Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Fantasy football 2024 -- week 16 recap


Think you know the NFL? Think you know the holidays? Then test your smarts by identifying which of the following names played for the Jacksonville Jaguars and which are cast members from the holiday classic “It’s a Wonderful Life,” which is probably airing on TV right now.

  • Frank Falyen
  • Wonderful life
    Mediocre NFLer

  • Josiah Deguara
  • Wonderful life
    Mediocre NFLer

  • Mitch Morse
  • Wonderful life
    Mediocre NFLer

  • Samuel Hinds
  • Wonderful life
    Mediocre NFLer

  • Max Linder
  • Wonderful life
    Mediocre NFLer

  • Ezra Cleveland
  • Wonderful life
    Mediocre NFLer

  • Cole Van Lanen
  • Wonderful life
    Mediocre NFLer

  • Henry Travers
  • Wonderful life
    Mediocre NFLer

  • James Stewart
  • NFL pro
    Hallmark star

    Don’t bother looking for the submit button, I still can’t figure that out. So I’ve got the answers listed below. You’ll have to grade yourself. No cheating, Santa is watching.

    Josiah Deguara, Mitch Morse, Ezra Cleveland and Cole Van Lanen are all current members of the Jaguars team.

    In the Christmas classic, Frank Faylen played Ernie Bishop and Samuel Hinds played Pa Bailey. Max Linder was an extra in the movie. Henry Travers was Clarence Odbody, AS2 (that’s angel, second class).

    James Stewart, of course, is obvious. He rushed for 2,951 yards with the Jacksonville franchise from 1995 to 1999, scoring 33 rushing TDs and five more receiving ones. Some have confused him with Jimmy Stewart, who had a minor role in “It’s a Wonderful Life.” He never recorded a single yard in the NFL.



    QB: Jayden Daniels, 44.42 pts — on Jo’s bench
    WR: Jonathan Taylor, 39.80 pts — started by Mom D
    RB: Justin Jefferson, 26.60 pts — started by Sam
    TE: Brock Bowers, 12.10 pts — started by Jonathan
    K: (tie) Jason Sanders, 21.00 pts — started by me
    K: (tie) Brandon Aubrey, 21.00 pts — started by me
    DEF: Atlanta, 26.00 pts — started by Bob
    D: Matthew Judon, 11.00 pts — on the wire

    Congrats to Jayden Daniels on his big game against Philly and sealing up rookie of the year honors. The last Maryland player to win that was Robert Griffin III, and I’m hoping that Daniels has the same kind of long, successful career. Luckily, Daniels isn’t frequently injured or prone to erratic games like Griffin was.

    Taylor had 218 yds rushing and three TDs in the Colts win over the Titans on Sunday. His 39.80 pts were four more than his total in the previous four games combined, and his three touchdowns were one more than his total for the previous eight games. Plus, he didn’t fumble on the goal line this week.

    But that’s nothing compared to the Atlanta defense. After totaling 46 pts in their first 13 games, they have posted 51 in their last two, albeit against the Raiders and Giants. Can they keep it up next week against Jayden Daniels next week? No. But it was a fun run while it lasted.

    “Good things come in threes” edition

    1st place: (tie) San Francisco, -3.00 pts — on Bob’s bench
    1st place: (tie) Arizona, -3.00 pts — on the wire
    1st place: (tie) Tennessee, -3.00 pts — on the wire

    It’s a rare coincidence for a three-way tie at the bottom of the standings, but even rarer is a defensive player on the negative points list. Come on down, Eagles CB Avonte Maddox! He scored -1.92 points thanks to a fumble on the final desperate lateral play of the game. He still would have ended in positive territory if he had recorded a tackle or defended a pass in the game, but that’s a lot to expect from a defense that played dead for an entire half.

    ** ESPN’s pre-game Sunday NFL show ended with a segment giving Herm Edwards the “Final Word” on his predictions for the day. His pick: “Quiet,” because he predicted critics would shut up after the Lions rebounded with a win this week.

    And after that brief explanation, his “final word” went on for another sixty seconds when he wouldn’t stop talking.

    Look, I get that it’s not a literal bit, and he wasn’t gonna say just one word. But if you keep droning on if when your parting statement was “quiet,” it just feels like it undermines everything.

    ** During Sunday Night Football’s player introductions, Tampa Bay WR Sterling Shepard was introduced with his two young daughters on his lap saying his name and college. It was adorable, because little kids are cute.

    It also should mark the end of these stupid player introductions, which now have zero to do with anything related to the game. Half the guys can barely read their own names. Some make up schools they went to. And the whole thing takes up half the screen for several plays, actually blocking the view of gameplay.

    We’re a step away from replacing the first quarter of games with players singing Christmas carols. Keep the cutesy feature stories for between plays, or after the game. Let me just watch a football game already.

    ** During the second quarter of the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, Fresno State led 13-3 with NIU on the one-yard line, inches from scoring. But on fourth down, the Bulldogs’ defense held, and stuff NIU for a turnover to preserve the 10-point lead. Play-by-play announcer Lowell Galindo shouted after the defensive stand:

    “What a stop! Who says bowl games don’t matter anymore!”

    In the end, Galindo’s comment was interesting because OH WHO ARE WE KIDDING you don’t want to hear how the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl turned out. It was two 6-6 teams playing on a Monday afternoon when half the country was still at work. Fresno State lost. So the play didn’t matter in the end. But even if it had, would you have cared even a little? No. Because you have a life. Or at least more of a life than the several hundred fans who attended the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl.

    Potato. Bowl.


    Positives from the Eagles loss to the Commies:

    — It knocked the Cowboys out of the playoffs: It would have been nicer if it happened next week when the Birds play Dallas, but starting their offseason early is always good news.

    — The streak is over: Remember what happened the last time the Commies ended a long Eagles winning streak? That was in 2022, when they had their eight-game streak stopped. The Birds went to the Super Bowl that year.

    — It stops the Hurts criticism: Is he inconsistent? Yes. Is this team much, much, much better with him on the field than any other option? Also yes.

    — It probably means another Eagles/Commies game: That’s the most likely first-round playoff matchup now. Maryland is 1-4 against teams with winning records, twice barely beat the Giants, beat the Saints by one point, needed a Hail Mary to beat the Bears. They could easily be 7-8. I’ll happily take team luck as an opponent over an actual skilled squad.

    — It gives the Eagles a bye week: Not a real one, of course. The #1 seed is out of reach now. But that also means that if the Eagles win next week, the final game of the season against the Giants is meaningless. That’s a nice time to get Saquon some records and rest everyone else.
     
    — It almost wasn’t a loss: The Eagles had 10 penalties for 91 yards, lost their starting QB to a concussion, had a backup QB play with an injured rib, had a star defensive back ejected, and still were one bobbled pass away from winning. Fix just one of those problems and we’re talking about another victory.

    In the spirit of Christmas, I decided this week not to search for words of spite and malice hidden in the names of Cowboys players and instead performed a simple search for the image of the season: Santa Claus himself. And it took me no time to have his name pop out of a key team contributor:

    Cowboys Dallas Offensive Tackle Tyler Smith
    ** My bloc — I hate Santa. Fowl toys, feckless drivel.


    In his defense, I might not like Santa much if he only brought me chicken toys. But you can’t expect Cowboys players to know how to spell, even on Christmas.

    ** I went 2-1 against Dad this week, pushing my lead in our weekly picks contest to six games with two weeks left. Since we never pick Eagles games, that leaves him just 30 match-ups left to catch me. I’ve been getting about 30% of games wrong, so it is possible, but rather difficult.
     
    ** Why fantasy football stinks, chapter 33: I was the second highest scorer in my head-to-hear money league this week, but I won’t be playing in the championship game because I played the highest-scoring team. He beat me by 4 points. Coincidentally, my QB — Jalen Hurts — only scored four points before leaving with a concussion. Even with the injury, if Hurts had run in that first TD of the game instead of giving it to Barkley inside the five, I would be in the money. Instead, my season is done.

    ** OK, so the Eagles can clinch the division with a win over the Cowboys now. That’s a decent late Christmas present.

    Week 16 standings

    1 — Still The Best (Jonathan), 2005.00 pts
    2 — Murder Hornets (Mike), 1974.15 pts
    3 — Chop Block to the Artery (Capt. Awesome), 1960.40 pts
    4 — Kodos for President (Jo), 1925.89 pts
    5 — Jabronis (Ant), 1861.83 pts
    6 — Blue Collar Killers (Jeff), 1849.41 pts
    7 — No One Likes Us We Don't Care (Bob), 1838.97 pts
    8 — Beer 'n Chips (Pop), 1835.20 pts
    9 — DeVonta’s Inferno (Mom D), 1812.86 pts
    10 — The Fightin Pickles (Sam), 1633.50 pts
    11 — They Certainly Are Dwarves (Paul), 1464.80 pts
    12 — All Rogers No Sauce (Joel), 1316.10 pts

    A late season push from Bob and Mom D, who scored 178.84 pts and 168.05 pts respectively, led a big week of scoring, but it wasn’t enough to massively disrupt the standings.

