Tuesday, August 23, 2011

2011 Fantasy Football Rankings by Position

By Edgar Walker


It’s late August, a time of change as kids return to school and most of the country’s joyous Summer vacations wind down. For many sports fans however, late August means one thing; fantasy football.

Many of you will be taking part in fantasy drafts over the next two weeks, and here at MVP Sports Talk, we want to make it easier for you to succeed in your league. Check out our top 10 fantasy football rankings by position. If the player has a parenthesis to the right of their name, the number inside that parenthesis is the player’s overall rank.

QB:

  1. Aaron Rodgers, GB (5)
  2. Philip Rivers, SD (8)
  3. Drew Brees, NO (12)
  4. Tom Brady, NE (14)
  5. Michael Vick, PHI (18)
  6. Matt Ryan, ATL (20)
  7. Ben Roethlisberger, PIT (21)
  8. Peyton Manning, IND (25)
  9. Matt Schaub, HOU
  10. Tony Romo, DAL

RB:

  1. Arian Foster, HOU (1)
  2. Jamaal Charles, KC (2)
  3. Chris Johnson, TEN (3)
  4. Adrian Peterson, MIN (4)
  5. Ray Rice, BAL (6)
  6. Maurice Jones-Drew, JAX (7)
  7. Frank Gore, SF (11)
  8. LeSean McCoy, PHI (13)
  9. Michael Turner, ATL (16)
  10. Rashard Mendenhall, PIT (17)

WR:

  1. Calvin Johnson, DET (9)
  2. Roddy White, ATL (10)
  3. Andre Johnson, HOU (15)
  4. Greg Jennings, GB (19)
  5. Dwayne Bowe, KC (22)
  6. DeSean Jackson, PHI (23)
  7. Larry Fitzgerald, ARZ (24)
  8. Hakeem Nicks, NYG
  9. Reggie Wayne, IND
  10. Mike Wallace, PIT

TE:

  1. Jason Witten, DAL
  2. Antonio Gates, SD
  3. Dallas Clark, IND
  4. Vernon Davis, SF
  5. Mercedes Lewis, JAX
  6. Jermichael Finley, GB
  7. Jimmy Graham, NO
  8. Tony Gonzalez, ATL
  9. Dustin Keller, NYJ
  10. Brandon Pettigrew, DET

D/ST:

  1. Green Bay Packers
  2. Pittsburgh Steelers
  3. New England Patriots
  4. New York Jets
  5. Philadelphia Eagles
  6. Baltimore Ravens
  7. Detroit Lions
  8. Chicago Bears
  9. San Diego Chargers
  10. San Francisco 49ers

Edgar Walker is a young, Baltimore-based sportswriter. Check out his work on Baltimore Sports Report, or follow him on Twitter.


Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Miami Booster Scandal

If you have seen the allegations made by University of Miami Booster Nevin Shapiro about benefits he gave players, coaches, and recruits you are probably just as shocked as us that the U was able to turn a blind eye on the scandals and wide array of NCAA violations that occurred between Shapiro's affiliation with the school in 2002 and his arrest on allegations of a $930million ponzi scheme in 2010. At first I was unsure about the facts behind the case and thought his argument was a little bit far fetched. After I read Yahoo Sport's Writer Charles Robinson's report on the situation which he broke yesterday after hundreds of hours of research and interviews and I can see clearly that The school and their staff knew what was going on and just decided not to report it.

I have always understood why college athletes would take money and benefits from agents and boosters. The athletes are college students, people who are generally not the richest in the first place. These benefits let them splurge a little bit and help the players out. What I don't understand is why the school didn't report it. It only makes it worse for them, because in today's world, eventually the media is going to break every major violation and eventually you will have to pay for your actions, so why not just fess up then and take lesser consequences. Because of the sheer number of players and the length of time and money this involved, I only see one punishment that will fit. The University of Miami, one of the historically great football programs will receive the Death Penalty.

