Archive for June, 2005

Edition One: Quarterback Rankings

Friday, 10 June, 2005

It’s that time. As the ruckus of fantasy football leagues begin to formulate, the brainstorming is even more intense. Quarterbacks are often the least looked at in early rounds of fantasy football, besides Manning, Culpepper, and McNabb. That’s a pattern that won’t change because quarterbacks are inconsistent. After the top five quarterbacks, you aren’t going to get an alarming separation of fantasy points from a quarterback sixth through twentieth.

That’s why a lot of owners that don’t go after an exclusive quarterback, will play the match up game with their quarterback tandem. They’ll draft two average quarterbacks and then maybe a long shot third string in twelve or fourteen team leagues. With that concept they can plug in and start the quarterback that has the fair advantage to exploit a weak defense.

It benefits a lot of owners but sometimes even that isn’t enough to overcome the deficit of head start points Manning, McNabb, and Culpepper give. So with your draft board, you need to make a conscious decision on what you are going to do with your pick. Don’t make the automatic assumption that you want to draft a running back. The back you are looking at could be snatched up, and leave you to reach out for a back.

Look at it the same way NFL teams do with the annual NFL Draft. Take the best available player on the board, and go from there.

Here is the first of many quarterback rankings.

1. Peyton Manning
No surprise here. Manning is the only quarterback I’d warrant drafting in round one. He is so far ahead of the pack, that it’s hard to pass him up. It’s almost a given that he is going to throw four to five touchdowns a week. With other quarterbacks it’s almost a long stretch for them to throw two. Manning is even hungrier than last season, and is going to put up similar numbers without a doubt. He has to be valued as the number one fantasy football sports athlete. The reason why, is because of the overwhelming separation of Manning and the rest of the quarterbacks. The disparity is amazing, and the constant blood flow will be at a rapid pace.

2. Daunte Culpepper
Culpepper will have to show his value without Moss, and that could lead to a slight drop off in his stats. For what it’s worth, he did prove himself with Moss being held out with injury last season. Still, the running back situation is shaky and he’ll have to rely on a pair of receivers that did absolutely nothing when together in Baltimore. Marcus Robinson and Travis Taylor will get a stab at it again, and there is no reason to think anything will be different. At least Culpepper will have Nate Burleson, and rookie Troy Williamson to differentiate from Robinson and Taylor.

3. Michael Vick
Two years ago Vick was the consensus first pick in many drafts, only to falter completely due to injury. The sour taste he left in fantasy owners only soured more as his disappointing season last year has people wondering. His pocket presence is not even in the top fifteen right now, and the majority of that has to do with his receivers. Peerless Price has been the biggest bust of a free agent wide receiver cashing in, and he obviously needs a big physical receiver opposite him, like Moulds was in Buffalo. The Falcons drafted Roddy White in hopes of Price getting less attention so that he can use his speed and get off the line. Regardless of Vick’s struggles throwing the ball last season, he more than made up for that rushing the football. His nine hundred yards rushing made up for his sloping passing numbers. His rushing ability is a given, and his ability to throw the football can only improve. In early mock drafts he has been falling to the third round, which is a steal.

4. Marc Bulger
One thing Mike Martz will never change is his air arsenal game plans. The Rams are still a great show on turf, and Bulger’s growth is impeccable. He has extreme poise and fearlessness in the pocket. He just has the total package of being a true leader that is never going to give up. At times his crisp passes and demeanor are reminiscent of Dan Marino. The receivers are still there, and the combination of Jackson and Faulk is only going to free up the passing game more. Bulger’s passing yards have always been fantasy football friendly, but this year expect him to creep up in the touchdown numbers as well.

5. Donovan McNabb
McNabb’s psyche may be the best in the league, as he has done everything except win a Super Bowl. He definitely has a bad taste in his mouth, and must keep his composure. With all the negative publicity he has received for his play in the Super Bowl, it must be shaken off. Last year he had a career year and threw for 31 touchdowns, and showed what he could do with a great receiver. Terrell Owens is still holding out, but unless Owens is extremely selfish he’ll be out there opening day.

