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Week 15 Picks

bobby | Gambling, Football | Sunday, December 14th, 2008

Best Player in the NFL, Part III, Week 14 Picks…

bobby | Gambling, Fantasy Sports, Football, Football | Saturday, December 6th, 2008

(NFL - 12 = x) Part III…

Obviously, I always consider my fantasy football leagues the best in existence. I use the point-per-reception format, award one points per 10 yards rushing and receiving, and six points per touchdown. I believe this format truly rewards the highest-performing players in the NFL. Some people don’t believe in PPR, but I think it’s the only way to reward go-to guys in the league. If someone catches 12 passes in a game for 100 yards, isn’t he more valuable to his team than a guy (say, Bernard Berrian for example) who catches two passes for 100 yards? All those first downs and progressive yardage gains? Especially for running backs, these catches should be rewarded with one point a piece, in my opinion. That being said, here are the top 10 fantasy backs in my league this season (through week 13):

1. Matt Forte, Chicago Bears: 232 Fantasy Points (1012 Rushing Yards, 6 TD, 48 Receptions, 358 Receiving Yards, 4 TD)

2. Thomas Jones, New York Jets: 217 (1088, 11, 27, 161, 2)

3. Marion Barber, Dallas Cowboys: 215 (870, 7, 47, 366, 2)

4. Adrian Peterson, Minnesota Vikings: 201 (1311, 9, 18, 94)

5. Maurice Jones-Drew, Jacksonville Jaguars: 200 (552, 11, 43, 415)

6. DeAngelo Williams, Carolina Panthers: 197 (955, 11, 18, 112, 2)

6. Clinton Portis, Washington Redskins: 197 (1228, 7, 23, 187)

8. Michael Turner, Atlanta Falcons: 195 (1208, 13, 4, 11)

8. Steve Slaton, Houston Texans: 195 (904, 8, 34, 250, 1)

10. Frank Gore, San Francisco 49ers: 194 (926, 6, 39, 354, 1)

There’s your top-10 performing backs this season: 2 rookies, 4 first-year starters (Not including rookies: Adrian Peterson, Maurice Jones-Drew, DeAngelo Williams and Michael Turner) and no LaDainian Tomlinson, Steven Jackson, Joseph Addai or Brian Westbrook.

At the very least, Westbrook is #11 with 193 fantasy points, and LDT is just behind him with 192. However, Steven Jackson ranks 27th with 130 points, and Joseph Addai (granted because of injuries) is ranked 35th overall. Addai, with 113 points is behind even his teammate Dominic Rhodes.

Obviously, there is much more to a running back than stats. A huge part of a back’s game which there is no way to track is pass blocking. There are some running backs in the league who take this incredibly seriously, such as LDT, MJD and Kevin Faulk. Then there are some, like Shaun Alexander before people realized he was a fraud, who would rather get a head start getting in line for Gatorade on 3rd down than trying to take on a linebacker coming free off the edge or flare out for an outlet pass.

Because of the many, many factors and arguments that could be involved in this discussion, I simplified this as much as possible by coming up with the three running backs I feel are the most complete players, and explanations as to why they’re there.
And heeere… Weee… Go!

3. Marion Barber, Dallas Cowboys:

A do-it-all guy.  “Marion the Barbarian” is a bruising back with the mindset of a hard-hitting free safety.  Never one for fancy running, there may be no player in the NFL (save for Brandon Jacobs) who elicits such fear in the hearts of would-be tacklers.

A part of his game, surprisingly outstanding because of his smash-mouth style, is his talents as a receiving threat out of the backfield.  His 47 catches are second only to Matt Forte, and he leads all running backs in receiving yards (Although to be fair, Reggie Bush had comfortable leads in both categories before injuring his knee).

Averaging just under 4 yards a carry and just under 8 yards per catch and never shying away from laying a devastating block or two, Marion Barber sits at #3 on my ultimate running back depth chart.

2.  LaDainian Tomlinson, San Diego Chargers:

A down-season (From my calculation, mostly due to Philip Rivers learning how to throw downfield instead of having to throw to LDT 75 times per year) for LDT is still very good for the future Hall of Famer.  Sure, his stats aren’t what they were, and he’s another year older, and we all know running back 29 is normal guy 36, but this guy is still the class of NFL running backs.

Whether it be cutting up the field, bowling over safeties, flying over the offensive line for a touchdown, taking screen passes for scores or staying back to take on the toughest of pass rushers, there’s still no one who has done it as consistently as LaDainian Tomlinson for several years now.

1.  Maurice Jones-Drew, Jacksonville Jaguars

The only one out of these three currently averaging over 4 yards per carry, Jones-Drew is beyond a doubt the most versatile running back in the NFL.  He’s a human highlight reel of bone-crushing blocks on linebackers twice his size (Anyone remember him pancaking Shawne Merriman coming in on a blitz last season?  Impossible to forget.  Whether helped or hindered by his short stature (”Pocket Hercules” stands an unimposing 5′7″ but packs 208 pounds into a body of solid muscle), he’s one of the best goalline and short-yardage backs in the game.

In addition to being able to power through defensive players, he possesses break-away speed that seems physically impossible for legs that don’t measure much longer than your common table lamp.  His 43 catches are just a few off the league lead, and averaging almost 10 yards per catch is something even quite a few wide receivers would be envious of.

As if that weren’t enough, his skills as a kick returner rival the best in the game.  Brushing off the sterotypical view of a kick returner (Lean, fast guys who can outrun scared deer but with no other specialized skills), the diminutive rising star cuts, dashes and flat-out runs over those that oppose him.  And when someone does get their arms around him, he’s one of the toughest guys to tackle possibly in the history of the sport.

Yes, it’s up for debate, and everyone has a different opinion.  And, yes, it was insanely difficult for me to keep Brian Westbrook off this list (I still may replace Barber with Westbrook as I type this).  But, if I were building a franchise and needed a stud running back, there is no one right now I would rather have than Maurice Jones-Drew.  The most dangerous back in the NFL.


SAN DIEGO (-9 1/2) over Oakland
CHICAGO (-6 1/2) over Jacksonville
Minnesota (E) over DETROIT
Houston (+5 1/2) over GREEN BAY
TENNESSEE (-13 1/2) over Cleveland
Cincinnati (+13 1/2) over INDIANAPOLIS
Atlanta (+3) over NEW ORLEANS
Philadelphia (+7) over NEW YORK GIANTS
BUFFALO (-1) over Miami
DENVER (-9) over Kansas City
SAN FRANCISCO (+4) over New York Jets
SEATTLE (+4 1/2) over New England
ARIZONA (-14) over St. Louis
PITTSBURGH (-3) over Dallas
BALTIMORE (-5) over Washington
CAROLINA (-3) over Baltimore

Last Week:
Me: 9-7
LVK: 5-11

Season:
Me: 80-89
LVK: 84-85

Whoops Picks…

bobby | Gambling, Football | Monday, December 1st, 2008

Yeah so it turns out my turkey hangover and friend Craig’s bachelor party prevented me from turning in my football picks on time. So, what I’m going to do is write my picks, why the majority of them were wrong, then bitch for a while as I tally up my girlfriend’s inevitable winning total wins.

