Aldi

435 posts

Aldi

Aldi

@SilkysmoothAX

Part time X-ray full time film grinder

Katılım Kasım 2018
172 Takip Edilen21 Takipçiler
Tyler Moe
Tyler Moe@Norseman1982·
@thorku KO: I don't trust JJ's maturity and growth on the field. Let's take a shot and roll with Kyler for a year. Random assistant or observer: JJ just had a PRACTICE with only one incompletion. KO: Oh shit, really?! Never mind then. Love ya Thor. But c'mon man.
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Aldi
Aldi@SilkysmoothAX·
@Norseman1982 @thorku If JJ isn’t the guy it’s ok to be wrong on him, you weren’t the only one. To take a victory lap after one camp report is not going to age well when Kyler is named starter. Love the content Thor but a lot were wrong on him, dudes too immature and needs to grow.
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Aldi
Aldi@SilkysmoothAX·
@ChiBearsMuse It was a great breakdown. It’s not his fault people focus enough to read past the first paragraph.
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BearsMuse
BearsMuse@ChiBearsMuse·
Bro it’s not that deep.
Yogi@Houseofyogi

Chicago lost the Bears this week. A team that's been in the city since 1921. They didn't lose them to a bigger market or a better deal. The Bears decided they'd rather be a tenant in Indiana than deal with Illinois for one more year. Think about how badly you have to run a place for that to be the smart move. They lost them for two reasons. The people running Illinois would rather villainize a builder than keep one. And they're bad at their jobs. In 2021 the Bears spent $197M on the old Arlington Park racetrack. Before they could break ground, Cook County valued the empty lot at $192M (Bears said $60M). They were salivating at the chance to extort a building that didn't even exist yet. That fight dragged on for years. The Bears were ready to put $2B into the stadium. All they wanted was a promise the county wouldn't reassess them into oblivion, plus $855M for infrastructure everyone uses. Roads, transit, utilities. A $3B project, two thirds of it private money pouring into Illinois. Springfield had since 2021 to get this done. They dragged it to the final night of session, passed it through the Senate at 3:39AM, and the House went home without voting. So now it's all gone. The funniest part? This started because Cook County tried to grab the tax early. They knew a built stadium would pay $53M a year. Now they get under $4M on a vacant lot. No jobs, no buildout, no new anything. Congrats on fighting for scraps and losing the whole prize. Pritzker: they're "an $8.5B valued business" that doesn't need propping up. But be smart for a second. Almost every NFL city throws in public money for a stadium. Not charity. The return is real. Tourism, hotels, restaurants, jobs, game days, property tax on a huge development. The math works. Indiana did the math. While Illinois sat on it for years, Indiana passed a bill in months, put up $1B, and took the team. And the Bears took a worse deal to get there. In Illinois they were going to own their stadium. In Indiana they rent it from the state. A team that wanted to build its own home gave up ownership just to escape Chicago. Nobody won but Indiana. The Bears lost their stadium. Illinois lost the team, the $2B, and $53M a year in taxes. Pritzker after they left: "I wasn't willing to give up billions of dollars of taxpayer money to give it to a billionaire-owned family or team." There it is. "Billionaire-owned." That's how Democrats talk about any business right before they run it out of town. Call them a billionaire, act like you're saving working families, take a victory lap while the tax base drives across the state line. Meanwhile they're running the whole state into the ground. And you already know how this ends. You're living in it. Pensions are $143B in the hole, worst in the country and not close. You pay $6,285 a year in property taxes, double the $2,969 national average, for a city that's $1.15B in the red. The mayor called its finances "the point of no return." When you run things this badly, you sell what's left. They leased the parking meters for 75 years to Morgan Stanley and a sovereign wealth fund in Abu Dhabi. Took $1.15B and burned through it in two years. The investors already made it all back, with 58 years left to collect. Sold the Skyway. Sold the downtown garages. Every asset that made money, gone for one check. But a fixed property tax rate for a team that's been here 106 years? That's "propping up billionaires." Companies are leaving. Boeing for Virginia. Caterpillar for Texas. Citadel for Miami. In 2023 alone Illinois lost 56,000 people and $6B in income to other states. The ones who left earned a third more than the ones who moved in. Indiana didn't outbid anyone. AAA credit, 16 years straight. A $676M surplus. Fourth-lowest debt per person in the country. They just weren't a disaster. Illinois could have collected $53M a year. It chose zero. Ignore all the bad management but make sure to stick it to those evil, pesky billionaires.

