Thursday, December 20, 2012

Superbowl XI

 NFFL Superbowl XI Preview

#1 Malinn (12-3) v Nemo (11-4)

Both Nemo and Malinn advanced last week in a pair of very tight games to reach this stage- Nemo beating rival Tighe while Malinn held on against a late, late surge from Curran.  Each has found himself lacking in recent championships- Nemo winning one in the six-team era, Malinn yet to find himself a week 16 winner- so the matchup will be sure to bring a deserving league member to a long cherished prize.  On to the preview…

Lineup Projection
Malinn: Manning-Marshall-White-Richardson-BGE-Graham-Cruz-Moreno
Nemo: Ryan-Johnson-Johnson-Rice-Martin-Miller-Cobb-Wallace-Dalton

Nemo’s lineup has written itself of late- after the trade for Wallace, James Jones has returned to the bench while RBs Woodhead and Jones-Drew are unlikely to feature.  Not much new from last week- this is a solid group with a very high likelihood of settling in at 105-115 points.

Malinn has a more variable situation.  Manning and Brees are locks, as is Graham despite his struggles with injury.  Cruz should line up opposite Marshall as a strong 1-2 WR punch while rookie Richardson is the RB1.  Questions start quickly, though, due to a combination of shaky play and a strong bench. 

At RB, BGE and Moreno represent the hot hands while Greene and Bush have established themselves as strong plays given good matchups.  I could see any combination of the four- my guess is above- but I would not fault any combination of those players taking a place in the starting nine.

The most intriguing player that could take the field is Brandon Lloyd.  Lloyd has stepped up his play of late, capitalizing on his many targets and moving himself into starting consideration with Roddy White limping.  My gut says White at this stage but a switch would not be a surprising or controversial move in any sense.

Matchups
QB: Edge Malinn- Brees and Manning are an elite duo but, as I wrote last week, QB tends be slightly overrated when each team has good players.  Nemo should stand a decent chance to hold serve.

RB: Edge Nemo- A big one, too.  I like the duo despite last week’s six total points, or whatever it was.  Not too keen on Malinn’s pairing but his backs have all performed of late.

WR: Slight edge, Malinn- Just by a hair.  Andre Johnson has been tough to stop of late but Marshall is a top WR and Cruz is nearly as good.  Can Cobb or Wallace step up to keep the pace?

TE: Edge Malinn- Not nearly as confident as we all would have been a month ago.  Graham seems to be legitimately hurting.

Flex: Even- I like Nemo here- two WRs but Cobb/Wallace and Stevie Johnson are a good, consistent pair.  Malinn gets to go one and one- RB & WR- but there is the question of whether the right pick is made with so much choice available.

Key Questions
1. Will Flacco play?
No.

2. The right decisions
It is an interesting comparison- Nemo has a lineup that is essentially carved into marble while Malinn has to make some very important decisions.  Will the number one seed crumble under the pressure?

3. Too little variety?
One area that has concerned me with Malinn’s team construction is the dependence on offenses in Denver and New Orleans.  One bad day from one player could sink two- this is the type of risk that can balance out over a season but is vulnerable to a consistent team such as Nemo’s.

4. Trade regret?
Nemo traded a #1 draft choice to Malinn in a straight-up deal for Mike Wallace.  Will either side look back on that deal with double the regret?

5. The future
Nemo has a relatively bright future in my eyes.  Cobb, Martin, and Dalton are more than capable of forming the nucleus for another playoff team.  Malinn is a little less stocked- not much in the form of draft picks but Richardson is a star keeper while Freeman and Graham should continue to contribute.  For both teams, though, this should represent the best chance at a title in the next three years.

Projected Score- Yahoo
Malinn 117, Nemo 115

Wow.  Yahoo does not like BGE, giving him 6, while Bush and Greene score higher- either would add to the projection.  The key here is variability because Yahoo tends to give an average that might not be as appropriate to predict the final score.  In Nemo’s case, I expect him to score in the 105 to 115 range most weeks.  With Malinn, the range is wider- 95 to 130, maybe.

Overlap, as discussed above, is the primary factor, but his player type is more up and down given the lack of a franchise RB.  I am not a big fan of either guy’s matchups this week so without much further ado…

Commissioner’s Prediction:
Malinn 106, Nemo 102

Should be a nail-biter…

Viewing Guide

The Superbowl kicks off Saturday night as Ryan goes, potentially, against White.  There is no doubt that Malinn will want to try to absorb the impact by playing White but this is not really a concept I buy into.

Nemo gets going at 1pm on Sunday, with eleven total games.  Rice is the only holdover at 425pm.  Malinn takes the late stage, batting appropriately in the bottom of the inning, with five of his projected at 4pm or later.  Neither team has a viable Sunday night option, likely preventing this game from becoming a classic NFFL showdown, but the scramble from Malinn in the four o’clock slot should be entertaining.

T-minus forty-eight hours- good luck to both participants.

Tim

Thursday, December 13, 2012

2012 Playoff Preview



2012 NFFL Playoff Preview- Week 15

A wild conclusion to the season saw Malinn eliminate long-time rival Lee through a league topping point total despite a ferocious response from the league’s tallest member.  As a result, Lee joins his humbled commissioner as the second 9-5 team in league history to miss the playoffs.