    Jonathan remains hanging on to first, but Mike is sneaking up slowly, and I’m lurking (although dependent on the remains of Jalen Hurts to save me). Jo has an outside shot at first place, but everyone else may be playing for pride at this point.

    Christmas is tomorrow, but so are two NFL games. And then there’s a Thursday game. And three Saturday games. Don’t forget the Sunday night game! Oh, and the Lions play on Monday. So NFL games on five of the next six days, because the NFL doesn’t want you to spend any time with family. GEt your rosters set and ignore everything but the Eagles game.

    Tuesday, December 17, 2024

    Fantasy football 2024 -- week 15 recap


    We’re less than two weeks away from Christmas, which means we’re in the height of Hallmark Christmas movie season. And this year didn’t disappoint — the channel premiered “Holiday Touchdown: A Chiefs Love Story,” which focuses on a woman competing to win the team’s fan-of-the-year award who falls in love with a Chiefs public affairs specialist. Donna Kelce had a cameo (for real, it was on TV this weekend and will be on 8am Christmas morning).

    The film got mixed ratings, which is good enough for Hallmark to rush several more copycats into production for next Christmas. Here’s a look at a few of the pilots being considered:

    ** Holly Jolly Jaguars
    — Trevor doesn’t have to think about the holidays, until his team is eliminated from the playoffs right after Thanksgiving. Can a trip back home to South Carolina and a chance meeting with his ex-girlfriend from college rekindle his Christmas spirit?

    ** Carolina Christmas Blues — Bill hasn’t been able to get over the breakup with his New England sweetheart for the past year. Desperate for a change, the senior citizen decides to enroll in college again, and learns that you can still be young at heart at Christmastime.

    ** J-E-T-S, ho, ho, ho! — Aaron moved to the big city to pursue his career, but the experience left him feeling cold and unloved. Now, with his company threatening to lay him off in December, can the Christmas season inspire him to give up his anti-vaccine ways and learn to love his fellow man?

    ** A Whiteout Christmas — Josh has been a superstar for his football team all year, and they seemed poised for the playoffs. But just before the big Christmas Eve game, a freak blizzard drops four feet of snow on the streets of Buffalo. Only a Christmas miracle will get him (and his fans) to the stadium on time.

    ** Receiving Christmas Cheer — Jalen and AJ used to be the perfect couple, but recently their relationship has been on the rocks. Can they pass the test of the holiday rush? Or will they drop the ball and run away from the world?



    QB: Jared Goff, 51.06 pts — on Sam’s bench
    WR: Davante Adams, 31.70 pts — started by Paul
    RB: James Conner, 27.37 pts — started by Jonathan
    TE: Jonnu Smith, 13.70 pts — on Ant’s bench
    K: Chase McLaughlin, 18.00 pts — on the wire
    DEF: Atlanta, 25.00 pts — started by Bob
    D: Nik Bonitto, 12.50 pts — on the wire

    Congrats to Goff, who became the second QB this season to throw five TD passes in a game and lose (hi, Joe Burrow!). The 48-42 defeat at the hands of the Bills was also the fifth time in Detroit franchise history that the team has scored 40-plus points and lost, an NFL record. Lamar Jackson (46.60 pts) also threw five TDs on Sunday, but he won, so that’s boring.

    A good week for QBs means a great week for wideouts too. Adams had 9 catches for 198 yds and two TDs, just a little better than Amon-Ra St. Brown’s 14 catches for 193 and one TD. Adams totaled 67.47 fantasy pts over the first 12 weeks of the season and has 62.37 pts in his last three games, so it’s nice to see him finally show up this year.

    Three defenses topped 20 points this week, and a fourth (Cincinnati) just missed with 19.00 pts. On the flip side, nine defenses were worth zero or fewer points this week, with Detroit leading the way at -6.00, the worst possible score. So if you started Goff and his team’s defense, you would have cost yourself that fifth passing TD.

    “Bad QBs” edition

    3rd place: Sam Howell, -0.34 pts — on the wire
    2nd place: Jameis Winston, -0.36 pts — on the wire
    1st place: Will Levis, -4.44 pts — on the wire

    Will Levis is allegedly a starting QB for the Tennessee Titans, but the stats don’t really back up that idea.

    On Sunday, he was benched after two and a half quarters of football despite completing 11 of his first 12 passes. Of course, three of those were completed to the wrong team, including a 39-yard interception returned for a TD. Oh, he also lost a fumble.

    This was the second time this year that Levis has started a game and ended in negative fantasy territory, and the single worst fantasy performance by a QB to date.

    All this just makes Levis’ recent endorsement deal with Hellman’s Mayonnaise even better. Levis got the national commercial campaign because of his odd obsession with the disgusting condiment, going viral earlier this year for putting it in his coffee and selling out a mayo-scented cologne in the Tennessee area in September. And when you think about it, it’s the perfect pairing and athlete. He’s extra white. He’s not good at all. You only associate him with terrible times. And if you were to hand him your stomach, he would find a way to turn it over.


    ** Colts RB Jonathan Taylor broke free on a 41-yard run in the third quarter of his game against the Broncos and then went full DeSean Jackson at the goal line, dropping the ball before he broke the plane. The ball rolled forward into the end zone and resulted in a touchback for the Broncos, who went on to score 24 unanswered points in a 31-13 comeback victory.

    I don’t know what to tell you. Absolutely no one has ever looked cool dropping the ball at the goal line, but a ton of these players think it’s fun. I guess we need to think about putting staples on the ball to prevent stupidity fumbles.

    ** Sirius XM has an ad they run during football games for the Howard Stern show that starts like this:

    Voiceover — “Howard Stern knows football.”
    Stern — “Every time I get excited about a team, they lose.”

    Doesn’t sound like he knows football. Just sounds like he’s a standard Jets fan.

    ** Dominos Pizza has an ad now where they deliver an “emergency pizza” to a contestant in the Squid Game and I’m sorry did ANYONE on that advertising team ever see the TV show? The contestant is hungry, so he orders a pizza so he isn’t caught moving during a game of Red Light, Green Light. A happy delivery woman brings him one … and then presumably is cut down in a hail of machine gun fire in a dystopian hellscape. That’s pizza for you!


    The Eagles won their 10th game in a row on Sunday, the longest such streak in franchise history. But does a long line of consecutive wins result in a championship? Here’s the best such streaks from other Philly teams, and how those seasons ended:

    ** Philadelphia 76ers
    Win streaks of 10 or more — 17
    Most recent — 2018
    Longest streak — 18 games (1966)

    The Liberty Ballers boast the most double-digit win streaks in city history, and actually had two runs of 10 wins in their 1983 championship season. They also won 10 in a row during 1967, en route to another title. But their most recent victory run — a 16-game win streak in 2018 — resulted in a predictable second-round playoff loss to the Celtics, as most of their seasons seem to end nowadays.

    ** Philadelphia Flyers
    Win streaks of 10 or more — 6
    Most recent — 2016
    Longest streak — 13 games (1985)

    That 1985 ended with a trip to the Stanley Cup finals, but not a championship win. But of the six Flyers seasons with long winning streaks, only once — in 1993 — did the Flyers fail to at least make the playoffs. Just something else to get angry at Eric Lindros for.

    ** Philadelphia Phillies
    Win streaks of 10 or more — 13
    Most recent — 2010
    Longest streak — 16 games (1892, 1887, 1890)

    Twice in the 1800s, the Phillies had 16-game win streaks broken up by the Boston Beaneaters (not a slur, that was an actual team back then). If you restrict your stats to just games after 1900, then the Phillies have only had 11 seasons with double-digit win streaks, and only twice since 1992. None happened in a season where they made the World Series.

    As proof that true beauty can come from pure evil, I present to you the latest edition of insult anagram poetry. This time, the verses come courtesy of a key special teams player for Dallas, long snapper Trent Sieg:

    ** LS Trent Sieg **

    Gentlest sir
    Tigress lent
    Grit nestles
    Gristle sent

    Grin settles
    Regents slit
    Stinger lets
    Tern legs sit

    Tests linger
    Glint resets
    Tensest girl
    Tingle rests


    Go ahead and check, all the lines are perfect anagrams of his name.

    But what does it mean? It’s a deep reflection on the Cowboys’ lost season, where the soft coach (gentlest sir) tries to imbue a vicious spirit on his players (tigress lent) but leaves the team with only grit and gristle instead of inspiration. Players laugh it off (grin settles) and leave their skills on the sidelines (stinger lets tern legs sit). While the animal spirit is still there (tensest girl) the “tingle” of winning is asleep for the moment.