On with the explanations… Home team in caps…

BUFFALO (-7) over San Francisco

No-brainer, right? A slightly less-than-mediocre west coast team going cross-country to play an AFC East team in a place that usually provides ridiculous wintertime home field advantage. Marshawn Lynch should have torn up that team in the cold and the Bills should have easily handled the 49ers. The result? a 10-3 San Francisco win for absolutely no reason. Yeah, I guess I should have seen that coming…

1-3

Baltimore (-7) over CINCINNATI

I stuck with my “Never pick Cincy under any circumstances this season while Marvin Lewis and Chad Ocho Cinco Johnson Wellington III still occupy the same zip code. Effective so far, especially against a defense as good as Baltimore’s.

2-3

CLEVELAND (+4 1/2) over Indianapolis

I had no idea what to make of this game, as a bad Browns team was starting to rally around their new quarterback, then lost him for the year, then started last year’s stud Derek Anderson, then lost him for the year. I’m not even sure who finished the game at quarterback for the Browns, but once again Indy was not able to unleash their offense against a questionable (and I use that term not only lightly, but as a compliment) defense. Against the spread Indy was close, but no cigar.

3-3

GREEN BAY (-3) over Carolina

I really thought I had this pick right when I made it. Green Bay’s defense was playing bend-but-don’t-break, opportunistic defense and very good offense and had home field in cold weather on their side against a mostly warm-weather team. Unfortunately, Carolina’s completely unpredictable season reared its ugly head against me once again.

3-4

Miami (E) over ST. LOUIS

This was what I thought an easy pick which turned out to be an extremely close game. But, the result should have been easy for everyone to see. Aside from the one good run St. Louis went on this season, they are an awful-yet-rebuilding-so-watch-out-for-them-inthenextfew-years team. But as for now? I’m pretty sure Miami’s incessant Wildcat offensive attack could confuse them enough to win this game in their Domepiece.

4-4

New Orleans (+3 1/2) over TAMPA BAY

I was really proud of this pick, as I saw that Reggie Bush was going to be back (even when he’s limited, he demands attention on the field), and Marques Colston is returning to full strength.  Despite Tampa Bay’s refusal to stop playing good defense besides not having a single big star on the starting team (lest you count Ronde Barber and Barrett Ruud), I had a feeling they would not be able to outscore the Saints to the tune of four or more points.  Even though they almost did, I’m taking credit for a win that came directly from my internal assessment of the matchup.  Sue me.

5-4

WASHINGTON (+3 1/2) over New York Giants

I know, I know, I really have to stop being bitter toward the Giants.  Eli Manning is really good, and their defense is very, very good despite losing many key players.  It is killing me this season, but I am going to have to admit they’re a great team, and they may just repeat this year.  For those of you that don’t know me well, I just banged my head against my coffee table 8 times.  For those of you that do, you know exactly what corner I banged it off of.

5-5

ATLANTA (+5) over San Diego

San Diego’s season this year makes me terrified of New England’s reported upcoming trip to London to play a regular season game next year.  If losing Brady this year wasn’t enough, now we’ll have to take the two-week ruining (at least) trip to England to play in front of a crowd that cheers the kickers louder than any other players because it’s the only fragment of the game that reminds them of soccer.  God, I hate this NFL international outreach program.

6-5

Kansas City (+3) over OAKLAND

Okay, Oakland’s not terrible, but would anyone in their right mind take them to cover as a favorite?  I mean, really?

7-5

NEW ENGLAND (-1) over Pittsburgh

This was a tough call, but I really did think New England would make this a “must-win” situation in their minds and pull this one out.  However, New England chose to have its worst game of the season this week, and proved me completely wrong.  I have no defense for this, and apparently New England chose not to have one this week either.  No, I’m not bitter.  I swear!  Well… Maybe a little.

7-6

Denver (+7 1/2) over NEW YORK JETS

I actually saw most of this game coming, to be perfectly honest.  I had a feeling Thomas Jones would run all over Denver’s undersized defense, but Denver’s passing game would ultimately outscore and prevail on Sunday.  It’s a lot easier to say now, but I saw this one coming alllll along…

8-6

Chicago (+3) over MINNESOTA

Call me crazy, but was I alone in thinking that what I believe to be the best defense in the NFL would be able to come up with a scheme to stop Minnesota’s running game, leaving it to Tavairis Jackson to beat them?  And then, in turn, intercept him at least six times, three of which for touchdowns?  How did this team put up 34 points!?  This had to have been like the New England game in which the team simply had its worst game of the season.  That’s the only  explanation I can think of.  Anyone else?  Minnesota can’t be that good, can they?

8-7

HOUSTON (-3) over Jacksonville

Jacksonville has been so severely underperforming this season it is hard for me to believe they will go into Houston on Monday Night Football and make a game out of this one.  Houston’s high-powered offense led by Matt Schaub (replaced nearly every game at some point by Sage Rosenfels), Andre Johnson and rookie standout Steve Slaton should prevent matchup problems throughout the game, and be able to hold the Jaguars’ offense, unable to get off the ground all season, to a minimum on the national stage.  And, look at that!  I even got the late picks in before Monday Night Football!

Coming Later This Week:  “The Best Running Back in the NFL”

Thanksgiving Day Picks!

bobby | Gambling, Football | Thursday, November 27th, 2008

I figured this week I would post these picks before the actual games were played, just so everyone knows I didn’t cheat when I go 3-for-3. Without further ado…

Tennessee (-11) at Detroit

I hope everyone is ready for this: My absolute insanity upset special of the year. Not only am I taking the points in this game, I am officially picking Detroit to win this game outright. If you’re laughing right now and calling me crazy, that’s fine. However, I will say you’re not very original. Before you navigate away from this page laughing to yourself, hear me out. I have a few sound (depending on how far you can stretch the word ’sound’) reasons for calling this…

1.) Kerry Collins is due. I mean, come on. Does anyone really expect this guy to flawlessly lead the NFL’s best team all season? Would it be that much of a stretch to think Kerry Collins could be lulled into a false sense of security against the league’s worst scoring defense, throw a couple of badly-timed picks, and blow this game? Not outside the realm of possibility, right?

2.) The Thanksgiving Day Factor. For a historically terrible team, a 20-18 record on Thanksgiving in the last 38 years is tough to overlook, right? I mean, any time a team that loses most of its games has a winning record under certain circumstances, attention must be paid. Whether or not it would appear possible on paper, players react with a different intensity and level of concentration when on the national stage. I’ve seen enough Monday Night Football and playoff games (especially in the last 2-3 years of the NFL) that have proved anything can happen, and this game is no exception.

