Showing posts with label NY Giants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NY Giants. Show all posts

Monday, August 17, 2015

Samuel L. Jackson and 2015 Fantasy Football


'I'm tired of these motherfucking blogs about this motherfucking fantasy football!'

I am pretty certain this was the exact quote Samuel L. Jackson used in the director's cut of 'Snakes on a Plane.' What an entertaining flick that was, but that is what usually happens when one sits down to watch one of the roughly 8,000 movies Jackson has appeared in over the last three decades. He's not always the star, but he usually leaves a lasting impression on the viewer with every minute of screen time he receives. There is, after all, a reason he gets as many roles as he does year in and year out.

As for me, I'm far less entertaining as you will soon find out (way to sell your post high there Jason). Every year I pick a famous Hollywood personality and tie their movie career into some of the hot button topics surrounding the upcoming fantasy football season. Last year I chose Tom Hanks and with mixed results I tried to best guess how the 2014 fantasy football season would unfold. Luckily for me I didn't follow my own advice writing that DeMarco Murray and Arian Foster would be busts. They were my first two draft picks in my 14 team league as I went 10-3 in the regular season and 2-0 in the playoffs to capture my 5th championship in the 17 year history of the league. Now don't get me wrong I also followed my advice of waiting on a quarterback. I took Jay Cutler late and he was just average enough to allow my studs to win games.

My rule for leagues of 12 or more teams: drafting RBs early can easily lose your league for you, but if those picks work out you will have a distinct advantage over those who take a QB/TE/WR combination with their first few picks. I won't always get lucky drafting the #1 and #5 overall running backs with the 14th and 15th picks of a draft. Once again I find myself drafting #14 overall and I might, just might be forced into picking backwards if possible studs aren't around. I won't have my full draft strategy until pick 12 of my draft at the earliest. Keep that in mind, when you are drafting, you must be ready to go to plan B or C immediately.

Before getting to the crux of my article, I provide for you my top 5 movies with Samuel L. Jackson in it:

5. A Long Kiss Goodnight

4. Unbreakable

3. Die Hard: With a Vengeance

2. Pulp Fiction (I'm beginning to think I have an affinity for Bruce Willis and Sam together)

1. Jurassic Park

I skipped out all the new age Marvel movies where Jackson has bit roles for the most part and Goodfellas, because although I've watched it a handful of times, cannot recall Jackson's role. I did want to include The Incredibles though, because that is such a fun movie.

Onto my preview of the 2015 Fantasy Football season, starring the one, the only Samuel L. Jackson:

Patriot Games

As has become my tradition, I tie in the first movie with the defending Super Bowl champions. Patriot Games was the second of the Jack Ryan movies (now at five) made, but the first of the Harrison Ford pair. It isn't the best of the bunch (Clear and Present Danger, Hunt for Red October and Sum of All Fears are better IMO) and Samuel L. Jackson isn't in it for very long, but here we are. I'll always remember my father asking me while driving back in 1994 when I was 16 'Do you want to see Patriot games?' I assumed we were moving to the Boston area because I took it as a sports related question, not knowing anything about the Tom Clancy books.

This past year the New England Patriots returned to glory after the Seattle Seahawks inexplicably passed the ball on the one yard line late in the fourth quarter. As happy and joyous as winning the Super Bowl has been for the Patriots, the off season has been the exact opposite. With endless questions surrounding 'Deflategate', the Patriots saw their owner get duped by the NFL Commissioner and then their future Hall of Fame quarterback, Tom Brady receive a four game suspension for basically getting a new phone. I said it from the beginning this was basically a suspension for everything the Patriots franchise has been accused of (and found guilty of) since Brady has been in the league.

What does this mean for all the skill position Patriots in 2015? Not too much really. Gronk is still the highest and most valuable fantasy draft option for them. As long as he stays on the field he is good for nearly a touchdown a game (73 games, including playoffs, 61 touchdowns). The wide receiving corps of Danny Amendola, Julian Edelman and Brandon LaFell will be more than serviceable, especially with the absence of the 77 targets and 52 receptions that Shane Vereen took with him to the New York Giants. It really doesn't matter for four games whether it is Tom Brady passing or Jimmy Garoppolo, the Patriots are a well-oiled machine and the stars will get their numbers. As for the running backs, well that is a horse of a different color. Each week you could have a different hero and goat. The 2014 Patriots had four backs gain between 281-412 yards and those four combined for 12 rushing touchdowns. What a mess. You can't even hope for one being a bye week fill-in for your starter because even up until game time you just don't know who will touch the ball.

As for Brady, sure you have to knock him back a round or two because of the suspension, but don't let him fall too far because you can always plug in Carson Palmer or Joe Flacco for the first quarter of the season and survive. Don't let him slip too far.

Deep Blue Sea(ttle)

I have to admit, I'm pretty proud of myself for this play on the title of a much underrated action/adventure movie. It has sharks, L.L. Cool J talking to a bird, science you could probably poke a million holes in and probably the third most memorable Samuel L. Jackson monologue scene ever behind his Pulp Fiction and Snakes on a Plane speeches. I won't ruin the fun of the scene if you haven't watched it before. As for the title of the movie, it is just perfect for what had to be the mood for fans of Seattle after that goal line interception. It was such a strange decision for a team that had the second most rushing attempts and fewest passing attempts in the NFL.

They rely so much on their run game and defense. IT WAS ONE FLIPPIN' YARD!!! You feel me don't you Seattle? No NFL play will be as scrutinized as that one. That is a fact.

Have no fear Seattle, sunny days will return. Okay maybe not in reality, but on the football field at least. Your defense is still top notch. Your quarterback was recently overpaid, but he gets the job done (EXCEPT ON THE GOAL LINE WITH THE SUPER BOWL ON THE LINE YOU IDIOT JASON). Marshawn Lynch is another year older with another 380 or so touches under his belt. The wide receivers are still forgettable, but the Seahawks did tinker with their tight end position.