    The lines are beautiful in their horror and disappointment. It’s like rain on your wedding day, or a free ride when you’ve already paid. Who are we to question the wisdom of the anagram balladry?

    ** Finally, I had a breakthrough in the picks against Dad. We had four games different, and I swept them all. Sadly, that also meant correctly predicting that the Cowboys would wipe the floor with the Panthers, but sometimes you have to acknowledge an act of evil and move on. I’m up five for the year now with just three weeks left, giving me a little breathing room for the stretch run.

    ** The Garrity Family playoffs start next week with #1 seed Jim vs. #4 seed Tommy/Shane and #2 seed Dad vs. #3 seed me. But the big news is that for the first time in three years, the “America’s Losers” team full of Cowboys and only Cowboys did not win a single game. So in a bigger sense, we’re all winners. But hopefully I’m the winner in the real sense next week too.

    ** The Steelers are one of the three best teams in the AFC. In the second half Sunday, they had two possessions: one ended in a fumble, the other in a punt. The Eagles final drive was 21 plays, 88 yards and took 10:29 minutes. Philly held the ball for 39:52 minutes in the game.

    That was a beatdown of a really good team.


    Week 15 standings

    1 — Still The Best (Jonathan), 1,885.38 pts
    2 — Chop Block to the Artery (Capt. Awesome), 1,851.63 pts
    3 — Murder Hornets (Mike), 1,838.71 pts
    4 — Kodos for President (Jo), 1,810.60 pts
    5 — Beer 'n Chips (Pop), 1,747.25 pts
    6 — Blue Collar Killers (Jeff), 1,730.54 pts
    7 — Jabronis (Ant), 1,729.44 pts
    8 — No One Likes Us We Don't Care (Bob), 1,660.13 pts
    9 — DeVonta’s Inferno (Mom D), 1,644.81 pts
    10 — The Fightin Pickles (Sam), 1,496.39 pts
    11 — They Certainly Are Dwarves (Paul), 1,379.01 pts
    12 — All Rogers No Sauce (Joel), 1,235.31 pts

    Jo’s team scored 142.42 pts this week and that was only good enough for third place on the weekend. Seven teams scored above 120, led by Jonathan’s 145.64. He doubled his lead over second place to almost 34 points, but now has both Mike and me within a 50-point outburst of taking over first place.

    And the second-most points this week? Is that Paul? His team was projected to only score 80-points by the Yahoo algorithm but ended up with 143.24, thanks to big days from Davante Adams, Jordan Love and Tyjae Spears. He could have gone even higher if he had started a kicker and a second defensive player. But that kind of mistake is understandable this early in the season.

    Speaking of setting your roster, it gets complicated this weekend. There is a Thursday game, two Saturday games, one Monday game and two Wednesday games that don’t count until week 17 so why did you even bring them up? Just make sure you’ve got a kicker ready to go. Only three weeks of fantasy football left.

    Tuesday, December 10, 2024

    Fantasy football 2024 -- week 14 recap


    On Monday, Disney+ simulcast the Bengals/Cowboys tilt but substituted Simpsons characters for key players and fans. The experiment was fairly weird and totally awesome, with jokes and references jammed into nearly every down.

    This was actually the second animated simulcast that Disney+ has broadcast, after a similar Toy Story themed presentation last year. So that begs the question: What will next year’s special animated real-time football game be? Here are the likely contenders:

    ** Star Wars simulcast: Ever wanted to see Jedi against Stormtroopers in a football game? No? Too bad! There are hundreds of “use the force” jokes for every completion, incompletion and run up the middle. Bonus points for using Jawas as referees.

    ** Frozen simulcast: Packers vs. Vikings from the frozen tundra of … Arendelle. Every deep pass is accompanied by an ESPN host shrieking “let it go, let it go!”

    ** Marvel simulcast:
    The network won’t be able to resist turning the Chiefs into members of the Avengers, complete with a list of Patrick Mahomes’ “superpowers.” And if they schedule it against the Raiders, team owner Mark Davis kinda looks like Thanos already.

    ** Little Mermaid simulcast: Only works if it’s the Dolphins vs. the Seahawks. Otherwise no one wants to be part of that world.

    ** Wall-E simulcast: This would be long and boring without life in the booth. So, you know, a typical last-season NFC South game.



    QB: Josh Allen, 57.88 pts — started by Dad
    WR: Jordan Addison, 30.87 pts — started by me
    RB: Zach Charbonnet, 32.83 pts — started by Jo
    TE: George Kittle, 13.07 pts — started by Ant
    K: Jason Sanders, 16.00 pts — started by me
    DEF: San Francisco, 14.00 pts — started by Bob
    D: Yetur Gross-Matos, 8.00 pts — on the wire

    Vikings QB Sam Darnold threw five TD passes this week but missed out on his moment of glory atop the best performers list because of Allen.

    Allen had an insane stat line on Sunday: 342 passing yds, 3 passing TDs, 82 rushing yds, 3 rushing TDs. His 57.88 fantasy points is the fourth best total since this league was founded, and I’m listing the rest here for the next time I need to remember those stats:

    1 — Drew Brees, 60.54 pts, Nov. 2013 (7 passing TDs)
    2 — Peyton Manning, 60.28 pts, Sept. 2013 (7 passing TDs)
    3 — Nick Foles, 59.64 pts, Nov. 2013 (7 passing TDs)
    4 — Josh Allen, 57.88 pts, Dec. 2024 (3 passing TDs, 3 rushing TDs)
    5 — Mike Vick, 57.37 pts, Sept. 2010 (4 passing TDs, 2 rushing TDs)

    But Allen does hold one distinction from the rest of that group — he LOST the game despite the gaudy stats. The Bills fell 42-44 to the Rams thanks to a defense that was worth -6.00 pts on the day. That means Buffalo had the best fantasy QB performance in league history and the worst possible defensive fantasy score on the same day. Just wild stuff.

    Meanwhile, Addison had eight catches for 133 yds and three TDs, and his fellow Vikings wideout Justin Jefferson had another seven catches for 132 yds and two TDs (24.30 fantasy pts, good for #3 on the week among wideouts). If you started those two together, you would have gotten 55.17 fantasy points. That’s almost the same as one Josh Allen start.

    One more note — with that game Allen vaulted himself in the QB fantasy standings for the year all the way up to … number two, because Lamar Jackson had the week off and is still 30 full fantasy points ahead of him.

    “Names you know” edition

    3rd place: Kadarius Toney, -0.62 pts — on the wire
    2nd place: Cordarrelle Patterson, -1.33 pts — on the wire
    1st place: Brandon Allen, -2.00 pts — on the wire

    Best QB on the week: Allen. Worst QB on the week: Allen.

    Brandon Allen had one pass attempt for the 49ers, and it was picked off by the Bears. Josh Allen had six TDs against the Rams. Josh Allen’s team lost. Brandon Allen’s team won. Football is weird.

    Toney has only registered a fantasy score in three games this season, and two of them have been negative points. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, keep playing on the Browns.
     

    ** Just in case you haven’t been following the Boise State Broncos football team closely, start RB Ashton Jeanty rushed for 209 yds in Saturday's Mountain West title game, giving him 2,497 yds for the season. That’s good enough for fourth-best all time in college football, just 131 yds behind Barry Sanders record of 2,628 set in 1998.

    Jeanty could pass Sanders in the Broncos college football playoff game later this month, a situation that seems unfair, since Sanders didn’t get to pad his total with any post-season games. Well, actually he did, rushing for 222 yds in a bowl game, but the NCAA doesn’t consider stats collected in bowl games towards single-season records.

    Well, actually they do, but only for bowl games that happened after 2002. Why? Because. So Jeanty can add to his season totals with any playoff games but Sanders’ total is locked because it happened before LeBron James played his first NBA game, which is the standard dividing line for all college football stats.

    If we’re gonna have this arbitrary nonsense with college football stats, then I’m not recognizing Notre Dame as ever being the top team in the country. After all, none of those championships came after 2002.

    ** On Sirius NFL Radio, former NFL coach Bill Belichick was asked about what he saw with the Patriots team this year.

    “They only have three wins this year,” he said. “It’s hard to watch. There’s nothing I can do about it, of course, but it’s hard.”

    From the tone of his voice, you could tell that Belichick meant his “of course” to remind folks that he is no longer the coach of the Patriots, so of course he can’t fix it. Funny thing is, he was the coach of the Patriots last year, and they went 4-13. So, even if he were still the coach, it’s pretty clear he couldn’t fix it then either.

    ** The Chiefs clinched their 9th straight division title on Sunday night with a win over the Chargers that came on a last-play field goal which bounced off the upright but over the crossbar for three points. As the refs signaled success, announcer Mike Tirico exclaimed “it’s a doink for the division!” Decent turn of phrase on the spot by him.

    Three minutes later, NBC sideline reporter Melissa Stark interviewed QB Patrick Mahomes about the improbable win. “It’s already being called ‘the doink for the division!’ What do you think of that?”

