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Friday, September 25, 2009

Matt Kemp, helping to lead Dodgers to the playoffs

By Jim Ingram
Fan Fanatic Sports Staff
If you haven't noticed, Matt Kemp has emerged as a budding superstar this season. Who is Matt Kemp? He's the bursting with talent center fielder for the Dodgers. After hitting a three run homer in last nights game, he's currently hitting .306 with 26 home runs, 100 RBI, 96 runs and 34 stolen bases. Not bad for a kid who turned 25 just two days ago, and is still learning to play the game of baseball. Not only are his numbers amazing, if he can keep his average about .300 he will become the first Dodger to ever hit .300, with 25 homers and 100+ RBI. While that is amazing, throw in the fact he's also stolen 30+ bases and should reach the 100 runs plateau. He's also done it all over the lineup. He's hit in every slot in the lineup except 3rd this season.
In my opinion, one of the best things to happen to Dodgers team was missing Manny Ramirez for 50 games. Yes, I know that sounds very odd, but it forced young stars like Kemp, and Andre Ethier to step up and take a leadership role on and off the field. Don't get me wrong, the Dodgers are a better team, and lineup, with Manny. Both Kemp and Ethier have been good run producers for the past two seasons, but have been very inconsistent going into this season. Both are young players and have matured greatly during the 2009 campaign.
If you look how young Kemp is and how much more he has to learn about the game, what he can, and most likely will, do in his career could be staggering. I think it's time people start to talk about him as one of the premier center fielders in the game.
Now he just needs to do it this Fall!

Fantasy Football: Post Week 2 Evaluations

By Jim Ingram
Fan Fanatic Sports Staff
The first two weeks of the NFL have come and gone, so how is your fantasy football team doing? Like the actual NFL, for most teams there is no need to panic. Of course if you've been decimated by injuries, that's another matter. So really, how do you feel about your fantasy football team? Like most years, I am involved with three different leagues. With the exception of the Fan Fanatic Sports Fantasy League, the other two teams have very similar rosters, but all three are 2-0 so far. Am I happy? Yes, I am, but also know it means absolutely nothing.
I am fascinated by the first few weeks of a fantasy football season. Why? I love to see the dash to pick up free agents off the waiver wire. I love to see which players fantasy owners have dumped so quickly. Don't get me wrong, I am often one of first to pick up a player, but try not to turn my roster over too early. So, the basis of this article today is to look at the 5 hottest pickups over the first two weeks and look at the long term viability of each player.
1. Mike Bell - Saints
Mike Bell has been producing like a #1 running back the first two weeks of the season. He's been nothing short of great, but did suffer a knee injury this past Sunday. There is no structural damage, but Pierre Thomas is being slowly worked back into the rotation. He will not be a starter, but it may be one of those bad luck years for Thomas. My suggestion is to ride Bell while you can, and stash just in case.
2. Steve Smith - Giants
If you play in a point per reception league, the "other" Steve Smith will be a very good play for you. He seems to be Eli Manning's go to guy, and that means a lot. He already has 16 receptions after two games and over 200 yards receiving. If you have him as your third fantasy receiver than you're doing very well for yourself. I doubt he's still available, but if he is, make sure to get him.
3. Mario Manningham - Giants
After making only 4 receptions in his rookie season, it looks like this former Michigan standout is actually going to have a career. From most reports, Manningham pretty much had no idea what he was doing last year. This year couldn't be any different. I doubt he'll ever be a great route runner, but his size and speed will lead to big plays. He will not be as reliable as teammate Steve Smith is by far a better play each week, but he definitely deserves to be on a fantasy roster, just not as a consistent starter.
4. Johnny Knox - Bears
No, this isn't the guy from Jack*ss. That's Johnny Knoxville. This rookie has absolutely burst onto the scene. He followed up a good first game by topping that with 6 receptions, 70 yards and a touchdown. Not bad for his 2nd career game. He has shown to be the only Bears receiver to be on the same page as Jay Cutler, and that means more than most people realize. I think he'll end up being the Bears most productive wide receiver on a team that desperately needs some consistency at that position.
5. Correll Buckhalter - Broncos
Buckhalter has been far more productive in his first two weeks than I thought he'd be. He only has a total of 17 carries for over 7 yards per carry. As the season goes on look for Knowshon Moreno to become the starter, but we are talking about a team that is coached by a former Bill Belichick. What does that mean? Josh McDaniels will most likely go with a running back by committee. I don't see him as a season long play.
Well, good luck to everyone in week 3, and make sure to check back every Friday for you fantasy football fix here at Fan Fanatic Sports

What we learned: ALWAYS take the underdog on Thursday

By Brendan Hall
Fan Fanatic Sports Staff


Greetings, from the "I told you so" department.

Every year, this seems to happen: SEC school delivers an upset of a top-five program, finishes the year on a big win streak, wins a bowl game, gets tons of preseason "hype" about being a "program on the rise", eventually gets overblown when everyone else suffers ticks and nicks.

Last year, it was Georgia and the ridiculous preseason No. 1 ranking they got, even as everyone in the program knew they were barely a top-ten program. This year, it's Houston Nutt's Ole Miss boys, who got stopped cold by an "upstart" South Carolina squad 16-10 last night in Columbia.

