Welcome everyone to entry #1 of the Detroit Fantasy Football
Blog. I am your host, Mr. Patrick
Fahey. The reason for this blog is a
personal branding project for social media 553.
The motivation for this blog is the pride, joy, and the ultimate
frustration of fantasy football. Fantasy
football is a way to keep in touch with friends, socialize with family members,
and have some social comradery at work. Not only do I play fantasy football, I am the
commissioner of two HIGHLY competitive leagues and let’s be clear here, I would
not have it any other way. Let’s face
facts , when you have grown men tuning into a Monday night football game to
cheer on a field goal kicker, you know something special is going on.
I am in charge of
running a friends and family league, “Detroit Pigskin Dynasty,” and I also run
my work league, where I am currently employed at Comcast. Both of these leagues are in their fourth
year of existence and have provided me with enough material for some legendary
tails that have been responsible for some excellent entertainment throughout
the football season. You will find that
I will be jumping back and forth between both leagues to provide you dedicated
followers with some interesting reads. Ultimately
you will see that being the commissioner is not very enjoyable, and is often a
thankless job. It is necessary though
that you have a well ran league with input from every member to come to fair
decisions, or you end up with grown men complaining. And I am not in the business of hearing
grown men complain.
This was the first year ever that I did not make the
playoffs in either league. This is a
painful admission to make. On a positive
note, it is good to see I have gotten past the denial stage and proceeded towards
acceptance. (In the Comcast league, I
literally lost out on going to the playoffs by 3.02 points; all I had to do was
beat the last place team in the entire league, the team with only ONE win all
year, but we will cover this on a later date, as the scars are still fresh from
this loss and I still feel pain and agony when I think about this.) I would like to tackle how I got into this
mess in the first place. The Draft. Leagues are often won on free agent pick-ups
and how you manage your team during the year, but the draft lays the foundation
for your team. Hell, the fantasy draft
is an unofficial holiday to all men (and women) everywhere.
As fate would have it, I pulled the fourth pick in both
leagues this year. I ended up going with
Andre Johnson and then with Phillip Rivers in the second round. Yep, disaster written all over it. The absolute worst part? I debated forever, and I MEAN forever going
with our very own Calvin Johnson with the #4 pick overall. (I wish I was joking - check out the video
below.) Seriously, I still have
nightmares over the brutal mistake that I had made.
In the Detroit
Pigskin Dynasty league, Calvin was taken #7 overall and the very next
quarterback, the very next pick in the second round, was Drew Brees. Not only did Calvin lead all of the WR’s in
touchdowns, he lead the WHOLE NFL in TD’s for like the first six or seven
weeks. And well Drew Brees kind of
speaks for himself. If I replace my top
two picks with those guys, not only am I guaranteed a playoff spot, hell I
could have steam rolled my way to the superbowl. (I’m in fear of doing the math because I don’t
want to confirm that I’m probably right.)
Now I know what you are already thinking. Why did this clown not draft a running back?
I will give you a couple of reasons but this one should stun
you. The WINNER of the Comcast league drafted
Arian Foster with the 5th pick………AND TRADED HIM…….for Hakeem
Nicks. His final roster looked like
this:
QB: Drew Brees
WR: Hakeem Nicks
WR: Stevie Johnson
WR: Jabar Gaffney
RB: Michael Bush
RB: C.J. Spiller
TE: Aaron Hernadez
K: John Kasey
DEF: Chicago
Bench: Beanie
Wells, Plaxico Burress, Eric Decker, Benjarvus Green-Ellis, Ben Tate, Houston
Defense
The superbowl winner had a backfield that consisted of
backups. Anyone that has experience with
fantasy football knows THIS HAPPENS EVERY YEAR. Halfway through the year you can always pick-up
a running back that will give you solid production, but an ELITE wide receiver is
hard to come by.
In the Detroit Pigskin Dynasty league the eventual winner
had the #10 pick. The wrap around pick
can do some damage if done correctly as the winner went with the combo package
of Roddy White and LeSean McCoy. LeSean
McCoy was an absolute steal here so late, but the story here is that the winner
had Matthew Stafford AND Cam Newton on his team.
The winner (technically) got LeSean McCoy in the second
round with the 11th pick.
However you look at it though, either being the 10th pick or
the 11th, McCoy out performed EVERY running back drafted ahead of
him that were considered top 5 picks. Adrian
Peterson, Chris Johnson, Jamal Charles are a few busts to name. McCoy led every running back in the touchdown
department.
Another reason I don’t like taking a running back so
high? The Superbowl runner-up of the
Detroit Pigskin Dynasty league had the #3 pick and went with Chris Johnson, who
was on the bench for a majority of his year.