3.) Pre-season Predictions. Before this season, many people expected about the same output from the Titans and Lions. Vince Young was still developing as an NFL quarterback, and therefore expectations were tempered. Tennessee was supposed to be little more than a very, very good defense. The Lions were supposedly going to be an excellent offensive team behind an emerging superstar in Calvin Johnson in his second season, along with Roy Williams (lost to a trade), Shaun McDonald and Mike Furrey catching passes from Jon Kitna (lost to injury, but may be addition by subtraction). Along with an efficient running game with the young and extremely talented Kevin Smith, the Lions could catch some eyes this season.

Though the season has turned out dramatically different so far, there were reasons behind these predictions, and the personnel (minus the aforementioned players) remain the same. Monster games from Calvin Johnson and Kevin Smith could even the playing field a bit from what the Lions lack in defensive prowess. And by lack in defensive prowess, I mean lack in being able to stop anyone from doing anything at any time.

4.) Home Field Advantage. On a short week (Thursday game after a Sunday game for both teams), the Lions get the benefit of spending the better part of two weeks at home. The Titans, on the other hand, must factor in travel time to their already abbreviated preparation schedule. On short rest, this could be a much bigger deal than it would seem at first glance.

So what does it all mean? Probably nothing. Tennessee’s running backs probably rush for 340 combined yards and most of the crowd will leave for dinner before halftime. But, until it happens that way, I’m putting a little bit of money on Detroit. If they’re going to take someone by surprise this season, the pieces are in place for a Thanksgiving Day Miracle.

Pick: Lions

Seattle (+12 1/2) at Dallas

I’m so glad the Seahawks got Bobby Engram back (Another fantasy casualty on my endless list this season) so that Matt Hasselbeck could all but completely ignore him on his way to leading Seattle to a 2-9 record. What in the world is the plan in Seattle? Ignore everything that has worked in the last few years and tank the season for draft picks? If so, mission accomplished. Good work, chumps. I have nothing more to say to you! Good day!!

(Note: The author of this column would like to apologize for the nasty tone taken for the duration of the Seahawks-Cowboys preview. He’s really taking this year’s fantasy football disaster to heart. If you have children, you may want to have them skip over the Saints preview and the “Reggie Bush’s MCL” rant that will surely accompany it. Thank you for your patience and understanding.)

Pick: Cowboys

Arizona (+3) at Philadelphia

Well, I am watching this Tennessee-Detroit game right now, and with the score 28-3 with time remaining in the second quarter, it appears I may have swung and missed on this one.  But, you know what?  I took a swing and struck out, which at least makes me better than Mark Bellhorn.  However, I seriously doubt that Mark Bellhorn is a football prognosticator now so I’m going to assume he couldn’t care less.

After last week’s awful loss to Baltimore in which Donovan McNabb was temporarily benched, I now can’t seem to trust Philadelphia to do anything right for the rest of the year.  With three straight weeks of winless football (Including a humiliating fight to a draw with Cincinnati), the Eagles are headed for the bottom of the NFC East, and no one on that team even seems to care. I’d love to see how, even with a very good defensive backfield, a coach who is unclear on the rules of the game will gameplan against the league’s best receiving tandem in Larry Fitzgerald and Anquan Boldin. With Tennessee upping the score to 35-3 while I was writing this, I see three blowouts occurring today, with the Titans, ‘Boys and Cards all lighting up opposing defenses on a magical Thanksgiving feast of offense.

I officially apologize for my attempt at a ridiculous upset pick, and I’ll never try something like that again.  I wish my favorite player of all time, Barry Sanders never retired.  Even though he’s  40 years old now, he still has more talent than most of this Lions squad combined.  He would definitely make this game more interesting.  But alas, I have to watch Daunte Culpepper throw interceptions on attempted halfback screens.  I picked this team to win today?  Unbelievable…

Pick: Cardinals

Who is the Best Player in the NFL? - Part II

bobby | Football | Saturday, November 22nd, 2008

This week I’ve decided to discuss wide receivers.  There are so many high-performance vehicles out there in the world of wide receivers, it is hard to narrow it down to someone who can be considered the best.  Last season, we had Randy Moss break the single-season receiving touchdown mark held by Jerry Rice (It should be mentioned, however, that Rice set the record in only 12 games, but had many opportunities before and after that to break his own record).  Terrell Owens’ and Marvin Harrison’s lifetime achievements are among the greats who have ever played the game, but both are past their respective primes, and Terrell Owens drops too many passes to be a top-5 guy on my personal list.

Here’s a list of receivers I believe could be argued into the top five, depending on who you’re talking to, and what team they are a fan of:

Andre Johnson, T.J. Houshmandzadeh, Greg Jennings, Randy Moss, Wes Welker, Steve Smith, Santana Moss, Calvin Johnson, Anquan Boldin, Larry Fitzgerald, Reggie Wayne, Roddy White, Brandon Marshall.

These are currently the top performing receivers in the game.  A couple of names I would tend to dismiss right away because of a lack of experience or extreme inconsistency are Santana Moss and Calvin Johnson.  Although, in Johnson’s case, I would credit his awful team more with his lack of legitimate receiving numbers to put him on this list, rather than his inexperience.  With even a decent quarterback throwing him the ball, he could be right up there.

The ideal receiver doesn’t exist in a single person, but would possess a few characteristics of different receivers in the NFL, for example:

Hands:  Kevin Faulk, as far as I can tell, has the best hands in the entire National Football League.  In all of my years watching football, I’ve never seen a player show such a staggering variety of improbably catches.  Kevin Faulk can catch balls that are darting at him at approximately 90mph into his inconveniently bouncy chest pads.  He’s caught numerous balls that if not for her perfect receiving fingers, would bounce off the tops of his shoes and likely be intercepted by a 300-something pound lineman.  He’s caught balls thrown a yard behind his forward motion, only to throw one arm out, tip it back to himself, have it bounce of numerous other parts of his body, and finally coming to rest in a cradled arm by his side.  He has dived for bad balls, plucking them from incomplete-status just nanoseconds before they brush the blades of grass below.  And most importantly, he never misses the rare times when a perfect pass will float his way and hit him in stride, and almost always has an acute awareness of where the first down marker is, and he gets there.  I simply don’t know how he does it, but he does.  I personally believe Kevin Faulk (Three Super Bowl rings were enough for people to agree that Brady was a Hall of Famer, how much does this phenomenon effect the vital role players of the team?) should eventually be voted into the Hall of Fame, but that is a conversation for another day.

