up the middle to let Celek and Sproles run those option routes.

I don't dispute that's what he thinks
but just because that's what he thinks doesn't mean he's right.

the #1 quality of all nfl coaches is arrogance.

sometimes they have the right

most times it bites them in the ass.

I just think Kelly believes in his system. The system is greater than one player. Shit. Look at Vick and Foles. No one begged Foles to be anything of real value and dude earned the starting gig and never looked back.

Kelly kinda reminds me of Mike Martz and his system. He took average players and made them look great under his O. Az-Hakim. Ricky Proel. Remember them ninjas? Same thing with Chip. Eagles are gonna be alright.
 
Just need a 4.4 speed dude. Have him run those Go routes in order to have the safety peel off and open up the middle to let Celek and Sproles run those option routes.



I just think Kelly believes in his system. The system is greater than one player. Shit. Look at Vick and Foles. No one begged Foles to be anything of real value and dude earned the starting gig and never looked back.

Kelly kinda reminds me of Mike Martz and his system. He took average players and made them look great under his O. Az-Hakim. Ricky Proel. Remember them ninjas? Same thing with Chip. Eagles are gonna be alright.

eh we'll see.

jackson was a star from day 1 in philly before chip so chip ain't make him he was already a top guy before.

and cooper was made by jackson and mccoy who was also the man before chip.

and all of them made foles.

major cogs in the system but we'll see.
 
Just need a 4.4 speed dude. Have him run those Go routes in order to have the safety peel off and open up the middle to let Celek and Sproles run those option routes.
t.

Man. It's more complex than that. There are a lot of 4.4 guys who can't play the position for shit. Go routes work when you are also worried about the WR breaking the route off. Ted Ginn Jr has blazing speed and he doesn't open up the field running go routes because he can't run other routes and he has suspect hands. Rookie WRs rarely make a significant contribution.. they typically take 2-3 years to really figure it out and unless you get one of those rare studs.

I don't think it's going to be the simple. If the NFL has taught us anything over the years, it's that team make the adjustments during the offseason. I'm willing to bet anything Noles it not as productive as he was during the last 9 games of the season where they went 8-1.

and btw. Sproles is good IN SPACE... he doesn't create it. It's the same thing with Shady... he's good in space..he doesn't create it..I think people are really underestimated how important Jackson was to the spacing because he drew so much attention.
 
Man. It's more complex than that. There are a lot of 4.4 guys who can't play the position for shit. Go routes work when you are also worried about the WR breaking the route off. Ted Ginn Jr has blazing speed and he doesn't open up the field running go routes because he can't run other routes and he has suspect hands. Rookie WRs rarely make a significant contribution.. they typically take 2-3 years to really figure it out and unless you get one of those rare studs.

I don't think it's going to be the simple. If the NFL has taught us anything over the years, it's that team make the adjustments during the offseason. I'm willing to bet anything Noles it not as productive as he was during the last 9 games of the season where they went 8-1.

and btw. Sproles is good IN SPACE... he doesn't create it. It's the same thing with Shady... he's good in space..he doesn't create it..I think people are really underestimated how important Jackson was to the spacing because he drew so much attention.

I feel you, but Ginn Jr is a bum who can't catch. My point is if you get a speed guy who can catch and read enough coverage to know which option to take in his option routes could suffice.

And yeah, the league will look at all the tape from Kelly last season, but i think that's one of the big reasons they got Sproles, to add a new wrinkles to the offense.

I look at it like when the Colts had Marshall. They shipped him off and plugged in Edgerrin who was a great back, but not as great as Marshall. The show went on. Philly has the 22nd pick and may be targeting a WR to fill in. He may not be a 1000 yard receiver, but if he can fit in and play his role in the O, I'm sure Philly will be alright.

My point is that I've seen enough of Oregon's offense to believe that Kelly constantly innovates and Philly has had enough time to plan for life w/o Desean and have confidence going into the season.
 