    Hold on, it’s “already” being called that because your team just said it. It wasn’t a trending topic, it was something you all invented. Sure, social media started quoting Tirico, but that was way later, like 10 minutes after the fact.

    Mahomes called the moment “amazing.” And then Stark informed him that some people were already calling it an amazing ending. Probably. I dunno, Joanna was shouting at the TV after it all happened, so it was hard to hear.
     

    One person in America was sweating out those final few minutes of the Eagles win on Sunday than any Philly fan: An unnamed gambler put down $3.1 million on the birds to beat the Panthers and nearly saw that small fortune go up in smoke. The odds on the bet were terrible, netting him $442,000 and potentially costing him almost eight times that amount.

    Hopefully, this compulsive bettor has learned his or her lesson. But if not, here are some better ways to spend that $3.1 million for next time:

    — Employ Zack Baun and Nakobe Dean for one year. The two Eagles linebackers’ compensation for 2024 is $3.02 million. They could probably earn you a few bucks carrying things and shoveling snow.

    — Buy 13 Super Bowl rings. The most expensive sold to date was Lawrence Taylor’s Super Bowl XXV ring, which went for $230K. With some savvy negotiating, you might be able to get as many as 15.

    — Get 10,000 shares of Packer stock. The last sale, in 2022, had shares going for $300 each. In 2011, the shares cost $250 each. That’s a solid growth investment.

    — Rent a suite at Lincoln Financial Field through 2085. The most expensive luxury boxes for Eagles home games run $45,000 a year right now. Scalp some tickets to those seats to turn a profit.

    — Don’t bet on the Eagles. The team is 22-9 in real life over the last two years but 15-14-2 against the betting spreads in that same frame. If the odds are basically a coin flip, maybe resist the temptation to wager more than $3 million on tails.

    Among the worst sins of the Cowboys franchise this year is not only their insatiable appetite for evil, but also their generally boring nature. True, watching them lose is fun, but in general the team has felt rather ordinary and unexciting. And that’s no surprise, when you start to see a common theme hidden in several of their players’ names:

    Dallas Cowboys LB Buddy Johnson
    ** Jowly, bad, bland nobody. Such loss.

    Dallas Cowboys Rookie TE Brevyn Spann-Ford
    ** A very bland player. Two socks, no friends. Boo.

    Dallas Cowboys DE Marshawn Kneeland
    ** Bland man, lacks lady, needs a shower. Ow.

    Remember, kids — I’ve you’re going to be full of spite and malice, at least be interesting about it.

    ** Once again, Dad and I split our picks this week, leaving me up one for the season. We actually independently selected all the same winners ahead of Sunday’s game, then forced each other to change one contest. And we both lost the ones we chose, which meant we were right the first time. On the season, I’m a ridiculous 146-62 picking winners (70.2% right) while Dad is a pedestrian 145-63 (30.3% incorrect).

    ** NFL teams have scored 30 or more points in games 97 times this season. Their combined record in those games is 87-10. The Bengals have done it six times, and their record in those games is 2-4. That’s just an amazing level of pain for their fans.

    ** The Eagles can clinch the NFC East with a win next week against the Steelers and a loss by the Commanders to the Saints. They can clinch at least the #2 overall seed with a win, a Commanders’ loss and a Seahawks’ loss to the Packers. And they can clinch the #1 overall seed next week with those three things and the Lions being teleported to Mars by belligerent aliens gambling on Earth sports.

    Week 14 standings

    1 — Still The Best (Jonathan), 1739.74 pts
    2 — Chop Block to the Artery (Capt. Awesome), 1723.53 pts
    3 — Murder Hornets (Mike), 1699.49 pts
    4 — Kodos for President (Jo), 1668.18 pts
    5 — Beer 'n Chips (Pop), 1624.63 pts
    6 — Blue Collar Killers (Jeff), 1612.70 pts
    7 — Jabronis (Ant), 1605.10 pts
    8 — DeVonta’s Inferno (Mom D), 1573.08 pts
    9 — No One Likes Us We Don't Care (Bob), 1556.54 pts
    10 — The Fightin Pickles (Sam), 1413.00 pts
    11 — They Certainly Are Dwarves (Paul), 1235.77 pts
    12 — All Rogers No Sauce (Joel), 1163.69 pts

    It’s a race again. Both Mike and I topped 150 pts this week, pulling to within striking distance of Jonathan’s reign of terror atop the standings. Dad just missed 150 pts but pulled himself from 8th place to fifth, 115 pts out of the top spot. Jo almost hit 130 pts, fell on spot in the standings but picked up 15 points on the leader.

    And Jonathan? He still scored 115.62 pts with his MVP QB on a bye, but the good-not-great week puts some concerns in his quest for a repeat. With four fantasy weeks left, he is catchable.

    Well, catchable if your team is within about 150 pts. Everyone below the seven spot is likely just playing for pride. To play off Paul, your teams may be fighters, but they are not giants.

    No byes this week, but there are two Monday night games, and neither one will feature Simpsons characters. So sad. Try to push past the heartbreak and set those rosters early.

    Tuesday, December 03, 2024

    Fantasy football 2024 -- week 13 recap


    Not every NFL team was contractually obligated to play on Thanksgiving this year — Most players got to enjoy a nice meal with their teammates on the holiday. Here’s a quick look at what was on the menu at a few of the locker rooms across the league:

    ** New Jersey Giants: Lots of cranberry sauce. Maybe that has something to do with all the jiggling in that spineless mess of a squad.

    ** Kansas City Chiefs: Rabbit. It wasn’t particularly tasty, but it’s the only way to get enough rabbit feet into their system to ensure they get a ridiculously lucky win every week.

    ** Dallas Cowboys: Veal. It’s not a traditional Thanksgiving meal, but it is cruel and reprehensible, so the players loved it.

    ** Jacksonville Jaguars: Chicken nuggets. They don’t deserve anything better.

    ** Philadelphia Eagles: Raven. Wrong bird for the holiday, but still tasty enough.

    ** New Jersey Jets: They actually didn’t eat, but they did gather around a table to listen to QB Aaron Rogers spew conspiracy theories for a few hours.

    ** San Francisco 49ers: Multiple large servings of humble pie, perfect for an overhyped fourth-place team.



    QB: Jameis Winston, 40.98 pts — on the wire
    WR: Jerry Jeudy, 28.17 pts — started by Dad
    RB: Bucky Irving, 25.30 pts — started by Mom D
    TE: Brock Bowers, 20.53 pts — started by Jonathan
    K: Chad Ryland, 17.00 pts — on the wire
    DEF: LA Chargers, 20.00 pts — on Jo’s bench
    D: Leonard Williams, 18.00 pts — on the wire

    I had this whole section written at halftime on Monday night, then had to dump it because Winston decided to pass for 497 yards and six TDs. Of course, two of those TDs went to the other team, but you take the good with the bad.

    Winston had the second-most passing yards of any QB in a game this season (behind Kirk Cousins’ 509) and lost anyways. Jeudy, who caught most of Winston’s long throws, had the second most receiving yards of any wideout this year (Jamar Chase, 267). Both Chase and Jeudy saw their team lose those games. Stats aren’t everything.

    Williams, a defensive lineman for the Seahawks, had three tackles, two sacks and a 92-yard interception return for a TD in Sunday’s win over the Jets. According to ESPN, that made him the first NFL player over 300 pounds to return an interception more than 90 yards for a TD. I can’t wait for the network to launch a new “yards per pound” feature so we can debate whether a 15-yard swing pass to a 165-pound WR3 is more impressive on a quantum mechanics level than a 250-pound QB sneak for two yards.

    I double checked, Chad Ryland is a real NFL player. Apparently he has been playing for about two months. It was news to me too.

    “Scrabble tiles” edition

    3rd place: Laviska Shenault, -1.80 pts — on the wire
    2nd place: Hassan Haskins, -2.00 pts — on the wire
    1st place: Kyle Juszczyk, -2.10 pts — on the wire

    Special recognition goes out to the 49ers defense, which recorded a perfect -6.00 pts this week against Buffalo: 35 pts allowed, no turnovers, no sacks. Just a wonderful stat line.

    Juszczyk gets you 42 points on a scrabble board (even more if you can sneak it onto the double word space) but he has managed only 21.09 fantasy pts this year. The 49ers RB subtracted from his season total with a rush for -1 yards and a fumble inside the red zone on Sunday night, giving the ball to the Bills and helping that San Fran defense surrender even more points.


    ** Visiting the Philly area this week, I saw that Dad had procured three boxes of special Jason Kelce cereal. The first is just a box of Lucky Charms with the Kelce brother’s faces. The second is a box of Honey Nut Cheerios with the same.

    The third is a box of “Kelce Mix” cereal — Reeses Puffs, Cinnamon Toast Crunch, and Lucky Charms, all thrown in together.