The remaining quartet, however, are all deserving of their place.  Malinn takes home the league’s least desired trophy, the regular season crown, which grants him the top seed and the tie-breaker for week 15.  He selected Curran, who enjoyed a fine season despite a notable lack of respect from his competitors, as his wild-card opponent.

Tighe, winner of his division by a mere fourteen points- aka a ‘Brady Quinn season’- is left to face his own longtime nemesis, Nemo, in the other semi-final round.  The two met in week 14, where Tighe failed to top 100 points for the first time since the bye weeks, as Nemo won to secure his first playoff place in several seasons.

The winners move on to week 16’s Superbowl XI- the NFFL’s eleventh, for all your Roman numeral fans- where, as usual, a tie will call for a week 17 replay.  Let’s get on with it…

#1 Malinn (11-3) vs. Curran (9-5)

Form- last five
Malinn: W-W-W-L-L
Curran: W-L-L-L-W

Malinn rides a three-game tear into the playoffs as he responded well to a 97-77 reverse against the same Curran in week 9.  The loss saw him stripped of his undeserved #1 ranking- a designation that Curran dropped a week later in an electric 118-113 loss to Nemo.  Curran made a strong play to miss the playoffs with his three-game swoon but the point totals were healthy and an excellent job was done to patch up for the loss of Gronkowski.

Projected lineup and analysis
Curran: Brady-Wayne-Welker-Turner-Gore-Gresham-Crabtree-Garcon-Palmer
Malinn: Manning-Marshall-White-Richardson-BGE- Graham-Cruz-Moreno-Brees

On paper, Malinn has a formidable squad that is benefiting from pouring excess resources into 2012 at the expense of future years- the Mayan Gambit, let’s say.  But a look at the numbers hints that Curran could do the job with a couple of pieces falling the right way.

First, at QB, Malinn spent considerably to acquire two of the league’s top guys.  However, by the numbers, the edge on the year has been two points per game.  That is, Brees-Manning vs Brady-Palmer would have netted a gain of two points, per game, all year. It is a shocking number but that is the reality- once the playoffs are reached, the importance at QB is diminished given the high starting point for scoring at the position.  Matchups favor Malinn, slightly, but only Palmer is not ‘match-up proof’ so this should be less of a factor.  Playing KC, in fact, may be enough to allow Palmer to keep pace.

We thus turn elsewhere- at RB, Gore and Turner compare favorably to Malinn’s trio, albeit very slightly.   To me, the matchups are about equal and I have bashed both RB groups all year so I will not repeat myself.  To me, the biggest battleground is here, and it is simple- can anyone score?  The team that gets in the end zone via the RB position should win, I think.  Turner is a long-time end zone poacher and the Patriots seem to allow rush touchdowns so Curran might be able to match up despite a 2 v 3 disadvantage.

WR is where Malinn begins to stretch his top-seeded legs- the trio is the league’s best and Curran should hope to only keep up.  I’ll give Malinn a tiny edge on mathcups- indoor game for Cruz and White- but Curran has enough to go on here with Welker essentially matchup-proof and Wayne @ HOU a plus.  The key guys are Crabtree and Garcon- each talented, with opportunity, but lacking a consistent track record.  Ten points is MINIMUM from these two- or it should be over.

At tight end, the Gronkowski injury was massive and could prove to have the same impact on the title as some other notable losses in past NFFL seasons.  The Graham-Gronkowksi head-to-head would have been fun on the playoff stage but it is now Gresham to attempts to make it a ‘Big G’.  Jermaine is a half-decent player but ultimately is the munchkin to the donut, the limp-wrister to the knucklepuck, and the edge here is massively in favor of Malinn.

The key?  My pick for the crucial area is inter-dependence, a factor for both teams.  Curran has two Patriots and two Niners- a shootout on Route 1 favors his squad.  Malinn has similar, Cruz-White going head to head while the Saints and Broncos offenses are tied tightly to his belt.  It could prove his undoing if Baltimore, a historically strong unit, steps up on Manning, or Tampa, a rising group, stifles Brees.  An upset here is more likely given this factor.

Yahoo projection, point spread, and prediction
Malinn 122, Curran 91- Malinn favored by 31 points

Take the points!  Since week 7, Curran has topped 100 six out of seven times- his lone dip, the 97 against Malinn.  Yahoo’s projections, obviously, fail to take this consistency into account.  Curran has also outscored Malinn four times in the last seven weeks and has done so seven times in the last ten- with Gronk, of course.

Is 122 reasonable for Malinn?  His team exceeded that target last week but has otherwise not hit those heights since week 9.  I think the final score meets somewhere in the middle but ultimately sees Curran, the neutral’s choice, fall to an overpriced Malinn squad.

PBR prediction- Malinn 113, Curran 105


Nemo (10-4) @ Tighe (9-5)

Form- last five
Nemo: W-L-W-W-W
Tighe: L-W-W-W-W

I had thought, weeks ago, that one of these two would be out.  However, each responded impressively, running out a combined 8-2 record to close the year.  Nemo is 2-0 so far this year, a sad-sack 90-83 week 7 win topped by a much more assertive 125-94 scoreline to close the regular season.  His lack of depth- the one real flaw- is now irrelevant, giving him a big boost in my eyes.

