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Futures: Florida TE Jordan Reed

Aaron Hernandez is a unique talent in the NFL, but one of his fellow alums has the potential to change that assertion. Photo by Patriotworld.

Last week, I wrote about Notre Dame’s Tyler Eifert and how his skills fit into the growing pantheon of versatile tight end play that is in vogue in the NFL. But versatility can have a number of different meanings depending on the talents of the player and his fit within an offense. The word doesn’t necessarily mean that the player can do everything well.

Players like Jermaine GreshamBrandon PettigrewBrent Celek, andHeath Miller are versatile in the sense that they can run block, have enough speed to stretch the intermediate seam, and produce in tight coverage in the red zone. I think they do a lot well, but nothing great. If anything, I believe they are the current evolution of the “average” tight end. (Though I have to say that calling personal favorite Miller “average” insults my sensibilities because in terms of smarts and execution he blows away players like Gresham and Pettigrew.)

Jermichael FinleyJimmy Graham, and Jared Cook are versatile because they have the speed to run more vertical routes and the height and hands to function more as outside receivers. While Graham and Finley have improved as blockers, neither would list this skill as a true strength of their games. All three are essentially big wide receivers that can do a passable job as blockers depending on the way an offensive coordinator incorporates them into a scheme. In other words: teams have to be more creative with them when they aren’t running a route.

The only tight ends I believe have it all are (Read the rest at Football Outsiders).

Reads Listens Views 11/2/2012

Views – Part I

Although this one is obvious, Lance Zierlein knows his crawdads better than most. Photo by Hyperboreal.

Lance Zierlein has a gift.

The Sideline View blogger has Jon Gruden down cold (check out the final minutes of this episode). When he told Sigmund Bloom and me about his Crawfish Draft, I knew it was just the kind of nut-job humor that the football-obsessed would love. After you see this, you’ll never think of linemen “redirecting” the same way again. You’ll also learn what Kelechi Osemele and a crawdad have in common.

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Fantasy Throwdown

You wanna throw-down? I’ll kick your ass at no charge at www.fantasythrowdown.com

Yeah, I said it. Now step up to the challenge and shut me up. It’s free, easy to play, and addictive. Suit up and draft against me in standard, IDP, or PPR formats. I’ll take you down regardless and I promise I won’t make your kid cry. And if you’re scared to play me, challenge a friend – all you need is their email address. Drafts take 10 minutes if you’re both online. Play as much as you like and (except when you face me) trash-talking is optional. Get started here.

Football Reads

I’m a big fan of the writers at FieldGulls.com. While the Seahawks have become my favorite NFC team to follow, I enjoy the analysis Danny Kelly and Mike Chan provide. While the articles are Seattle-focused, the themes are universal to the game.

The Jason Jones Effect by Mike Chan of Field Gulls – Strong analysis from Chan on how good defensive tackle play can ruin the short passing game.

Jermaine Kearse’s possible role with the Seahawks – Ever wonder what a team sees in a player? This piece is a good example of “fit” as an important priority with personnel management.

Geno Smith’s Learning Process – Another excellent piece from Eric Stoner at Rotoworld.

Views Part II

I was weaned on two sports as a boy. You know the first one. The other was boxing. I was fortunate enough to see the final decades where the heavyweight division mattered in sport. The three boxers in these two videos – Earnie Shavers, Larry Holmes, and Ken Norton, Sr. – would have beaten the best heavyweights of the past 30 years when they were in their prime.

Earnie Shavers

Shavers never won the championship, but he was one of the most feared opponents during an era packed with great boxers. If I were to give you my football-obsessed equivalent, Shavers was the Frank Gore of fighters. Check out the 2:55 mark for this one particular knockout if you don’t have time for the full video. It’s a savagely beautiful combination of a counter punch.

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Larry Holmes

Holmes was one of my favorite boxers because of his excellent chin and trip hammer of a left jab. One of the most memorable events of my sports childhood was this Holmes-Norton fight below. If you didn’t know, Norton’s son was a star linebacker at UCLA and the 49ers. He’s been a coach with Pete Carroll at USC and now Seattle.

JayeP does a great job of describing its significance in the sport:

“I would consider this the last great fight of the Golden Age of the Heavyweights. This last round pretty much sums up the heavyweight division in the 70’s. I remember seeing this fight on TV. I’m more impressed by it now. Two guys, no technique. Just a burning desire to win, willing to stand in the middle of the ring and trade punches that would kill most of us. By far the greatest 15th round in boxing history.”