-A

Sunday, August 14, 2011

SEC does not extend invite to Texas A&M

Despite what many people think, it was Texas A&M that approached the SEC, not the other way around, about joining the conference. Although the Southeastern Conference showed interest in Texas A&M last season, the vote to extend an invite fell through, partly because they couldn't find a fourteenth team to add to the conference. The Aggies, upset about ESPN's Texas Longhorn Network and the power it would give the school among other problems in the Big 12, hoped tojoin the SEC in competition this fall. About the issue of conference expansion, University of Florida President Bernie Machen, the chairman of the league's presidents and chancellors committee, said that meetings on Sunday "reaffirmed our satisfaction with the present 12 institutional alignment." Even though they are satisfied for now, he did leave the door open for expansion in the future saying "We recognize, however, that future conditions may make it advantageous to expand the number of institutions in the league," Machen said. "We discussed criteria and process associated with expansion. No action was taken with respect to any institution including Texas A&M."

MVP Sports Talk will stay updated on this matter

-A

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Texas A&M Set to Join SEC

Texas A&M is expected to announce Monday that it will be moving to the SEC to play in College Football's premier conference. The SEC is also in pursuit of getting A&M rival Big 12 school Missouri and two ACC Schools, Clemson and Florida State, to join the conference and possibly having schools that are less than competitive in its feature sport be dismissed from the conference at least in football. If they do keep all of their schools, it will become what would be the first true "Power Conference" and provide as an example for other conferences looking into expansion.

*Update* Missouri's Athletic Director has said that the school will not be joining the SEC but we will follow that matter and provide further information as it becomes available.

-A

Thursday, August 11, 2011

The American League Wild Card Race

We at MVP Sports Talk are happy to announce that we have a new member joining our writers. Jacob Adler, who has guest posted for us before will be joining us as our new head baseball writer. You can visit his sports blog The Nerd with the Sports Report here, and follow him on twitter @jacobadler

The wild card situation is odd. When the spots were added, traditionalists were outraged while the supporters claimed that it was the right thing to do since sometimes there were great teams missing the playoffs because they had a division rival with a better record. Since it has been implemented in 1995, four wild card teams have won the World Series, most recently with the 2004 Red Sox and has been just another mark of the Bud Selig era, angering traditionalists while pleasing some “modern” fans. Even though there is talk of another wild card spot to give teams in the AL East a break (they have the Yankees, Red Sox, and Rays), this year there is only one per league and a team in the AL East will most likely take the wild card, with the Yankees taking the final playoff spot

I don’t think that anybody that is sane expects a team not in the AL East to get the wild card. Yes, that’s a double negative, but think about it. With the poor performance from the Minnesota Twins this year, the AL East boasts three of the best four American League teams in the Yankees, Red Sox, and Rays, with only the Rangers from the west rounding out the top four. Overall, I’d rank the teams Red Sox, Rangers, Yankees, and Rays, although I think you can make a case for any of the first three to be at the top. The Rangers have a two game lead over the Angels for the AL West crown, but are four games behind the Yankees, who are sitting in second place behind Boston.

Really, I’m not sure how the Angels are still in the race, but they could try to copy the 2001 Diamondbacks duo of Curt Schilling and Randy Johnson with Dan Haren and Jered Weaver, but I don’t think that will happen. Although they both were phenomenal in the first half, especially Weaver with his sub-2.00 earned-run average, Haren is known to be better in the first half than second and Weaver’s peripherals show he has the tools to do what he’s doing but with the exception of the ERA part. Weaver’s lowest qualified ERA was his 3.01 mark last year, and obviously that number is not 1.78, but back to the Angels, I think if they end up taking the division it will be because of a Rangers collapse or an extreme hot streak.

I think the Rangers are the X-factor in the race, controlling the race. If they take the division, I think the Yankees will beat the Angels for the wild card, but if they don’t, the Yankees are in trouble. The Rangers didn’t make a move for a big bat at the trade deadline, but made their bullpen even better with the addition of Mike Adams and Koji Uehara. Their rotation with C.J. Wilson, Alexi Ogando, Derek Holland, Colby Lewis, and 2011-breakout Matt Harrison is definitely deep enough for a playoff run but you never know with injuries, which could possibly be the Achilles’’ heel of this team. Stars Nelson Cruz and Josh Hamilton are frequently on the DL and the Rangers’ lineup is quite weak without those two bats. I think the American League West is theirs for the taking, but I don’t see them getting the wild card because they have to be pretty sloppy to lose the division.