    This is a pro-Kelce blog, and even despite all the overexposure that Jason is getting right now, I’m here to support him. That said, Kelce Mix is a crime against both nature and humanity. Don’t go back and reread what is in there, it will cause an immediate cavity and rapid-heart syndrome. I’m legitimately concerned that both brothers will be jailed if any children actually eat that abomination of flavors.

    I wanna keep backing you, Jason, but you’re making it difficult.

    ** In the first quarter of the Michigan game on Saturday (the MICHIGAN GAME, since only one team showed up), the Wolverines faced a third-and-four at their own 36-yard line. QB Davis Warren threw a slant pass to TE Marlin Klein, who was immediately wrapped up by a linebacker. Warren reached forward as he fell, and Fox announcer Gus Johnson exclaimed “we’ll see if that move makes it close enough for a first down!”

    After a quick review, the refs announced it was not, and Michigan faced a fourth-and-four.

    Yes, fourth-and-four. Klein was tackled at the line of scrimmage, but Johnson wasn’t sure if the 6-foot-6 tight end had managed to stretch twice his height to get the first down. In fairness, it was hard to tell on the telecast whether he had gotten a first, because the yellow line was so far away it was barely on the screen.

    Michigan opted to punt, despite the short reach away from another set of downs.

    ** In one of the stupidest scoring decisions in NFL history, Bills QB Josh Allen was credited with a receiving TD in Sunday’s game despite having zero catches.

    On the play in question, Allen passed to WR Amari Cooper, who was immediately wrapped up by a 49ers cornerback. Before he was tackled, however, he lateralled the ball back to Allen, who ran it forward 7 yds for a TD. I gave Allen a passing TD and receiving TD on the same play, something that rarely happens in the NFL.

    But it has happened before, when a pass is batted in the air the QB catches it. In this case, Allen didn’t catch a pass, but the NFL decided they’d act as if he did just for grins. A logical solution would have been to call it a catch, then a rushing TD by Allen, same as if he picked up a fumble and advanced it (which is allowed only in certain circumstances). But, no, the NFL wanted to celebrate Allen getting a passing, rushing and receiving TD in the same game, no matter how convoluted the logic was.

    Allen’s final box score line: 7 yds receiving, 1 receiving TD, 0 catches. Makes perfect sense.


    The Eagles are 10-2 at the start of December — just like one year ago, and we all remember how awful that turned out.

    Last season’s collapse should send shivers down the spine of every fan. After losing to the 49ers to set their record at 10-2, the Eagles lost five of their next six games, including an embarrassing playoff loss. The lesson here is that a good start can lead to an epic collapse and … hold on, didn’t they win 10 of their first 12 back in 2022 as well?

    Yep. They were 11-1 at the start of December, and headed towards the Super Bowl. So the real lesson to take away from an Eagles team that wins 10 or more of their first 12 games is that while the team may look good, they can’t win it all.

    Or maybe they can, because the Eagles were 10-2 after 12 games in 2017 and won the championship.

    So the real REAL lesson here is that in the last eight years, the Eagles have had four seasons where they had 10 wins before the first week in December. That means it’s hard to remember which Eagles’ 10-win seasons were good and which were disappointing. And that is an insane thing to type.

    The Eagles best three-year win total since the franchise was founded was from 2002 to 2004, when Andy Reid led the team to 37 regular season wins and a 4-3 playoff record. Right now, the Eagles have 35 regular season wins since the start of 2022, with five games left this season. Hopefully, that total increases. And they have a 2-2 playoff record over the last two seasons. That could improve too. 

    Since 2000, the Eagles have 238 wins against 159 losses. Only four teams (Patriots, Steelers, Packers and Ravens) have seen more wins than the Eagles over that span. Since 2022, only the Chiefs have won more, and they only lead the Eagles by one regular season victory.

    These are really good times for football in Philly. Don’t forget to appreciate that.

    Also, Saquon Barkley rules.

    Dallas has put together a surprising two-game win streak despite being left for dead in the standings a month ago. What’s the secret to the turnaround? For most teams, it would center on teamwork, persistence, character. For the Cowboys? Their center is a little different. Just look what his name spells out:

    Dallas Cowboys Center Cooper Beebe
    ** Sweet boy? No. Local scrod be a creep

    I too am dismayed that being a creep can still translate into success, but honestly, it’s not that much of a surprise.

    ** Dad and I split our picks yet again, leaving me up one in the season standings. I lost yet another one-point game against him, this time mistakenly putting my faith in the Patriots over the Colts. This is the fourth time this season I’ve lost a one-point decision to Dad, which is fairly ridiculous. If he beats me on the season by one-game, I’m demanding a recount.

    ** Ohio State coach Ryan Day is 47-1 in regular season games excluding contests against Michigan. He’s 3-8 in games against Michigan and post-season games. You know, the games that actually are important and call for a good coach. But congrats on being proficient at beating up on nobodies.

    ** If Green Bay beats Detroit on Thursday night, and the Eagles beat Carolina, the birds would have the tiebreaker for the #1 seed against the Lions. Just something to keep an eye on.


    Week 13 standings

    1 — Still The Best (Jonathan), 1,624.12 pts
    2 — Chop Block to the Artery (Capt. Awesome), 1,569.04 pts
    3 — Murder Hornets (Mike), 1,540.85 pts
    4 — Kodos for President (Jo), 1,538.85 pts
    5 — Blue Collar Killers (Jeff), 1,512.94 pts
    6 — Jabronis (Ant), 1,486.56 pts
    7 — DeVonta’s Inferno (Mom D), 1,481.78 pts
    8 — Beer 'n Chips (Pop), 1,478.28 pts
    9 — No One Likes Us We Don't Care (Bob), 1,449.98 pts
    10 — The Fightin Pickles (Sam), 1,298.52 pts
    11 — The B Sharps (Paul), 1,163.44 pts
    12 — All Rogers No Sauce (Joel), 1,106.06 pts

    Tough week for Jo, who left the #2 QB and #1 defense on her bench over the holiday weekend, but did start the second-worst defense on the week (Miami, -3.00 pts). She lost 49 pts to her bench, which would have been enough to vault her into second. Instead, she sits just a hair behind Mike, off the medal stand.

    Jonathan opened up his first-place lead a bit again, but he has his QB and #3 WR on a bye this week, so now is the time to catch up to him.

    Speaking of byes, this is the final bye week of the season. The Broncos, Colts, Patriots, Commanders, Ravens and Texans all have off, right as most fantasy teams are deciding who will make the playoffs. Gotta love the NFL, they find ways to ruin almost everything fun about football.

    Six teams on byes means only 14 games this week, so fill those roster holes early. We’ve only got five weeks of regular season football left before the Awesome Cup gets polished and awarded again.

    Tuesday, November 26, 2024

    Fantasy football 2024 -- week 12 recap


    Through 11 games this season, Eagles RB Saquon Barkley has amassed nearly 1,400 rushing yds and more than 250 receiving yds. He’s already set personal records this year in rushing yds for a game and rushing yds for a season. Here’s what’s next on the records list:

    Eagles rushing yds for a season: 1,607 (LeSean McCoy, 2013)
    At current pace: Barkley breaks that in week 13, vs Panthers

    Eagles total scrimmage yds for a season: 2,146 (LeSean McCoy, 2013)
    At current pace: Barkley breaks that in week 15, at Commies

    NFL rushing yds for a season: 2,104 (Eric Dickerson, 1984)
    At current pace: Barkley breaks that in week 17, vs Giants

    NFL total scrimmage yds for a season: 2,509 (Chris Johnson, 2009)
    At current pace: Barkley breaks that in week 17, vs Giants

    For what it’s worth, Barkley had more production by himself on Sunday (302 yds, 2 TDs) than his entire former team (Giants offense had 245 yds, 1 TD) managed in a loss to the Buccaneers. The New Jersey squad that didn’t want to re-sign Barkley last offseason doesn’t have any rusher above 600 yds so far and has totaled 1,275 combined rushing yds from nine different players, compared to Barkley’s 1,393 yds.


    QB: Tua Tagovailoa, 36.48 pts — on Mike’s bench
    WR: Courtland Sutton, 22.47 pts — started by Jeff
    RB: Saquon Barkley, 42.36 pts — started by me
    TE: Noah Gray, 18.40 pts — on the wire
    K: Wil Lutz, 22.00 pts — on the wire
    DEF: Seattle, 23.00 pts — on Jonathan’s bench
    D: Jimmie Ward, 11.50 pts — on the wire

    Lutz is the #4 kicker on the year and has yet to make his way onto any team. Poor guy. He just needs some love.

    Raise your hand if you had Tua topping the weekly fantasy list before Patrick Mahomes. The Chiefs QB had a solid week, scoring just 2.5 pts less than the Dolphins signal caller. But close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades and football if your team has the Brotherly Shove in its arsenal.

