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Drew
Brees headlines the Saints and my fantasy team...........
And
Miles Austin should boost the Boyz and dem Crabs
Photo by Chris Graythen - Getty
Photo
- by Kvork Djansezian - Getty
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It’s hard to even discuss the Mets at
all these hot dreary
days but when other distractions are so much more fun than watching
weak
groundouts and strikeouts, it’s really impossible.
Why concentrate on a minor league team?
Besides, football’s starting, the
baseball races for playoff
spots are heating up, there’s a hurricane coming and the U.S. Open is
proceeding along without Serena just fine, thank you.
Fantasy Football dominates my
attentions early on in the football
season every year as my fan interest in the Giants and Jets isn’t
revved up
yet. My draft was this past Sunday and I’m
as happy as the proverbial pig in the poke, as hopeful as Bob Baffert
on Derby
Day. With Drew Brees as my quarterback,
all other considerations become secondary.
And Drew will have Miles Austin to
throw to on my scrappy
Dem Crabs team. That’s on one side, the
other will be manned by another speedster with hands, a fellow named
Percy
Harvin, as in Favre to Harvin on a Vikings team missing Sidney Rice as
a big
secondary target. Will that help his
numbers?
If Harvin can’t face all those
double-teams, I can only
throw in the likes of Bobby Meacham, whose numbers can only improve
this year
as he competes with Marques Colston and Devery Henderson for playing
time. Or, if Bobby should falter, there’s
Indi’s
Austin Collie to steady those numbers, like one of those center horses
on Ben
Hur’s chariot team.
Running backs were hard to come by
once again for me this
year, having gone for a qb with my first pick, but Denver’s Knowshon
Moreno is
one of those young backs who figure to get even more carries in his
second year for the Broncos.
The Lions’ first round draft choice, Jahvid
Best, looked terrific in one exhibition I’ve seen, and the Lions will
put points
on the board this year, having beefed up that offense to protect Calvin
Johnson. Besides, if the Lions were so
stuck on the likes of Kevin Smith as their main horse in the running
game, they
wouldn’t have wasted a first-rounder on good ol’ Mr. Best.
At tight end, it would be difficult to
be happier. San Francisco’s Vernon Davis
is one of the
leaders of that Niners offense and Alex Smith seems to really like
throwing his
way, to the tune of 965 yards and 13 touchdowns last year.
If he and wideout Michael
Crabtree don’t kill each other on the
practice field, they should both enjoy good seasons.
Managing to grab the Ravens as my
defensive unit was
fortuitous as that unit has been a top unit year after year for a lot
of
years. And the Bengals figure to
continue to surprise in 2010 after showing up big last year.
If Brees should go down, and I hate to
even think it could
happen, I nabbed Donovan McNabb as his backup at quarterback. McNabb didn’t waste any time twisting his
ankle
but should return soon to an offense that has potential, what with
Clinton
Portis hitting the line hard and Santana Moss returning to prominence
now that
Jason Campbell is gone, along with his slow reactions to just about
every
situation. I feel for the Raiders who
seem to think he’ll revive their game.
But one of the best features of this
formidable fantasy
squad of Crawlers is the reserve squad at running back.
For a Giants fan, playing both Ahmad Bradshaw
and Brandon Jacobs at running back sure seems like a relatively
riskless running
alternative, not to mention what positive effect it’ll have on my
viewing
pleasure on Sundays. Grabbing Lawrence
Tynes as my kicker will just enhance the overall effect.
As for the G-Men’s chances this year,
I can’t be that
optimistic after watching the defense have trouble with the Ravens on
third
downs. While the pass rush shows every
sign of improving, they weren’t quick enough to protect that
linebacking and
secondary crew. The offensive line hasn’t
really clicked yet either and injuries along the front could just
prolong their
coming together as a unit.
They can’t possibly be as bad as they
were last year, can
they? With the return of Phillips and no
more CC Brown , things have got to be better. But
will they be good enough to beat a Panthers team
in the opener, one
that thrashed them late last year 41-9? Their
QB, Matt Moore had a ridiculous 139.8 passer
rating in that one,
completing 15-20 and throwing 3 TD passes. Some
pretty smart football folks think Carolina will
be the most
improved team in the NFL this year.
Oh, and Jonathan Stewart rushed for
206 yards in that
one. The Giants stopped nothing that
day. Can Antrel Rolle and Keith Bulluck
make that much of a difference? The
answer is “maybe”. A new defensive
coordinator and scheme could make all the difference.
But it’s the players that have to make the
difference on the field. The depth chart
still shows Phillips only backing up at safety and Jonathon Goff is the
middle
linebacker. I don’t expect the Giants to
win that opener, or the one against the Colts after that.
It’ll be all uphill for the G-Men this year.
The Jets are a different story. They’re a hard team to like, to be
honest. Tannenbaum makes me sick. So does that Scott fella.
On the other hand, it’s easy to like Sanchez
at QB and Rex Ryan as the coach. But
Darrell Revis was the star of the defense and Tannenbaum didn’t save
any money
to sign him. Yeah, you can say he was
already under contract but as Michael Corleone once said, “C’mon Kaye,
who’s
being naïve now”?
The Jets were also incredibly lucky
last year. That unprecedented luck of
catching Indi and
Cincinnati after they’d already wrapped up playoff spots won’t be
repeated. And opening up against
Baltimore and New England, and then to Miami, that’s no easy road
either.
Mets? Who
cares?