The Boston Red Sox have an interesting situation. With the emergence of Josh Reddick in the outfield, the Red Sox continue to strengthen their lineup (although one could argue they weakened it with the addition of Carl Crawford) and are possibly strong at every position except for shortstop, where they are slightly above average with their Jed Lowrie/Marco Scutaro platoon. What will make the difference for the rest of the year is the rotation, where the role of the third starter is in question. Obviously, Josh Beckett will be the #1 with his great comeback numbers this year, and leukemia-survivor and no-hitter-thrower Jon Lester as the #2, there is no clear number three. The Sox have Tim Wakefield, who has been a much-needed help this year, former phenom Andrew Miller, the now-injured Clay Buchholz, newly acquired Erik Bedard, and John Lackey, who has proved how much he was not worth his contract two years ago. I think Miller is definitely out of the question, Wakefield will be limited to long relief because he is a 45-year old knuckleballer, and I’m not sure about Buchholz’s status with his injury and if and when he will return this year. That leaves Bedard and Lackey. This is more playoffs than wild card race, but if the Red Sox draw the Yankees during the playoffs, Lackey will be in the rotation, especially after his recent performance against the Bombers. He out-pitched CC Sabathia, and has been great against New York, a trait that means he could have a positive future with the Red Sox after all, but Bedard, the former ace of the Baltimore Orioles, has had a good overall year so far while Lackey and his 6.14 ERA have not. The key for the Red Sox’ playoff hopes is to find who they want playing in the meaningful games, and if they can do that and make the right decisions, they will make the playoffs, most likely with the AL East title.
I am doing the Yankees last because this is on the wild card, and I think the Yankees have the best shot at it. Why? They didn’t make any big moves at the non-waiver trade deadline, and they have put together a good, although unlikely rotation. Among the unlikely are former-Cy Young winner Bartolo Colon, Freddy Garcia, and Ivan Nova. They are joined by ace CC Sabathia and A.J. Burnett. There was a big question mark in spring training about who would close out the Yankees after Sabathia, Burnett, and Phil Hughes, but Colon, Garcia, and Nova have taken advantage of Phil Hughes surprisingly poor performance this season and have take advantage to the fullest, each making at least 20 starts and all having earned-run averages of 3.85 and under. Also, with the continuing troubles of Joba Chamberlain and this season Rafael Soriano, David Robertson has been invaluable to them with his 1.38 ERA and 13.99 K/BB ratio. The biggest reason that I think the Yankees will win the wild card is that they are good, but simply not as good as the Boston Red Sox. They lost to the Rangers in the ALCS last season, but I strongly think Texas’s bullpen acquisitions will lead them to the AL West crown. In other words, the Yankees are good, but not too good.
I do think the Yankees will get the wild card, but here are a few interesting situations:
Yankees go really hot, along with Angels, bypass Red Sox and Rangers. Advantage Red Sox. Although I think the Rangers are more equipped for the playoffs, I think it will simply come down to management. I respect Ron Washington and he is one of the best managers in the game today, but you got to think that Terry Francona will be higher on that list. You have to account for how hot the Red Sox have been since their 2-10 start in April, and when the Red Sox are healthy and playing well they can be the best team in the majors.
Yankees vs. Rangers.
Rangers win because of the Yankees rotation. I was just talking about how great it has been, but Sabathia and Burnett won’t cut it. The reason that their mediocre pitching goes unnoticed is that the Yankees score a lot of runs. Really, Burnett has a 4.60 ERA and like Lackey, has proven to his club that he is not an elite pitcher deserving of a huge contract. I think I’m also not giving the Rangers enough credit for their World Series appearance and how well they’ve done without Cruz and Hamilton when they are out and in the offseason picking up Mike Napoli. Like the Rangers didn’t have enough power already. Anyway, the Rangers are a good team and I think the only team that could keep Texas from a playoff spot is the Red Sox (and technically the Angels if they overtake Nolan Ryan’s club in the division).