Chip is used to the dictatorship of college football. A professional baller can tell him to go fuck himself. if he can't manage NFL egos then he needs to return to college football where it's his way or the highway. you cannot rid yourself of your best talent and expect to win in this league.

and this is what I wish the media would address....its easy for amiddle aged white man to blame his flaws on a black guy...simply by saying "oh he is hood.."

when the real issue is that the coach wants to be king in a league that is ran by common respect.....

Hello Gre Schiano....these white dudes are so insecure that they can t reason with a man like a man...
 
Couple of things:

ESPN tried so hard to run with this story about the gang ties - shit -you had Jaws (who is probably waiting or has already gotten a nice bonus from the Eagles as their all-time QB) saying dumb shit about being in a gang and Bruschi talking about leadership. It was like they were trying so hard for one liners.

John Saunders put it best on sports reporters - he he committed no crime, broke no legal rules. For an all pro in the prime of his career, "the less money he makes, the less he looks like a gang member." $10 million a year? Gang ties. $6 million a year? Starting wide receiver.

Someone else mentioned that his numbers went down with Foles. Riley Cooper, Eric Decker both benefited from a better receiver on the other side. Eric Decker was already exposed in the playoffs/super bowl. Riley Cooper - you are up next.
 
The Deep ass Draft at Receiver is the sole reason the Eagles decided to cut ties with Desean right now... If it wasn't for this deep draft, this thread would not exists...

__________________

http://www.bleedinggreennation.com/2014/3/30/5560296/2014-nfl-draft-desean-jackson-replacement-wide-receiver

20131101_pjc_ae6_450.0_standard_709.0.jpg


The Eagles will likely replace three-time Pro Bowl wide receiver DeSean Jackson with a young upstart in May's draft.

The Eagles will look to get a replacement for DeSean Jackson in May's draft. This is widely-considered one of the best (if not the best) wide receiver draft classes in recent history and the team should have several options in the selection process. There are four different types of wide receivers that the Eagles will look at in the draft: speedsters, large redzone threats, the inbetweener and speed and late-round players to develop. Let's take a look at 12 prospects that could be of interest to the Philadelphia front office.

The Size

Kelvin Benjamin, FSU (6'5" 240 lbs, 4.61 forty time): The former Seminole had a very rough Combine, but he has the size to make a major impact for the Eagles. While he runs like a tight end, he could be paired with Zach Ertz and move around the lineup into several different spots. If anyone can exploit Benjamin's size, it is Chip Kelly. (BGN Profile)

Mike Evans, Texas A&M (6'5" 231 lbs, 4.53 sec forty time): Evans is a scary player to go up against with solid hands, elite size and quality speed. He is likely to be gone by pick No. 22 but the Eagles have shown quite a bit of interest in him. He is set to visit the Eagles and Kelly was at his Pro Day. Could Philadelphia trade up for him? (BGN Profile)

Martavis Bryant, Clemson (6'4" 211 lbs, 4.42 sec forty time): A bit of a raw talent with an insane size-speed combination. Bryant is a bit green as a route runner, but he can be a serious threat in the redzone. He is a lanky, fast player that could also eventually work as a deep threat. He is likely a third round pick.

Jordan Matthews, Vanderbilt (6'3" 212, 4.46 sec forty time): Matthews had a good combination of size and speed. He also has solid hands and can make big plays. While he isn't a surefire first round pick, he could be appealing as a trade back option. He would add more size to the offense, while still giving them speed to work with for the long ball.

The Flash

Brandin Cooks, Oregon State (5'10" 189 lbs, 4.33 sec forty time): The former Beaver is probably the name most linked to the Eagles in light of Jackson's release. While they seem like similar players on the surface, Cooks is a quality returner with the body to do things that Jackson would likely avoid. Cooks is open to going across the middle and he can score from anywhere on the field. He could be used in the slot and on the outside. (BGN Profile)

Marqise Lee, USC (6'0" 192 lbs, 4.52 sec forty time): The Eagles could have an option in the first round with Lee. While opinions are split on Lee because of his injury history, the guy can make plays. He can get open downfield and has solid route running skills. He would likely need to be taken at No. 22.