6. Tom Brady
It’s been the Brady exclusion show the past few years, and the savvy of this guy is incredible. His bold presence just rubs off in the huddle. Even after making a bonehead mistake against the Dolphins on national television, he recovered like it didn’t happen. The Patriots offense never seems high powered, but Brady’s numbers don’t reflect that. If you’re looking for a sure safe bet, this is the guy. He’ll get you 3,500 yards passing and 25-28 touchdowns.

7. Trent Green
As long as Tony Gonzalez is wearing a Chiefs uniform, Green will remain a top ten quarterback. The connection between the two is unreal, and teams still can’t stop it. Gonzalez opens up so many different options for Green, as well as does Priest Holmes. He is an old school type quarterback that’s only going to get you fantasy points with his arm, but he hasn’t disappointed as a Chief. Even though he isn’t getting any younger, the fact that he has started every game the past three years is a bonus to wipe out cautiousness.

8. Matt Hasselbeck
The Seahawks bounce back and forth on the hot and cold spectrum as worse as any football team in the NFL. Hasselbeck’s overall season totals last year looked solid but were misleading. His cold streaks were agitating to fantasy owners and seven times last season he only threw one touchdown pass or went without. His play is an exact comparison of the Seahawks play, and time will tell if that has changed.

9. Kerry Collins
Job security hasn’t been a title for Collins career, and this will be the biggest challenge for Collins. All complaints on a sub par last season have been filled in with the correct acquisitions. Collins now has a running back in Lamont Jordan, and a wide receiver that is beyond special. The acquisition of Moss changes so much for the Raiders, and Collins needs to be able to play with consistency. His deep throw is probably up there with Manning as the league’s best, but his play overall has always remained erratic. Collins has always had the ability to be a top three quarterback, and this could be his year. The receivers Collins has are the best group in the league. Moss, Porter, Curry, and Gabriel assets should make for a lot of four wide receiver sets.

10. Drew Brees
Fantasy owners often overlook efficiency, and with that in mind Brees would rank at the top. He takes what defenses give him, and won’t lose you points with interceptions. We’ll see how Brees handles pressure, as the Chargers are obviously testing his mind. They know and Brees knows, that if he has another stellar year the Chargers will deal Rivers. If not, Brees one-year contract will be expired, and the Chargers will let him run rampant. Expectations of showing weakness were expected week-to-week last season, and it never happened. It won’t happen this year either.

11. Brett Favre
This is the lowest Favre has been ranked amongst quarterbacks since the mid 90’s. Favre wouldn’t submit to his body’s request of retiring last season, and you wonder if being on the football field may finalize that. Favre’s tendency to freestyle and make something out of nothing is what has been a fascinating part of his game. Last season though it seemed to backfire all the time. He’d just throw the ball up for grabs or make a rookie throw. Things that would get any other quarterback criticized were overlooked. Favre still had a monster year but the teams in his division have improved a lot on defense, and his best days are far behind him.

12. Aaron Brooks
Wow, now here is the definition of a player leaving room to fill in his potential. He is an exact replica of Jake Plummer. A quarterback that just moderates at a certain level but never progresses. He’ll give you a little taste here and there, but for the most part is barely above an average quarterback. Really nothing has evolved in his game since taking over for Jeff Blake in 2000. If he can ever get out of that funk, he can be a top five quarterback.

13. David Carr
Taking a beating is supposed to keep you down, but Carr has used it to launch and propel his travels in the NFL. He has definitely gone through his bumps along the way, but this should be his year to be a solid number two fantasy quarterback. Carr, Domanick Davis, and Andre Johnson are the youngest dynamic trio in the league.

14. Carson Palmer
It was unfortunate Palmer got hurt at the end of last season, because it finally clicked for him right before that. He went a three-week stretch of putting up dominating numbers, including a dazzling 29 of 36 performance against the Baltimore Ravens. Now he’ll have to prove that he hasn’t fallen off that trail and can keep walking that path.

15. Brian Griese
Give Griese all the credit in the world as he resurrected his career when it seemed at a low point. After jeopardizing his status as quarterback with Miami, he came to Tampa Bay as a castoff bench veteran. That status soon fell into the hands of Brad Johnson, and Griese surpassed Chris Simms with ease. When finally in the fold, Griese put up better numbers in eleven games than some quarterbacks did in sixteen. Twenty touchdown passes and a fair amount of monster 300 yard games. The weapons are now there offensively, and Griese could be a huge steal in draft’s this season.