But, despite the lesser record and head-to-head losses, Tighe is the higher seed by basis of his division championship. The squads were 1-2 in points, Tighe winning out by a mere eight, which does slightly justify the seeding.
                                                                                       
Projected lineup and analysis
Nemo: Ryan-Johnson & Johnson-Rice-Martin-Miller-Cobb-Wallace-Dalton
Tighe: Griffin-Thomas-Smith-Spiller-Forte-Gates-Jones-Foster-Stafford

The injury status of RGIII will be the story and, for now, I’ll give him the nod.  Let’s assume David Wilson steps in if he is ruled out.

Like Malinn, Tighe is glitz and glamour at QB, his trio notable for rushing yards, department store tomfoolery, and losing games by fistfuls.  Nemo is more workmanlike, his duo winning games, kind of, and not putting up big numbers.  On the year, the head-to-head gives Tighe a three point edge, but Ryan has been in decline of late- let’s call it five.  I like the matchups for Nemo, or, I should say, I dislike his less, but these are all capable players and should produce.

Running back is where it gets fun- both teams are strong here, stronger than the pair facing off in the other playoff game.  Rice and Martin, for Nemo, have been as strong a duo as any in the NFFL.  Each sits comfortably in the top-five and, with Peterson and Charles at home, the two are in the top three, so to speak, from the remaining.  Tighe counters with a top runner in Foster and an equally dangerous player in Spiller, who may look to finally reach his tantalizing potential after Fred Jackson’s injury.  Matt Forte has an excellent pedigree while David Wilson might be the month of December’s breakout star, a potential top three back for 2014 who could tap into his immense potential down the stretch.

Matchups for these six are more or less OK- Spiller has a tough assignment but as a pass catcher should be fine.  Same for Rice, against Denver.  It may come down to touchdowns but those are hard to predict- what may become the key factor here is the use of Rice under a new offensive coordinator.  Cam Cameron, perhaps in the name of preserving his star man, underused Rice at times and this coaching change could signal the start of more significant usage.  The edge goes to Tighe, but only by virtue of a 3 v 2 numbers edge.

Wide receiver is a much tougher area to call here.  Nemo has more of the traditional type- good volume, solid red zone options who might not blow up but can get ten to fifteen points with regularity.  Cobb has emerged as that type of player in the slot while the Johnson duo has done it for years.  Mike Wallace is the ‘Flex-Factor’ the late season pickup making a huge contribution last week after totaling a Kerry Meier level stat line in the prior games.  Tighe is more hit or miss and the player type has contributed to some minor inconsistency issues- Thomas, Smith, and Jones hit big plays but rarely come in for consecutive weeks of ten catch, one TD production.

Ultimately, Tighe might win out here.  Three solid matchups and a buffer action on Ryan via Julio Jones could prove the difference if the Packers or Bills have trouble scoring.  Nemo has the consistency, but with strong matchups I like Tighe’s odds of explosive scoring.

Tight end?  Meh.  Heath Miller and Gates are both out to pasture- Gates has some ability and could get going but his performance this year has been less than stellar.  Heath Miller lacks the name recognition but might be a better bet- his numbers are far better than Gates and he has played well with and without Big Ben.

As said above, I think the key is Tighe capitalizing on WR matchups.  His players lack the consistency I think wins playoff games but he has the desired matchups to succeed.  It may be any of the three but a 20-point showing from one should do the trick.  Nemo counters via Rice- will Baltimore re-committ to the run?  Rice has already been strong so any uptick will be a major boost.  Nemo will need touchdowns, no doubt about it, to overcome what I expect will be a yardage edge for Tighe.

Yahoo projection, point spread, and prediction
Tighe 120, Nemo 117- Tighe favored by 3 points

Perfect!  Tighe, favored by 3, at home, accurately reflected my feeling that these are even-matched teams.  Again, with RGIII’s status in flux, we can assume a reversal if Wilson steps in- Nemo by 3- which creates the (lame) argument that perhaps the line is a pick ‘em.

A week 9 explosion aside, Nemo has more or less fell in the 100 to 115 point range.  More of the same, I think, for him.  Tighe has, in my mind, been inconsistent but with his team otherwise healthy I like the odds for him to top 100 and move on to the Superbowl.

PBR prediction- Tighe 111, Nemo 107


Good luck, all, and many thanks for not forcing us to watch Jets-Titans on Monday…

Tim

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Rivalry Week- Playoff Picture

Hi all,

Your bed-ridden commissioner has staggered out into the kitchen to stuff his face and try to fix his iTunes (which is occasionally not updating the 'play count'- anyone have ideas???).  In the meantime, let's talk some playoffs.

By this point we should all know the matchups...standings:

Norwood Division
Malinn, 10-3
Nemo, 9-4
Concannon, 5-8
DFlam, 3-10
TMac, 2-11

Mustang Division
Tighe, 9-4
Lee, 9-4
Curran, 8-5
Brett, 6-7
Thompson, 4-9

The big news is that both Tighe and Malinn control their own destiny, so to speak, with regard to winning the division- the only way I could be wrong is if Tighe and Lee both win while Lee makes up ONE HUNDRED POINTS.  Good luck, Lee.

The race for the top seed is down to these two- Malinn, if he wins, will clinch.   Tighe, with a win and a Malinn loss, should gain the crown given his own large points lead over Malinn.

Curran, #2 in points, has found himself on the outside after a crushing loss to...Thompson?  The good news is that Curran needs someone above him to lose and with Malinn facing Lee and Nemo facing Tighe, the only way he could be totally locked out is with a Lee win or tie AND a Tighe-Nemo TIE.  That is it...otherwise, Curran can get to 9-5 with a win and climb past either Lee, if he loses, and/or the loser of Tighe-Nemo.

