Archive for September, 2007

How to Improve Your Fantasy Life

Monday, September 24th, 2007

With fantasy baseball season winding down, football in full-swing, and both hockey and basketball about to get started, Canon Fodder would like to offer up six ways to improve your fantasy sports experience.

Bigger leagues are better – Eight- and ten-team leagues are for wussies. The NFL has thirty-two teams but there isn’t enough talent for sixteen to twenty fantasy teams? The thinner the talent pool, the more opportunity there is for shrewd owners to separate themselves from the pack. Any fantasy league hack can listen to a local talk radio show to sort out whether to start Donovan McNabb or Matt Hasselbeck. In reality, the whole effort is a waste of time because both QBs will likely produce near identical numbers. In bigger leagues, those two would be on separate teams and the challenge comes in figuring which platoon running back or third-tier wide receiver is poised for a breakout game. Much like the professional leagues (you know, the ones you’re supposed to emulating), games aren’t always won by the elite players. Top players put their teams in a position to win and allow “lesser” players the opportunity to succeed. Thin the talent pool and you’ll increase the distance between good fantasy owners and those that are merely lucky.

Everything should count – Whether you’re in a free Yahoo league or paying a major provider like SportsLine, there are plenty of options available on the scoring tables to add layers of depth. “Simple” and “standard” scoring systems are exactly what their names imply and little more. Most anyone interested in participating in a fantasy sport is likely to be divining the inner secrets of the game. Why should the league’s scoring system retard thinking to only a single path to success? The more ways there are to score, the more ways there are to succeed. (There’s a joke in my football league that players are awarded a point for getting a drink from a water bottle. In reality, the only plays that don’t score in my league are fair catches on punts and kickoff touchbacks. And when I can figure a way to tack on points for those situations, we’ll have them covered too.) Gleaning from the gumption of Gordon Gecko…

The point is, ladies and gentlemen, that more scoring – for lack of a better word – is good. Scoring is right. Scoring works. Scoring clarifies, cuts through, and captures the essence of the fantasy spirit. Scoring, in all of its forms – scoring for offense, for defense, for special teams – has marked the upward surge of fantasy sports. And additional scoring – you mark my words – will not only save your fantasy league, but those other malfunctioning tables called “simple” and “standard”.

Find balance – One of the key aspects of every sport is the balance between offense and defense. It’s not just about scoring the most points; it’s also about preventing opponents from scoring at will. The same goes for fantasy sports. In baseball, it’s all about hitters and a handful of elite pitchers. In hockey there are the scorers and a few goaltenders. Sure there will always be inequities (a dozen skaters for every starting goaltender and batters playing daily versus a starting pitcher on the bump once a week) but those can be smoothed out with weighted scoring. The objective should be to make any position worthy of the first pick overall.

Embrace the unloved – Give me your wide receivers, your tight ends, your loogies and set-up men, your NHL penalty killer yearning to be relevant. The wretched filler with which you reluctantly round out your draft. Send these, the insignificant, the overlooked to me and I will show you the way to give them import.

(Emma Lazarus just died a second death.)

Allow me to tell you how your last fantasy football draft went. Some combination of LaDainian Tomlinson, Larry Johnson and Peyton Manning were followed by another dozen running backs then a quarterback or two. Sound formulaic? Well, it’s because your scoring system stinks. While you’re tinkering with it, why not pump up the peripheral players a bit? Isn’t a reception harder to get than simply being handed the ball? Score it as such. Why should a possession receiver with a penchant for moving the chains and catching ten balls be punished for not scoring touchdowns or sprinting for 150 yards? How many first downs does it take to equal a touchdown? What about the minute-eating penalty-killing defenseman or the low-WHIP/high strikeout middle reliever? Isn’t the timely shorthanded goal or inherited runner stranded just as important as the power play goal and the home run? With the myriad of scoring possibilities allowed league commissioners, it’s almost criminal the way these contributing athletes are overlooked in their respective sports. Find ways to accentuate what these role players bring to the game.

Encourage participation – Sit in a bar and ask the average guy what he thinks about the local team and the hours will melt away. Take a spin down the AM dial and you’ll find “experts” espousing endlessly while a full rack of callers await the chance to share their thoughts on their favorite team’s ills. Fans love talking about their teams. Fantasy owners are no different (except for the fact nobody wants to hear about your fantasy team if they’re not involved in your league).