    “California dreaming” edition

    3rd place: Las Vegas, -2.00 pts — on the wire
    2nd place: San Francisco, -4.00 pts — started by Bob
    1st place: LA Rams, -5.00 pts — started by Paul

    You know who had a really bad week? The team that gave up 255 rushing yards to Saquon Barkley. Turns out that’s a bad strategy for a fantasy defense.

    Everyone, please take a moment to welcome the 49ers to the bottom of the standings. The once proud franchise gave up 38 points to the mediocre Green Bay Packers on Sunday, turning in their first negative fantasy performance in 30 games. The loss dropped San Fran to last place in their division (5-6, albiet still just one game out of first place) heading into a contest next week with a Buffalo team coming off of its bye week. Send your Christmas cards to them early, because the squad appears headed to the offseason already.

    ** Headline on ESPN Plus Monday: “Here are the 43 most important college football games of Rivalry Week”

    Why must the site’s coverage be so limiting? There are 128 top-tier teams in the NCAA, and this article only covers two-thirds of them. Don’t the bottom three-dozen teams deserve detailed analysis too?

    As an avid fan, I’m definitely reading everything I can about the 42nd most important college rivalry in America, but I won’t be truly happy until the 56th biggest showdown also gets attention.

    ** On his podcast last week, well-known Boston fan Bill Simmons was arguing that the Patriots are actually a much better team than their record shows.

    “They’re 3-8, but they had close games against the Seahawks, and the Dolphins, and the Titans. This team could be 6-7.”

    His co-host immediately called him on it. “Really, you think so? I mean, I can see how they could win a few more, but you think they could have found a way to play two extra games?”

    To his credit, Simmons pulled out the “I was promised there would be no math on this episode” excuse, laughed at himself and moved on.

    ** Fox NFL kickoff on Sunday had a whole segment before Sunday’s game looking back at the Packers’ game-winning FG block a week earlier from the perspective of Green Bay QB Jordan Love, who was … on the sidelines for the play.

    What did we learn from the segment? Love was really stressed out. And then he was happy when his team won.

    Other than that, he was as involved in the action as you and me and had arguably a worse vantage point than TV viewers. The D-lineman who blocked it? The Chicago kicker? They could have given some new perspective. But the signal caller for a team whose offense hadn’t been on the field for five minutes? Gotta fill the hour of pregame drivel with something, I guess.
     

    Everyone is bringing out their best Black Friday bargains this week, including the NFL. If you’re in a shopping mood and have some disposable income, add these items to the list:

    ** QB Daniel Jones (retail $40M, now on sale)
    His noodle arm was cut by the Giants and is available for just a few million for the rest of the season. Maybe you need a somewhat mobile scarecrow for your backyard?

    ** Texas Stadium (retail $1.15B, now on sale)
    Please note that any purchase of the Cowboys home does not come with a full roof (since pieces are falling off) or sun-blocking curtains. Still, if you want to host a ridiculous sideshow, it’s a good buy.

    ** Coach Doug Pederson (retail $8.5M, now on sale)
    True, the Jaguars haven’t officially tossed their embattled coach aside yet. But go ahead and make an offer if you’re interested. I’m pretty sure the front office will listen.

    ** Thanksgiving Day tickets (retail $200, now $28)
    Speaking of Texas Stadium, standing-room passes for the Giants/Cowboys rivalry game on the holiday are selling for as low as $28 each on resale markets. It’s almost as if people don’t want to pay real money to watch these teams…

    I know they won this week, but we’re officially at the point where the Cowboys’ terrible performance on the field is more than just merely an eyesore. It’s an actual public health threat, possibly the worst we have seen in years.

    Think I’m exaggerating? Just look at the Dallas secondary and S Israel Mukuamu, a key player for the defense. At first glance, he appears to be a standard team villain with his character clearly spelled out within his name:

    Cowboys Free Safety Israel Mukuamu
    ** Wussy. Beery. Scum. Fake. A moot failure.

    Bad enough. But when you look closer — really look closer — you can see there is more than just simple negative vibes here. There is death and disease:

    Cowboys Free Safety Israel Mukuamu
    ** Wry scum abates, offers you leukemia


    I know what you’re thinking. “Oh, it’s ridiculous to suggest the Cowboys are plotting another global pandemic just because you found ONE illness hidden in their safety’s name.” And to that I say, you’re just not looking close enough:

    Cowboys Free Safety Israel Mukuamu
    ** Makes tuberculosis for a fee. Way yum.


    I still hear you. “OK, two is a coincidence, but …” Let me stop you right there and urge you to LOOK CLOSER:

    Cowboys Free Safety Israel Mukuamu
    ** Yuk row — if my farts cause Ebola, sue me

    What more do we need before the government deploys the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to Texas Stadium? They could start widespread contamination during the Thanksgiving game. Our health and welfare are quite literally at stake.

    ** Technically, Dad dropped another game to me in our picks this week, but I’m waving it off. He reluctantly guessed the 49ers would win, without knowing that Brock Purdy, the greatest player in the history of the NFL according to San Fran fans, was ruled out before the game. So we’re going to keep the standings at me plus-one.

    ** Last week I predicted the Bears would lose to the Vikings on a last-second FG. How did that game actually turn out? The Bears lost to the Vikings on a game-ending overtime FG. Sounds like a perfect call by me.

    ** I checked — This is now the third time in this blog’s 18-year history that I’ve made an Ebola joke. First for tuberculosis and leukemia, though.

    ** There’s still a scenario where the Jaguars and Panthers host playoff games in January. It requires so many things that I didn’t have the patience to type them out here, but it’s possible. There is no scenario left where the Giants could, however.


    Week 12 standings

    1 — Still The Best (Jonathan), 1502.35 pts
    2 — Chop Block to the Artery (Capt Awesome), 1463.19 pts
    3 — Kodos for President (Jo), 1440.72 pts
    4 — Blue Collar Killers (Jeff), 1425.05 pts
    5 — Murder Hornets (Mike), 1407.46 pts
    6 — DeVonta’s Inferno (Mom D), 1361.72 pts
    7 — Beer 'n Chips (Pop), 1353.36 pts
    8 — Jabronis (Ant), 1344.59 pts
    9 — No One Likes Us We Don't Care (Bob), 1334.74 pts
    10 — The Fightin Pickles (Sam), 1181.02 pts
    11 — The B Sharps (Paul), 1084.65 pts
    12 — All Rogers No Sauce (Joel), 1041.76 pts

    A huge week for my Saquon-led team (150.69 pts) combined with Jonathan’s second sub 100-pts week of the season has tightened up the leaderboard a little, or at least enough that I can dream about knocking him off his perch. Less than 40 points separates the two of us.

    Jo and Jeff are just a short throw away from me, and then it starts to get sketchy in the standings. But everyone is over the 1,000 pts barrier now, which is an accomplishment that I think we can all be proud of, even though we really didn’t do any work to get there.

    This week’s schedule: Three games on Thursday. One game on Friday. One game on Sunday night. One game on Monday. Four games on Saturday after 11pm (maybe, I dunno, the week is so spread out). Get your players squared away before any turkey enters your system.

    Tuesday, November 19, 2024

    Fantasy football 2024 -- week 11 recap


    At the end of the 2022 season, the New Jersey Giants signed QB Daniel Jones to a four-year, $160 million contract extension as a reward for his strong year leading the team to their first playoff appearance in six years. At the start of the 2023 season, the Eagles signed their QB, Jalen Hurts, to a five-year, $255 million extension. And this summer, the Cowboys signed star QB Dak Prescott to a four year, $240 million contract extension which included a ridiculous $80 million signing bonus immediately.

    That’s more than $650 million tied up in three NFC East QBs for the near future. Who is getting the best bang for their buck so far? Here’s a breakdown over the past 20 months:

    Total salary paid out, April 2023-Nov 2024
    Hurts: $65 million
    Jones: $67 million
    Prescott: $107 million

    Cost per TD over that frame
    Hurts: $1.1 million (61 total TDs)
    Prescott: $2.1 million (50 total TDs)
    Jones: $6.7 million (10 total TDs)

    Cost per yard over that frame
    Hurts: $9,184 (7,077 passing & rushing yds)
    Prescott: $15,758 (6,790 passing & rushing yds)
    Jones: $19,420 (3,450 passing & rushing yds)

    Cost per win over that frame
    Hurts: $3.4 million (19 wins)
    Prescott: $7.1 million (15 wins)
    Jones: $22.3 million (three wins)

    Salary paid out for missed injury time over that frame
    Hurts: $0 (no games missed)
    Prescott: $7.9 million (two games)
    Jones: $27.3 million (11 games)

    It’s worth noting that Prescott’s contract value will get worse as this year goes on while the Cowboys pay him to recover from his latest injury, while Jones’ contract value will get worse as the Giants pay him to sit on the sidelines following his benching this week. That makes the Hurts contract look like even more of a deal.