The trickiest part is that Curran is up nine on Nemo and down thirty to Tighe so getting level with the loser of that matchup does not guarantee anything.  The simplest path is through Lee, provided he falls to Malinn.

On the other end, both Brett and Thompson, heroically forging on, will not be permitted further spoiler status as they face down and out DFlam and Concannon, respectively.  The latter pair were 9-10 in points last week- nice work.

TMac- I did not forget you.

Good luck, all.

Tim

Friday, November 23, 2012

Wk 12 Power Rankings and Stretch Run Update


Week 12 Power Rankings
Happy Thanksgiving!

My, my, did Jaesung Lee draft that Jets’ team?   A fine day of football to mark the close of our league trade deadline served as the starting point to the league stretch run.  As we all know, there are five teams battling hard for four playoff spots while the rest remain in the hunt for draft pick positioning. 

Before I launch into a mini-preview, some general comments-

*League Cup is starting either week 13 or 14.  I plan on doing total points through week 15, then taking 1v4, 2v3 as semi-finals before the week 17 cup final.  $100 to the winner.  I have not checked out DFlam’s site from weeks ago but if that checks out we can use it- in any event, it will be a salary cap format.

*This has been my worst year so far as commissioner and I apologize for the difficulties that has caused.  I’ll go into more detail in January in terms of what went wrong and what I feel can be fixed.

*One area related to above- running the league has become a bit overwhelming.  I have chatted with a number of you in regard to taking over certain duties in the league.  If anyone has any area they want to contribute to next season, let me know and we can figure something out. All positions will pay about one (1) PBR per year, draft, give or take a couple of fluid ounces.

*I would like to take a swing at a kind of ‘Champions League’ competition next year.  I will include any league that has been together for about the same amount of time as ours- five members playing together for about five straight years being the minimum.  Since the rosters will be separate from the regular season, it does not matter if leagues are redraft, keeper, or dynasty.  Let me know if you guys know of other leagues that might want to contribute their top two to four teams each season for this new competition.   And- for the record, I’ll try to include everyone in our league for this in year one…details to come in January.

OK- onward…team by team first, then rankings…

Last Week
5. Nemo
4. Lee
3. Malinn
2. Tighe
1. CURRAN

Naturally, Curran lost.  And, with Gronk out, he probably will not return to such lofty heights anytime soon.   Let’s take a look at the squads now and see who I like to lead the way into the playoffs…

5. Curran- Curran has had an outstanding season and I think the Brady-Palmer duo is just going to be enough, combined with a soft schedule, to sneak into the playoffs.  However, the Gronk injury is devastating and I think it makes him the clear weak spot in the playoff pack.

The reason I say so is not just because of #87’s ability but because there is a lack of support at other positions to make up the difference.  The loss at RB and WR compared to the others is significant and it truly comes down to Brady’s arm now.  Fingers are crossed for Amen Father Coffee but I think the Gronk blow is too much to overcome.

4. Lee- Lee’s team is kind of the opposite of Malinn- see below- because I think he has a good shot of winning it all IF he makes the playoffs.  The Rodgers-Eli tandem is good for about Rodgers plus five points these days and that level of inconsistency is going to be tough to overcome in late season showdowns.  However, strength at RB and WR is, at worst, level with the best teams in the league and I think that is going to make him a playoff favorite.

The key guy is, as always, Ridley, and whether Lee wants to risk him posting up a two point week in exchange for big upside.  Maintaining Bryant’s recent surge as well as getting Nicks back could provide vital late season points, as well.  A soft schedule leads into a Malinn matchup in week 14- look for Lee to be jockeying for positioning by then.

3. Tighe- A hot start and recent surge sandwich a difficult mid-season, where dropping four of six has left Sammy Knight stranded just outside the wild-card.  Head to head with Curran this week and a last-chance try against Nemo will give Tighe a chance to fight his way into the playoffs but being on the outside is always an uncomfortable position.

Unlike others, Tighe’s best team is up for debate.  Is it a healthy Vick or lackluster Stafford at QB2?  Is Spiller reliable enough with his touches to bench Forte?  Can Harvin or Jones play when sub-100%?  Some of these inconsistencies contributed to those bye week problems.  However, the team is strong from top to bottom and having to decide between many good options should work out fine in the end.  If Tighe makes the playoffs, I like his team’s odds.

2. Malinn- ‘Outhouse to penthouse’ as Malinn put it, moving various pieces around to acquire Brees and Pizza Manning.  The moves, on average, add about eight points to his team per week.  The trio of White, Marshall, and Cruz give Malinn arguably the top trio of WRs among contenders while Graham is the top TE, by far.  These edges will be desperately needed as the McGahee injury puts Malinn in a big hole at RB- Richardson, who has had some minor injuries, and Greene, just outside the top-20. 

Malinn is going to put one of my favorite theories to the test- QBs get you into the playoffs, RBs win in the playoffs.  Based on that arbitrary line alone, Malinn is projecting to a round 1 exit.  The potential key guys are Greene (soft schedule), Bush (needs more work), and Green-Ellis but I think ultimately not going after a bigger name at RB will cost this team a championship.

1. Nemo- After swapping out a first round pick for Mike Wallace, Nemo had taken on the look of a true contender.  It was momentary, however, as Roethlisberger’s injury likely renders Wallace as more of a hit-or-miss type in the coming weeks.  However, the track record has been outstanding thus far, a big winning streak moving him from question mark to true contender, and he should be able to overcome the blow.