16. Chad Pennington
The Jets are all about ball control, and are very similar to what the Steelers objective is. They grind it out offensively, and let the defense win games. They don’t want to run up and down the field, and that means Pennington can only be an average fantasy quarterback. He’ll have the occasion game of throwing three touchdowns, but the three hundred yard passing games aren’t going to be there.

17. Jake Delhomme
Don’t expect the same type of stats from Delhomme this season. The Panthers were forced to throw the football a lot last season due to DeShaun Foster and Stephen Davis’s injuries. He also lost his main threat in Mushin Muhammed, but will get his former favorite target back in Steve Smith. Delhomme is the perfect quarterback to have for spot duty.

18. Steve McNair
Which McNair are we going to see this season? A healthy flashback McNair, or a quarterback that’s best days are behind him. According to McNair he has recovered nicely and is ready to go. That’s hard to believe and fantasy owners will have to be the judge of that. Slippage of McNair in drafts is not even a question, and the Titans outlook this season isn’t going to help. They lost Derrick Mason to free agency, and their main targets are now Drew Bennett and Tyrone Calico. The only bright side is the Titans are going to be down a lot this year, so that means a lot of garbage statistics for McNair to pick up in the fourth quarter.

19. Byron Leftwich
Comeback fourth quarter victories by the Jaguars last year were always highlighted by Leftwich touchdowns. That happened in the majority of the Jaguars wins, but Leftwich only had 15 touchdowns. A big component of the Jaguars victories had to do with their defense, and their offense finally clicking when needed. Leftwich’s notoriety is there now, and it’ll be up to him to advance to another level.

20. Jake Plummer
Each year Plummer is listed as a sleeper, because people know he can be much better. It hasn’t happened yet, and now he has become a fantasy write off. Maybe draft him and take a chance, but realize his acquisition can be a simple write off. No one is high on him anymore so the potential of being a bust is non-existent. It ends up simply being a non-worthy eighth or ninth round pick.

21. Patrick Ramsey
The disarray of the Redskins team is at a high point. LaVar Arrington has run off the mouth about his point of view, and the latest news with Sean Taylor is head shaking. Still, the Redskins had the best defense last season, but couldn’t get an iota of help from their offense. Brunell is back on the bench, and Ramsey has been inserted to get another stab as a starter. One more drastic basement year on Ramsey’s part, will result in the crumbling of his career.

22. Drew Bledsoe
How many times has a remarriage ended on a bad note in the NFL? The glory days seem to be behind both Parcells and Bledsoe, but both think the magic can happen again. Bledsoe still possesses the same tools but can’t seem to grasp the idea of getting rid of the football. He still holds the ball too long, or flings the ball uncontrollably. The fact that Cowboy fans still are chanting for another Drew is unbelievable. Bledsoe can quiet those doubters with wins, but won’t be a flashy quarterback with or without victories.

23. Ben Roethlisberger
Who was having nightmares during the off-season? If a poll were taken amongst NFL quarterbacks I’m sure Roethlisberger would rank number one. Can he shake off the quick exit of last year’s success? Either way the Steelers are going to grind it out, and let the other team lose the game. Roethlisberger threw for under 200 yards nine out of the fourteen games he started last year.

24. Kurt Warner
Somebody please want me, I’m a former MVP. Warner was being tossed around with no love by the Rams and Giants, and has opened his arms once again this time with the Cardinals. The love was enough to grant another one-year contract, wow. Warner wants to prove himself, and the supporting cast is reminiscent his best days with St. Louis. This is the lowest he’ll be ranked all season, unless he loses his job to Josh McCown.

25. Joey Harrington
Harrington is another quarterback that can only shoot up rankings, or lose his job to Jeff Garcia. The Lions aren’t going to give him any leniency this year, and Harrington will either rise or fall. Just like Warner there is crazy talent surrounding Harrington, and if there are still no results, than we all know what the main problem is.

26. JP Losman
The Bills believe they found a gem in Losman, and have handed their future to the youngster. Can he step in, and not disrupt the chemistry the Bills had going toward the end of last season? The Bills think the majority of the success was due to McGahee’s abilities, and will run him to death again. Trust me, Losman will be tested and it’ll be a rough year.