Most commissioners and owners probably don’t even realize the story posting options available on sites like SportsLine. It’s an amateur sportswriter’s dream. Write up some copy, toss in some statistics, Google a funny picture and slap on a caption. Suddenly you’re the next David Halberstam. I’ve never seen anything except positive responses to articles of this nature. As a matter of fact, the only criticism I’ve ever experienced occurs when you happen to miss posting an article. Between the voracious appetite for league-centric material and the suppressed urge every sports fan feels for being a sports journalist, there lies the perfect environment for getting more than just the commissioner involved in accentuating the fantasy experience.

Toilet bowls rule! – Taking a page from the local Gus Macker tourney, my league “borrowed” the concept of a loser’s competition for the post-season. What’s up for grabs? The first overall pick in the following year’s draft. Nobody wants their season to end no matter how unsuccessful the campaign. Toilet bowl competitions encourage continued play even if it’s only to deny a rival from obtaining the first pick. Keeping fantasy players involved throughout the season regardless of their record is always a daunting task. With the right incentives, even the lowliest of teams have one last carrot to chase after their regular season has circled the drain.

So there you are; half-a-dozen ways to improve your fantasy life (or lack there of a real one). Take the ideas and run with them. Have a few suggestions of your own? Send them my way to jeff@canon-fodder.com. Otherwise, keep passing Canon Fodder to anyone with a pair of functioning eyes. (Our gracious sponsor is too cheap to spring for a potent word processing program for this writer let alone anything to aid our throngs of visually-impaired readers in their quest for sports comedy.)

The More Things Change…

Monday, September 17th, 2007

Let me tell you how hard it is to crank out an article or two when you’re entertaining a father-in-law for a month. My wife’s father is visiting from New Zealand and in the last two weeks we’ve been to a grand prix, two major league baseball games, two museums and a trip to Frankenmuth. The poor man has been inundated with Americana. I even lined up a couple of articles loosely titled “Extrava-Dad-Za” but too many familial factors conspired to keep me from my beloved Canon Fodder.

But now I’m back. Well, sort of. The father-in-law leaves town Thursday so we’ll return to normalcy soon after. In the meantime, I’ll throw a tidbit to the masses in hopes that it satiates the appetite.

Taking a quick glance at the sports world this week, I realized the more things change, the more they stay the same. Don’t think so? Let’s take a look…

Joey Harrington is the starting quarterback in Atlanta.
In a related story, fans in Detroit and Miami are being blamed for crashing every gambling website in their zeal to wager against the Falcons.

Under the scrutiny of an HGH scandal, Rick Ankiel and the Cardinals are slumping.
As the only living human being that didn’t jump on the ‘feel-good comeback’ bandwagon, I just want to say, “Told you so.” (Second headline.)

And while I’m tooting my own horn of prognostication, remember this article from back in March? Let’s give it a quick once-over to see how I came through on my haiku predictions.

I hit a few on the nose:

Strong start in April.
Seattle fans given hope,
then Mariners fade.

Upgrade with Sheffield.
Motown kitties still learning.
This year a setback.

Schmidt carried Giants.
Years of overuse catch up.
Dodger dog on mound.

Then again, I missed big time on a pair too.

Humbled by last year
Guillen rekindles pale hose.
ChiSox win pennant.

Ninety-nine year drought.
Goat curse continues its streak.
The lovable Cubs.

The fact I have both Chicago teams predicted exactly backwards means I was either off by just a fraction (AL versus NL) or by as much as one could be and nothing in-between. And what did I learn? Making predictions is not only a tedious endeavor; you get the added bonus of looking like an idiot six month afterwards.

First overall pick Greg Oden will miss the entire NBA season to microfracture surgery.
Just in-case you thought the Blazers were finally going to put that Bowie-before-Jordan debacle behind them, Oden-over-Durant rings eerily similar. Not good times in Portland.

WNBA outdraws MLB in 2007!
Okay, I fibbed just a bit. Technically speaking, there was a Major League Baseball game with only a few hundred in the stands and it did draw less than a WNBA Finals game, but who are we really kidding here?

Winless Notre Dame travels to the Big House to play a winless Michigan on Saturday.
So what’s the same about this game? It’s yet one more historic match-up in the long history of these two teams. How so? Never have these two met and both been 0-2.

(In all honesty, I’m just grasping at straws to justify why I’ll be battling traffic all the way to Ann Arbor so I can witness this epic battle of ineptitude.)

Keep checking Canon Fodder as I’ll hopefully be back to a normal writing schedule next week. Until then, pass around our address and sending in those e-mails to jeff@canon-fodder.com.