Routes:  Whether this comes with age and experience, or whether these guys simply always possessed uncanny skills in the area, Torry Holt and Marvin Harrison are the best route-runners since probably Jerry Rice.  Unfortunately since their respective teams have apparently forgotten that they still start on offense for them, they can’t possibly be included on this list.  These are types of guys, however, that can have a telestrated line of the textbook route they are about to run drawn on the screen, and they wouldn’t waiver a step.  If they ever had to walk a line during a field sobriety test, it wouldn’t surprise me to see them ace with flying colors, as long as they could request to walk a post or fly pattern.

Speed:  These are the guys that get open because of pure speed and quickness.  Usually, this group includes a lot of crazy-good, crazy-small players that slip in and out of coverage almost undetected.  Examples in the game right now include Steve Smith, Wes Welker, DeSean Jackson, Lee Evans and Steve Breaston.  They couldn’t dunk with a stepladder and a 6-inch diameter Nerf basketball, but they can get open as if there’s no coverage at all on them, and usually run after the catch. It’s not limited to diminutive receivers, however, as I would certainly include Randy Moss, Greg Jennings, Terrell Owens, Anquan Boldin and Calvin Johnson in this group.  Ironically, this group also includes some of the bravest (and therefore, dumbest) receivers in the game, running head-first into linebackers twice their weight in order to get the extra two-and-a-half yards needed for a first down on third-and-8 in a game-tying drive in the 4th quarter.  AKA:  Go-to-Guys.

Strength and Jumping:  An undervalued part of a receivers game.  These two usually fit together, because when a receiver needs to use his strength the most is usually going for a jump ball and wrestling it away from a pesky corner in man coverage or a wild safety who will fight to the death for any chance at an interception (e.g. Rodney Harrison, Troy Polamalu, Adrian Wilson…).  There are a lucky few receivers who possess the strength, size and jumping ability to come down with almost any pass, against even the best of backs such as Antonio “Let me Just Grab This” Cromartie, such as Anquan Boldin, Chad Johnson, James Hardy, Antonio Gates, Tony Gonzalez, Terrell Owens (If he can actually catch it), and, surprisingly for his thin frame, Randy Moss.

Smarts:  There are some receivers in the game who simply outsmart everyone on the field when they’re playing.  This is a much smaller field, as many receivers have large egos to accompany their insane statistics.  Throughout college ball and practices, many are likely to ignore advice from coaches, and especially other receivers, relying on their god-given ability to let their accomplishments play out on the field.  These players include, but are not limited to:  Wes Welker, Randy Moss (Any coincidence the smartest coach in the game got these two guys together?), T.J. Houshmandzadeh, Larry Fitzgerald, Troy Brown (Hey, he only retired this year, I’m still counting him in this group because he may have been the smartest receiver in this decade), Reggie Bush (Yup), Marvin Harrison, Torry Holt (The textbook route-runners, not a coincidence either), Antonio Gates, Tony Gonzalez, Jason Witten (Tight ends are forced to out-wit defensive players because of an assortment of packages they run including pass-blocking, run blocking, short and deep routes and the different types of defenders they match up against (Linemen, linebackers, corners and safeties all will have an assignment to cover a tight end at some point in a game, depending on the player’s release).

Bringing all these attributes together is something that would seem like an impossibly difficult task, but here are the top 5 guys that I believe do the best job of it, and their stats (and NFL rank) this season:

5.  Wes Welker, New England Patriots - 72 catches (2nd), 781 yards (11th), 1 TD.  Possesses smarts, speed (and filthy quickness - different from speed in that kind of “I just had him in my sights, where the $()*&@ did he go!?” type of way), hands and route running.  Also has an shocking ability to whack a linebacker in the chest backward two yards on his way to a hard-earned first down.  On pace to break his own franchise record of 112 catches with the only thing being thrown by Tom Brady is money at his supermodel girlfriend.

4.  Larry Fitzgerald, Arizona Cardinals - 67 catches (4th), 939 yards (2nd), 6 TD. Possesses speed, route-running, hands, size/strength/jumping ability.  One of the most physically gifted receivers I’ve seen in my lifetime, save for the guy on the opposite side of the field.

3.  Andre Johnson, Houston Texans - 71 catches (3rd), 955 yards (1st), 3 TD.  Possesses ridiculous speed, route-running, hands, s/s/ja and smarts.  Has been able to produce pro-bowl type numbers even with David Carr at the helm for the beginning of his career.  One of those receivers, however, who we will always have to wonder about:  What would he do with a HOF-type QB?

2.  T.J. Houshmandzadeh, Cincinnati Bengals - 77 catches (1st), 746 yards (9th), 4 TD.  Possesses unique speed and quickness, smarts (and genius when compared to his co-star Chad Ocho-Stinko), pristine route-running, and great hands.  His 77 catches, some from Carson Palmer, and many others from a guy who I can never remember whether he’s Ryan Fitzpatrick or Patrick Fitzryan, prove he is the premiere pass-catching go-to guy in the game.  The only thing that bugs me about this guy is everyone in professional sports coverage staunch refusal to pronounce his name correctly, despite the fact its spelled out phonetically.

1.  Anquan Boldin, Arizona Cardinals -  62 catches (6th), 792 yards (7th), 10 TD (1st).  Possesses break-neck speed and quickness, smarts, route-running, Faulk-like hands and an unparalleled size/strength/jumping ability that makes him the Alpha and Omega of goal line receivers.  His fearless patrol of the middle of the field, speed to win a footrace downfield, hands to catch a ball thrown anywhere at any speed, and the physical gifts to rip a ball away from anyone, anywhere (especially in the end zone) make Anquan Boldin the best receiver in the game today.  Boldin’s unique natural ability, respect and love for the game and its intricacies, along with his Will Smith in “Pursuit of Happyness” workmanship are enough for me to bestow this title on him.

So there you go.  It’s my list, and I’m sticking to it.  I know fans of other receivers will be livid with the exclusion of certain names, so here’s some advice for a few of them…

Steve Smith:  More consistency, stop sucker-punching teammates and running your mouth about watching yourself on NFL Network when you should be paying attention to the game.

Terrell Owens:  Stop dropping easily catchable passes, then celebrating like a “Dance for Pennies” street performer when you actually grab one for a score.

Randy Moss:  What happened to you “Jump to the Moon” special move?  Haven’t seen it at all this season, and smaller defensive backs are starting to make you look a little bad.  Play like your money depends on it, and you could be right back at the top of this list.

Roddy White, Marques Colston, Greg Jennings and especially Calvin Johnson:  You’re well on your way.

Reggie Wayne:  You barely missed being #5, and that may or may not be just because you’re a Colt and Wes is a Patriot.  But with Marvin disappearing from the game plans, you should be setting the NFL on fire right now.  Better get on that if you want to breach the list next year…

Picks column tomorrow…

Said I Wouldn’t, but I am…

bobby | Gambling, Football | Sunday, November 16th, 2008

Look, I’m putting some work into this (Best Player in the NFL - Tom Brady = x) equation, so I forgot to take any notes on who was playing each other today. Let’s fly through these…

Thursday’s game: I got it wrong… No comment…

Sunday:

Denver (+6) at Atlanta

Matt Ryan will get to continue his impressive (and increasingly unopposed) run at offensive rookie of the year bid against one of the league’s worst pass defenses.