27. Kyle Boller
Todd Heap is set to be at 100 percent, and Boller also now has Derrick Mason and Mark Clayton. It took awhile for the Ravens to use some money in the receiver area, but it’s a wrap now. Can the inclusion of the new talent, add to the development of Boller? It should, and Baltimore has to be one of the scariest teams in the AFC.

28. AJ Feeley
Reports are that Feeley may not even win the starting job over Gus Frerotte. The Dolphins may have let Jay Fiedler go too early. He fit the system perfectly and didn’t do too much until the Dolphins had no rushing game. Feeley had a few signs of being an okay quarterback, but mostly he was just a weekly case of fear factor for his own team.

29. Rex Grossman
The evaluation of Grossman isn’t based on his prior experiences, as we have no idea. We have to base his ranking on the Bears system of quarterbacks, and that has been the bottom of the barrel for a long time.

30. Eli Manning
Hopefully his years of struggles are behind him, because we haven’t seen a rookie go through a rougher season in awhile. Manning has a cannon for an arm, but needs to obviously develop his ability to read defenses. That comes with time, and there should be a brighter improvement for Manning this year. He is still a good year or two away though from even being considered being drafted.

31. Trent Dilfer
Dilfer has been a journeyman, and seems to keep being picked up by teams that really should be looking elsewhere. Dilfer isn’t the answer for Cleveland, and Charlie Frye will likely get an opportunity somewhere in the middle or latter part of the upcoming season. One thing that can’t be taken away from Dilfer is his Super Bowl ring, and a lot of quarterbacks can’t state that.

32. Alex Smith
The 49ers rookie will be in a tug of war battle to win the starting job over Tim Rattay. Favoritism will lead the way for Smith, and a nice highlight reel that he’ll want in a locked vault will accompany that as well.

33. Jeff Garcia
Aww, your former head coach for years has signed you to be a backup. I think we all saw that wink from a mile away. Just wait for the right moment, and Garcia will be inserted like neither expected. It’s kind of like a staged WWE event.

34. Gus Frerotte
Frerotte has managed to hang around the league, even after his head butt into the wall. The reason why is because he knows the game, and that’s why he will likely eclipse Feeley before training camp even starts. Feeley doesn’t understand his position yet, and Frerotte will snatch it like it a receiver going up for a football.

35. Billy Volek
McNair’s injury concerns and the Titans future will come up rapidly this year, and Volek will likely play into the fold. He did well last year, and will be involved one way or another at some point.

36. Kelly Holcomb
Anytime there is a youngster starting, a veteran backup is watching with wide eyed binoculars for the mistakes to tip over. Holcomb has always flourished in a backup role, and that pattern may be tested.

37. Josh McCown
Don’t give up on McCown yet. Dennis Green has been known to make changes quicker than he can finish a sentence. Warner is already on a thin line throughout the league, and the offers weren’t overflowing for his contributions. McCown is hungry to get back in, and finished the season nicely after Green gave him his job back.

38. Philip Rivers
It’s a long shot that Rivers will step on the field this year. It would take a Chargers losing season or a Brees injury for that to happen. The sad thing is that Rivers is probably better than six to eight current starting quarterbacks and he hasn’t even started a game.

39. Andrew Walter
The ASU grad broke several Pac-10 records and would have been a high draft pick if it weren’t for his late collegiate shoulder injury. If Collins doesn’t perform, Walter could step in and have an immediate impact. Unlike other rookies, Walter started all four years of his collegiate career, so he is a more mature and prepared quarterback. The ASU offensive system is also very similar to an NFL style.

40. Charlie Frye
It’s just hard to imagine Trent Dilfer starting the entire season.

Classic Article: Be Prepared To Make A Quarterback Change

Thursday, 9 June, 2005

Be Prepared To Make A Quarterback Change-Preseason 2000

He had a career year throwing for nearly thirty touchdowns and 3,500 yards. After completing that season fantasy owners were very high on him for the 1999 season. That quarterback was Vinny Testaverde who went down with an Achilles tendon injury in the first game of last season.