Jalen Saunders, Oklahoma (5'9" 165, 4.44 sec forty time): Built like Jackson, but not as talented. Saunders could be a Day 3 replacement for Jackson that could eventually develop into a poor man's DeSean. He has return ability and will likely serve primarily as depth as a rookie.

Sammy Watkins, Clemson (6'1" 211 lbs, 4.43 sec forty time): Watkins is the big fish of this draft. He is easily the most complete player at the position and will be a No. 1 receiver from the jump. The Eagles would likely need to trade up into the Top 5 to nab him, which is unlikely. However, if they are serious about replacing Jackson, there would be no better guy.

The Depth

Odell Beckham Jr., LSU (5'11" 198 lbs, 4.43 sec forty time): Beckham has speed but that is not what makes him special. The guy just never drops a pass, no matter if it is heavily contested or he is wide open. He is a dynamic returner and has the versatility move around a formation. A pair of trustee hands, Beckham is a late-first round pick or an early second round pick at worst. (BGN Profile)

Donte Moncrief, Mississippi (6'2" 221 lbs, 4.40 sec forty time): Size and speed are there for Moncrief, who has the ability to stretch the field. He is also a solid possession option that can get open with ease. He is a Day 2 guy that could easily turn into a starter early in his career. If the Eagles want to enjoy the depth of the class, Moncrief is a very good target.

Allen Robinson, Penn State (6'2" 220 lbs, 4.60 sec forty time): While his speed is a major question, Robinson is a capable route runner with size. He has the ability to go up for a pass and bring it down. He is strong and showed consistency with the ball in his hands at Penn State. He is also a local player that the team has likely paid attention to this past season.

Devin Street, Pittsburgh (6'3" 198 lbs, 4.55 sec forty time): Taller but slender, Street is a quality player with prototypical possession skills. He has natural hands and runs routes well. He could be taken in the third or fourth round and be developed into an eventual starter.

The Late Round Upside

Cody Hoffman, BYU (6'4" 223 lbs, 4.65 sec forty time): Hoffman is huge but is inconsistent. He also has a few character concerns but has terrific size. His speed is in question, but his height could make him ideal as a redzone option. He would likely be a second wide receiver pick for the Eagles that they could develop for a bigger role down the road. (BGN Profile)

Matt Hazel, Coastal Carolina (6'1" 198 lbs, 4.50 sec forty time): Average size and speed, Hazel is a small school prospect that is more a technician than a big play threat. He could be a very good option to replace Jason Avant in the slot, which would kick both Maclin and Riley Cooper to the outside. (BGN Profile)

Josh Huff, Oregon (5'11" 206 lbs, 4.51 sec forty time): A player very familiar with Chip Kelly, Huff could be used in the slot and returns. He has average size and speed but is a good route runner and can get open. He knows the offense and could fit right in with the Eagles.

Michael Campanaro, Wake Forest (5'9" 192 lbs, 4.46 sec forty time): A slot option with a history of injuries, Campanaro is a smart player with tons of experience. He could be used as a punt returner and go across the middle on offense. The talent is there but durability is a risk.
 
The Deep ass Draft at Receiver is the sole reason the Eagles decided to cut ties with Desean right now... If it wasn't for this deep draft, this thread would not exists...

__________________

http://www.bleedinggreennation.com/2014/3/30/5560296/2014-nfl-draft-desean-jackson-replacement-wide-receiver

20131101_pjc_ae6_450.0_standard_709.0.jpg


The Eagles will likely replace three-time Pro Bowl wide receiver DeSean Jackson with a young upstart in May's draft.