I didn’t mention the Rays because there is an extremely small chance that they could overtake either of their division opponents for a playoff spot.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Analyzing the Trade Deadline

By Guest Writer Jacob Adler
You can visit his sports blog The Nerd with the Sports Report here, and follow him on twitter @jacobadler

The trade deadline in baseball is one of the more exciting parts of baseball, as there is a flurry of trades in a short time period. Teams looking for an extra boost exchange prospects for role players, rentals, or stars. Teams out of contention trade away guys that aren't in their future for guys that will. And some teams just sit back and relax. What I'm about to do is analyze the few trades that I think will make a difference.

1) Hunter Pence to the Phillies
The Phillies were in obvious need of a right fielder and they got an All-Star in Pence (albeit with Houston). They were in the running for Carlos Beltran but backed out of the way because they didn't want a rental player. With Pence, he will be in the lineup for this year and next, because his contract expires at the end of next year. By then, Philly will have their right field problems solved with either Dominic Brown or Pence starting in right field, whoever Charlie Manuel and Ruben Amaro Jr. think is the answer. Now to what the Phillies gave up, they gave Houston GM Ed Wade top prospects Jarred Cosart and Jonathan Singleton while also handing over Josh Zeid. Cosart, a starter, and the first baseman Singleton were the Phillies' top two prospects behind Dominic Brown, while Zeid is a 2nd-tier prospect that has struggled in the minors this year with a 5.65 earned-run average at Double-A Redding after spotting 2.93 in Single-A ball last year. Back to Pence, it is obvious how much the Phillies believe in the 28-year old right fielder because of his price tag, but with .307 batting average to go along with 11 homers and 63 RBI, Pence is the right-handed batter the Phillies need in their lefty-stacked lineup.

2) Michael Bourn to the Braves
Like their division counterpart Philadelphia, Atlanta added an outfielder at the deadline, getting the speedy center fielder Bourn, also from Houston, who leads the majors in steals with 39. Atlanta GM Frank Wren was also pursuing the previously mentioned Pence, Carlos Beltran, and Ryan Ludwick. Wren decided not to pull in the switch-hitting Beltran because he didn't want to give up a top pitching prospect like Mike Minor or Arodys Vizcaino (Julio Teheran was way off-limits) because that price was not worth it "for a rental." Many Braves players such as Chipper Jones were on board with the acquisition because it gave Atlanta a much-needed pure leadoff man, which the Braves, "haven't had that kind of threat in the top of [the] lineup in a long time" said Jones, as the Braves' last pure leadoff man had been Kenny Lofton back in the 1990s. This move makes more sense than Atlanta getting Pence, Beltran, or Ludwick because it gives the Braves both a centerfielder and a leadoff man (Beltran is the only one that can play center but he prefers right and none of them can bat in the #1 slot).

3) Derrek Lee to the Pirates
Although a shout-out goes to the Texas Rangers, who yesterday added Koji Uehara and today Mike Adams, solidifying their bullpen, the final trade that will have a big influence on how the rest of the season plays out is not the Adams trade nor the Fister/Pauley trade but the Derrek Lee trade. Last night, Lee was traded to Pittsburgh for first base prospect Aaron Baker. Why is this an important trade? The Pirates are currently in third in the NL Central, but they are above .500 and have played well this season as a whole. Most people know that whatever the Pirates do influences the Wild Card race as well as the NL Central race, as Pittsburgh is only 3.5 games out of the division lead and 7.5 back in the Wild Card. By adding Lee, the Pirates are gambling that Lee can be the playoff-experienced veteran they need to finish out the year strong and hopefully make the playoffs. However, he has been to four postseasons and the only time his team made it out of the first round (2003 Florida Marlins), Lee batted .208 with only one homer. If Lee performs well the rest of the season and if something happens to the Brewers (I'm not considering the Cardinals as a threat because of the Pujols free agent talk and lack of Adam Wainwright), then the Pirates could have a legitimate shot at playing in October.