He was a proven veteran that had always had great seasons passing in the NFL. He was coming off of a season in which he threw for 36 touchdowns and over 4000 yards passing. Many people had him ranked the number two quarterback on their fantasy football draft boards in 1999. This quarterback was Steve Young, who lasted only two games before being knocked out with a serious concussion.

This quarterback was coming off a year in which he dazzled the NFL with his great heroic performances to earn his team a playoff spot in 1998. He led comeback after comeback for his team and won a playoff game. Fantasy owners were very high on him and many had him ranked as a top five for quarterbacks. His name was Jake Plummer and he missed four games due to a finger injury, and played the rest of the year not at 100 percent.

Testaverde, Young and Plummer aren’t the only quarterbacks that suffered through an injury prone season. In fact, 23 out of the 31 NFL teams had different quarterbacks at some point during the season, whether it was due to injury or a quarterback being benched. I guess you could throw Brett Farve in there because he played all season hurt even though he never missed a start.

If that isn’t a reason to stay away from drafting a quarterback early, then I don’t know what is. Here is a list of quarterbacks that were backups last season, and because of their teams starting quarterback going down last year they had an opportunity to start. All of these quarterbacks played so well, that they will be starting next season in the NFL.

Tony Banks
Cade McNown
Tim Couch
Rob Johnson
Kerry Collins
Damon Huard/Jay Fiedler
Kurt Warner
Jeff Garcia
Akili Smith
Donovan McNabb
Shaun King

There will be 11 new starting quarterbacks that weren’t starting week one of last season. A big reason for that is because of the old veterans retiring, like Dan Marino and Steve Young. But the main reason is because quarterbacks are inconsistent and injury prone.

More than likely, a quarterback that you draft as a starter is going to go down with an injury during the season or will be benched due to poor play. So I have come up with a list of quarterbacks that are backups entering training camp now and have the ability to surprise people when they get an opportunity to play this season. Stay tuned for that article.

Stepping In

Thursday, 9 June, 2005

The prognosis of a surgeon performing surgery is a step-by-step careful yet aggressive process. A surgeon needs to be smart, precise, quick, and get the task done with extreme pressure. It’s a routine that obviously takes some time for a surgeon to get down. That’s why before they get a chance they need to establish themselves. They do this by watching surgery’s and the colossal amount of studying time involved in learning all the processes. Not until the overall staff feels the soon to be surgeon is comfortable and ready to grab a scalpel will any cutting and risk taking start.

Of course a surgeon isn’t going to be a perfectionist, but that’s what a patient is expecting. Surgeons don’t keep stats, but if there was tracking no surgeon would have a perfect record. That’s why a celebrity that needs a serious procedure will seek out to find the best. The whole idea is that the studying, learning, and advancement is supposed to pave the way for an unbreakable career.

In football the analogy is synonymous with a quarterback’s development. At first they’re able to have a nerve free sideline experience. It’s like kicking back at a movie theatre, enjoying your popcorn and drink. Bam, within a three-hour experience the lesson’s learned from watching snippets from your point of view are going to come to a test. Each day in practice the weekly lessons start to turn over into eye-popping development in practices, or coaches yelling and spitting in your face like you’re at boot camp. Coaches notice this with the quickness, and the story of that quarterback’s chapter starts to sprout when that eye is attatched..

The ultimate question involving that quarterback is will they thrive or fold under pressure? The quarterback is now that surgeon that has to pick a part by making the right decisions in a minimal amount of time.

Any type of situation can pop up that could make the quarterback a goat or a hero. There are so many key plays that go unnoticed when a game is over. It could be a third down scramble that later resulted in a second quarter drive’s touchdown, or that play could be the quarterback scrambling and fumbling.

A scenario like that may seem awkward, but it’s a logical idea. How many times do you see a fluke back to back sequence, with teams giving up the football after acquiring the ball right after a turnover? It happens, and a quarterback’s immediate future starts from the first day under center as official starter. That classification could be withdrawn just as fast as it was given. If you prove yourself than wa-la, general managers are offering you righteous deals. Just like a surgeon pulling in clientele that expect a smooth operation.

Out in Buffalo, there is an extreme amount of pressure on JP Losman. The experience that he was going to get last season, didn’t happen because of the Bills strong finish. The Bills knew they were going his way, and would’ve loved to give him the experience early so he could go through his struggles. Well, now the only time he is going to be allowed that precious experience will be in pre-season.