Jimmy Graham is now a Seattle Seahawk. A square peg into a round hole? An overreaction to that Super Bowl play? Just what Russell Wilson needed to become an elite fantasy quarterback? Therein lies the million dollar question. Just how will these two mesh? Last season Doug Baldwin saw just over 21% of all the pass attempts by Wilson which was the most on the team. Could Graham eclipse 30% in 2015 which would equate to 135 targets? He averaged 137.75 over his last four years in New Orleans so that is what it would take. With the already built in running threat and the scramble ability of Wilson I figure Jimmy Graham will be seeing a lot of man coverage with help over the top. He will be a PPR monster and his usual goal line beast self. The thought of him being in Seattle will cause his ADP to drop a bit (currently a late 3rd round pick on ESPN) which will make somebody very happy.

As for Wilson, he'll have to nearly duplicate his rushing stats 800+ yards and scores (6) to be fully trusted #1 QB. The system just won't allow for him to reach upper echelon passing statistics. Jimmy Graham will help, but I have to believe that 200-300 of Wilson's scramble yards will turn into passing yards and that will lower his fantasy points. Wilson is a middle of the pack at best #1 starter who will have games in that rugged NFC West where it devolves into 'ground and pound' and the Seahawks focus squarely on not making a big mistake.

The Great White Hype

A forgettable movie for me and I'm sure one that Samuel L. Jackson would like back, but that's what happens sometimes in the movie making business. Even with an above average cast with a strong background of work, sometimes it just doesn't come together even if it looks great on paper. This brings me to topic number three: rookies. For every Peyton Manning #1 overall in 1998 you get a Ryan Leaf #2 overall in 1998. For every Ki-Jana Carter #1 overall in 1995 you get a Curtis Martin #74 overall in 1995. For every Rod Gardner #15 overall in 2001 you get a Reggie Wayne #30 overall in 2001.

If the 2012 Draft was the year of the quarterback (Luck, RGIII, Russell Wilson) and 2014 was the year of the Wide Receiver (ODB, Sammy Watkins, Mike Evans, Kelvin Benjamin) could the 2015 class finally produce a good crop of running backs?

Todd Gurley drafted by the St. Louis Rams who already have Tre Mason who as a rookie last year came on strong down the stretch of the season. Gurley who is recovering from a torn ACL may or may not be ready for the start of the season. He may or may not be the #1 running back in St. Louis when he is healthy. I'm not getting burned by those question marks.

Melvin Gordon drafted by the San Diego Chargers who also were led by a rookie running back last season in Branden Oliver has a much better chance to be a star right away. The starting job is probably his which already makes him intriguing. People don't trust rookie RBs in the fantasy world for good reason so if he drops just enough, he could be quite the steal for an owner who goes non-RB with their first two picks.

T.J. Yeldon drafted by the Jacksonville Jaguars. Good - he could and should be the starter. Bad - he is on the Jacksonville Jaguars. Do you remember how well Toby Gerhart did last year? Denard Robinson fared a bit better in spots, but the team is a mess. Yeldon will be drafted too high for my liking because of the possibilities. He may do well but I'm not risking a RB2 slot on him.

Ameer Abdullah, Tevin Coleman, Duke and David Johnson all have the same problem: they are slotted to start as the backup behind an average at best starting running back. All of them will get their chances to shine in 2015 whether it be from injury, poor performance or just being their turn to tote the rock. These are the top RB4s to stash on your bench for a rainy day from this year’s draft class.

As for Wide Receivers there are another interesting crop coming to play this season. Because of last year’s success they might get an unfair bump in ADP which will lessen their value. Kevin White steps in for the departed Brandon Marshall in Chicago (and then suddenly gets injured and will miss at least the first six weeks of the season). Amari Cooper becomes another in a long line of high draft picks for the Oakland Raiders. DeVante Parker gets the role that Mike Wallace once had. Nelson Agholor jumps in feet first to the run and fun style of Chip Kelly and takes the spot of Jeremy Maclin. For wide receivers who will have ample opportunity to be a fantasy WR2 or better, but best be drafted as you WR3 or later. It'll be a fine line come draft night as to whether they show up on my roster.

At Quarterback this year you get another #1 and #2 overall debate: Jameis or Marcus? I'll take neither thank you. If I had to guess who will be the 'Peyton Manning' and who will be the 'Ryan Leaf' of the two I'd give Mariota the Manning card.

Die Hard: With a Vengeance 

I love this film. Academy Award caliber, no, but that isn't what you hope for in a Die Hard movie. You want a sassy, tough as nails John McClane up against an evil henchman who seems to have everything under control up until it's too late to realize he was never in control. Yipee-kay-yay!! The third installment showed a washed up Bruce Willis who everyone thought he was a joke of a cop and a person prove he had another great effort in him. This brings me to our next topic: veterans who might still surprise.

Reggie Bush - He is just 30 years old, but in the NFL he is ancient. Last season was a disaster for him in Detroit, but now he finds himself in San Francisco. Frank Gore is gone (more on that later) making way for Carlos Hyde. Reggie Bush could settle in to the 3rd down back where he could thrive as a pass catcher. There are worse players to take a flyer on with a late round pick (especially in a PPR league).

Frank Gore - Speaking of Gore he once again proved me wrong by piecing together another solid season. He leaves the boring 49ers offense and gets to possibly excel in a wide open Colts attack. Defense won't be able to crowd the line so even at the ripe old age of 32 he could easily surpass his numbers from a year ago and be a upper echelon RB2 for you.

