Archive for December, 2009

Fantasy Football Sitcom, The League – Why the Hate?

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

Being a president of a fantasy football games site, I got to stay on my toes with whats going on in the industry and what the voices out there say. In doing so, I have heard some ‘blah’ type comments about FX’s new 1/2 hour sitcom based on a fantasy football league called The League. My question: Why?

Its odd for two reasons:

  1. Fantasy industry guys should be thrilled about a show focused on fantasy football. Its a dream come true in getting even more recognition and respect of such a huge phenomenon.
  2. Its a GREAT SHOW!!!

Now most of the chatter hasn’t been harsh or critical, it has mostly been “Its ok” type talk . That couldn’t be further from my opinion of the show. To start, its funny. Take out any relationship to fantasy football and just look at the characters. They’re great and the dialogue is great. If you have any love for Fantazzle and/or the Fantazzle Blog, spare me 2:20 seconds and watch this clip. You can’t tell me that isn’t funny: from the song to the characters reactions. As far as I know, characters and dialogue are what make a show funny and this show has them both.

NOW, throw in the connection to fantasy football and I’m loving life! I think it would be great w/out it, but 100 times better with it. The one thing I was scared about with the show is the use of the typical fantasy football humor. You know TJ WhosYourDaddy type humor. Not so. Its fresh. The writers spent a lot of time figuring out how fantasy football can be funny and working on it with things that are not overused. Example: to figure out the draft order they did the typical pick a number from a hat, BUT that was only to know what kid you were backing in the potato sack race. If your league does something like this, I commend you. If it doesn’t, I guarantee there will be a lot more leagues doing something similar next year. It’s unique, thank gawd because that was my biggest worry about the show.

The only item I don’t care for much is the relationship/marriage type stuff. I’m sure its because I’m a single guy and can’t relate. Other than that, this show is great. Just like It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, another comedy on FX, it pushes the envelope and I look forward to every episode.

If anyone from the show is reading this, send me an email, I’ll do anything I can to help promote the show. I love it that much.  If you haven’t seen it, give it a look. I believe you can watch past episode on FX’s website and it comes on Thursdays at 10:30pm ET. At least TiVo it if your out drinking at that time (which I’m sure the unmarried guys watching this show are probably are doing at this time). If you have already seen it and you were a ‘its ok’ type, I ask that you give it another shot. Help this show grow and be back again. This is a monumental moment for fantasy football and I urge you all to help that moment continue.

Fantazzle Prez – Ryan Parr

Fantazzle Fantasy Football Games

www.fantazzle.com

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New Fantasy Football Games Promotion

Saturday, December 5th, 2009

Hi all,

Fantazzle has recently updated our Facebook Fantasy Football Games fan page and Fantasy Football Twitter page. We hope you like them. We’ve been spending a lot of time getting these active and lookin’ good and to celebrate, we have a special fantasy football games promotion this week. If you win any of our entry fee fantasy football games this week and you follow us on Twitter and our fan of our Facebook page, we will give you 200 FantaStock points good for $10 worth of free fantasy games. Join before the games start on Sunday and your qualified. Each player is limited to one win per user, but it can be in any of our 3 entry fee games like our fantasy football salary cap game or unique fantasy football pick’em game.

Enjoy!

Fantazzle Prez – Ryan Parr

Fantazzle Weekly Fantasy Sports Games

www.fantazzle.com

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Free Fantasy Football Game Contest – Steve Smith Promotion Results

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

Hi all,

As many of you know, Fantazzle Weekly Fantasy Games has partnered with Steve Smith of the New York Giants in his 2010 Pro Bowl Contest. The winner of this contest will win 2 tix to the 2010 NFL Pro Bowl, hotel, airfare, and dinner with Steve. During the contest, Fantazzle is running free fantasy football games to win free gear from Steve Smith. The free contests will run for the next week and we already had our first free Steve Smith fantasy football game and winner this past week.

Congrats to hedrush who pulled off of a come from behind victory on Monday night. I wrote an earlier post about the leaders of the free fantasy football contest and those who had a chance leading up to NFL MNF. hedrush wasn’t even listed. He was way behind in points so he wasn’t on our radar. But like any given week, Drew Brees can change that very quickly. Couple him with Marques Colston and those 60 points put him over the top. hedrush finished with 147 pts with bdubya3 and BayMan3205 tying for 2nd/3rd with 139 pts each.

I wrote hedrush earlier to congratulate him and you couldn’t ask for a perfect winner as he thanked Fantazzle and added that he has Steve Smith in both of his traditional fantasy football leagues. It was fate from the beginning!