Strong finishes are one of the main reasons for all this hype. The other, it seems, stems from whether you have a bona fide top five draft pick in your backfield. The Dawgs had Matthew Stafford; the Rebels have Jevan Snead, who may go No. 1 next April. In Snead's case, he has the added benefit of playing for a guy who has produced many an offensive talent, of both legendary (Barry Sanders, Thurman Thomas) and lottery (Darren McFadden, Felix Jones, Hart Lee Dykes) status.

All that aside, Nutt knew, just as Mark Richt knew, his team was going to hit a bump at some point. A couple wins over some cupcake teams, and they've become the first team since South Florida and Boston College in 2007 to be totally out of their league being in the top five. There's no way the Rebels were worthy of a No. 4 ranking -- I question whether they're the best team in the SEC West. So with that in mind, what in the hell were they thinking scheduling a Thursday night game? Especially an away game? Do they pay attention at all?

And it's not like South Carolina is a world-beater of a program anyway. Lou Holtz could never get it done, and Steve Spurrier is finding the same struggles. They're forever a middling program, delivering the occasional upset but never capitalizing on the momentum. Christ, their two best players are a linebacker (Eric Norwood) and a kicker. Their quarterback is too busy posting party pictures of himself on Facebook and getting forearm shivers from referees.

A Thursday away game messes up many a football team's routine. Think about the inconvenience -- you should be studying for that Friday exam -- and then factor in all of the other variables: travel itenerary, walkthroughs, pre-game meals. For the home team, the only change in routine is merely the day of the week. For the away team, everything changes, and that can mess you up big-time.

Just look at all the upset victims on the visiting side Thursday in the previous three seasons: USC, West Virginia, South Florida, Louisville, Florida State, TCU, LSU...add Georgia Tech, FSU (again) and Ole Miss to that list now, and the fun will not cease as fall rages on.

Here are some other upsets you'll see in a few Thursdays:

Missouri over Nebraska, Oct. 8
South Florida over Cincinnati, Oct. 15
East Carolina over Virginia Tech, Nov. 5
Rutgers over South Florida, Nov. 12
Texas A&M over Texas, Nov. 26

-- Thought I'd share with you a recent letter I wrote to Sports Illustrated after reading their hackjob of a team preview on the Pats:

I'd like to thank Ben Reiter for wasting five minutes of my valuable time with his pseudo-scouting report of the New England Patriots. Not only did he become the 1,045th self-proclaimed "scribe" since 2005 to "lampoon" the Pats' much-ballyhooed frugality of quotes, but the deepest question he posed is if the Patriots are going to be better with Tom Brady back. Gee, thanks.

Maybe if Ben didn't spend so much time in his limited inches pretending to be so enamored by something that's been overwritten about for six years now (and adds nothing to what he's talking about), he'd actually have been able to divulge into things like: just how the team plans on using Julian Edelman; whether or not Shawn Springs and Leigh Bodden are an upgrade at cornerback; how much Fred Taylor has left in the tank; whether this linebacking corps is stronger in 2009. And then maybe I wouldn't have to go to Yahoo!, ESPN, the Herald or Boston.com to get the information I wanted, regretting that I could have spent the money I just wasted on SI on two coffees or a pack of smokes. If it wasn't for Peter King, Dr. Z and the occasional feature from Leigh Jenkins and Tim Layden, your football coverage wouldn't be worth the paper it's written on.

"Big Red"
Westminster, MA

P.S. I am also wondering how Andrew Perloff and Selena Roberts conned you guys into hiring them. I have a job interview coming up, so I need to know their secrets.


This is their response two days later:

Thank you for your comments, which will be shared with the senior editing staff.

Sincerely,
SI Letters Department


Hitting the big time?...kinda, sorta, maybe...awesome.

-- Watching these "FedEx Cup" highlights on SportsCenter...how many years until some dweeb shows up on the boob tube griping about how Tiger "always loses the big one"?

-- The guy on the left is Klitschko's next opponent. Seriously.

-- So the Paul Gonnella search is over. Dude is at...Miami. Yes, he's at the U as an assistant coach, and I can't think of a luckier guy. In the last three years he's held jobs at UNC, Tennessee and now Miami. Christ Almighty.

-- Mark Whicker, meet your foil. Lead from a gamer this week in a Wisconsin newspaper:

The nightmare of 9/11 will live forever in our minds and memories.

Fast forward eight years later and last Friday, Sept. 11 is a night the Sun Prairie High School football team, coaching staff and Cardinal fans hope can soon be forgotten. Dealt a 22-0 halftime deficit by Madison Memorial in a Big Eight Conference football game at Ashley Field, the Cardinals made an inspiring comeback in the second half but never fully recovered, falling to the Spartans, 22-14.


Another example of why people no longer read newspapers.

-- Text convo of the week:
(978) Just saw a guy with a "PS3" tattoo on his leg
(413) WTF???
(978) Hope he knows it's permanent
(413) That'd be like, imagine if my grandfather got a tattoo of his favorite choo-choo train when he was a kid.