Vincent Jackson - Coming off a down year where he was overshadowed by a rookie, the 32 year old Jackson is primed for a slight bounce back. He won't be the focus of the secondary and he is bound to catch more than two touchdown passes. He still shouldn't be anything more than a WR3 for you with upside.

Carson Palmer - How many times have you heard 'If he can just stay healthy?' This is all you need to know about Palmer. If he plays, he'll do well. Do you realize Carson Palmer was 6-0 as a starter last year with an on pace average of 4300 yards, and 29 touchdowns over a 16 game season? He could be yours in the 10th round or later easy as well. How lucky do you feel?

Thor

This might be a stretch, but when I think about the Norse mythology of the Thor I think of the Minnesota Vikings mascot. After all he is based on Ragnar Lodbrok who 'was a legendary Norse ruler, king, and hero from the Viking Age' according to Wikipedia. See, it all makes sense now right?

As for the 2014 Minnesota Vikings, if you drafted any of their key players for your fantasy football team, you more than likely didn't win many games. Adrian Peterson played just one game last season after being a consensus top 5 pick. His off the field issues have been resolved in the eyes of the NFL, but he is still a jackass in my eyes. Then there was Cordarrelle Patterson who flopped miserably as an up and coming wide receiver. He was joined by Kyle Rudolph in the tight end slot who suffered through an injury plagued season. Three players, three failed seasons all for different reasons.

The gang is all back together for another fun filled season. Adrian Peterson will be yet another top 5 pick, but nobody know how the year off will affect him. Hopefully there are no more skeletons in his closet as well. Patterson will be the #2 or #3 WR behind Mike Wallace (who swapped places with Greg Jennings) and possibly Chris Johnson who could be a sneaky pick if he falls far enough. Kyle Rudolph gets another chance to be paired with coach Norv Turner who is supposed to be the tight end guru.

The key to how this will all work will hinder on the right arm of second year quarterback Teddy Bridgewater who might just be the league’s best kept secret. While everything in Minnesota was falling apart around him, Teddy held his own in his rookie year. With that out of the way, an expanded playbook, a hall of fame caliber running back and God given natural talent, Bridgewater is poised for a breakthrough season. Should you draft him as your starting QB in your draft? Hell no. Don't get me wrong I'm not going all-in on him just yet, but I would love to have him in my back pocket if I waited to grab Eli Manning or Tony Romo as my starter.

The Hateful Eight

For the first time in my five year history of doing this mash-up of movies and fantasy football I am including a movie that hasn't been released. The Hateful Eight is the next Quentin Tarintino movie and I cannot wait for it to come out. The plot is described as a bunch of all around mean and dangerous people stuck in a cabin during a blizzard where all types of mayhem breaks loose. Giggity! Let me guess, long scenes of exquisite dialogue mixed with violent bloodshed? I'm in. As for the title, I used this to give you eight players I am staying away from this year. Let's call it the Frank Gore list because of all the abuse I have given him over the last few years, but he just won't fade away!

 DeMarco Murray - Yes the overall #1 fantasy running back from last year. I'm not touching him. He had the sixth most touches in NFL history last season when everything went right. He was behind a dominant offensive line, he had nobody vying for playing time behind him and he had a predictable coach who leaned on Murray in a contract year when he pretty much knew he wasn't coming back. Now Murray is in Philadelphia who doesn't run the ball at the same rate as Dallas (42% to 50%). Murray saw 77% of the Cowboys rushes last season. The top Eagles back from last season, LeSean McCoy saw just 65.8% of the rushes. Philadelphia also has Darren Sproles and Ryan Mathews in the backfield to eat away at some playing time to keep Murray fresh in the up tempo scheme. All signs point to some major regression and a hamstring problem.

Calvin Johnson - For three straight years all of the important numbers for Megatron have decreased. Games played, targets, receptions and yards receiving all down. That is not good for a receiver who is about to turn 30. Fantasy owners don't see nor do they care about this. They see the name and they want him. He is still going mid to late 2nd round in fantasy drafts. There are far too many younger receivers with the same upside to pick before Johnson.

Mark Ingram - This could be the one that comes back to haunt me. It's not that I don't believe in what Ingram could be, I just don't trust the Saints this year. More importantly I don't trust Sean Payton. The last time the Saints had a 1000 yard rusher was Payton first year coaching in 2006. I certainly think Ingram has the best chance anyone has had since then to eclipse that mark, but I'm not risking a late 2nd round pick/early 3rd on that. Add into the fact that C.J. Spiller was brought in to be the 3rd down back and then some, I just am too weary. The Saints won't be a pass happy team, but my fear of Payton keeps Ingram off my teams.

Andre Johnson - New city. Better quarterback. Andre Johnson is back!!! Hmmmmm, no. His numbers have dropped just like Calvin Johnson over the last three years and he has just turned 34. The Colts have brought in Frank Gore to help balance out their offense. They already have T.Y. Hilton, Dwayne Allen, Coby Fleener and Donte Moncrief. There is only one ball to go around. Andre Johnson has not been a part of an offense like this. Temper your expectations folks. Don't let the glow of Andrew Luck's star blind you into wasting a fourth round pick.

Brandon Marshall - Pssst Brandon Marshall is now a New York Jet. Yes the same Jets who just lost their starting quarterback to a broken jaw in a locker room fight. Remember what happened to Eric Decker when he left Peyton Manning? This isn't going to end well. He's also going in the sixth round of most drafts. That's just silly talk. The Jets are awful and are already on their backup quarterback for the first quarter of the season. Go younger, take another running back or your QB here.

Drew Brees - Did I mention that I'm down on the Saints this year. Call it fear of the unknown. Just how will they look without Jimmy Graham? Graham was such an important cog in that offense I am struggling trying to figure out what we will see this season from Brees and company. Payton has threatened to run more and why not? On one side you have an aging Marques Colston and on the other side you have a young, unknown in Brandin Cooks who missed six games to injury during his rookie year. Like Calvin Johnson, fantasy owners will still see the name 'Drew Brees' and think of the good old days and reach a bit too early for him. This will be a down year for him and for you as well if you draft him as your starting quarterback.