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Aldi
Aldi@SilkysmoothAX·
@Ihartitz People snoozing on Kolar, he was a good pass catcher in college. Behind Andrew’s in Baltimore, so depressed production
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Ian Hartitz
Ian Hartitz@Ihartitz·
@SilkysmoothAX Lolol just writing chargers team preview. I’m in on everyone. I want them all. Could be the No. 1 scoring offense. Yes. Take anyone with a bolt on their helmet (I’m not taking much Gadsden though he’s the exception lolol)
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Ian Hartitz
Ian Hartitz@Ihartitz·
You know what, let's just draft Keaton Mitchell as much as possible and live with the consequences
The Coachspeak Index@CoachspeakIndex

#Chargers OC Mike McDaniel printed out wanted posters for Keaton Mitchell and Alec Ingold, and put the posters up on GM Joe Hortiz’s wall

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Yogi
Yogi@Houseofyogi·
Chicago lost the Bears this week. A team that's been in the city since 1921. They didn't lose them to a bigger market or a better deal. The Bears decided they'd rather be a tenant in Indiana than deal with Illinois for one more year. Think about how badly you have to run a place for that to be the smart move. They lost them for two reasons. The people running Illinois would rather villainize a builder than keep one. And they're bad at their jobs. In 2021 the Bears spent $197M on the old Arlington Park racetrack. Before they could break ground, Cook County valued the empty lot at $192M (Bears said $60M). They were salivating at the chance to extort a building that didn't even exist yet. That fight dragged on for years. The Bears were ready to put $2B into the stadium. All they wanted was a promise the county wouldn't reassess them into oblivion, plus $855M for infrastructure everyone uses. Roads, transit, utilities. A $3B project, two thirds of it private money pouring into Illinois. Springfield had since 2021 to get this done. They dragged it to the final night of session, passed it through the Senate at 3:39AM, and the House went home without voting. So now it's all gone. The funniest part? This started because Cook County tried to grab the tax early. They knew a built stadium would pay $53M a year. Now they get under $4M on a vacant lot. No jobs, no buildout, no new anything. Congrats on fighting for scraps and losing the whole prize. Pritzker: they're "an $8.5B valued business" that doesn't need propping up. But be smart for a second. Almost every NFL city throws in public money for a stadium. Not charity. The return is real. Tourism, hotels, restaurants, jobs, game days, property tax on a huge development. The math works. Indiana did the math. While Illinois sat on it for years, Indiana passed a bill in months, put up $1B, and took the team. And the Bears took a worse deal to get there. In Illinois they were going to own their stadium. In Indiana they rent it from the state. A team that wanted to build its own home gave up ownership just to escape Chicago. Nobody won but Indiana. The Bears lost their stadium. Illinois lost the team, the $2B, and $53M a year in taxes. Pritzker after they left: "I wasn't willing to give up billions of dollars of taxpayer money to give it to a billionaire-owned family or team." There it is. "Billionaire-owned." That's how Democrats talk about any business right before they run it out of town. Call them a billionaire, act like you're saving working families, take a victory lap while the tax base drives across the state line. Meanwhile they're running the whole state into the ground. And you already know how this ends. You're living in it. Pensions are $143B in the hole, worst in the country and not close. You pay $6,285 a year in property taxes, double the $2,969 national average, for a city that's $1.15B in the red. The mayor called its finances "the point of no return." When you run things this badly, you sell what's left. They leased the parking meters for 75 years to Morgan Stanley and a sovereign wealth fund in Abu Dhabi. Took $1.15B and burned through it in two years. The investors already made it all back, with 58 years left to collect. Sold the Skyway. Sold the downtown garages. Every asset that made money, gone for one check. But a fixed property tax rate for a team that's been here 106 years? That's "propping up billionaires." Companies are leaving. Boeing for Virginia. Caterpillar for Texas. Citadel for Miami. In 2023 alone Illinois lost 56,000 people and $6B in income to other states. The ones who left earned a third more than the ones who moved in. Indiana didn't outbid anyone. AAA credit, 16 years straight. A $676M surplus. Fourth-lowest debt per person in the country. They just weren't a disaster. Illinois could have collected $53M a year. It chose zero. Ignore all the bad management but make sure to stick it to those evil, pesky billionaires.