    But just remember, it’s still ridiculous money. Every time Jalen Hurts does a 1-yard tush push, it costs almost $10,000.


    QB: Jared Goff, 42.58 pts — started by Sam
    WR: Amon-Ra St. Brown, 27.83 pts — started by Jonathan
    RB: Saquon Barkley, 31.07 pts — started by me
    TE: Jonnu Smith, 21.73 pts — started by Ant
    K: Chris Boswell, 24.00 pts — started by Sam
    DEF: Denver, 16.00 pts — on Ant’s bench
    D: Derek Barnett, 12.50 pts — on the wire
    Taysom Hill: Taysom Hill, 36.69 pts — on the wire

    It’s time again for our annual conversation about Taysom Hill.

    Taysom Hill, who plays for the Saints, is listed as a QB/TE. He does not, in fact, ever play TE. He should not count as a TE. He should be listed as “slash”, in the mold of Kordell Stewart, the “slash” QB for the Steelers in the late 1990s who actually played QB/RB/WR.

    In Sunday’s win, Hill did a little of everything: 18 passing yds, 50 receiving yds, 138 rushing yds, 42 return yds, three TDs, one fumble, one interception. That’s an absolutely mind-boggling stat line. All that’s missing is a tackle and a FG attempt. He had 45.29 fantasy pts total in 10 games coming into Sunday, and nearly equaled that amount in his 11th game.

    Hill is an exciting and erratic player. But he is not a TE. If there were any real rules in fantasy, he would be listed as “W/R only.” But there are no rules, because fantasy is not real football.

    Shoutout to Goff, who had five interceptions last week when I needed him in my other league and four TDs and a perfect passer rating this week when he was on my bench. I love fantasy football.

    Also, former Eagle and current Texan Derek Barnett had a sack, forced fumble, fumble recovery and a defensive TD against the Cowboys on Monday night. The title of ESPN’s featured video clip from the score was “Cowboys fumble twice on same play as Texans score defensive TD.” This really has been a wonderful season.

    “Bottom of the barrel” edition

    3rd place: New England, -3.00 pts — on the wire
    2nd place: Atlanta, -5.00 pts — on Bob’s bench
    1st place: Jacksonville, -6.00 pts — on the wire

    Goff’s perfect day came at the expense of the truly awful Jaguars, who lost 52-6 without recording a single sack or turnover on the day. Jacksonville has lost its previous three games by a combined total of 13 points. Their point differential for the season is minus-108 pts, but 46 of that total came in the last contest.

    Just missing the list was WR Kadarius Toney, the former first round pick for the Giants and a member of the Chiefs last two Super Bowl winning teams. He was cut in the offseason, picked up by the Browns, and saw his first action of the year this week. He had one rush for -7 yds in Cleveland’s loss to the Saints, no catches, then was demoted to the practice squad on Monday. Life comes at you fast.


    ** I know he corrected himself a few moments later, but during the Eagles’ Thursday night game, play-by-play announcer Al Michaels made a reference to Philadelphia’s famous “Liberty Bowl.” And I just can’t figure out what he was thinking when it happened.

    I mean, it’s a one-ton bell. If you’ve ever seen it, you think “that’s a big bell.” It’s hard to mistake it for anything but a working bell.

    Did Michaels temporarily picture it upside down, filled with soup? Did he get it confused with a college bowl game? Was Michaels so bored with the first half of the contest that he wanted to go bowling?

    Thankfully, he didn’t try to reference Philly’s famous statue of the Rock standing outside the art museum.

    ** Ahead of the Steelers upset win on Sunday, Ravens radio announcer Gerry Sandusky painted a picture of a beautiful fall Sunday on the gridiron. “It’s 53 degrees here today, and absolutely perfect weather for football. Barely any clouds, not much wind, no rain or snow at all in the forecast.”

    I know Baltimore has a lot of quirks, but do they often get snow there when the temperature is over 50 degrees? Or do they just worry that snowmen may strike at any moment?

    All-Pro K Justin Tucker missed two kicks in the first-half of the loss, probably because of the sudden blizzard conditions that can instantly form at any moment without warning.

    ** Late in the Texans win over the Cowboys on Monday, both teams got in a scuffle and started shoving each other, prompting a flurry of flags. The refs announced personal foul penalties on four Dallas defensive players, and one on a Texans offensive lineman.

    And then they announced the penalties offset.

    Now, I’m not a math major, but it feels like 60 yards worth of penalties on one team should not be erased because of 15 yards worth of penalties on the opposing team. But everything is bigger in Texas, so maybe that was the problem.
     

     After starting out the year 4-2, Chicago is now 4-6 with a losing streak that includes a pair of brutal, unlikely losses: a last-play Hail Mary by the Maryland Commanders and a last-play blocked FG attempt by the Green Bay Packers. It’s hard to imagine a tougher stretch for any team .. but not impossible. With seven games still left on the schedule, here are other painful, torturous loss possibilities out there for Da Bears:
     
    ** Week 12: Last-second FG surrendered to the Vikings.
    Of those six losses, four have been fewer than six points. But none so far have involved giving up a kick for three on the last play of the game, the most traditional way to entertain last-second heartbreak in the NFL.

    ** Week 13: End zone interception on the final play against Detroit
    Imagine a game where the Bears hang with the high-scoring Lions, have a chance to win with a TD at the end of regulation, drive the ball down inside the 10 and toss a pick under the uprights with no time left on the clock. Brutal.

    ** Week 14: Overtime loss to the 49ers on a safety.
    Getting to overtime shows your squad was good enough to win it. Giving up a safety shows a healthy dose of bad luck and fundamental flaws in strategy. Why not combine the two with a game-ending sack in your own end zone?

    ** Week 15: Last-second FG surrendered to the Vikings, again.
    What’s worse than losing on a final kick once? Losing on a final kick to the same team twice in four weeks.

    ** Week 17: Meteor strike on the final play against the Seahawks
    Nevermind, scratch that. Having your QB killed by a meteor on the final play of the game is still less painful than losing on a Hail Mary.

    The Cowboys miserable season (for them, great for us) continues to trudge along, but the front office did make an effort to improve the team ahead of last week’s trade deadline: Sending a fourth-round pick for Panthers WR Jonathan Mingo. The deal itself was a dud, but it was special to note because the trade wrote its own headline. Just look at what his new title clearly spells out:

    Dallas wideout Jonathan Mingo
    ** Hangman to join outlaw lads. Die!

    FYI, “Jonathan Mingo” also spells out “Mahjong nation” which coincidentally is what he’s going to be starting at his home in a few weeks, after the Cowboys’ season ends without a playoff invite.

    ** Dad went 3-1 against me this week, pulling to within one game in our weekly picks showdown. And that’s not the worst of it. Even after I ridiculed him here for multiple weeks for picking the Jets, I decided to put my faith in the New Jersey squad on Sunday when even Dad wouldn’t touch them. So, the joke is on me, and I have learned my lesson. No more picking the Jets … unless they play the Jaguars … which they do in four weeks…

    ** Delaware won its final home game as a FCS school on Saturday, bringing their record to 9-1 on the season. Their last regular season game before heading to Conference USA next year will be a win over Villanova next week, and then hopefully a long run in their final FCS playoffs appearance.

    ** The 49ers have lost three games this year where they were leading with two minutes left in the game. I think that’s neat.


    Week 11 standings

    1 — Still The Best (Jonathan), 1408.89 pts
    2 — Murder Hornets (Mike), 1326.71 pts
    3 — Kodos for President (Jo), 1320.04 pts
    4 — Blue Collar Killers (Jeff), 1318.61 pts
    5 — Chop Block to the Artery (Capt. Awesome), 1312.50 pts
    6 — DeVonta’s Inferno (Mom D), 1262.85 pts
    7 — No One Likes Us We Don't Care (Bob), 1243.59 pts
    8 — Beer 'n Chips (Pop), 1225.35 pts
    9 — Jabronis (Ant), 1209.63 pts
    10 — The Fightin Pickles (Sam), 1111.15 pts
    11 — The B Sharps (Paul), 1006.46 pts
    12 — All Rogers No Sauce (Joel), 942.39 pts

    Big weeks for Mike and Jeff have created a logjam around the second-place podium perch, and firmly established four tiers in the standings.

    At the bottom are Paul and Joel, both 400-plus points out of first. Realistically, they’d need all of use to lose our logins to get back into this fight.

    Next up are the under-fives, all sitting at least 140 pts out of the top spot. It’s not impossible for them to get back into contention, but it’s going to take a lot of luck over the last seven weeks to get there.

    Everyone in our second-place pack is within 100 points of the lead, but no one is closer than 80 pts. Someone could climb that mountain, but it’ll take work. And maybe a pickaxe in the back of other coaches.