The Eagles will look to get a replacement for DeSean Jackson in May's draft. This is widely-considered one of the best (if not the best) wide receiver draft classes in recent history and the team should have several options in the selection process. There are four different types of wide receivers that the Eagles will look at in the draft: speedsters, large redzone threats, the inbetweener and speed and late-round players to develop. Let's take a look at 12 prospects that could be of interest to the Philadelphia front office.

The Size

Kelvin Benjamin, FSU (6'5" 240 lbs, 4.61 forty time): The former Seminole had a very rough Combine, but he has the size to make a major impact for the Eagles. While he runs like a tight end, he could be paired with Zach Ertz and move around the lineup into several different spots. If anyone can exploit Benjamin's size, it is Chip Kelly. (BGN Profile)

Mike Evans, Texas A&M (6'5" 231 lbs, 4.53 sec forty time): Evans is a scary player to go up against with solid hands, elite size and quality speed. He is likely to be gone by pick No. 22 but the Eagles have shown quite a bit of interest in him. He is set to visit the Eagles and Kelly was at his Pro Day. Could Philadelphia trade up for him? (BGN Profile)

Martavis Bryant, Clemson (6'4" 211 lbs, 4.42 sec forty time): A bit of a raw talent with an insane size-speed combination. Bryant is a bit green as a route runner, but he can be a serious threat in the redzone. He is a lanky, fast player that could also eventually work as a deep threat. He is likely a third round pick.

Jordan Matthews, Vanderbilt (6'3" 212, 4.46 sec forty time): Matthews had a good combination of size and speed. He also has solid hands and can make big plays. While he isn't a surefire first round pick, he could be appealing as a trade back option. He would add more size to the offense, while still giving them speed to work with for the long ball.

The Flash

Brandin Cooks, Oregon State (5'10" 189 lbs, 4.33 sec forty time): The former Beaver is probably the name most linked to the Eagles in light of Jackson's release. While they seem like similar players on the surface, Cooks is a quality returner with the body to do things that Jackson would likely avoid. Cooks is open to going across the middle and he can score from anywhere on the field. He could be used in the slot and on the outside. (BGN Profile)

Marqise Lee, USC (6'0" 192 lbs, 4.52 sec forty time): The Eagles could have an option in the first round with Lee. While opinions are split on Lee because of his injury history, the guy can make plays. He can get open downfield and has solid route running skills. He would likely need to be taken at No. 22.

Jalen Saunders, Oklahoma (5'9" 165, 4.44 sec forty time): Built like Jackson, but not as talented. Saunders could be a Day 3 replacement for Jackson that could eventually develop into a poor man's DeSean. He has return ability and will likely serve primarily as depth as a rookie.

Sammy Watkins, Clemson (6'1" 211 lbs, 4.43 sec forty time): Watkins is the big fish of this draft. He is easily the most complete player at the position and will be a No. 1 receiver from the jump. The Eagles would likely need to trade up into the Top 5 to nab him, which is unlikely. However, if they are serious about replacing Jackson, there would be no better guy.

The Depth

Odell Beckham Jr., LSU (5'11" 198 lbs, 4.43 sec forty time): Beckham has speed but that is not what makes him special. The guy just never drops a pass, no matter if it is heavily contested or he is wide open. He is a dynamic returner and has the versatility move around a formation. A pair of trustee hands, Beckham is a late-first round pick or an early second round pick at worst. (BGN Profile)

Donte Moncrief, Mississippi (6'2" 221 lbs, 4.40 sec forty time): Size and speed are there for Moncrief, who has the ability to stretch the field. He is also a solid possession option that can get open with ease. He is a Day 2 guy that could easily turn into a starter early in his career. If the Eagles want to enjoy the depth of the class, Moncrief is a very good target.