One More Reason to Hate College Football

Wednesday, September 5th, 2007

I witnessed the “Blocked Kick Heard Round the World” while sitting in a bar in Midland, Michigan. I was working on a minor league baseball article when the impossible (but obviously inevitable) happened. As the Appalachian State player was dragged down and the clock reached zero, history had been made. Michigan fans were stunned. Everyone else rejoiced. (College football is rife with schadenfreude.) Don’t think so? **cue the clip**

[youtube]http://youtube.com/watch?v=MOBjdka9uEw&feature=bz100[/youtube]

And don’t fool yourself into believing these folks were pulling for an underdog as much as they were giddy to see a titan toppled. It’s the nature of the big time college football fan.

As this historic event came to pass, I realized what I was feeling wasn’t disappointment. It certainly wasn’t happiness. Living in a quality football-starved area like Detroit, it’s no surprise many locals hitch their loyalty to the Michigan bandwagon. They’re the most professional team in the state.

Did you read that last line, Detroit Lions? Read it again. It’s true.

During the years of Desmond Howard and the Fab Five, I was lucky enough to visit Ann Arbor every weekend. My girlfriend (at the time) spent five years attending the university. When she graduated, my best friend spent his graduate years at U of M. That’s nine years of partying and attending football games. The Kordell Stewart game? I was there. I dropped enough cash in the coffers of Ann Arbor watering holes to equal at least a semester or two of university tuition.

I’ve paid my dues.

1997 was a magical year. After countless weekends of following the Wolverines, the payoff of a national championship was the pinnacle moment for me as a college football fan. Michigan had won playing the “Michigan Way”. Tough schedule. Conservative offense. Big defense. Hustle and hits. Three yards and a cloud of dust. The team had Bo Schembechler’s thumb print all over it. The Rose Bowl victory was almost too good to be true. (Considering Michigan’s recent record in Rose Bowl games, a victory – regardless of a championship or not – was a pleasant surprise.)

But 1997 was also the season when I began to really notice the darker side of college football somewhat sullying a perfect season.

When Tom Osborne announced his pending retirement, fellow coaches couldn’t wait to award Nebraska a share of a national championship as a parting gift. A soft non-conference schedule had no effect upon the Cornhuskers’ place in the rankings. Nebraska’s penchant for big scores drew more attention from coaches than Michigan’s close-to-the-vest style of play. When personal politics entered the contest (like a certain bitter Tennessee head coach voting Michigan fourth in the final coaches poll because his golden boy quarterback was edged out by Charles Woodson for the Heisman Trophy), I began to realize the NCAA cares more about the popularity of it’s elite teams than determining an actual champion.

Shortly after splitting the mythical national championship, the powers-that-be in Ann Arbor decided to follow the lead of other elite football programs and dumb down their non-conference schedule. The addition of a few money-starved patsies allowed the Wolverines to pad their schedule with extra home dates and a couple more guaranteed wins. Posting the requisite seven wins to qualify for a post-season bowl game became more important than actually finding opponents worthy of playing.

The danger of scheduling gimme games becomes apparent when one of the pushovers finally shoves back and wins. Michigan’s narrow defeat at the hands of Appalachian State ranks as one of the worst – if not the worst – defeat in the history of college football. The golden domers were handed their heads (in front of Touchdown Jesus no less) by Georgia Tech and the Wolverine’s two-point defeat is the talk of the football nation.

And it should be.

Teams like Michigan should be ashamed for scheduling the Appalachian States of the world. Sure, Notre Dame was mercilessly pounded but their opponent was worthy of delivering a pounding. A game merely intended to be a “tune-up” game for the Wolverine program ended up becoming Appalachian State’s greatest football victory. Keep in mind, the Mountaineers are coming off back-to-back Division I-AA championships. (With playoffs and everything. What a novel idea to determine a champion.)

Hopefully U of M learned a lesson from this epic debacle. Maybe they’ll go back to their former selves and schedule opponents worthy of losing to. Will it mean a few more 8-4 seasons? Sure. Will they football program be able to pride itself much the way Notre Dame continues to (regardless of their recent struggles)? Definitely.

In the meantime, Canon Fodder will continue to rail against the absurdity of Division I-A football and the ludicrousness of the BCS system. Readers can expect an article in the next month or so spelling out how the NCAA should handle the post-season for their highest tier of college football. Until then, I’ll go back to ignoring the make-believe competition America’s institutions of higher learning are doling out to us on the gridiron every Saturday afternoon.

Are you still checking into Canon Fodder regularly? Well you can look forward to some changes in the near future. More writers. More content. We haven’t hit the big time yet but with your continued support, our little sports comedy blog might garner some attention from the masses. How can you help our cause? Keep passing your favorite Canon Fodder articles to friends and family. Another way to participate is to, well, participate. Reader feedback is a major driving force. All your quips, comments and complaints help. Keep ‘em coming.