Devonta Freeman - Devonta Freeman or Tevin Coleman? Is there a correct answer in Atlanta this season? Early drafts on ESPN seem to favor Tevin Coleman, but as I look at other websites, it is still rather muddled. This is how I feel the Atlanta backfield right now. I'll definitely keep an eye on these two during the preseason, but right now I'm steering clear.

Bishop Sankey - Okay this one is just personal. Fool me once shame on you, fool me twice I hate you forever. I don't want to hear the excuses about the Titans sucking last year and dragging Sankey down with them. They won't be that much better even with Marcus Mariota but even if they are I won't reap the rewards of a refreshed Sankey, because I'm not touching him.

Kiss of Death

 How did I miss this film? Shame on me. Maybe it is good, maybe is sucks, but I completely let it pass me by. This brings me to my next topic: Sleepers. If you aren't paying attention you just might miss a gem. Of course if you do go out to see that unknown movie that everyone says is going to be so great you just might come back disappointed and a few bucks poorer. I think back to the movie 'To Die For' with Nicole Kidman. What a heap of crap that turned out to be, but all I heard was how it couldn't miss. You hear that Bishop Sankey?? I'm so bitter.

Of course I've rarely picked a good sleeper which also bring the title of this topic home. As soon as I put these names down, they are destined to fail. This will be their 'kiss of death.'

David Johnson (RB) Arizona Cardinals - As a bitter owner of Andre Ellington I know that it is just a matter of time until the rookie out of Northern Iowa gets his chance. You could probably snag him somewhere between the 9th and 12th rounds depending on your league size and wind up with a starting RB for 4-6 weeks while Ellington is nursing yet another lower body injury.

Sam Bradford (QB) Philadelphia Eagles - As a fantasy owner I'm stuck between knowing he'll get injured and knowing he'll be in the Pro Bowl. I've seen how Chip Kelly's scheme turns the average quarterback into something special. Sam Bradford can be very special as long as he stays upright. You could do a whole lot worse with the 22nd quarterback drafted as he is currently going on ESPN.

Donte Moncrief (WR) Indianapolis Colts - We saw the flashes of greatness last season. Then he disappeared. Then the Colts brought in Andre Johnson. So much for that. Well that's where the definition of 'sleeper' comes in to play. My lack of faith in Andre Johnson and the ability of the Colts to score at will makes me confident enough to snag Moncrief as my WR4 and reap the rewards mid-season.

Unbreakable

 I feel like this is the most underrated of the really good M. Night Shyamalan movies. Don't laugh. Obviously there is The Sixth Sense, but I enjoyed Signs and to a lesser extent, but nonetheless The Village. Unfortunately he has turned into what Tiger Woods has become. We all know the talent is there, but as time goes on and the failures pile up you just don't believe he'll ever be good again. Of course this is why we keep buying tickets to watch both of them, just in case they hit lightning in a bottle. The ceiling is so high which make hitting rock bottom so painful to see.

For this topic I will cover the tantalizing option who happens to suffer from the injury bug. You can name this the 'Fragile' Fred Taylor category.

I start in Washington, home of the walking wounded. Lead member, and the perfect poster boy for this category is:

Jordan Reed (TE) - Week in and week out I watch the Redskins hoping for a return to glory. I am always disappointed. Every time Jordan Reed steps onto the field I watch for the hope that he makes it through the game injury free. I am always disappointed. I'll keep my eye on him and stash him on my bench...just in case.

Percy Harvin (WR) - If there is one franchise that makes me happy to be a Redskins fan it has to be the Buffalo Bills. They made a big splash by bringing in Rex Ryan and then LeSean McCoy. Well Percy Harvin finds himself in the land of the bad sports teams with probably his last chance to stay in the NFL. He's been injured on the field, he's been a malcontent off the field. But we all remember him in the Super Bowl. We know the talent is there. We will keep drafting him in the hopes of the glory days of just two years ago.

Jonathan Stewart (RB) - Just as one 'Daily Show' is ending, another one gets his big shot to finally be the one and the only lead back in Carolina. When he returned from his 82nd* career injury (*approximation) last season I added him to my roster because why not? I knew he could perform and when he actually did it was a welcome surprise. If you knew that Stewart would play all 16 games in 2015 how high would you draft him? Think about that when you see him still available in Round 3 or 4.

Hey look another spot where I could've talked about Sam Bradford. Maybe he should be the poster boy for 'Injuries 'R Us'.

For QB outside of Bradford please consider Carson Palmer (plagued, but has talent) or RGIII (plagued, but has issues) for you backup quarterback.

The Other Guys

 I saw this in theaters. I laughed. I barely remember anything about it. I swear it had its moments, but what they were I have no clue. I couldn't tell you if Samuel L. Jackson was a primary character, a secondary character or a voice-over. This is pretty rare for me. It has to be the early signs of getting old.

I've covered a good sampling of players who could be difference makers either for the good or for the bad for your fantasy team this season, but I missed quite a few. Let me briefly touch on some of..wait for it...the other guys.

 Shame on me for ignoring the machine that is the Green Bay Packers. I think the rule should be: you can't draft too many Packers. Aaron Rodgers? Money in the bank. Jordy Nelson and Randall Cobb? So Good. Eddie Lacy? Dominant. You really can't go wrong.