His starting running backs near the end of the year were Frank Gore and
Shonn Greene.
It’s a risk to draft running backs so high with many
examples of players becoming busts. Of
course, the injury factor comes into play here, so calling them busts might not
be fair. But that should further prove
my point. Hell, Jamal Charles should
have known not to have an altercation with Roary….right?
With Drew Brees going in the second round of both of my leagues,
Matt Stafford getting drafted late, and Cam Newton not even on anyone’s week
one roster, I could easily argue that Calvin Johnson should have been the #1
overall pick.
So what do you think - that I’m wrong right?? Well the easiest way to prove that is to post
your championship rosters. I’m intrigued
to know.
As a commissioner of two highly competitive leagues as well, I couldn't disagree with you more. I'm not sure I've ever seen a champion without a top 5 rb on their roster. In both leagues this past season, both champions had more depth at rb than any other position. Surprised to see it different in your league.
ReplyDeleteWhat were the final rosters of the two championship teams ?
ReplyDeleteby fantasy points alone,, if you went with Calvin in the first round, Brees in the second round,, and grab a combination of Ryan Matthews, Marshawn Lynch, Reggie Bush, and CJ spiller all with late round picks and waiver pick ups,,, there is no way a team like that is losing. I should of explained more why I thought Calvin proved he should of been the #1 overall pick last year.
ReplyDeleteI feel your pain with Rivers man, I had the #2 pick and went with Foster the 1st round then went with Rivers the 2nd round. I thought I was picking up a reliable qb that give me 300 yds and 3 td's a game but what I got was a middle of the pack nancy boy. But thats how it rolls sometimes.
ReplyDeleteThe guy that drafted C.J must be a fantasy god!
ReplyDeleteOur league has a very interesting set up with the 3 WRs slots, something that I like very much. With the NFL as pass heavy as it is, having quality receivers who can post the big yards is much more important than having a running back who is most likely splitting carries anyways. Nice blog fahey
ReplyDelete-bonanni
2012 Season Proposed Payout Structure:
ReplyDelete1st place - 50% (5 of the buy-ins! Is this not enough?!)
2nd place - 25%
3rd place - 15%
Winner of toilet bowl (5-8 seeds) - 10% i.e. buy-in
8 teams have something to play for all season and you are likely never mathematically eliminated from a possible payout during the regular season.
I picked Drew Brees #7 in the first round skipping Calvin Johnson and many other RB choices. I picked Michael Turner as my top RB in round 2 but he under produced down the stretch and was consistently overshadowed by Fred Jackson whom i picked up late in round 12. So yeah, none of my drafted RB's ended up working out in the end and I had to rely on C.J. Spiller who i picked up after Jackson went down and Roy Helu
ReplyDeleteSo would I have made it to the superbowl if I had chosen Calvin over Brees? I dont know but both of those players are drafted to carry a team
Superbowl Roster:
QB: Drew Brees
WR: Steve Smith
WR: Santana Moss
WR: Dwayne Bowe
RB: C.J. Spiller
RB: Michael Turner
TE: Jimmy Graham
K: Dan Bailey
DEF: Cincinnati
You should have nightmares about not drafting Calvin Johnson for the FOURTH PICK! You are lucky it even got that far and you lost yourself the season!!!
ReplyDeleteAll of yall are just whiners. Fahey should have the only room to whine b/c I trade raped him (only in hindsight)
ReplyDeleteHis starting 3 WR:
Andre Johnson
Kenny Brit
Vincent Jackson
Bench = AJ Green
Arguably at that point in the season...
I have:
Desean Jackson
Mike Wallace
Some scrub
My backup RB is Ben Tate (starters were Ray Rice and MJD)
Now Ben Tate at this period in time (wk 2) is tearing it up and riding my bench. Same with Fahey's 4th WR AJ Green. I propose a trade to him and he shoots it down b/c he has a vendetta against me. So I throw out the "what kind of douche...won't better his team to spite me" comment at him. So he sits down, does the research and finds it a good deal. So we trade.
Low and behold, Kenny Britt in Wk 3 tears his ACL and Andre Johnson in Wk 5 rips his hammy (first of two). Then of course VJax does nothing the entire year. Oh and to top it off, Ben Tate lost his starting job to Arian Foster. And of course AJ Green becomes the offensive rookie of the year.
So will Fahey ever try to trade with me again? Probably not because he's bitter and twisted. However, I didn't try to screw him. It was a good deal at the time. He just has to realize he has as bad of luck in FFB as he does in the poker room.
Love the blog my man.