I still remember that round because Holmes won the title but left the ring on a stretcher. That kind of effort won me over as a young fan. Here’s that final round (Holmes white trunks, Norton in blue) where they finish this war standing toe-to-toe, throwing and taking everything the other has left.

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As much as I have concerns about the future of both sports there’s no denial that like most of us during the 1970s, I was raised with a keen appreciation for hitting.

Non-Football Reads

Sneak Attack: Voter ID Laws May Throttle Voting Rights. How big business wants to shrink the electorate

An Open Letter to Ann Coulter (Best letter ever)

Injection Wells: The Poison Beneath Us

How Companies Have Assembled Political Profiles for Millions of Internet Users

Thank You

I created this blog to promote my publication The Rookie Scouting Portfolio. If you haven’t checked out this tome of rookie skill player goodness, then I want you to imagine that unassuming little restaurant where the building has character, the service is great, and the food is not to be believed. You want to eat there every day, but you’re racked with ambivalence about sharing your find. You have the urge to tell everyone within earshot that you know who would appreciate the place and, as ridiculous as it sounds, you want to hide your find from everyone so it doesn’t get too big and it loses its charm.

The RSP is like that place to my readers. I get emails all the time from folks who thank me for a publication that exceeds their expectations and that the same time apologizing in advance for not being willing to share it among their friends. I get it. I also thank those of you who weren’t too reticent to share a good thing because it is people like you that help me continue to deliver a publication that takes months of focused work. It also provides me a greater opportunity to give back to Darkness to Light, an organization that provides sexual abuse prevention training to communities nationwide.

Thank you for supporting the RSP. If you haven’t taken that step yet, check out my past publications from 2006-2011 at a price of $9.95 apiece. Readers tell me all the time that the RSP has multiple years of value for fantasy football owners.

Randy Moss and Exceptions to the Rule

You’ve seen this eRumor:

It is time to elect a new world leader, and only your vote counts. Here are the facts about the three leading candidates.

Candidate A associates with crooked politicians, and consults with astrologers.
He’s had two mistresses. He also chain smokes and drinks 8 to 10 martinis a day.

Candidate B was kicked out of office twice, sleeps until noon, used
opium in college and drinks a quart of whiskey every evening.

Candidate C was a decorated war hero. He’s a vegetarian, doesn’t smoke, drinks an occasional beer, and never cheated on his wife.

Candidate A was Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Candidate B was Winston Churchill.
Candidate C was Adolph Hitler.

Although there is no record that Churchill ever used opium and Hitler’s “wife” became his wife shortly before he offed himself in his bunker, there’s a lot of documented truth in these statements that make a sound point: It is sometimes dangerous to deify or damn our public figures for behavior outside their role. This is especially true with athletes.

“To be great is to be misunderstood”

– Ralph Waldo Emerson

Given this point, I shouldn’t find it incredible that the NFL fan base is polarized when Randy Moss is mentioned as one of the greatest receivers in the history of the game. Continue reading

Fantasy Throwdown Tourney Results Round 2

Throwdown Tourney Round 2 Results

October 30th, 2012

Round 2 is in the books for our “For The Heck Of It” Tournaments. A few matches were still to be decided from the San Francisco 49ers-Arizona Cardinals yawner on Monday night.

For those who didn’t manage to stay up for the duration, Larry Fitzgerald was tackled half a yard short of the end zone on the Cards’ final play on offense. It made a difference in two of my traditional fantasy leagues, and here is hoping you weren’t on the wrong end in your Throwdown match as a result of that Kevin Dyson-Mike Jones-esque finish. (Sorry to dig up that analogy, Titans fans.) Continue reading

Who is Virgil Green?

Green was seventh round pick of the Broncos, but he was my top tight end for fantasy-oriented owners looking for a player with sizable upside from the 2011 NFL Draft class of tight ends. Photo by Jeffery Beall.

Virgil Green’s 3-catch, 44-yard debut (with 5:34 left in the game) with Peyton Manning might be a surprise to some. However, the tight end from Nevada is a well-known stash for those who get the Rookie Scouting Portfolio publication each April. I don’t know if Green will be an option once Joel Dreessen returns from his injury but he is a talent to keep an eye on despite the fact that his draft status didn’t match my evaluation and Julius Thomas was the more regarded prospect. His performance was indicative of what I saw from him as a collegian. Below is my evaluation of Green prior to the 2011 NFL Draft.  Continue reading

Reads Listens Views 10/26/2012

My open letter to Panthers owner Jerry Richardson is to play career-saving matchmaker for Jonathan Stewart and Deangelo Williams. Photo by Parker Anderson (PDA Photo).