Losman has the intangibles to be the Bills quarterback for many years, and he seems confident and set on that as well. It’s always a strong quality when your quarterback is a strong believer in his own ability. It may sound funny, but it happens in any profession especially athletics, where the loss of motivation and self-esteem kicks in.

A bad raise in a real life job leads to sudden drop off in a person’s job skills. In athletics it’s called a funk, and young athletes tend to get into that zone quickly. They have so much confidence and expectations, that a string of losses can domino an entire season. The best mind frame for Losman to have is to take everything one day at a time. Started from training camp all the way through out. Getting too far ahead of himself can result in mental fatigue on top of the obvious body aches that he is going to go through.

The support of Bills fans also needs to be encouraging. It has been a minute since they’ve had success, and after the 90’s patience probably isn’t a word in Bills fans vocabulary. Still, this is a new adjustment period and a setback from last year’s finish is a probable hypothesis. The AFC is mighty tough, and it’s going to take a Ben Roethlisberger effort from Losman to finish better than last season’s record.

Bill Cowher did a phenomenal job with Roethlisberger on bringing him along. It’s the perfect blueprint that should be used for quarterbacks with no experience under their belts. They kept his pass attempts below twenty the majority of the time, and his check downs were simple. The work horses in Jerome Bettis or Duce Staley was the main offense, and Roethlisberger did what he needed to throw off defenses. The Bills can do the same with Willis McGahee, and will need to for the first month or so of the regular season.

If not than a play when they should have ran is going to turn into a deadly seven for the other team. The Bills defense is good enough to keep them in games, and they are going to need to play ball control football. If they get into a shoot out, that’s not going to suit Losman this season. It’ll play into the other team’s defensive coordinator’s hands. Once he sees a certain tendency by Losman, or ways to throw him off, they’ll begin to attack.

Losman should have a great career, but he needs to keep his goals realistic in his first year as starter. It’s always good to set high goals, but you have to approach situations with a balanced free to breathe mind frame.

New Number One

Tuesday, 7 June, 2005

New Number One
By Zack Cimini

There has been a receiver on the creep for the top spot over the last few years, and now it is his turn. He hasn’t necessarily been in a strong offense, but yet has demanded yearly attention and makes cornerbacks cringe weekly outlooks. Not only is he due to breakout and head the elite pack of wide receivers, his team altogether looks poised to make a stance and impression this season.

Out in Cincinnati, head coach Marvin Lewis has quickly arranged and programmed a team into believers. The main athlete that is going to benefit is going to be star wide receiver Chad Johnson. His numbers have always been top ten and respectable, and that was with a bewildered young quarterback. Carson Palmer grew and matured like a teenager going through a growth spurt last season. It was so sudden, and his new confidence carried over in all phases of the game for the Bengals.

So how does Chad Johnson jump over a group of star-studded receivers? It’s simple, the long jump is there for the taking. Terrell Owens has been bickering over a contract, and who knows what his true motive is there. Maybe he hasn’t fully recovered from his ankle injury and is trying to cover it up. One thing or another, TO’s numbers are bound to come down from his out of the Earth season last year.

Javon Walker is coming off a career year, and already demanding money. The Packers have been waiting for Walker or Robert Ferguson to explode, and Walker finally took advantage. Athletes are so quick to get big headed over statistics, and it even brought out Brett Favre to throw his take in. This is the quarterback that is going to throw him the football. You can bet he’ll be looking more in Ferguson’s direction, who shouldn’t be forgotten about as he was hurt a lot last season. He also entered last year ahead of Walker on the depth chart.

Randy Moss is one of those athletes where a situation doesn’t matter, but injury concerns and Kerry Collins inability to remain consistent an entire season is a big question mark. There is a huge difference between Collins and Culpepper, and Moss and fantasy owners are going to soon realize that. Moss will still have top ten receiver numbers, but may disappoint owners in the touchdown category. As west coast offenses tend to have receivers that put up monster yardage and average touchdown numbers.

