Welcome to the "Original" Dynasty Rankings Fantasy Football Blog

This blog was born out of a Dynasty Rankings thread originally begun in October, 2006 at the Footballguys.com message boards. The rankings in that thread and the ensuing wall-to-wall discussion of player values and dynasty league strategy took on a life of its own at over 275 pages and 700,000 page views. The result is what you see in the sidebar under "Updated Positional Rankings": a comprehensive ranking of dynasty league fantasy football players by position on a tiered, weighted scale. In the tradition of the original footballguys.com Dynasty Rankings thread, intelligent debate is welcome and encouraged.

Monday, August 18, 2008

Quote of the Day | August 18, 2008: One of the Easily Overlooked Strengths

Michael MacCambridge's 2004 America's Game: The Epic Story of How Pro Football Captured a Nation:


With the growth of sports on television came the accompanying growth of the sports schedule. Competing leagues and sports had spread their tentacles into an all-consuming, overlapping mass in which major sports events were held virtually every day of the year. With more than 120 major sports franchises, 117 Division I-A college football teams, and 327 Division I college basketball teams, the calendar was clogged with an unending torrent of games, broadcasts, results, and previews. Along the way, the notion of sports as an oasis was often lost.

Against this context of constant activity, one of the NFL's great appeals was the built-in scarcity and compression of its action. In the space of six hours on most fall Sundays, fans could watch their own games and monitor almost all of the rest of that week's action, with only a single Sunday and Monday primetime game left. The action was immediate, surroundable, coherent and all the more exciting because, with so few games on the schedule, each one was of greater importance (the result of a single pro football game carried the same competitive weight as ten baseball games).

This was one of the easily overlooked strengths of the league, and perfectly complemented the exclusivity of its playoff structure. The two were interlinked, as the limited number of playoff spots invested almost every regular season game with tangible importance. For decades, there had been a tendency in all sports to increase the playoff field to maximize postseason revenue (more teams led to more games led to more money), and to keep more teams' fans interested throughout the season. The downside, as the NBA and NHL had learned in recent years, was that when every quality team was assured of a playoff spot, individual regular season games often held scant meaning. In basketball and hockey, the entire regular season served as little more than a very long and drawn-out qualifying head that would eliminate less than half the league's teams for the winner-take-all playoffs. In the NFL, where home field was more important than any other sport, the advantages that accrued to playoff teams were both valuable and clearly graduated, meaning even after a playoff berth was clinched, teams had compelling reasons to keep winning to improve their seed.


Tags: Michael MacCambridge, America's Game

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