Pick: Falcons

Philadelphia (-9) at Cincinnati

I have no idea what to make of either of these teams after 10 weeks in the NFL. Philly can’t finish off anyone in the 4th quarter, Cincy can’t figure out if they’re playing a preseason game or going to attempt a real season, and I wouldn’t put money on either of them to cover any kind of spread over a touchdown, especially when you’re the visiting team. No way, no how.

Pick: Bengals

Chicago (E) at Green Bay

This game is the most intriguing of the week to me. I can see a blowout either way, and I can absolutely see a close, defensive struggle in which this matchup comes down to Robbie Gould vs. Mason Crosby. I can also see choosing not to watch this game because Rex Grossman has turned it into a laugher with 4 interceptions in the first half.

Pick: Packers

Houston (+8) at Indianapolis

With Indianapolis on the downside of a long run near the top of the NFL (We may be talking about the coming-down of the Indianapolis dynasty right now if Drew Bledsoe never got almost killed against the Jets in ‘01), this Houston-Indianapolis rivalry may turn into one of the best in football. And, as any Red Sox or Yankees fan knows, you never pick one team to win in a landslide. The games will be long, exhausting, close and probably result in more than one fight.

Pick: Texans

New Orleans (-5 1/2) at Kansas City

This spread can’t be big enough for how bad New Orleans is going to make the Chiefs’ secondary look today. Even with Reggie Bush missing one more week, Marques Colston may break the single-game receiving mark against a Chiefs D allowing over 400 yards per contest (Good for dead last in the NFL).

Pick: Saints

Oakland (+10 1/2) at Miami

This is a game where anyone could win, anything could happen, and anyone could be the star of the game. And still, no one will care.

Pick: Raiders

Baltimore (+6 1/2) at New York Giants

I love Baltimore’s defense this season. However they’ve done it, they’ve managed to revitalize this aging defense into one of the NFL’s elite yet again. I see Brandon Jacobs being taken completely out of this game, and Eli Manning having to do it all himself against a ballhawking, experienced Ravens secondary. Even if the Giants pull this off, it’ll be a squeaker.

Pick: Ravens

Minnesota (+3 1/2) at Tampa Bay

Is it just me, or is Tampa Bay the most boring team to watch in the entire NFL? If anyone has any answer to this question, or a rebuttal or counter-point, I’d love to hear it. Someone explain to me why this team is doing decently and take a shot at convincing me they have any chance whatsoever to get out of the first round of the playoffs if they even make it there. Go for it, I dare you!

Pick: Vikings

Detroit (+14) at Carolina

Okay, I know Carolina has been playing well this season, and Detroit is terrible. But really, 14 points? This is a spread we’re used to seeing after New England or Indianapolis! Is Jake Delhomme, and Co. capable of covering two touchdowns against a team that used to have Barry Sanders?! …Yeah, actually they probably are.

Pick: Panthers

St. Louis (+6 1/2) at San Francisco

Fresh off one of the worst regular season games ever played last week against the Jets, the Rams are looking to rebound against a much more beatable 49ers team. They won’t.

Pick: 49ers

Arizona (-3) at Seattle

Bobby Engram moves back to his more comfortable spot in the slot this week, where he caught over 90 balls for over 1,000 yards last season, against Arizona. With Hasselbeck still out, however, it makes so little difference it’s not even worth talking about. I just felt like mentioning it since my auction league is suffering because of it. And Reggie Bush being out, AGAIN. And, has Tom Brady returned to practice yet? Derrick Mason is questionable??? What the hell is wrong with my auction team!?

Pick:  Cardinals

San Diego (+4 1/2) at Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh will find a way to stop LD today at Heinz field, which puts the pressure on Philip Rivers. With snow showers and winds expected in Pittsburgh today at game time, my money’s on the D.

Pick: Steelers

Tennesse (-3) at Jacksonville

The Jaguars are in disarray, with the team decision to bench team captain Mike Peterson for insubordination. However, I see the Jaguars pulling together to fight hard against this flawed-but-perfect-so-far Titans team. Who am I kidding. The Titans won’t go undefeated, but they’re definitely beating this Jags team today.

Pick: Titans

Dallas (-1 1/2) at Washington

With Tony Romo back, with weapons like Roy Williams, TO, Jason Witten, Marion Barber and Felix Jones around him, they will be able to get back on the winning and loving it track this week in Washington. And, for the love of god, THROW THE BALL TO ROY! HE’S A CRAZY TALENT THAT WAS STUCK IN DETROIT FOR HIS WHOLE CAREER!! PLEASE LET US SEE WHAT HE CAN DO IN THE REAL NFL!!! PLEASE!!!!

Pick: Cowboys

Monday:

Cleveland (+5) at Buffalo

I really like Cleveland, and their players, and especially their coach, but Buffalo is going to kill them at home on Monday Night Football. Brady Quinn was the right move for this team, but the kid’s going to need some time. Let’s hope they can give it to him, and still get something for Derek Anderson.

Pick: Bills

Last Week:

Me: 3-11
LVK: 6-8
Season:

Me: 62-75
LVK: 70-65

Who is the Best Player in the NFL?

bobby | Football | Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

The prevailing thought for the last few years is that Tom Brady, the Golden Boy quarterback of the only dynastic team of the new millenium, was the best player in the NFL.  With his season ending before time expired in the first quarter of the first game of this season, now prevailing thinkers don’t know what to think, or to prevail!

So in an NFL universe that doesn’t include Tom Brady, who is the best player?  In the next few weeks, I’ll be taking a look at the skill positions, comparing the best of the best, and find who is the best of the rest.

Quarterbacks

There are at bare minimum, 200 different aspects of this position that go into making a player great.  Tom Brady has approximately 199 of these.  I would take pure foot speed out of his column, simply because I’m not sure he could have outrun Joe Paterno before his knee injury, never mind now.  Some would argue his mobility within the pocket is so incomparably good that you could consider him a mobile quarterback, but that’s not what we’re here to argue.

In terms of star quality, the competitors are clear:  Peyton Manning, Donovan McNabb, Drew Brees, Tony Romo, Brett Favre and Eli Manning.  However, only two I’d actually take from this list for competing for the “Best player alive except for Tom Brady” Award.  Here are the guys that were cut, and the reasons I had for doing so.

Donovan McNabb:  If the NFL were “Mortal Kombat,” Donovan McNabb would have a “finishing move” that involved throwing an object at the opponent that sails twenty feet too high, then vomiting on himself and falling down.  In other words, McNabb is not clutch.  From his famous failure and upchucking in the 4th quarter of Super Bowl XXIX, to his complete inability to finish a game out this season, the guy simply cannot be relied upon to seal a victory, or complete a comeback.