Marvin Harrison is going to continue to get his, but the main question is how much. Last year a lot of fantasy owners became frustrated because of Reggie Wayne and Brandon Stokley stealing the show on a lot of weeks. When your quarterback is throwing touchdowns as easily as a handoff than everyone is going to enjoy lunch. Harrison still had fifteen touchdowns and almost 1200 yards receiving. He is 33 years old, but that shouldn’t matter as he has kept himself in great shape.

Harrison will be a close second to Johnson next year, as the best fantasy football wide receiver. Johnson is a ball hog whenever the ball is near him, and just shreds defenses a part. He could have been at this foregone state if he had a solid quarterback to throw him the ball. Now that Carson Palmer is set, Johnson is going to be showing more than his gold smiling grill this season. It may be time for him to think of some endzone celebrations to compare himself with Moss, Horn, and TO.

Pressure Is On

Tuesday, 7 June, 2005

Pressure’s On
By Zack Cimini

Throughout the late 90’s and 2000’s one of the most dependable and consistent teams has always been the Tennessee Titans. They had a core of athletes that had ventured from footballs laugh stock to yearly contenders. Players like Frank Wycheck, Eddie George, and Steve McNair were always the main threats and vocal points offensively. With head coach Jeff Fisher’s strong work ethic and zero tolerance for losing, it all added up to a long term marriage.

Still, their yearly success never turned into that championship ring, and the Titans are a perfect example of how short and precious chances are. All of the sudden, Frank Wycheck’s body started to crumble, and soon there after the battering took its toll on Eddie George. George has never been a long-range threat, and rather is just a between the tackles and move the chains guy. Once his power started to depreciate, the Titans were forced to make the right decision last summer. Anyone that so how ineffective he was with Dallas last season, had to feel bad for the guy. He truly sacrificed his body for a long time, and his days as a running back are pretty much slim to none. The best possibility for George would be to convert to a fullback, as that would be a great combination with Julius Jones.

Steve McNair is yet another Titan that has remained a warrior and never used an injury as an excuse. There probably isn’t another quarterback over the last five years, that has played through more injuries. He still managed to produce, but last year the injuries just were too much for his body. The worse thing about it, was the emergence of Billy Volek. Volek came in and delivered with huge yardage totals and showcased that he can throw the deep ball just as well as Steve McNair. On top of that, his ability to spread the ball deep led to a new connection between him and Drew Bennett.

Volek isn’t even 100 percent, and their main starting running back in Chris Brown is also plagued and trying to recover. With the strength of the AFC, the Titans are looking to be in serious jeopardy of sinking to a new low. Steve McNair is obviously still the starter, but he will be brought around slowly in training camp. We’d be very wary in selecting McNair, and if you do make sure you snatch up Volek or vice versa. McNair still has the mindset of a Pro Bowler, and that can also be a negative. Last season, when he tried to play through injuries, he made a lot of crucial mistakes because his body couldn’t make the plays.

If the Titans can protect McNair from getting ambushed, a .500 season wouldn’t be out of question. From past years though, that isn’t bound to happen. The freak injuries just seem to occur for McNair, whether it’s on a scramble or a blindside hit. The heat is also on Jeff Fisher, as he has been coaching the franchise since the Houston days. If another disappointing season happens, it may be time for the Titans management to look in a new direction. Fisher has done a great job, and is still a top tier NFL coach but sometimes a change up is just needed. Time will tell, but it’s not looking bright for the Titans next season.

NotJustaGame News

Saturday, 4 June, 2005

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Our staff is currently preparing their initial updated player rankings just in time for the new fantasy football season to kick off! Our team has been making very accurate predictions since we have been active for two years now and we think our third year will be our best one yet. Stay tuned!

A Comprehensive eBook
For those of you who really want to get that edge on your competition we will be offering a comprehensive eBook that will act as your handbook for the pre-season. The fantasy football eBook guide from NotJustaGame will be available later this month for an extremely low price. It will practically be free! Don’t miss out on this terrific resource.

A Fantasy Blog Format with Open Membership
You might have noticed that our articles now allow comments. However, one thing we do ask is that you register to become a member of our site. Membership is 100% FREE and we do not charge you a cent. The only reason we do this is so that we can avoid spammers ruining the commenting forums. Sign up today and also receive our weekly fantasy insider newsletter which will be premiering in July!

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