(Views) Walk on the Wild Side: An Open Letter to Jerry Richardson 

While I can’t claim credit for the changes ahead, the news of Carolina making adjustments to its offense have been my sentiments for weeks.

Dear Jerry,

I’ve been watching your organization from afar. Like everybody’s Uncle Arthur Blank, you seem like a good guy. You were a calmer, assuring voice of reason during last year’s lockout. Unlike most of your pencil-necked geek peers at owners meetings, you actually played in the NFL. You may have only amassed 15 catches for 171 yards and 4 touchdowns in a one-season career, but you did play with Johnny Unitas on a championship team.

No bad, Jer. Not bad.

Anyway, I’m a fan of your state. Continue reading

Mike Gillislee and the Currency of Respect

Gators runner Mike Gillislee understands the currency for respect in the game of football. Photo by Photo-Gator.

Hitting and guts are the currency of respect in the game of football. A football player that can deliver a hit, take a hit, and play with abandon earns respect from teammates, opponents, and fans. When I watch a prospect, these three aspects of football stand out immediately when I see them. Said player may not have the technical or conceptual skills, or physical talent to become an NFL player, but hitting and guts make a great first impression.

Florida running back MIke Gillislee delivered a strong first impression against Texas A&M in the 2012 opener. Although I watched him carry the ball 14 times for 83 yards and 2 touchdowns, the box score only reveals the tip of the iceberg. What the stat line doesn’t show is that Gillislee’s best runs – both statistically and otherwise – came during his final eight carries after he injured his groin in the first offensive series and required an A-C bandage. Continue reading

Sunday Fantasy Mailbag 10/21/2012

Would you trade C.J. Spiller for Julio Jones and the Law Firm? I wouldn’t, see why in this week’s mail bag. Photo by Matt Britt

The weekend mailbag is back! I’m also going to field Twitter questions. I think “new” technology like Twitter is fantastic and fantastically comical because as people we’re always behind the curve with how to use new tools. So I’m probably going to make fun of the questions I get on Twitter. If I rag on you or your question, I will provide a serious answer.

Continue reading

Futures: West Virginia WR Tavon Austin

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Evaluating players is a long process. It doesn’t end when an analyst watches a few games of a prospect. I want you to keep this in mind as you read this take or any take that I provide of a player before his college career has ended. My methodology of evaluation is as detailed as any and I often find that the third, fourth, or fifth game I’ve watched of a player only validates what I saw in the first performance. Even so, there are times that my fundamental opinion of a player will change with additional viewings of games.

Steelers running back Rashard Mendenhall comes to mind. I had initial concerns about his acceleration that eventually diminished after additional viewings of his performances.  The more I watched him, the more I liked him. On the opposite end of the spectrum, the more I watched quarterback Matt Leinart the less confident I felt that he had the on-field makeup to become anything more than system player with fringe starter potential.

I share this because West Virginia receiver and return specialist Tavon Austin is one of those players where after my initial studies I have more questions than answers. Several draft analysts list Austin as one of the five best receiver prospects of the 2013 N.F.L. Draft class – including NFL Draft Scout and my buddy Josh Norris over at Rotoworld. I agree that the 5-9, 176-pound slot receiver and kick return specialist from West Virginia is among the most productive performers at his position in college football, but what I have seen of Austin continues to raise one question: Is there a slot receiver in pro football with the kind of marquee game that in hindsight would have deserved a first-day pick in April?

Read the rest at Football Outsiders

Reads Listens Views 10/19/2012

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Hat tip to E.C. Stoner for the Brees video.

Reads (Football)

Futures: Matt Barkley – This was last week’s column. Tomorrow’s analysis is on West Virginia Receiver Tavon Austin.

Russell Wilson’s Seam Pass to Zach Miller – Danny Kelly at Field Gulls is one of the cooler bloggers I’ve had the pleasure to interact with during my first year and a half doing this work. He has been extremely generous with posting my work on his site and I wish I had discovered his work as an analyst sooner. This is a fantastic piece on Russell Wilson that demonstrates why Wilson has skills to start in the N.F.L. Go ahead, bring up the 49ers game last night. You done? Good. Read.

A Former NFL Player’s Inside Scoop on Aaron RodgersIf you weren’t done about Wilson then I suggest this fascinating read about Rodgers at Cal from his former teammate Ryan Riddle. As usual, excellent stuff that describes a debut that left Rodgers crying the night away alone in his room. All quarterbacks go through rough patches.

New Grantland: Denver Dips Into the Old Colts Playbook for Some Vintage Peyton

Nick Saban Doesn’t Teach Back-Pedaling – Always good stuff at Smart Football.

Reads (Non-Football) Continue reading