    And the last tier is Jonathan, the reigning Awesome Cup champ, all by himself in first place. Mike scored 159.69 pts this week and only managed to pick up 27 pts in the standings, because Still the Best seems to hit 130 consistently every week. Luckily, he has several key players still to hit a bye, but the biggest one — QB Lamar Jackson, the top scorer in the league — doesn’t sit until week 14.

    Six other teams have byes this week, though: The Bills, Falcons, Bengals, Saints, Jets and Jaguars. And there is still a Thursday night game. So check those rosters early, you may need to make a lot of adjustments this weekend.



    Tuesday, November 12, 2024

    Fantasy Football 2024 -- week 10 recap


    Week 10 will go down in the 2024 NFL record as the week that teams finally broke football. Here’s a quick recap of things that defied logic but actually happened:

    ** The Lions threw five interceptions. They won anyway.
    Houston threw two picks of its own and missed a late 4th-quarter FG attempt, giving the Lions an opportunity to win the game on a final-play kick. Detroit trailed 23-7 at the half but won 26-23.
     
    ** The Falcons had a 300-yd passer and a 100-yd rusher. They lost anyway.
    Despite racking up 468 offensive yds, Atlanta missed three FGs and turned the ball over twice. That let the Saints escape with a 20-17 upset.

    ** The Vikings had three turnovers and failed to score a touchdown. They won anyway.
    Amazingly, the 12-7 win over the Jaguars was the second time since 2006 that a team hasn’t gotten a TD and was -3 in turnovers in a victory.

    ** The Bengals had 264 receiving yds and three TDs from WR Ja’Marr Chase. They lost anyway.
    QB Joe Burrow threw four TDs in the Thursday night game, but failed to connect on a last-minute two-point try. The Ravens won, 35-34. Chase has a combined 21 catches, 457 yds and five TDs in two games against Baltimore this year, both losses.

    ** The Panthers let their team on the field. They won anyway.
    With arguably the worst roster in modern football history, Carolina squeaked out a 20-17 overtime win against the New Jersey Giants. It’s their second win in a row, and their second winning streak of any kind since October 2021.


    QB: Joe Burrow, 41.72 pts — started by Jeff
    WR: Ja’Marr Chase, 41.10 pts — started by Mike
    RB: Bijan Robinson, 26.97 pts — started by Bob
    TE: Travis Kelce, 14.27 pts — started by Jonathan
    K: Tyler Bass, 13.00 pts — started by Bob
    DEF: Philadelphia, 23.00 pts — started by me
    D: Taron Johnson, 12.50 pts — on the wire

    It’s always the defensive player. Speaking of defense, the #2 defense on the week was Buffalo, with 20.00 pts, sitting on my bench.

    Since I gave you Chase’s numbers in the two Ravens games, here are Burrow’s: 820 passing yds, nine TDs, 1 INT, two losses. Baltimore QB Lamar Jackson managed 10 total TDs in those games, in which the two teams totaled 141 combined points. Just wow.

    Don’t look now, but over the last four weeks, Eagles QB Jalen Hurts actually has more total TDs (16) than Jackson (15) with the same number of turnovers (both 2). And over that span, Hurts’ team is 4-0, unlike the MVP-favorite Jackson’s Ravens, who are 3-1.

    Hurts also leads the league in first-half brain farts, with 472.

    “Names we know” edition

    3rd place: Jalen Reagor, -0.20 pts — on the wire
    2nd place: Olamide Zaccheaus, -0.97 pts — on the wire
    1st place: Cooper Rush, -2.00 pts — on the wire

    Zaccheaus, who was on the Eagles last year, nearly muffed the first punt he saw in Sunday’s Commanders game and fumbled the second, leading to a key Steelers score and a Pittsburgh win. Reagor, who never “played” for the Eagles but did steal a roster spot for a while, produced -2 yds rushing on two WR runs, and did nothing else.

    But let’s talk about Cowboys backup QB Cooper Rush, who played three quarters and produced one of the worst performances of the season: 13 for 23, 45 passing yds and two lost fumbles. Completing that many passes for less than 4 yds a catch is really, really hard.

    For what it’s worth, nine QBs had two or more turnovers in games this weekend (including Jalen Hurts). Their combined record was 4-5, which, all things considered, is surprisingly good.


    ** During the radio broadcast of the Panthers/Giants game Sunday, play-by-play announcer Bob Papa noted the large number of cheers after the Giants grabbed a turnover late in the fourth quarter. “This may be a Panthers home game, but there are plenty of Giants fans here today!” he exclaimed.

    What he failed to mention was that the game was taking place in Germany, which is not the traditional home turf of the Carolina Panthers. So that small contingent of Giants faithful outnumbering the even smaller contingent of Panthers fans isn’t as impressive as Papa may think.

    ** Facing criticism after WR CeeDee Lamb lost a potential go-ahead TD catch in the sun glaring through the side of Texas Stadium, Cowboys owner Jerry Jones flatly rejected the idea of putting up curtains to help players on the field see better because … well …

    “Every team that comes in here has the same issues,” he said. “They know where the sun is going to be. Every team has the same thing. I’m not saying it’s on our coach. I’m saying the world knows where the sun is. We get to know that almost a year in advance. So someone asked me about the sun. What about the sun? Where’s the moon? We’re fine. But everybody plays in the sun out here.”

    There you have it. Astronomers can estimate the distance from the sun to the Earth, so football players should be able to catch a ball while staring right into it. That’s just science.

    ** I was listening to the Columbus broadcast of the Ohio State game this weekend and the Ohio Soy Council had a commercial talking about all the products soy is used in that ends with the statement “soy low key slays” and that was the point that I decided this country is no longer worth saving.


    Sunday was only the first of two games for the Eagles against the Cowboys this year, but the game was full of other notable firsts for the victorious birds:

    ** First win over Dallas after week 9 since 2019. (Six games)

    ** First win over the Cowboys in Texas since 2017. (Eight games)

    ** First time holding Dallas to no TDs since 2020. (Nine games)

    ** First time Saquon Barkley has won against the Cowboys. (10 games)

    ** First time scoring more than 30 in a win against Dallas since 2017. (15 games)

    ** First time forcing five turnovers against the Cowboys since 2008. (33 games)

    ** First time ending the Cowboys season with eight games left on the schedule. (131 games)

    As if the Eagles embarrassment of the Cowboys at home on Sunday wasn’t enough, team officials confirmed in recent days that their $240 million QB, Dak Prescott, will require a season-ending operation on his leg to repair damage to his hamstring. The news is grim, but with how wild the NFL is, can you really count Dallas out of the playoff chase?

    Yes. Yes you can. Just look at what the prognosis spells out:

    Hamstring surgery needed for Dak Prescott
    ** Postseason march? Ended. Try grief drug trek.

    The good news is that Dak has only missed 22% of regular season games over the last five years due to injury, so there’s no reason to think he can’t get hurt several more times before that giant contract is paid off.

    ** Dad’s never-ending faith in the Jets let him down again, and he sits three behind me in our weekly picks. But I’m sure next week will be the time that Aaron Rodgers finally turns it all around.

    ** The Eagles play the Marlyand Commies for the undisputed lead in the NFC East next week. The Commies are 7-3 but 0-2 against teams with winning records. The Eagles are 7-2 and sport a much more impressive … 1-1 record against teams with winning records. So, yeah, this game should really tell us … something.

    ** In its 14-3 win over North Texas on Saturday, Army football had a 94-yard second-half TD drive that lasted 21 plays and took 13:54 off the clock. I’m trying to come up with a joke but honestly I don’t even understand how the math works on that.

    Week 10 standings

    1 — Still The Best (Jonathan), 1276.35 pts
    2 — Chop Block to the Artery (Capt Awesome), 1213.59 pts
    3 — Kodos for President (Jo), 1192.77 pts
    4 — Murder Hornets (Mike), 1188.52 pts
    5 — Blue Collar Killers (Jeff), 1158.92 pts
    6 — DeVonta’s Inferno (Mom D), 1154.03 pts
    7 — No One Likes Us We Don't Care (Bob), 1149.18 pts
    8 — Beer 'n Chips (Dad), 1105.18 pts
    9 — Jabronis (Ant), 1100.18 pts
    10 — The Fightin Pickles (Sam), 980.09 pts
    11 — Overachievers Anonymous (Paul), 920.72 pts
    12 — All Rogers No Sauce (Joel), 864.03 pts

    Jonathan extended his lead slightly this week, and our top three spots remain unchanged, which means that Fort Awesome maintains a military blockade around the medal stand.

    Mom D is up a few spots, Bob is down a few spots, and five teams — Dad, Jeff, Joel, Paul and Sam — failed to crack 90 pts this week. There’s now a growing canyon right around that 8th-place spot that soon may be impossible to cross over, even with eight weeks of football left.

    Speaking of all the football left … Eagles play the Commies on Thursday night, and four teams have a bye this week (including the Giants and Panthers, so that has major fantasy implications for you). Check your bench early and make sure to get your team above the century mark next week.