As an aside, the Steve Smith 2010 Pro Bowl Contest is well underway and we believe that Steve deserves a look for all of you Pro Bowl voters out there. He’s in the top 10 for fantasy football WRs and even higher in points per reception leagues (PPR). He deserves every fantasy football players consideration and he has been one of the best players in fantasy football this year. Numbers don’t lie.

So the first free fantasy football contest is over with 3 more to go. Make sure you sign up before the first NFL game on Sunday begins. Spread the word if you like the contest. If we get more entries into the game, we will expand the prize pool and have more than one winner. Its up to you all to get this done. We will run a referral promotion during the Steve Smith free games. Simply refer your friends and shoot us an email at stevesmith@fantazzle.com with your friend’s email and/or username and we will give you an extra prize if you win the free football game. You’ll win the prize of the week plus we will give you a $25 credit to your Fantazzle account to play all of our fantasy games. Help Fantazzle build our fantasy site and we will help you build your account balance. Nothing to lose and a lot to gain!

Sign up now for the Steve Smith free fantasy football game.

May the best fantasy player win!

Fantazzle Prez – Ryan Parr

Fantazzle Weekly Fantasy Football Games

www.fantazzle.com

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The Fantazzle Player Rater for Weekly Fantasy Basketball Games

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

If you have ever selected a roster for Fantazzle’s weekly fantasy basketball game, you probably know the feeling: I know who’s the best in my regular fantasy basketball league, but who is the best in THIS format? It’s that moment when you scratch your head, shrug your shoulders and just pick some guys, even though you know that there has to be a more scientific way of building a team especially when its a fantasy basketball salary cap game.

Sure, you know that blocks and steals are highly valued, and the percentage-based categories don’t mean jack, but how do you put that abstract information into practice?  I know he’s the man, but is LeBron James really worth $165,000?

Well, that’s what you have me for.  I have created a scoring system to rank every single NBA player according to Fantazzle’s unique metric.  As of 11/28/09, here are your Fantazzle scoring leaders:

PLAYER, TEAM POS

MIN

REB

AST

STL

BLK

PTS

TOT

AVG

LeBron James, Cle SF

37.9

6.7

8.0

1.3

0.6

29.2

812

47.8

Carmelo Anthony, Den SF

36.5

6.1

3.6

1.6

0.3

30.9

708

44.3

Dirk Nowitzki, Dal PF

38.2

8.6

2.7

1.2

1.6

27.1

748

44.0

Dwyane Wade, Mia SG

38.7

4.8

5.3

2.1

1.3

27.1

659

43.9

Kobe Bryant, LAL SG

37.5

5.3

3.8

2.3

0.2

29.5

654

43.6

Kevin Martin*, Sac SG  O

41.8

5.4

2.6

2.0

0.2

30.6

215

43.0

Kevin Durant, OKC SG, SF

38.7

7.1

3.2

1.6

0.8

27.5

679

42.4

Chris Bosh, Tor PF, C

35.7

11.9

1.7

0.5

1.2

25.1

717

42.2

Chris Paul*, Nor PG  O

34.0

3.4

9.2

1.7

0.0

23.8

398

39.8

Danny Granger, Ind SF  DTD

37.1

6.4

2.9

1.5

1.2

24.8

513

39.5

Monta Ellis, GS PG, SG

39.3

4.5

5.5

2.4

0.5

23.1

582

38.8

Tim Duncan, SA PF, C

31.9

11.3

3.6

0.4

1.9

18.3

453

37.8

Deron Williams, Uta PG

39.7

4.9

9.9

1.3

0.3

19.5

524

37.4

Josh Smith, Atl SF, PF

33.8

9.3

4.0

1.6

2.6

15.7

596

37.3

Carlos Boozer, Uta PF

35.6

10.6

3.4

1.1

0.6

19.9

595

37.2

Pau Gasol, LAL PF, C

31.0

12.0

3.5

0.0

1.8

18.0

148

37.0

Dwight Howard, Orl C

32.5

12.2

1.5

0.9

1.9

17.8

629

37.0

Andre Iguodala, Phi SG, SF

39.2

6.8

6.0

1.8

0.6

18.1

568

35.5

Andrew Bynum, LAL C

36.1

10.6

1.2

0.5

1.7

19.1

459

35.3

Antawn Jamison, Was PF

36.0

9.3

1.2

1.2

0.3

21.7

211

35.2

Brandon Jennings, Mil PG

34.2

4.1

5.5

1.2

0.2

22.3

521

34.7

Rudy Gay, Mem SF

39.9

6.7

2.1

1.6

0.8

21.1

555

34.7

Chris Kaman, LAC C

37.5

8.4

1.8

0.6

1.5

20.2

589

34.6

Brook Lopez, NJ C

35.9

8.9

1.6

0.5

2.5

17.9

549

34.3

Richard Hamilton*, Det SG  O

36.0

3.0

4.0

1.0

0.0

25.0

34

34.0

Gerald Wallace, Cha SF, PF

40.6

11.8

1.3

1.8

0.7

15.9

544

34.0

Joe Johnson, Atl SG, SF

38.4

5.4

4.5

1.1

0.1

21.7

541

33.8

David Lee, NY PF, C

33.1

9.9

2.6

1.3

0.4

18.1

541

33.8

Marc Gasol, Mem C

35.6

10.8

2.1

1.1

1.6

15.4

540

33.8

Trevor Ariza, Hou SG, SF

38.8

5.5

3.8

2.1

0.6

18.3

527

32.9

Gilbert Arenas, Was PG

35.8

3.7

6.3

1.2

0.2

20.1

493

32.9

Tyreke Evans, Sac PG, SG

35.9

5.3

4.8

1.4

0.4

19.1

459

32.8

Zach Randolph, Mem PF

34.7

9.6

1.9

0.7

0.4

18.8

521

32.6

Paul Pierce, Bos SG, SF

35.8

5.0

4.3

1.1

0.4

20.0

518

32.4

Baron Davis, LAC PG

32.5

3.7

7.1

1.8

0.6

16.1

541

31.8

Luol Deng, Chi SF

38.4

8.1

1.6

1.1

0.9

18.1

443

31.6

Steve Nash, Pho PG

32.3

2.6

11.8

0.3

0.2

16.2

506

31.6

Al Harrington, NY PF

31.7

6.4

1.6

1.2

0.4

20.3

505

31.6

Andrew Bogut*, Mil C  O

33.6

9.2

1.9

0.7

1.4

16.1

283

31.4

Amare Stoudemire, Pho PF, C

34.1

6.9

1.1

0.6

1.2

19.9

503

31.4

Russell Westbrook, OKC PG

34.3

4.8

6.9

1.0

0.6

16.7

503

31.4

Nene, Den PF, C

33.3

9.2

2.6

1.4

1.2

14.2

497

31.1

Al Jefferson, Min C

32.0

7.5

2.3

1.5

1.1

15.9

432

30.9

Brandon Roy, Por SG, SF

36.6

4.4

5.2

0.5

0.2

19.7

583

30.7

Luis Scola, Hou PF, C

30.4

9.9

2.0

1.0

0.4

15.3

479

29.9

Al Horford, Atl PF, C

34.1

9.9

2.0

0.8

1.8

13.1

479

29.9

Stephen Jackson, Cha SG, SF

36.3

4.4

4.3

1.6

0.6

16.9

478

29.9

Joakim Noah, Chi PF, C

33.4

11.7

2.4

0.6

1.6

11.1

418

29.9

Lou Williams*, Phi PG, SG  O

34.8

3.5

5.1

1.7

0.2

17.4

417

29.8

Rajon Rondo, Bos PG

33.6

4.2

8.9

2.6

0.0

10.8

466

29.1

Note that the players are ranked according to per-game averages, not total points accrued, which is why Kevin Martin is currently ranked sixth here, for example.  As you scan this list, you will probably be surprised at some of the results.  You probably would have guessed that Monta Ellis was going to be a top 25 player, but 11th overall?  And you knew that his stellar percentages certainly increased his values in standard leagues, but did you think that Steve Nash, a clear top-ten fantasy player this year, would barely even crack the top 50?

One of the cool things about fantasy sports is that it allows you to test your own personal perception of a player’s ability or value and compare it again the cold, hard facts. Sure, statistics can’t tell you everything about a player’s performance.  Bill James and them fellas still can’t figure out a good way to measure defensive ability in baseball, for example.  But they do give you an objective standard against which to compare two players, which is precisely what the Fantazzle Weekly fantasy basketball game is all about, when you really think about it.

So let’s take some time to sift through these numbers, and see what anomalies we can find in the Fantazzle Player Rater.  Who else enjoys such a spectacular boost in value when you switch around the scoring parameters like Fantazzle has?  And who else isn’t worth the hefty salary that they command in the Fantazzle fantasy game?  Perhaps most importantly, who else has taken the time to read this blog, and also figured out not to pay Steve Nash to play for his team?

***

I think there is really only one place to start with a fantasy basketball blog this year. And that’s with the biggest story of the first month of this young season: Brandon Jennings of the Milwaukee Bucks.  Jennings has been simply fantastic in his first month as a pro, and he will one day be viewed as the catalyst for a new and inevitable trend in American basketball: elite players by-passing the college experience and instead playing for megabucks in Europe.

