A list of puns related to "Mike White (quarterback)"
That's right, it's Kyle Casey Armstrong
The FAKE NEWS is continuing to cover up ALL THE WINNING and single game passing yard records GEQBUS set with the Jets. This is the kind of propaganda that made GEQBUS leave those UNGRATEFUL BASTARDS in New York for the very fine people in Carolina.
10. Boomer Esiason, Super Bowl XXIII (Cincinnati Bengals)
Boomer Esiason was a native of the town of East Islip on Long Island, and he played college football at Maryland, leading them to an ACC title his senior year. The Bengals made him a second round pick in the 1984 draft. Esiason started four games his rookie year behind Ken Anderson and went 3-1. His strong performance left the Bengals confident that he was the man who could replace Anderson, the aging former MVP, and they made Esiason their primary starter in 1985. The Bengals missed the playoffs in each of Esiasonβs first four seasons in the league. However, despite the fact that the Bengals missed the playoffs, Esiason was still named to the 1986 Pro Bowl after throwing for 3959 yards and 24 touchdowns.
Esiasonβs career turned a corner in 1988. The Bengals suddenly became the best team in the league. Rookie running back Ickie Woods rushed for 1000 yards and 15 touchdowns, while wide receiver Eddie Brown caught 1200 yards. For his part, Esiason threw for 3500 yards, 28 touchdowns, and 14 interceptions. The Bengals stormed to a 12-4 record and took the top seed in the AFC. For leading the best offense in the NFL that year, Esiason was named the 1988 league MVP. They scored wins over the Seahawks and Jim Kellyβs Bills to reach Super Bowl XXIII, where they faced Joe Montana and the 49ers for a rematch of Super Bowl XVI. Despite being the most electric team in the league that year, the Bengals would not be able to topple the dynasty, although they almost pulled it off. Esiason had the Bengals clinging to a 16-13 lead with 3:10 to go, but Montana executed a 92 yard drive that ended with a 10 yard touchdown pass to John Taylor with 34 seconds left, launching the 49ers to a 20-16 win and leaving the Bengals disappointed yet again.
Esiason would play 4 more seasons with the Bengals following his Super Bowl appearance, but never experienced the same success he had in 1988. He was named to a third Pro Bowl in 1989 after posting stats similar to his MVP season, but the Bengals only finished 8-8. Esiason helped them reach the playoffs one final time in 1990 after a season where he threw for 3000 yards and 24 touchdowns, but also led the league in interceptions with 22. This would be the Bengalsβ last playoff appearance until 2005, and to date is still their final playoff win. Esiasonβs play fell off in the following two seasons. In 1991, he failed to pass for 3000 yards and threw more
... keep reading on reddit β‘Let me be very clear, I am not shitting on Nick, Nick is a excellent player in his own right and played an incredible game.
Mike White displayed a great amount of control throughout the entire post merge really but especially after the final Final 9. Everything went the way he wanted it to, and he spearheaded a lot of those votes. Only got his name written down once and didnβt need idols and only won one immunity. All while being in a lot of players ideal final 3s (Alec, Nick, Alison, Angelina all wanted him there). This is all while competing against the strongest cast of newbies ever in my opinion. Christian, who is a strategy nerd was mind blown by what Mike did in the game and voted for him at FTC.
edit: just for clarification, I wasnβt praising Baker Mayfield at all with this post. He was not good today and he got injured mid game (hope he recovers soon). This is purely just poking fun at Mike Whiteβs βfirst overallβ comment from a few days ago
edit 2: amazing how many people took this info way too seriously
Long story short, some guy yoloβd $1000 on Mike White to be the top passer of the week at 125-1 odds. The second-most passing yards went to Tom Brady this week with 375.
Sorry for the wait for those of you who enjoyed my last post (which was admittedly much more popular than I was expecting). I don't have time to write this much during the week and if I posted on Sunday, it would get lost in the game threads and highlights, so Saturday is really the only day I can post this.
Link to Part 1 for an explanation of the criteria: Bottom Tier (21-30) Basically, a quarterback must have started at least one Super Bowl in their career without winning one. Read the intro to Part 1 for a full explanation.
20. Jake Delhomme, Super Bowl XXXVIII (Carolina Panthers)
Delhomme played for four different teams in his fifteen year career, spending six seasons with the Saints and seven with the Panthers. A native of Lafayette, Louisiana, Delhomme stayed close to home and played college football at Southwestern Louisiana (now known as the University of Louisiana at Lafayette). He was not selected in the 1997 NFL Draft. He once again stayed close to home when he signed with his home state New Orleans Saints as an undrafted free agent.
Delhomme spent six seasons with the Saints as a backup while the team went through a starting QB carousel that included the likes of Heath Shuler, Billy Joe Tolliver, Kerry Collins, and Aaron Brooks. He started just two games as a Saint, both in 1999, going 1-1. He also spent some time in NFL Europe, where he was the backup to future MVP Kurt Warner on the Amsterdam Admirals in 1998.
Prior to the 2003 season, Delhomme signed with the Carolina Panthers, and posted strong performances in the preseason that convinced the Panthers to keep him as the second string QB behind starter Rodney Peete. The Panthers were a team just two years removed from going 1-15, and they were hoping Peete and second year head coach John Fox could restore them to some degree of relevancy.
Trailing 14-0 at the half against the Jacksonville Jaguars in the season opener, the Panthers benched Peete and sent Delhomme into the game. Delhomme threw three second half touchdowns and led the Panthers to a dramatic 24-23 comeback victory, giving Fox the confidence needed to stick with Delhomme. Delhomme started the remaining 15 games, shocking the league by leading the Panthers to an 11-5 record and their first division championship since 1996. Delhomme passed for 3219 yards, 19 touchdowns, and 16 interceptions in 2003.
Delhomme led th
... keep reading on reddit β‘The rules here are simple:
1: All posts must pertain to Mike White, the NFL quarterback drafted by the Dallas Cowboys and who currently is a star for the New York Jets
2: Use reasonable language. Swearing is fine, as we are talking about Mike fucking White, but slurs and such are prohibited
3: Donβt be a dick. Itβs not what Mike White would want
Please note that this site uses cookies to personalise content and adverts, to provide social media features, and to analyse web traffic. Click here for more information.