 The Miami Dolphins seem to be on everyone's list of breakout potential. Starting with QB Ryan Tannehill who has seen his numbers get drastically better year over year. As he gets better, he'll make Jarvis Landry better and in turn open up the running game led by a very inconsistent Lamar Miller. I can easily see these three being big time swing players for fantasy teams. Either the hype will bubble and you'll lose all value or they will stay under the radar and pay off. Before you draft check to see how these three have moved over the last 7-14 days and act accordingly. You do want to get at least one of them on your team.

The Oakland Raiders...are still a NFL team somehow.

Although they suffered through a very disappointing season record wise the New York Giants rediscovered a potent offense. Eli Manning threw for the 2nd most yards and touchdowns of his career. This was obviously due in large part to the team utilizing rookie Odell Beckham Jr. as soon as Victor Cruz went down who responding with seven games of 100+ yards receiving (out of 12) with a touchdown per game average. In the backfield Andre Williams and Rashad Jennings combined for 1360 yards and 11 touchdowns which would be fine for any individual player, but neither proved to be good enough to haul the entire load. This could be why the Giants brought in Shane Vereen. No not to run the ball, but to continue to be the best 3rd down back in the NFL. Jennings and Williams can now focus their plodding efforts on 1st and 2nd down and Vereen can continue to catch 50 passes a year and be a worthy PPR league pick. The big question is can the passing game repeat the magic and will a running back emerge? Also can Victor Cruz return to any level of stardom? Eli Manning will be fine and will surely finish higher than 12th best QB which is where he is going in standard ESPN leagues. ODB will probably regress a bit with a better cast around him and the focus squarely on him this season, but still be a viable WR1 in all formats.

The Cincinnati Bengals are the definition of 'The Other Guys.' I mean, they can be good or mediocre and they get the same national coverage because nobody takes the seriously. This is in due large part to the 'Red Rifle' Andy Dalton. Just when you thought he was ready to make the stride to trusted fantasy option he regressed to worse numbers than his rookie year. Let's compare:

2011 3398 yards, 20 TD, 13 INTS

2014 3398 yards, 19 TD, 17 INTS

'12/'13 average: 3981 yards, 30 TD, 18 INTS

The key stats for me were passing attempts and completion %: Dalton attempted 35 FEWER passes than he had in his four year career, but set a high for completion % at 64.2. This tells me that the Bengals were worried about his INTs so they reined him in by throwing safer passes and fewer deeper passes. His yards/completion were the lowest of his career which solidifies my thought process.

Unless Andy Dalton can regain the trust of his coaching staff, he'll be relegated to a backup role in the fantasy world. 

A.J. Green missed three games, but even when he played his numbers were slightly down over his career as you would expect with the 'safer' play calling. His numbers were close to his rookie year in per game averages which also happened to be Dalton's rookie year as well. They are literally two peas in a pod. For Green to live up to his billing of a top 10 fantasy receiver the Bengals had better learn to live with the ups and downs of letting Dalton air it out.

The backfield is nearly equally as jumbled. Yes Jeremy Hill splashed onto the scene around Week 8 in his rookie season. Through the seventh week his average stat line was: 7 carries for 27 yards and he had scored just 2 touchdowns. In the final 9 games his average was: 19 carries for 103 yards with 7 touchdowns. Quite a leap. All the hype. Will he top 1300 yards and 12+ touchdowns as is expected with his late first round/early second price tag? I just can't see that happening as long as Gio Bernard continues to get 10 rushes a game and plays on 3rd down. I see Hill matching his rookie year at best this season.

Rules of Engagement/The Negotiator/Changing Lanes/Pulp Fiction

 A foursome of movies for my final topic.

Rules of Engagement was a run of the mill military movie where the topic of discussion was whether shooting upon people trying to get into a U.S. embassy was illegal or not.

When it comes to your fantasy football draft, there are no rules...put your shirt back on, okay there's just one rule. (Love that commercial). Old school with heavy RB drafting? I'm cool with that. Zero RB strategy which is the new age? Sure why not? All I can ever tell you is to know the rules of your league and adjust your cheat sheet accordingly. Just because ESPN/CBS/Yahoo! have a cheat sheet for a 10 team league with a flex and 0.5 PPR, doesn't mean that will help me in my 14 team, 3rd round reverse, no flex, no PPR league. Picks will be similar, but when every pick is extremely important, you cannot afford to make too many mistakes.

The Negotiator is, in my opinion, a much underappreciated movie. Maybe I'm just a sucker for Kevin Spacey in it. It's one of those movies that I have to watch if I come across it on television.

 Changing Lanes is one of those movies, on the other hand, which I watched once and never gave a second thought to. It was fine, but it involved people from two different walks of lives figuring out they needed to work together to help make each out a better person. Meh.

These translate to fantasy football in a very easy way. Please trade. Please negotiate. Please be active. Don't waste your leagues time by checking out after a 0-2 or 2-5 start. Give it your all for 13 or 14 weeks. Your roster should be nearly fluid save for 2-3 roster spots. Sometimes you'll trade away a play who is about to break out, but sometimes you'll trade him just before he breaks down.

Pulp Fiction was a game changer for me. I think I could easily list the three movies that stand out as the most profound for me being the movie addict that I am:

 1991: Terminator 2: Judgement Day 

My first R rated movie in the theaters, but what registered with me was grand scale of the action. My dad took his then 13 year old son and I was blown away. I had never seen a movie with effects like that. It opened a world of watching blockbusters in theaters. I love to see the explosions and the world ending on the big screen.

 1992: Rear Window

I was in an 8th grade Theater Arts class and our teacher exposed us to the world of Alfred Hitchcock. I was mesmerized by the style, the characters and subtle suspense. The summer after 8th grade I went through Hitchcock's entire filmography in what one could describe as pre-Netflix age binge watching. Now all suspense movies aim to be dubbed 'Hitchcockian' but for my money nothing tops the original.  