Nemo’s team is developing question marks at QB as Matt Ryan’s recent showing against Arizona continued a slow slide from the top 5.  Rice is also looking more and more like a lower-end RB1 as opposed to the top-three player he was drafted as.  This loss is being balanced out by some strong play at WR from Johnson and Johnson.  To me, it is looking more and more like Nemo’s young guns- Martin, Cobb, and Dalton- will need to maintain their surprisingly high levels of play to keep him at #1 and move him forward into the Superbowl.

Big Matchups
Week 12- Curran v Tighe
Week 13- Malinn v Nemo
Week 14- Tighe v Nemo, Malinn v Lee

From above, we see that everyone gets one more tough game but Lee and Curran get an extra soft matchup.  Assuming everyone wins their softies-

Norwood Division
Nemo, 9-3
Malinn, 9-3

Mustang Division
Curran, 10-3
Lee, 10-3
Tighe, 8-4

Wild Card
Lee, - Game behind
Malinn, 0.5 games behind
Tighe, 1.5 games behind

What becomes clear is that Tighe must win this week against Curran or he will need Nemo or Malinn to lose twice in order to remain in the chase.  If Tighe wins, Lee will likely need a week 14 win to take the division while the loser of Malinn-Nemo next week will sweat it out for a wild card spot in week 14.  As usual, points is first tie-breaker before head-to-head is used.

And that is that- might take a break next week before a playoff picture breakdown prior to Rivalry Week.  Good luck, to all.

Tim


Saturday, November 10, 2012

Wk 10 Power Rankings

Down goes Lee...shocker.  Here is my fire sales pitch unbiased look at the league at this point:

-5 teams OUT...autopsies on the way!
-5 horse race with Tighe one game back on the wild card

So, given the split, I will IGNORE the bottom five given time constraints...

5. Nemo
Doug Martin scoring one thousand points was cute but I do not think he is going to be at that level for the year!  The move to scoop up Wallace was very costly- a top-six pick- but the player is a stud when firing and Pittsburgh is an ascending offense.  I think Nemo could use Fred Jackson another RB as cover because another injury would be devastating (in other words, Woodhead).

4. Curran
A commanding performance from Father Coffee as he 'spilled the beans' on Lee's flimsy #1 spot.  Brady returns but the squad is going to need a boost from Ahmad Bradshaw at least one more player currently tucked away on the bench- Redman, maybe, or another player acquired before Turkey Day.

3. Lee
I think there is a top-two, a bottom two, and then Lee, who fits snugly in the middle.  When on his game, Lee is a threat to all squads in the NFFL but the inconsistency of players such as Ridley is going to be maddening.  In terms of just the playoffs, I think Lee is likely to be very let down by a player simply not getting needed volume- Nicks, Bryant, Eli, Ridley- or maybe an injury at RB.  Lee could probably use Jordy Nelson as he recovers fully in time for the playoffs veteran help at WR as Broyles, Hilton, and Wright are all solid prospects who cannot be relied upon in the playoffs.

2. Tighe
One game out but the strong squad would hint otherwise.  The QB trio is formidable, the RB position improving, and the WR group solid enough despite Harvin's injury.  Still, given potential concerns with that player, Tighe might be tempted to bid against Lee for Mr. Nelson take one more swing at a veteran WR pickup just to shore up a potential problem area.

1. Malinn
I think if we reset the records at this point I would actually go with Tighe's team but Malinn takes the top spot by virtue of kissing up to the commish about his bad luck having won last week.  The QBs are a little shaky for a #1 but passable while the WR-TE area is a true strength.  Scooping up the disgruntled Drew Brees extra help at RB would probably make Malinn a weak favorite going forward.

This week?

Tighe-Lee and Malinn-Curran highlight excellent matchups while Nemo hopes to sneak past a stubborn PBR squad.  Good luck all!

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Midseason Review


2012 NFFL Midseason Update

Hi all,

Seven down, seven to go in the annual wild goose chase for the four playoff positions.  Where do we stand at this stage?

Malinn leads the way at 6-1, Lee halting his undefeated start just this past week.  The over-confident South Korean leads his division with an identical record.  Curran, at 5-2, leads the wild card pack while Nemo, fresh off his own rivalry week (I mean, Rivalry Week) victory over Tighe shares a 4-3 record with his rival.  Concannon, brutalized by a combination of poor luck, bad lineups moves, and Tony Romo sits at 3-4, one game back of the final playoff spot.  DFlam, Brett, and Thompson remain committed to 2012 at 2-5 while TMac is down and out at 1-6 despite being twenty points (or, as I like to say, a Kerry Meier career) off the season scoring lead.

A closer look at our teams is in order and, as I mentioned, we will frame it around this past week- an extraordinary rivalry week, as competitive as any I can recall.

We can start right at the top- a marquee showdown between the league’s current division leaders.  Malinn fell, 85-74, with a combined ten points from Flacco, Richardson, Lloyd, and Rudpolph.  I point at these players because I think these gentlemen represent key figures or positions for this squad the rest of the way.

Flacco, as a QB1, looked very strong early and has looked very Lee-like of late.  That is, he has looked as I would expect Mr. Jaesung Lee to look if he suited up under center for the Baltimore Ravens.  Malinn is relatively weak at QB- Big Ben is a strong QB2 but might not be consistent for the QB1 role and Freeman is unproven but on a hot run- so we could see some trade activity here in the next few weeks.