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Aldi
Aldi@SilkysmoothAX·
@EthanKreagerFF That 18% didn’t have anything to do with Nick Chubb now did it?
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Ethan Kreager
Ethan Kreager@EthanKreagerFF·
3. De'Von Achane Achane crushed in 2025, but the situation is worse now. Bobby Slowik doesn't historically target RBs in the pass game (18% as Houston's OC in 2024), and Miami will be run-heavy with Malik Willis. MIA's barren WR room will also likely lead to stacked boxes and fewer goal line carries.
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Ethan Kreager
Ethan Kreager@EthanKreagerFF·
Knowing who NOT to draft might be even more important than knowing who to target in fantasy football... Here are five players that I'm AVOIDING in 2026: 1. Nico Collins Last season, Collins only had 3 designed targets...
Ethan Kreager tweet media
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Aldi
Aldi@SilkysmoothAX·
@ChuckFBass @BestFantasyFL To your support your point, Corum didn’t look good his rookie year either. This year he look so much more decisive and explosive
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Chuck Bass
Chuck Bass@ChuckFBass·
@SilkysmoothAX @BestFantasyFL I saw an inconsistent rusher and a really talented pass catcher I'm not talking about taking him in the top 20. I'm talking about grabbing the RB with the highest ceiling in his backfield in the 6th and sometimes 7th round.
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Chuck Bass
Chuck Bass@ChuckFBass·
There's only one player that slides way past ADP in every single draft I'm in
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Aldi@SilkysmoothAX·
@ChuckFBass @BestFantasyFL Objectively you cannot look at last year and say he was a good RB. He did some nice things in the passing game but Its a committee there, always has been and always will be
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Chuck Bass
Chuck Bass@ChuckFBass·
@BestFantasyFL To me that sounds like "they re-signed a guy that can't stay on the field and drafted a 4th rounder"
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Aldi
Aldi@SilkysmoothAX·
@TBIR_9 @theycallmejuu4 @PanthersAnalyst I’m not sure how you sit there with a straight face and be happy with Bryce. That’s a new level of fandom, glad the 150 yards per game is working for you guys
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Aldi
Aldi@SilkysmoothAX·
@TBIR_9 @theycallmejuu4 @PanthersAnalyst I would have chosen Mac Jones for a 3rd and a bag of chips. How do you sell the house for a 5’ 10” athletically limited QB. We rebuilt our whole roster thanks to that guy.
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Aldi
Aldi@SilkysmoothAX·
@theycallmejuu4 @PanthersAnalyst Ya cause drafting TMac at that spot was a real reach. Please don’t tell me this is the Bryce Young guy also
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Juu
Juu@theycallmejuu4·
@SilkysmoothAX @PanthersAnalyst This guy also signed Coker from UDFA the same year and drafted TMac + JHJ the following year. So yeah, he knows his WRs
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Ray G
Ray G@RayGQue·
Dropping a couple Year 2 player projection profiles today. Historical usage turned into stat line projections. Tetairoa McMillan. Emeka Egbuka. Luther Burden. Matthew Golden. #TrustTheTrinity
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Chris O'Brien
Chris O'Brien@17gamepace·
WRs I’d draft over AJ Brown now that he’s a Patriot: Ja’Marr Chase Puka Nacua Jaxon Smith-Njigba Amon-Ra Justin Jefferson That’s it.
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Ray G
Ray G@RayGQue·
some of the big boy WR ranges of outcomes #TrustTheTrinty
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