1994: Pulp Fiction

New age film noir? Quentin Tarantino as I described with The Hateful Eight above meshed together lengthy scenes of dialogue with over the top brutal violence while presenting very detailed and imaginative characters. This along with Kevin Smith's 'Clerks' opened me up to the world of R rated movies. Violence, language and hopefully a great story.    

I didn't really have anything more to say about fantasy football, but I had to get Pulp Fiction into this somehow.  

Best of luck to everyone this year and may your office productivity not suffer too much on Monday's as you discuss your fantasy stats with your office mates. 

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Denzel Washington and 2012 Fantasy Football

Last season I used Clint Eastwood as my muse for my fantasy football preview:  Feel free to read it here.  I had some hits and I had some misses (yeah Chad Ochocinco did not work out), but at least I entertained myself.

I have always enjoyed Denzel Washington movies, but just like my prognostication abilities, he has had his share of flops along with supreme, award winning performances.  He has the rare ability to portray both the hero and the villain and be believed by audiences in either role.  That's why he does it for me.  I'm am glad he doesn't get typecast into one character that he just rehashes with a different plot.  You never know what you will get when you tune in and that's why you keep going back.

It's just like fantasy football (or sports in general), if the story lines were the same year in and year out, we'd get bored and stop watching.  If you knew that the Washington Nationals would have the best record in MLB on August 8th, raise your hand.  If you knew that the Cincinnati Bengals would make the playoffs with Andy Dalton at the helm last season raise your hand.  We don't know and we like it that way.

Here are my thoughts on the upcoming season thanks to Denzel Washington and his fantastic career.

Unstoppable

This movie was about a runaway train and the one team that best resembled that last season was the Green Bay Packers.  Sure they were tripped up in the playoffs, but fantasy football owners could care less about that.  During the regular season the Packers led the NFL with 70 all purpose touchdowns.  To put that in perspective the St. Louis Rams were dead last with only 18 touchdowns.  They were probably a bit too pass heavy which hurt them greatly in the playoffs and maybe, just maybe, we'll see Green Bay scale back their aerial assault and try to work in a running game.

That might be a problem because I don't see an every down running back on their current roster.  Their projected starter, James Starks is currently the 37th fantasy running back in drafts.  There are only 32 teams in the NFL.  Case closed.  I guess nobody expects the Packers to overreact to their playoff failure and prepare themselves for the playoffs by running.  Aaron Rodgers will once again be a fantasy monster and he better for your sake as you'll have to spend a top 5 pick to acquire him.  Anything less than that and you'll lose his value in a very deep position in the NFL.  I'm not a fan of using a pick that high on a quarterback, because there is usually better value later on in your draft.  The wild card on this team (outside of Starks) is Jermichael Finley who I have lauded for years only to be letdown.  He had a good year last year, but I know he can elevate his game to a Rob Gronkowski level with Rodgers throwing to him.  The question is will this be the year?

The Book of Eli

I think we all should be subscribing to The Book of Eli now.  After years of being ignored, Eli Manning finally had his most consistent passing year (which is still a bit inconsistent) and is now being treated like an elite passer.  Not to mention he capped his year off with a second Super Bowl victory, the stars seem to be aligning for him to wriggle out of the shadow of his older brother once and for all.

Gone is the notion of the Giants being a run first (and second) team.  Gone is the heavy footed, waste of space, Brandon Jacobs.  With the emergence of both Hakeem Nicks and Victor Cruz as speedy, elite wide receivers, New York shifted its focus to keep up with the changing times in the NFL.  They are now pass happy and use the running game as a change of pace.  The Giants had 17 rushing touchdowns last season and their passing game still was very productive with 29 scores.  I do not see any way that New York will score 17 times this season on the ground.  If you take 5 of those scores from running to passing Eli Manning vaults to a top 5 fantasy quarterback.

I'll also play the role of devil's advocate.  Hakeem Nicks is already recovering from an injury.  Maybe Victor Cruz was a flash in the pan.  Without the running game balance maybe the Giants get out of whack.  Maybe Eli returns to his interception happy ways when he had 25 in 2010.  Of course I pegged the Giants as the team most likely to implode last year so maybe I am just biased against them.

Deja Vu

Let me tell about two teams who handle their off season in two completely different ways.  The Washington Redskins have been dubbed the 'winners of the off season' almost every year since Dan Snyder took over.  The New England Patriots are usually very quiet and refuse to make many waves with free agent signings and selling off of their draft picks.  In fact, New England is famous for trading down to acquire more draft picks and cutting their players a year or two before they get too old.  Look at how they are treating Wes Welker.  They are not about to sink a ton of money into a 31 year old slot receiver.  They brought in Brandon Lloyd to supplant him in the near future.  They just reload year in and year out...the right way.

The Redskins have to make the big splash.  The constantly mortgage their future to get the biggest off season prize.  Whether is was Bruce Smith, Deion Sanders, Albert Haynesworth or now (via draft) Robert Griffin III.  As a Redskins fan, I am drooling over RGIII, but I know there is no depth on this team.  The offensive line is already in shambles with their only asset 1 failed drug test away from being out of the NFL.  They couldn't add any more talent because they were caught 'cheating' by the NFL when they circumvented the lack of a salary cap and exiled some bad contracts.  They traded away 3 draft picks for RGIII including a 2nd rounder this year and their next two 1st round picks.  Where will the help come from?  RGIII won't be of much use in a full body cast.

The Patriots are always the deepest team in the NFL.  They plug in backups at every position and still succeed.  Lose Tom Brady in game one? No problem...still 10-6.  Lose a roster full of defensive backs? No problem, throw in a wide receiver...still win the AFC East.  Yes they haven't won a Super Bowl since waaaaay back in 2005 but they have gone twice since and I'd take that if I were a fan.  How does this affect us fantasy owners?  Simple, when was the last time anybody on Washington was relevant for fantasy owners?  Clinton Portis in 2009?  How about for New England...Tom Brady, Wes Welker, Rob Gronkowski, Aaron Hernandez, Brandon Lloyd and now they'll plug in Stevan Ridley at running back and he'll probably be more than successful.  Like Deja Vu all over again.