Richardson has looked at times to potentially be the star man in a backfield that appears to be loaded with RB2/RB3 types.  However, his injury record so far is of little cause for optimism as little issues have tended to flare up here and there.  Bush, on bye, has been solid (and shopped) but LeShoure, Greene, BGE, and Brown are all very unreliable plays.  One disadvantage in our format is the difficulty in packaging these players for a more proven runner so we will see how Malinn maneuvers what could be a problem position down the stretch.

Lloyd and Rudolph are, unlike the names above, more representative of the position than their own ability here.  Lloyd earning zero points highlights an enviable problem- Malinn has to pick a good WR or two to bench each week.  Rudolph is a fine prospect but his presence only serves to confirm the absence of Graham.  Neither issue here is much of a long-term concern but it is worth keeping an eye on over these next handful of weeks as Malinn pushes to keep Lee off the league summit.

Lee’s victory was another confirmation for his strategy- lean on Morris, pretend Ridley was a ‘STUD’, and continue to play two tight ends to provide blind-side blocking for his quarterbacks.  League, this strategy must be beaten now before it is too late.

On the other hand, winning with McCoy out is somewhat impressive.  The Eagle has been less than impressive so far but a bye week could sort his offense out.  Nicks, getting healthy, might be part of the solution to his dual-threat problem at TE. 

*And before Lee protests here- seven, six, seventeen (but with a zero), thirteen (but with a zero), and eight are the total points in Lee’s two tight end weeks.  This strategy is not even WORKING RIGHT NOW and Lee continues to employ it.  I propose a trade embargo with Lee involving anyone that fits in the W/T flex…

The key, though, will be Rodgers and Manning.  Unlike Malinn, Lee can expect top eighty points per week with just these two men involved.  Injuries are a minor concern for each- Rodgers, recall, was healthy last year for the first time- but for now the duo gives Lee a stability that his direct challenger lacks.  Lee has done a very good job collecting WR talent and was savvy to get Powell and Dwyer at RB so there is the potential for his waiver-wire work to get him some production late.  I like his outlook from here to both make the playoffs and be among the favorites to win it.

Directly below in the standings is Curran, the only winner this past week with the better record entering the matchup than his opponent.  The team is Pats-heavy, as we all know (or as I keep saying) but Gore, Palmer, and Wayne provided plenty of balance this week to keep his team steady.  The outrageously weak RB corps has held up so far but starting Batch was a roll of the dice that underscores the problem.  I am also a little concerned about Gore, who faded late last year, and Turner, who looks more burnt than burner.  A logical trade partner for Malinn, perhaps, if each could stomach helping direct competitors.

The other open issue here is whether there is a reliable option at the W/R/T flex or if Curran will need to roll, Lee-style, with two tight ends.  I do not have much confidence at the moment that a player will step up but the remarkable consistency level so far- 98, 105, 96, 121, 111, 93, 93- is both unrivaled and perhaps points at my making too much fuss over little to be concerned about.  That said, the bench is weak with only Bolden and Titus Young, in my eyes, candidates to emerge as viable options late.  But, as long as the Pats, Palmer, Gore, and Wayne, a true veteran group, continue ticking along at this rate, Curran should be right in the mix at year’s end.

On the other side is TMac who has had a strange season so far.  Entering the auction with the best established keepers in the league, TMac enjoyed an extraordinary run of bad luck by finishing in the top five of league scoring in four of his first five losses before turning in 2012 team to rebuild.  In fact, this is how bad it was:

Wk1: L, Nemo (led league in scoring)
Wk2: L, DFlam (led league in scoring)
Wk3: L, Malinn (2nd in scoring)
Wk4: L, Lee (led league in scoring)
Wk5: W, Brett (TMac led league in scoring)
Wk6: L, Concannon (led league in scoring)

Result: One win, five losses, holy shit…

I thought I would lay it out to illustrate a point that the luck analysis will not capture (and I may scrap that feature given that this is the story of the schedule so far): In five of the six weeks, TMac was involved with the highest scoring team and finished 1-4 in those weeks.  The lone exception was against Malinn, who finished second, while TMac managed a measley fourth.

So, the question is- did TMac give in too early?  My gut says yes, but I started 0-3 and came back into the mix.  I think the argument to make is that there was still time before the deadline to make a move and that the deal from DFlam would probably still have been there, perhaps with a different team, in week 10. 

But before we move on to that deal, a quick look at the roster to see where this team shapes up for 2013.  The extra draft pick will help add to a keeper roster that includes Stafford and Cam Newton for an approximate $30-$40, not great value, but a big starting point nevertheless.  Richardson and Vereen are speculative but promising at RB while Hernandez is a likely bet at TE.  Moore and Hankerson are emerging in different ways at WR but my feeling is Moore, enjoying something of a career, might net more in a trade because he will be unlikely to hit these heights next year.  After that, there is little else of note so we will see if a trade comes in involving the big names of Cam, Stafford, or Hernandez to bolster the 2013 prospects.

The trade partner, DFlam, is off to a bad start in the Foster era after a big loss to Brett.  His 2-5 record is not entirely out of the race but his Rivers-Smith QB2 tandem is not the type to drag teams back into the race.  WR remains a strong point with Colston a big addition and Jennings nearing a return- but will it be too late for the Packer to make an impact?  Questions remain at RB after Foster with Jackson and McGahee sliding towards flex plays from RB2 and bench options (such as DeAngelo Williams and his two carries) looking unlikely to provide relief.