Brett Favre:  Interceptions.  I know, I know, he’s phenomenal.  His consecutive starts at quarterback dwarf Cal Ripken, Jr.’s “Iron Man” accomplishments by comparison.  He’s the all-time NFL leader in passing yards and touchdowns, but also in interceptions.  He could certainly lead a comeback with his talent, but does anyone truly trust him not to throw a heart-wrenching pick in a crucial third-and-long situation in a big game?  I certainly don’t.

Tony Romo:  I know his numbers are great, because unlike Drew Bledsoe, he decided to start throwing to Terrell Owens all the time, but I haven’t heard a good argument for the case that Romo is even a top-3 quarterback in the league.  Top-3 fantasy quarterback?  Oh, sure.  No one will argue that having Jason Witten, Terrell Owens, Roy Williams and two great running backs to take pressure off of you would make you a phenomenal fantasy quarterback.  But until the guy wins a playoff game, I’m not counting him among the elite just yet.

Eli Manning:  I admit, he is well on his way to becoming one of the elite quarterbacks in the NFL, but he needs more than one incredible playoff run to get there.  I’m not ready to put him there after one Super Bowl, just like Brady wasn’t considered that great until his third.  That leaves two.

Drew Brees and Peyton Manning are easily candidates to round out the top 3 with Brady, and fans of both could argue their merits as #1 all day.  Here’s a look at their stats over the last three years:

Brady:  12,445 yards, 100 TD, 34 Int, 99 QB Rating

Brees:  12,417 yards, 78 TD, 44 Int, 93.9 QB Rating

Manning:  12, 184 yards, 90 TD, 33 Int, 94.6 QB Rating

I have no idea if those QB Ratings make any sense, because averaging out the QB Ratings from ‘05, ‘06 and ‘07 probably don’t equal out exactly, but it’s close enough.  Both Brees and Manning are back at the top of the fantasy QB ranks again, with some outliers up there as usual (Aaron Rodgers, Jay Cutler and Philip Rivers, none of which I’m ready to put into this class of quarterback).

So, if we’re looking for a quarterback to be the best player in football.  I’d say it’s one of these two guys.  Tune in next time when running backs are discussed.  Before long, we’ll find out who the best of the rest actually is.

Week 10 Picks

bobby | Gambling, Football | Friday, November 7th, 2008

Since there is a Thursday game this week, I’ll throw up my picks today, then probably write another column about the games on Sunday night. I missed out on the pool I run at work this week by a measly 5 picks. The worst part(s)? I lost to a woman, I lost by a lot, and I paid for TWO slips, so I had twice the odds!

I hope no one is taking these seriously…

On with the picks…

Denver (+3) at Cleveland

Brady Quinn will get his first start in front of his ultra-supportive home crowd tonight.  The Browns have gotten their offense going just well enough to add his charisma and talent to cover this spread.  Although the Broncos possess huge amounts of talent at left tackle, quarterback, cornerback and wide receiver, they seem fatally flawed in key areas (such as passing defense - 27th in the league).  Browns cover, and cover big.  Wait… That makes no sense.  Don’t listen to me, I’m certainly not.
Pick: Broncos

New Orleans (Pk) at Atlanta

There seem to be a ton of home teams this week that have very achievable spreads to cover.  Since none of my other tactics seem to work, no matter how much strategy or nonsense I put into my choosing them, I’m going to go ahead and choose mostly home teams this week.  If I lose, I’m blaming Katherine Harris.
Pick: Falcons

Carolina (-9) at Oakland

Over the past week, Oakland waived self-proclaimed “Greatest player in the history of organized sport” DeAngelo Hall because, statistically, he is the worst cornerback since I played for the Barnstable Silver Bullets at 11 years old.  With their great corner on the other side (for real, this guy really is great), Asiomughosomingham Oulotusofeld, Steve Smith will be all but neutralized.  However, whether or not Oakland has enough to stop the other threats on Carolina’s offense (Jeff King, Mushin Muhammad,
Pick:  Raiders

Tennessee (Pk) at Chicago

Tennssee has everything going against them in this game.  A Chicago defense that has found its “We’re going to knock your teeth out” mentality again, a rising media interest in their undefeated record, an opponent whose strength would theoretically neutralize their strength (Chicago’s run D against the Titans’ running game), and playing in a hostile, cold and windy Chicago home stadium.  I do love this Titans team (especially what Chris Johnson has done for my fantasy teams), but their first loss will come in week 10.

Pick:  Bears

Baltimore (+1 1/2) at Houston

In my fantasy auction league (recently renamed “Hurricane Katrina” after injuries to Tom Brady, Reggie Bush, Matt Hasselbeck [we have Bobby Engram], Rashard Mendenhall and Kolby Smith), Steve Slaton is now our only viable running back, and after struggling against a frustratingly formidable Minnesota rush defense last week, must try to find some sort of success against an equally tough Baltimore run D.  We plan to catch breaks in this league at some point, we really do.  I see them coming at around week 12.  I need anti-psychotic medication immediately.
Pick:  Houston

Jacksonville (-6 1/2) at Detroit

Despite Detroit’s valiant cover last week, I still refuse to pick them against a decent team, even though they’re home.  I mean, they lost Roy Williams!  They don’t have a running back!  This has got to be a blowout, right?  By the way, did MJD slip into a coma at some point this season?  I’ve heard less about Maurice Jones Drew since fantasy drafts ended than I have about Reverend Jeremiah Wright.  And, that just makes me sad.
Pick:  Jaguars

Seattle (+9) at Miami

My useless, ridiculous, based-on-nothing prediction for the week:  Seneca Wallace will finally be introduced to Bobby Engram, who caught over 90 passes for over 1,000 yards last season, and will be able to maintain some sort of offensive drive against Miami.  Then, they’ll lose by 8.  Yes, that sounds good.
Pick:  Seahawks

Green Bay (+2) at Minnesota

After losing a heartbreaker against Tennessee last week, something gives me the feeling this talented young team will be angry and aggressive against a Minnesota defense still vulnerable against the pass.  If Green Bay can minimize Adrian Peterson’s impact on this game, they may even have this wrapped up by halftime.  Sportsomedy Player Prediction:  Greg Jennings:  6 catches, 138 yards, 2 TDs.
Pick:  Packers

Buffalo (+4) at New England

Anyone willing to bet against a Bill Belichick coached, fresh-off-a-loss, angry New England team playing a must-win division game at home against Buffalo this week?  Yeah, me either.
Pick:  Patriots

St. Louis (+8) at New York Jets

Steven Jackson will be inactive for the game on Sunday.  So will the Rams’ chances of competing int his game.
Pick:  Jets