Man on Fire

Who is the angriest person in the NFL?  Who saw their head coach suspended for the year?  Who had to fight tooth and nail to get a new long term contract after practically saving his franchise?  Drew Brees that's who.  Coming off of one of the greatest single season statistical seasons for a quarterback, Drew Brees has been put through the wringer this off season and it will be interesting to see how he produces.  He also has to face the curse of hosting the Super Bowl this season.  Remember how well that worked out for Dallas two years ago?  There has been plenty of turmoil surrounding this team and I can easily see this team cracking if this go bad early.  An injury here and bad break there (God forbid they lose to the Redskins at home to start the season) and the losses could pile up.

Drew Brees is the consummate on field general, but it has always been Sean Payton that was the straw that stirred the proverbial drink in New Orleans.  Without him around the team this year I expect some more inconsistencies.  The 46/14 TD/INT split for Brees might slip to 38/17.  Not drastic, but enough to drop him down a notch.  The wide receiver position in New Orleans has always been a tough one for fantasy owners. Sure they throw the ball a ton, but the Saints spread the ball around well.  Marques Colston is not special, but he's consistent.  Lance Moore and Devery Henderson have shown flashes and will have chances again this season with the departure of Robert Meachem.  The big break out star of the passing game was tight end Jimmy Graham.  He again will look to lead the team in all receiving categories and I don't see why he can't.  He has the perfect mix and speed and size and great hands.  I have him as my #1 tight end over Gronkowski because I think the Patriots will diversify their offense even more just to mess with us.

The running game is an interesting puzzle.  Darren Sproles had 87 rushing attempts and 86 receptions.  Pierre Thomas and Mark Ingram combined for 1000 yards and 10 touchdowns on the ground, but I expect Ingram to get a bit more work as the younger player this season.  If he can stay healthy I can see 900 yards and 9 touchdowns from him.  All three will be drafted and all three will have great games, but I see Pierre Thomas dropping off the radar by season's end.

Remember the Titans

This should be entitled 'Remember Chris Johnson?' or 'Remember Kenny Britt?'.  Two of the bigger busts at their respective positions last season, both are looking to rebound.  After holding out for a new contract last season, CJ2K came into 2011 a step slow and it cost him dearly.  He had a couple of breakout games, but those were against some pretty bad defenses.  Kenny Britt started out on fire, but a torn ACL ruined his season.  Then he went out and got arrested AGAIN this off season so he is not only facing league penalties, but physical limitations as well.

At quarterback, Jake Locker looks to replace the aging Matt Hasselsuck...err beck this season.  He was okay in his brief stint as starter last year and will need to make big strides to make this team relevant to fantasy owners.  If he can prove to be a average thrower and keep defenses from crowding the line of scrimmage, not only will his job be easier by handing off to Chris Johnson more, but Johnson could return to elite status in the fantasy world.

It also doesn't hurt that the Titans play in the least talented division in the NFL.  While Houston is a contender, both Indianapolis and Jacksonville have major question marks.  Four games against them will be good news for a young team trying to find its way.  Chris Johnson is the only player worth spending a high draft pick on, but there are others to keep an eye on including Nate Washington and Jared Cook who are both dependent on a good passing game.

He Got Game

The story about a young basketball star with dreams of greatness.  Each year the fantasy world is smitten with dreams of rookies being the next greatest thing.  I play in a keeper league in addition to a normal redraft league so it is doubly important to decide right away whether to invest in 1st year players or not.  I have never been a big fan of drafting any rookies, no matter the position.  More than not this will be a sound strategy, but every once in a while you'll miss out on a late round draft pick future stud.

Take A.J. Green for example.  He proved to be a very good #2 wide receiver on a fantasy team with the upside of being an elite #1 receiver.  I thought Andy Dalton would hinder his rookie numbers, but they worked quite well as a tandem.  If they progress, Cincinnati could all of a sudden be full of quality fantasy options.

This season all the talk surround Trent Richardson in Cleveland and the aforementioned RGIII in Washington.  The Browns offense expects to be centered around Richardson, but he is already hurting and according to reports scheduled to visit Dr. James Andrews to look as his knee.  The Redskins hopes this season and the next decade rest on the right shoulder and sprinters legs of RGIII.  He might not be Cam Newton this year, but he should be a viable backup/injury replacement quarterback and a definite must own in keeper leagues.

Outside of those two there are two running backs that will be vying for touches and could emerge as starters sooner rather than later.  Doug Martin in Tampa Bay and David Wilson in New York (Giants) are both listed as the backups for their respective team, but both LeGarrette Blount and Ahmad Bradshaw have injury and performance concerns.  They could give fantasy owners the best bang for the buck because neither are guaranteed 20+ touches a game, but will certainly be the first option when the starter goes down.

I am not going to endorse Justin Blackmon this season.  He seems to be in the mold of Dez Bryant as a talented on the field player and a pain in the ass off the field.  He will go way too high to be entrusted in drafting this season.  No value for the pick.  If you are going to take a flier on a rookie wide receiver I say look in the direction of Brian Quick in St. Louis or Alshon Jefferey in Chicago.

Dare I forget to mention Andrew Luck.  He has some talent around him and plays in the weak AFC South, but I think he will be at least a year away from a starter for fantasy owners.  Now a keeper league will be different as he will be a must own if you can afford to stash him away for a season.

