Budda Baker
Comments
-
I was top young to appreciate 91. The only player I knew was napoleon kaufman. I thought he was the greatest football player of all time and I wanted to be like him when I grew up. Shame about my disability (whiteness)
-
But perhaps it wasn't 91 that I remember him from. I don't know when he started and made his name
-
dhdawg said:
might go down as the best safety ever. never saw lawyer milloy play, but budda is specialGreenRiverGatorz said:Budda is an instant Husky legend
Slow your role, Millenial.
Christ
-
Interesting, and completely disagree.DerekJohnson said:
There are members of the 1991 team that say Milloy would not have started on that team. That he wasn't sound fundamentally, and became much better as a pro.RoadDawg55 said:I was too young to really analyze Milloy's game, but it's hard to imagine a safety as good as Budda.
He's hardly even a safety. Just a chess piece that snuffs out passes in the flat better than anyone I've ever seen. He blitzes very well, is a great open field tackler, and has crazy quicks. The pick where he landed on the sideline was unreal.
My only regret about today is he missed a kill shot opportunity on Sefo that would have been amazing.
He was always good, but the past 4-5 games he's been incredible and really cemented his legacy.
You should PM me, DJ - lots of dates/facts incorrect.
Or Irish Doog - your call
-
In the annals (lol) of UW lore, when people talk of the rebirth of the program they will start with Haden and Petersen. Then Budda. Then everyone else. He's been that important.
-
By chance were their names Shane and tommie that told you that? Milloy was awesome but had freedom to play center field and ad lib a lot.DerekJohnson said:
There are members of the 1991 team that say Milloy would not have started on that team. That he wasn't sound fundamentally, and became much better as a pro.RoadDawg55 said:I was too young to really analyze Milloy's game, but it's hard to imagine a safety as good as Budda.
He's hardly even a safety. Just a chess piece that snuffs out passes in the flat better than anyone I've ever seen. He blitzes very well, is a great open field tackler, and has crazy quicks. The pick where he landed on the sideline was unreal.
My only regret about today is he missed a kill shot opportunity on Sefo that would have been amazing.
He was always good, but the past 4-5 games he's been incredible and really cemented his legacy.
Kidding aside I have a feeling that the coaches would have found a way make him more fundamentally sound if that was what it took to get him on the field.
As it turned out our secondary from the 91 team was not that good in the pros, apparently it was not that hard to cover people for 1.5 seconds while the rest of college football figured out how to attack the 46 defense and block Stan empertan. -
Keeping Budda here for Pete, was as important as coach James keeping Joe Steele here back in the day. The lifeblood for this program will always start with keeping the local kids home. Thank you young man, you will be a dawg legend forever.
-
This. Budda is the Joe Steele/Paul Arnold of the Petersen era. But he's had a greater career (due in part to injury avoidance) than either of those guys.godawgst said:Keeping Budda here for Pete, was as important as coach James keeping Joe Steele here back in the day. The lifeblood for this program will always start with keeping the local kids home. Thank you young man, you will be a dawg legend forever.
-
Joe was pretty damn good.
-
Budda's decommitment from Oregon was the initial push that got the wheels turning again.
It was the first shovel in the dirt of the Kenny Wheaton pick grave.
70-21 was the tombstone being etched.
Last night was UW pissing all over the grave.