Allen Robinson, Penn State (6'2" 220 lbs, 4.60 sec forty time): While his speed is a major question, Robinson is a capable route runner with size. He has the ability to go up for a pass and bring it down. He is strong and showed consistency with the ball in his hands at Penn State. He is also a local player that the team has likely paid attention to this past season.

Devin Street, Pittsburgh (6'3" 198 lbs, 4.55 sec forty time): Taller but slender, Street is a quality player with prototypical possession skills. He has natural hands and runs routes well. He could be taken in the third or fourth round and be developed into an eventual starter.

The Late Round Upside

Cody Hoffman, BYU (6'4" 223 lbs, 4.65 sec forty time): Hoffman is huge but is inconsistent. He also has a few character concerns but has terrific size. His speed is in question, but his height could make him ideal as a redzone option. He would likely be a second wide receiver pick for the Eagles that they could develop for a bigger role down the road. (BGN Profile)

Matt Hazel, Coastal Carolina (6'1" 198 lbs, 4.50 sec forty time): Average size and speed, Hazel is a small school prospect that is more a technician than a big play threat. He could be a very good option to replace Jason Avant in the slot, which would kick both Maclin and Riley Cooper to the outside. (BGN Profile)

Josh Huff, Oregon (5'11" 206 lbs, 4.51 sec forty time): A player very familiar with Chip Kelly, Huff could be used in the slot and returns. He has average size and speed but is a good route runner and can get open. He knows the offense and could fit right in with the Eagles.

Michael Campanaro, Wake Forest (5'9" 192 lbs, 4.46 sec forty time): A slot option with a history of injuries, Campanaro is a smart player with tons of experience. He could be used as a punt returner and go across the middle on offense. The talent is there but durability is a risk.

Man its a deep receiver draft EVERYYEAR if we let "scouts" tell it. Those same scouts though co-signed Carson Palmer the 1st overall pick in the draft. Actually the same scouts that believe USC quarterbacks transfer well into the NFL shout out to former top 10 picks Matt Leinhart, Carson Palmer and Mark Sanchez....
 
ain't no guarantee ANY of them will become what desean jackson IS.

not none

True...and especially not immediately.

No doubt, just posting an article about the reason for the timing...

Oh. That definitely played a part. They could trade up and get a real playmaker. There are 2-3 guys that are can't miss. They aren't going to give you 1300 yards in their rookie season, but they'll contribute. Plus, they'll be way cheaper. Oh they definitely took the draft into consideration when cutting him.
 
True...and especially not immediately.



Oh. That definitely played a part. They could trade up and get a real playmaker. There are 2-3 guys that are can't miss. They aren't going to give you 1300 yards in their rookie season, but they'll contribute. Plus, they'll be way cheaper. Oh they definitely took the draft into consideration when cutting him.

But that line of thinking is silly on the Eagirls part. Unless they are delusional and think Desean what was holding them back. They have holes at linebacker, defensive end, secondary....they arguably had holes at receiver WITH Desean unless people feel comfortable in coming off a acl injury Jeremy Maclin and a career best 800 yards receiving Riley Cooper.

So for you to cut Desean and then replace him WITH a 1st round pick makes no sense. The only way it makes sense IMO is if they try to find his replacement in later rounds. But if you waste a 1st rounder on receiver than they are making another silly mistake. But this goes back to releasing Jackson which was stupid to begin with.
 
But that line of thinking is silly on the Eagirls part. Unless they are delusional and think Desean what was holding them back. They have holes at linebacker, defensive end, secondary....they arguably had holes at receiver WITH Desean unless people feel comfortable in coming off a acl injury Jeremy Maclin and a career best 800 yards receiving Riley Cooper.

So for you to cut Desean and then replace him WITH a 1st round pick makes no sense. The only way it makes sense IMO is if they try to find his replacement in later rounds. But if you waste a 1st rounder on receiver than they are making another silly mistake. But this goes back to releasing Jackson which was stupid to begin with.

oh. It's mad stupid. I'm just saying that is probably what they were thinking.
 
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