Fallen

On the other side of the ledger is fantasy heroes of seasons past.  Of the projected top 200 fantasy players this year, at least 20 won't be spoken of by seasons end or ever again.  It may not be so sudden for everyone, but each year brings a new crop of youngsters looking to take the place of an aging veteran.  Ryan Mathews excused LaDanian Tomlinson in San Diego and Andrew Luck has replaced Peyton Manning in Indianapolis.  It happens to everyone.

My number one pick for this list is Frank Gore.  It will be difficult to watch him decline this year.  He was so good to me in 2009, but with Brandon Jacobs, Kendall Hunter and LaMichael James all in line to lessen his workload, Gore will no longer be worthy of anything more than a flex player by mid season.  His last 100 yard rushing game was in Week 9 last year as he averaged only 54 yards per game and scored only 3 touchdowns in the 2nd half of the 2011 season.  San Francisco has already announced their plans to use the other three backs more and Gore less, so don't say I didn't warn you.

At quarterback I have lost faith in 'Big' Ben Roethlisberger.  What made him so good for his first 7 years started taking a toll last season.  He is only 30 but his body is that of a 37 year old.  He has nursed so many different injuries that I'm not sure he can be elite again.  He had only five 2+ touchdown games last year while having four games of 0 touchdowns.  That leaves seven games with just a single touchdown pass and that won't cut it nowadays.  He is more than due to miss a couple games this season and the Steelers should start grooming a replacement.

The story looks to be the same for Baltimore Ravens wide receive Anquan Boldin.  In the final 8 Ravens games, Boldin didn't top 63 yards receiving, scored only one touchdown and missed two games.  That's not good.  The one saving grace for Boldin is there aren't too many options to replace him.  Outside of fellow starter Torrey Smith, only Jacoby Jones looks to take some catches away from him.  Of course Ray Rice will get his share of receptions and whoever emerges between Ed Dickson and Dennis Pitta at tight end could be valuable, but this should be the last hurrah for Boldin.

Philadelphia

What to make of the dynasty in the making in eastern Pennsylvania?  The Eagles can be so dominating and so lost all in the same game.  There is far too much talent to not expect them to excel this season, but questions still exist.  Can Michael Vick stay healthy?  Is DeSean Jackson done being a head case?  Is LeSean McCoy ready to be the best running back in the NFL?  Will Andy Reid's head be in it this season?

Let's go down the list: No Michael Vick cannot stay healthy.  He will miss a game or two or more and that is a problem for not only his owners, but the owners of all the Eagles.  As Vick goes, so goes Jeremy Maclin, Brent Celek and Jackson.  At least you won't have to waste a 1st round pick on Vick this season.  If he drops in your draft to the 3rd or 4th round he might be worth the trouble.

Yes I believe DeSean Jackson's antics are behind him.  He can easily bounce back and prove he's the game breaker we all thought he'd be last year.  I certainly hope he learned from his childish mistakes last year and I'm willing to take him as my #2 wide receiver, but not my top one.

LeSean McCoy was asked to run more and catch less last year and that turned him into a fantasy stud.  It was the only thing lacking in his game and fantasy owners never thought the Eagles would commit to the run enough, but that was proven wrong.  Now as a true dual threat, we know that if you need a 30 carry, 185 yard, 2 touchdown effort (2011) he can do that.  If you need an 8 catch, 86 yard, 1 touchdown performance (2010) he can do that too.  Now if he happens to combine the two in a week...well draft him with confidence folks.

You have to feel for Andy Reid.  He recently lost his eldest son and has already returned to practice.  His family issues have been well documented and that along with the normal issues of coaching in Philadelphia for  13 years its amazing he has been able to hold it together.  Eventually it has to add up and start to distract him doesn't it?  If he is able to guide the Eagles to the playoffs this year, it may be his best coaching effort to date.

The Mighty Quinn

This is where I would have talked about Brady Quinn leading the Cleveland Browns to glory...but he sucks so I'll move on.  You missed out Brady...you missed out.

Glory

Perhaps Denzel Washington's preeminent performance of his career (I did not care as much for Training Day) I will now try and pick a couple of guys who are set to break out this year with their own best performance.

At quarterback I'm going back to the well of Josh Freeman.  Sure many thought the same last season, but apparently the player/coach dynamic under Raheem Morris was how do you say...not good.  With new weapons including Vincent Jackson, Dallas Clark and Doug Martin he is a prime candidate for a bounce back season.  Will he be good enough to crack the top 10 in the same mold of Matthew Stafford last season...hmmm...maybe.  He needs to continue to add the element of running into his bag of tricks as he scored four rushing touchdowns in 2011...up that to seven and now we're talking.

A nice late round back could be Donald Brown in Indianapolis.  Even though the Colts are expected to struggle, they still will run the ball and Brown has been elevated to the starter.  There is no way that Indianapolis will have Andrew Luck throw the ball 40 times a game.  They should be much more balanced than they ever were under Peyton Manning.  Brown had 645 yards rushing and five touchdowns in only 12 games in a completely lost season in 2011 so why not expect a 900 yard, 7 touchdown effort this year?  That wouldn't be too shabby for somebody being drafted as the 38th overall running back currently.

Wide receiver is the most difficult position to guess a breakout star in my opinion because almost anyone can do it with the right opportunity.  I would have need 50 guesses at least for Victor Cruz so here goes nothing. I'm picking Denarius Moore from the Oakland Raiders.  Why not?  I think Carson Palmer still has a couple of bullets left in his gun and with young, emerging wide receivers in Moore and Darrius Heyward-Bey its only a matter of time for the Raiders to show some promise.  When on the field, Moore made plays and that is all you can ask from a wide receiver.  He scored 5 touchdowns on only 33 receptions and averaged nearly 19 yards a catch.  The skill is there, the opportunity is there and a full year of Palmer is there.  If he stays healthy he can hit 1,000 yards and 8 touchdowns easy.