It comes back to the trade and to questions of whether good value was had for the pieces exchanged.  The tight end swap looks to be a wash of sorts but I do like Hernandez more.  The swap at QB- Cam for Rivers and Smith- is a certain step down.  The loss is likely offset, perhaps more than offset, with Foster coming in for the likes of Felix Jones, Williams, or Pierre Thomas but that is probably less than what was needed given the keeper value lost.

It seems to me that the end result is, from the big picture, a swap of a first round pick for Colston.  He will be in the third WR spot for the time being with either him or Bowe making way if Jennings gets healthy (or possibly one of Jackson or McGahee).  I do not think this represents a good value.  Of course, an eye on 2012 justifies the trade more for DFlam but my feeling is a better deal could have been had.

The crunch match is coming up with Nemo this week on Foster’s bye.  After that, two relatively lighter opponents in Thompson and TMac means that DFlam could claw right back to .500 with a strong showing this week. 

On the other side, Brett is up to 2-5 but is likely thinking ahead.  His squad’s heavy and risky investment in Johnson and Johnson is not providing the required returns and DeMarco Murray highlights a disappointing group of young RBs.  There is plenty here to build around- Luck is a big-time prospect while Brown, Amendola, Bradford, Murray, Gordon, Tate, Givens, Moore, and Tannehill all have significant keeper potential so a couple of deals to get the big names out of town should suffice to make Brett a viable 2013 contender.

The focus now shifts to the teams making the other trade made this year, rivals Thompson and Concannon.  Last season, these two ended the year with a spectacular contest that seemed to swing on Romo’s failure to connect with a wide-open Miles Austin before Eli Manning led a late drive to give Concannon a narrow victory and the regular season crown.  This year, Romo finished what he started with a dreadful showing that makes him the biggest goat in a two-point defeat.  PBR has been surging of late, a three-game winning streak evening off a trio of losses to open the year.  A win here would have moved him into a three-way tie for the last playoff spot, four points off the tie-breaker.  Instead, Thompson’s massive win keeps PBR a game out and Thompson in with a pulse. 

With healing backs Charles and AP looking strong and Sproles involved heavily in the Saints aerial circus, Thompson has the RBs to compete until the end.  Questions are at QB where Quinn, acquired in the trade with Concannon, fills in for injured Cassel and Locker on Fitzpatrick’s bye.  In order to make a surge for the playoffs, Thompson will need to resolve the QB issue while hoping to get average production from WRs Fitzpatrick, Jackson, and Kerley.  Combining those players with his RBs should make him a threat in a wide-open race.

PBR’s resurgence has been fueled by the return to health of the RBs- Mathews, Bradshaw, and Jackson- in combination with the WRs hitting the end zone.  Brees has been spectacular, mitigating Romo’s mediocrity, so PBR should remain heavily involved in the chase from here.  Getting Jennings, even for a couple of weeks, will be a major boost during the bye weeks.

The final look is at our longest running battle in the league’s history.  Tighe fell to Nemo in a tough bye week slate, handing starts to Gibson and Wilson, to fall into a tie at 4-3 with his rival.  Nemo’s impressive win came with five total points scored by big-name stars Rice and MJD. 

Nemo, in fact, will need to find some solution while MJD is on the shelf.  Cobb has stepped up of late but the hole is significant for a squad built around strong RB play.  The combination of Ryan and Dalton has been a rock solid foundation and helped overcome some scattered outings from an improvised WR group.  However, despite impressive early returns, the injury is a massive one- the first true knockdown hit so far, in my mind- and I think it will be too much to overcome in the playoff race.

Tighe, the early #1, has stumbled of late despite leading the point tally.  Griffin is an early fantasy MVP candidate while the WR group has been generally outstanding but sloppy outings from RB and Gates has proved to make Tighe less of a consistent threat than once expected.  The surprise component here is that McFadden and Forte have generally been healthy but have yet to get going so that is something to keep an eye on as the season moves on.


Power Rankings

Enough tap dancing…#1 Malinn fell meaning a reshuffle is in order here.  As the rules stand, only the five winners last week are eligible for #1…uh-oh…

10. TMac- Nothing much to add here as TMac has made the moves to shift his horizon forward.

Key Man: Stafford or Cam- my thoughts here are that either player could net a big haul if he blows up down the stretch.

Sneaky Keeper: Leonard Hankerson, WR- As Griffin develops, Hankerson is going to benefit.  In my mind, Garcon is not much of a long term threat here- or short term, for that matter.  Look for the former PBR draft choice to find himself as a popular sleeper pick in 2013.

Biggest Matchup: Wk9 v Nemo- With Nemo reeling after MJD’s injury, TMac has a chance to sneak a win here with a relatively bye-free lineup. 

9. Thomposon- Without the quarterbacking horsepower needed, my feeling is that Thompson fades down the stretch.

Key Man: AP- regaining quickness each week, AP is a potential team-carrier down the stretch and could help make up for some shortcomings at QB and WR to move Thompson back into the playoff hunt.

Sneaky Keeper: Bernard Pierce- The Raven runner has looked solid at times and could become more involved next year if, as some speculate, the Ravens begin thinking about life after Flacco.  Ray Rice, despite being a picture of immaculate health, also seems due to miss some time soon.