Not longer after the NBA adopted it’s “pre-to-pro” policy in 2006, and thereby prevented high school players from being drafted by NBA teams, Jennings was a high school senior at the Oakhill Academy, one of the most prestigious high school basketball programs in the country.  Its roster of alumni include Carmelo Anthony, Kevin Durant and Rajon Rondo.  Jennings was considered one of the top high school point guards in the nation, and was offered a scholarship to attend the University of Arizona, which is a breeding ground for future NBA stars, such as Richard Jefferson, Mike Bibby, Jason Terry, Andre Iguoadala, Gilbert Arenas and Damon Stoudamire, among others.

Instead of doing what he was “supposed to do”, Jennings decided to sign a contract with Lottomatica Roma, an Italian basketball team, which paid him handsomely for his services. However, after spending the vast majority of his first and only season with the team riding pine, most analysts agreed that Jennings had hurt his draft position by going overseas.

Yet, despite his nearly non-existent season and corresponding lack of draft buzz, Jennings declared himself eligible for the 2009 NBA draft.  And then on draft day, he nearly slipped right out of the lottery, a fate that seemed nearly inconceivable at the end of his high school career.  He might have even fallen right out of the top-2o were it not for the Bucks, who turned a lot of heads when they selected him with the 10th overall pick.

Now, just one month into the season, Jennings is running away with the rookie of the year award, and Milwaukee brass is looking like a bunch of bonafide rocket scientists.  Despite averaging 22.3 points, 5.5 assists and 1.2 steals per game thus far, everything was pretty under-the-radar for this sweet-shooting lefty until he exploded for 55 points against the Warriors on November 14th.

Sure, it came against one of the truly horrific defensive clubs in recent memory, but still!  I remember it clear as day.  It happened on a Saturday night, and not just any Saturday night, mind you.  No, this was the Saturday night of Chach & Caroline’s millionth-annual Pre-Thanksgiving party, only arguably the biggest party of the year for me and my nefarious cohorts.  Needless to say, the Kid got extremely toasted on that particular evening and didn’t get home to get his nightly fantasy hoops intel until approximately 4 a.m.  I’ll never forget feeling like my eyes were going to pop right out of my skull when I read that stat line: 55 points, 5 assists, 5 boards, 21-34 from the floor and 7-8 from downtown.  Perhaps the most absurd stat is that he was just two weeks into his rookie year!

The first thing I thought to myself was: Uh, did he just break the all-time rookie scoring record?  In week two?  Uh, who even owns that record?  What IS that record? (Note: as it turns out, Wilt Chamberlain owns the record, which is 58 points.  Jennings’s 55 is the most since Earl Monroe went for 56 in 1968.  Jennings is also the second-youngest player to score 55 or more points.  The youngest is LeBron James, who dropped 56 in 2005).

The second thing I thought to myself was: why didn’t the Knicks draft this sonofabitch!  Damn you, Donnie Walsh and the rest of your funky bunch!  Why did you draft this Jordan Hill character who, despite playing for the WORST team in the league that is going through a REBUILDING process, CANNOT play a single frigging minute of a single frigging game all frigging YEAR?!?!

But I digress.  Brandon Jennings, with this one singularly nuclear performance, re-wrote his own history, not to mention the fate of the many legions of high school seniors who will surely follow in his decidedly enormous footsteps.  Don’t you think a high school senior now has to think twice about inking that deal to play in college when he could make a nice chunk of change balling in Europe for a year without even sacrificing his draft stock?  Now these kids will surely think (preferably in a Chris Tucker, Smokey from Friday voice): well, Brandon Jennings can do it, why can’t I?  College sounds fun, but damn!

Except one has to wonder: did playing in Europe actually make Jennings any better?  How good would this guy be right now if he had actually played a full season at Arizona?  I have no doubt that European basketball is comparable to the NCAA in terms of overall talent; I think Team USA’s well documented struggles in various international tournaments has made that quite clear.  But I do wonder whether it really made him a better player to just practice with these guys.  He played like 8 minutes per game in Italy!  Wouldn’t he have been better served starting for the Wildcats in a title run?

But that’s really the ONLY thing that makes me question whether Jennings represents the dawn of a new era in international basketball.  And who’s to say that the next guy to go over there won’t be benched by his dumb ass Italian coach?  I mean seriously, how stupid does THAT guy feel right now, whoever the hell he is?  I’d love to know who exactly was so good over there in Roma that Mr. Spaghettihead couldn’t find enough time to get Mr. ROY on the floor.  Whoever that player was, I bet he couldn’t drop 55 in an NBA game if his life depended on it.

OK so that’s my Brandon Jennings rant.  Sorry, it was a long one.  But really, kind of like my man-crushes on Chauncey Billups and Kevin Durant, he soooo deserves it!  Let’s wrap this up by pointing out that Jennings currently fetches just $80,000 in the Fantazzle game, and considering the fact that he’s a top-25 Fantazzle player, that’s what you call a gimme.

Yea, I know, you love me.  You can thank me later with a tweet or dap or something.

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