New York Giants (+3) at Philadelphia

Besides watching the Patriots, this may be the game I’m most interested in come Sunday.  The Giants, after suffering serious injuries and losses to their defense before the season even started, have been playing over their heads for the majority of the season.  And, although the Eagles’ defense has allowed more than a few points, they are very capable of destroying a team’s morale with sacks, interceptions, forced fumbles and top-notch trash talk.  I see the
Pick:  Eagles

Indianapolis (Pk) at Pittsburgh

Something about Indianapolis playing outside at Hines Field in cold weather against a rejuvenated Steelers team which just got one of its best players back in Willie Parker, makes me think this game will be a lopsided victory for the home team.  Dr. Foreman will catch Bob Sanders cheating up after the first quarter, then starting bombing passes to Santonio Holmes for 140-yard touchdown passes.  In addition, this Colts team this year has just been awkward to watch.  Besides the football-beauty that is Peyton-to-Wayne, this team has little going for it this season.
Pick:  Steelers

Kansas City (+15) at San Diego

Kansas City has a 13th string running back, a former peanut at quarterback, and a star receiver who drops almost as many passes as Terrell Owens, but do they really lose by more than two touchdowns to a Norv Turner team?
Pick:  Chiefs

San Francisco (+9 1/2) at Arizona

I think I’ve gone with enough home teams with huge spreads at this time.  With Tim Hightower running like he just escaped from police custody and recently getting all-world wide receiver back, the Cardinals should win this game handily.  But holding J.T. O’Sullivan and Frank Gore to 10 points less?  The best defensive player in the game, Patrick Willis (P-Will!) will not let that happen…
Pick:  49ers

Bobby’s Condensed Picks (Last time, I promise…)

bobby | Gambling, Football | Sunday, November 2nd, 2008

Yeah, I know it’s condensed, and yeah, I know it’s even late.  But look, when you’re hanging from Halloween and you’ve spent 3 out of 5 nights during the week going out looking for costume stuffs, you’d be pretty wiped out too.  So there!  And now… The Picks…

BUFFALO (-5 1/2) over New York Jets

CHICAGO (-12 1/2) over Detroit

CINCINNATI (+7 1/2) over Jacksonville

Baltimore (+1 1/2) over CLEVELAND

TENNESSEE (-5 1/2) over Green Bay

Tampa Bay (-8 1/2) over KANSAS CITY

ST. LOUIS (+3) over Arizona

Houston (+4 1/2) over MINNESOTA

Miami (+3 1/2) over DENVER

Atlanta (-3) over OAKLAND

NEW YORK GIANTS (-9) over Dallas

Philadelphia (-6 1/2) over SEATTLE

New England (+6) over Indianapolis

WASHINGTON (-2) over Pittsburgh

Last Week:

Me: 6-6

LVK: 6-6

Season:

Me: 53-58
LVK: 58-51

Mid-Season Fantasy Review

bobby | Gambling, Fantasy Sports, Football, Football | Thursday, October 30th, 2008

I simply don’t know what to make of the NFL anymore. I don’t care who you are, what your level of expertise is or how long you’ve been doing what you’re doing, there’s no way you’re hovered anywhere near 70% on correctly picking winners this year. It’s just impossible.

Vegas has recouped all their money and then some from the Patriots’ remarkable run last season, and one has to think they’re in on this. How can all these games end up so far off the general perceptions of them? The NFL has truly succeeded in having more parity than any other professional sport.

But that’s not what we’re here to talk about. We’re here to discuss how fantastic I’ve been in predicting everything that’s happened this season in the fantasy universe. And, now that we’re finished with that, we can get on to everything I missed:

Here’s what I got wrong:

1. Santana Moss, WR - Washington Redskins… Sort of…

He’s responded to me stating his washed-upedness with a terrific half-season so far, averaging over five catches a game and over 82 yards. But despite his yardage (658, 5th in NFL) and touchdowns (5, T-2nd), he submitted two awful performances in two consecutive weeks that almost made my points about him totally valid. In week 5 he didn’t register a catch, then came out in week 6 with a two catch, 22 yard performance. After this I thought my prediction had materialized exactly, but he recovered very well from this dip. However, with his hamstring ailing him as week 9 approaches, we’ll soon see what he has left for this season.

2. Michael Turner, RB - Atlanta Falcons… Sort of…

This is another guy who started of great, but has come very hard back down to earth. At the the semi-halfway point, he is still one of the highest rated fantasy football players in the game, with 655 rushing yards and five touchdowns. However, his receiving stats (3 catches for 11 yards) make him all but a liability in Point Per Reception (PPR) leagues. His stats are also slanted by the fact he broke out with an outrageous 220 yards in week 1. However, after we learned how absolutely pitiful the Detroit Lions would be this year, this achievement was diminished somewhat. There is also something to be said for the improvement of this team as a whole. With a reliable, talented quarterback leading the team and a group of hardworking players on the defensive and offensive side of the ball playing to the best of their abilities, running games can sometimes be good by association. Since his week 1 performance, Michael Turner has averaged only 73 yards per game with four scores in six games. He is averaging 4.5 yards per carry for the season, but since the first game, he’s averaging an entire yard less, only 3.5 ypc for the other 6 games. Not exactly ideal for a #1 fantasy back.
If you haven’t noticed, my ridiculous ego is preventing me from admitting total misses so far. We’ll see later if I can find something more complete that I missed.

3. Benjamin Watson, TE - New England Patriots

Speaking of total misses… I suggested that after the first 7 or so tight ends were taken, Tony Scheffler of Denver and Benjamin Watson from New England would be premier bargains and put up numbers comparable to the best tight ends in the league. Swing, and a miss. Not just a miss, a Jason Varitek, swinging at a change-up down and away from a great right-handed pitcher type of miss. After seven games, Big Benjamin has seven catches for 70 yards, or 1 catch for 10 yards per game. Yeah I’m going to go ahead and admit I missed that one. I will make the small point that tight-end loving Tom Brady has been injured all season, but nothing excuses that type of output. My apologies.

4. Who I told you to pass on…

In my reach for/pass on columns, I suggested that it was worth waiting and/or passing on Steve Smith and Calvin Johnson. Both guys are in the 30 catch/300 yard area, Smith having 4 touchdowns and Johnson 5. A healthy Jake Delhomme has contributed to Steve Smith’s consistency, and Calvin Johnson emerged much more quickly than most people including myself imagined. Now with Roy Williams in Dallas, he’s forced more into the spotlight than ever before. He’ll certainly see tougher coverage, but the guy’s so talented I’m not sure it will make one bit of difference. Whoops…

And now everyone’s favorite part… What I Got Right…

1. Kickers

Okay, okay. I know everyone who knows anything about fantasy football knows to avoid kickers until the second-to-last or last round, but this year’s crop of kickers is so unbelievably lop-sided I feel like it needs to be mentioned here. Let’s take a look at the top kickers in my commissioned leagues (3 points for most field goals, increasing with distance, and negative points for missed chip-shots and extra points):

1. Joe Nedney, SF

2. John Kasay, Car

3. Rian Lindell, Buf

4. Shaun Suisham, Was

5. John Carney, NYG

Alright, not a bad list. In fact, after the first couple of weeks, most of these kickers were owned in most Yahoo! leagues (the fantasy page I most often use). However, in their pre-rankings, and the kickers most often drafted early and often, these are the kickers, in their pre-ranked order.