Biggest Matchup: Wk8 v Curran- One week at a time in his position but with DFlam, Brett, and TMac on deck, a win over Curran could vault Thompson onto a winning run as he comes out of the bye weeks.

8. Brett- This team is beginning to find a semblance of balance with Chris Johnson rounding into form but a lack of true star power at QB and overall unreliability at RB will prevent a week-to-week consistency needed to claw back into the playoff race.

Key Man: Calvin Johnson- Or, Matthew Stafford.  But, either way, Brett will need a return to form here as Johnson could both drag this team back to the chase or help him net further pieces for next year’s squad.

Sneaky Keeper: Jacquizz Rodgers- Had a tough time with this one as Brett has a lot of possible flex-type guys to keep but I think this is one player who could see a true role expansion next year if the Falcons move toward a spread-type attack.

Key Matchup: Lee, Wk8- See below.

7. DFlam- After the BIG TRADE a surge forward was expected but DFlam has stagnated.  With Foster on bye this week, we could see a double-move of the nature that PBR pulled off two seasons ago when Gates was acquired at a high price only to then be flipped for pieces.

Key Man: Arian Foster- RB help is certainly needed but I cannot confidently pick a RB2 so I will go the other way and state that DFlam will likely miss the playoffs unless Foster finishes the year as the far and away #1 RB.

Sneaky Keeper: Nick Foles- Colin Kaepernick seems logical but Foles is the sneaky play if the Eagles opt to go with an overhaul of the organization.  Andy Reid has a fine history of development at this position, further enhancing Foles’s stock.

Key Matchup: Nemo, Wk8- Must win.

6. Nemo- The injury to MJD is a brutal one that offsets any positive Packer related news for this week.  Still firmly in the hunt, the search for a replacement RB should be in full swing.

Key Man: Andy Dalton- With MJD limping Nemo will need a new source of consistency and it should come from this man.  The second-year Red Rocket will need to find ways to score points on a week-to-week basis to keep Nemo in the chase.

Sneaky Keeper: Mike Williams- It might be Williams as he continues his resurgent play in Tampa Bay.  A Jennings departure could move Jones into this category as well.

Key Matchup: Concannon, Wk10- Nemo has a relatively soft schedule as he does not face a top-two squad until Week 13.  Thus, opportunity is there for him to run off wins in this upcoming stretch.  Beating Concannon, a direct competitor for a wild-card spot, will be a huge boost forward.

5. Curran- The Patriot-heavy unit will receive its annual boost soon as the Pats tend to roll from here on out.  Post-bye, I expect Curran to be a menace on the league leaderboards.

Key Man: Frank Gore- Curran lacks a point engine at RB so the load falls to Gore to continue his fine campaign without a recurrence of past injury concerns.

Sneaky Keeper: Titus Young- The Lions are about to find out who is the potential #2 between him and Broyles after the Burleson injury.

Key Matchup: Malinn, Wk10- Lee gets the annual ‘plays Curran on the Pats bye’ free pass and this scheduling arrangement may decide the division.  As such, a return to winning ways against Malinn will be crucial to maintain the one-game gap in the wild-card race.

4. Concannon- PBR took some bad news this week with Nelson acquiring a hamstring issue.  These things tend to drag and drag- see Austin, Miles, 2011 season- and it is enough to drop me to this spot. 

Key Man: Ryan Mathews- Returning from a bye, the logic is that the Chargers should now know what to do with a potential top-5 fantasy RB.  They also have a history of surging after October that I would hope to benefit from here.

Sneaky Keeper: Rashad Jennings- It was a tricky one here as not many players I would label ‘sneaky’ but I could see Jennings getting a new job this offseason in a Michael Turner type of move. 

Key Matchup: Tighe, Wk8- The schedule is punishin in the sense that four straight weeks against higher opponents await but that is also a signal of opportunity.  Getting a win against Tighe will work wonders toward staying the wild-card race because a loss would open up a two-game gap.

3. Malinn- Malinn drops to the third spot here after falling to Lee.  With Graham out, the sledding has been a little rough but I think the squad depth is enough to keep him atop the division.

Key Man: Reggie Bush- Malinn is fairly weak here but Bush is a very strong performer who could move into RB1 territory as Miami continues its steady improvement. 

Sneaky Keeper: Josh Freeman- A three-dollar man, Freeman is in line to be keeper eligible at around $6 to $9 next season.  Not too bad for a potential top-15 player next season.

Key Matchup: Concannon, Wk9- Malinn has the two-game edge in the division and a win here would probably knock Concannon out of the running for good.

2. Tighe- I went head to head with Malinn here and the logic was that Tighe has a significant edge at QB and a strong edge at RB to offset the loss at WR and TE. 

Key Man: Robert Griffin- Griffin will carry this team as far as it can go and that is a dangerous proposition given the hits he takes and his slight build.  Last year, Cam Newton won it for DFlam so there is a precedent here.

Sneaky Keeper: David Wilson- I think he is a top ten RB next year and, although not particularly sneaky, the magnitude of that prediction qualifies him here.

Key Matchup: Lee, Wk10- It appears Lee has a soft schedule so head to head victories will be critical.  Two games back, Tighe has a significant chance in week ten to step in the right direction.

1. Lee- Seventh in points.

Good luck to all this week and hope to be doing these again REAL SOON.

Tim