1. Nick Folk, Dal

2. Shayne Graham, Cin

3. Adam Vinatieri, Ind

4. Nate Kaeding, SD

5. Stephen Gostkowski, NE

Not a match in the top 5? Okay, it happens. Let’s continue…

6. Josh Scobee, Jax

7. Rod Bironas, Ten

8. Phil Dawson, Cle

9. Neil Rackers, Ari

10. David Akers, Phi

Not a match in the top 10? Now that’s getting a tiny bit out of hand, but, I suppose it still happens. Moving on…

11. Mason Crosby, GB

12. Jeff Reed, Pit

13. Josh Brown, StL

14. Ryan Longwell, Min

15. Robbie Gould, Chi

16. Kris Brown, Hou

(No… I’m not kidding…)

17. Mike Nugent, NYG

And finally…

18. Shaun Suisham, Was

17 (SEVENTEEN!) kickers were pre-ranked higher than any of the top five highest-scoring kickers in the NFL so far. Not only that, but Suisham’s still only the fourth highest actual ranking kicker this season. Here’s where the rest of the guys fell in the preranks:

26. Joe Nedney, SF (Ranked #1)

23. John Kasay, Car (Ranked #2)

21. Rian Lindell, Buf (Ranked #3)

24. John Carney, NYG (Ranked #5)

The icing on the cake? Adam Vinatieri (Pre-Ranked #3 in kickers) is currently ranked #30 out of 30. That’s right. Dead… Last… You can’t make this stuff up.

2. My Draft Diary

Despite wasting 2 high picks on Tom Brady and Carson Palmer, I was able to get (In a PPR league!) Frank Gore, Reggie Bush, T.J. Houshmandzadeh, Greg Jennings, Lee Evans, Chris Johnson (in the fourth-to-last round), picked up Chad Pennington and Matt Ryan as free agent backups at quarterback and am currently in 1st place in that league. In addition, my choice to pick up P-Will, Antonio Cromartie, DeMeco Ryans and an assortment of the best defensive players in the game has provided me with a squad of IDPs that can outscore anyone’s offense on any given week. I should give lectures on IDP, PPR leagues I swear to god.

3. Pass On: Willie Parker, Marvin Harrison, Tony Romo, Adrian Peterson

A few things: I realize Parker and Romo were only bad decisions so far because of injuries, but I don’t care, I’m taking credit for them. Marvin Harrison was a truly bad player to reach for this season. Finally, remember that I didn’t say pass on Adrian Peterson, I simply said to pick LDT first. I made a point of stating his higher potential value in PPR leagues, and his lack of competition with Michael Turner now gone. Adrian does not catch passes like LDT, has one serious knee injury in one year of playing, and has Chester Taylor to compete with still. You’re doing well if you got Peterson, you’re doing better if you got LDT.

4. Reggie Bush

First, I need to vent. My two highest paid players on my auction league team were Tom Brady and Reggie Bush. Both injured, and both would have had us in the top three in that league right now, without a doubt. Reggie Bush again (since this is a PPR league) was one of the top-scoring running backs, and our low-money picks such as DeSean Jackson, Derrick Mason and Chris Perry (we got decent performance out of him before benching him when he became ineffective and lost his job. We also only need to start one running back weekly) gave us plenty of points per week to contend seriously. Now, with the injury to Bush, I’m calling Shenanigans for everything and vetoing every trade for no reason because I’m just so angry at fantasy sports. It’s really sad to see, and I hate myself for it. But, what would you do?

Before I take off, here is the mid-season summary for you. The top five players at each position, and their stats in my PPR, IDP league (Overall Fantasy Ranking in Parentheses):

Running Backs:

(3) Reggie Bush - 294 yards rushing, 2 TDs. 42 catches, 366 yards, 3 TDs. 285 return yards, 3 TDs.

(4) Marion Barber - 611 yards rushing, 5 TDs. 32 catches, 276 yards, 2 TDs.

(6) Frank Gore - 629 yards rushing, 4 TDs. 32 catches, 311 yards, 1 TD. 1 2-point conversion.

(10) Clinton Portis - 944 yards rushing, 7 TDs. 11 catches, 77 yards.

(15) Matt Forte - 515 yards rushing, 4 TDs. 29 catches, 223 yards, 2 TDs.

Quarterbacks:

(1) Drew Brees - 2,563 yards, 15 TDs, 7 Ints.

(2) Philip Rivers - 2,038 yards, 19 TDs, 6 Ints, 2 2-point conversions.

(5) Aaron Rodgers - 1,668 yards, 12 TDs, 4 Ints. 113 yards rushing, 3 TDs.

(7) Kurt Warner - 2,089 yards, 14 TDs, 6 Ints.

(9) Jay Cutler - 1,862 yards, 13 TDs, 7 Ints. 84 yards rushing.

Wide Receivers:

(8) Santana Moss - 42 catches, 658 yards, 5 TDs. 114 return yards, 1 TD.

(11) Andre Johnson - 56 catches, 772 yards, 2 TDs.

(12) Roddy White - 43 catches, 679 yards, 5 TDs.

(13) Larry Fitzgerald - 43 catches, 661 yards, 5 TDs.

(18) Greg Jennings - 37 catches, 685 yards, 4 TDs.

Tight Ends:

Jason Witten - 46 catches, 549 yards, 2 TDs.

Antonio Gates - 30 catches, 403 yards, 5 TDs.

Chris Cooley - 40 catches, 451 yards, 1 TD.

Tony Gonzalez - 33 catches, 369 yards, 3 TDs.

Owen Daniels - 32 catches, 395 yards, 2 TDs.

Defensive Teams:

Chicago - 114 PA, 14 sacks, 1 safety, 10 Ints, 6 fumble recoveries, 5 TDs, 2 blocked kicks.

Tampa Bay - 114 PA, 14 sacks, 12 Ints, 3 fumble recoveries, 4 TDs, 1 blocked kick.

Philadelphia - 131 PA, 23 sacks, 1 safety, 8 Ints, 7 fumble recoveries, 2 TDs, 1 return TD.

Tennessee - 87 PA, 18 sacks, 12 Ints, 4 fumble recoveries, 2 TDs, 1 blocked kick.

Green Bay - 151 PA, 12 sacks, 13 Ints, 1 fumble recovery, 5 TDs, 1 blocked kick, 1 return TD.


Don’t forget to email all fantasy questions and/or comments to bobby@sportsomedy.com

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