Thursday Mar 11

Football

Written by Ben Pogany
User Rating: / 2
PoorBest 

1) Doritos- Little Black Kid

2) LeBron v Superman

3) E*Trade- Gotta Love the Babies

4) Doritos- Snack Samurai

5) Bud Light- Autotune ft. T-Pain

6) Career Builder- Dudes in Underwear

7) Bud Light- Lost Spoof

8) Teleflora- "Don't Touch Me"

9) Boost Mobile- The Boost Mobile Shuffle

10) Bud Light- Light House


PS: How much are we guessing CBS paid The Who to play 'Who Are You' in their set?  And how sad is that the second that song started, almost everyone in the room immediately thought "Oh, its the CSI song"?

PPS: How 'Favre' is it that that little shit would try to bogart all the attention that should be on Peyton and Brees with yet another "I can't decide whether or not I want to retire, how adorable am I?" commercial?  Ugh!

PPPS: WHO DAT? WHO DAT? WHO DAT SAY DEY GONNA BEAT DEM SAINTS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

 
Written by Ben Pogany

Absolute MUST READ piece on the true story of the life and crimes of Marvin Harrison, former "squeaky-clean" hall-of-fame receiver for the Indianapolis Colts.  This will blow your mind....

The Dirtiest Player
By Jason Fagone
GQ
February 2010 Issue


"...Nixon was across the street and thirty yards away when [Marvin] Harrison started shooting. Pop pop pop pop pop pop—a great staccato gust of bullets. Steadily, Nixon says, Harrison unloaded both guns into the fat man's car, stippling the red Toyota Tundra with bullet holes as the fat man ducked in his seat. Eventually, the fat man sat up and sped off, heading straight toward Nixon's position as Harrison darted into the street and continued to shoot....

"...On September 3, 1991, when Marvin Woods [Harrison's half-brother] was 17, he was playing in the championship game of a schoolyard hoops league when his coach took him out of the game, subbing in another boy. Woods got angry. He left the game. When he rode back on his bike, twenty minutes later, he was carrying a Tec-9. He sprayed his substitute with bullets, killing him, and rode off. Marvin Woods is currently serving a life sentence for first-degree murder at the State Correctional Institution in Dallas, Pennsylvania. ..."

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE

Written by Ben Pogany

--The BCS National Championship Game rotates among the sites of the BCS bowls.  The title sponsor of the BCS National Championship Game each year will be the same as that of the bowl game in that year's host location.
--The game was first played at the conclusion of the 1998 college football season in accordance with the agreement reached by the Big Ten and Pac-10 conferences and the Rose Bowl Game to join the members of the former "Bowl Alliance" to create the Bowl Championship Series. The Bowl Alliance and its predecessor, the Bowl Coalition, featured championship games from 1992 through 1997. However, these were hindered by the lack of potential participation by the champions of the Big Ten or Pac-10.
--The game was initially rotated among the four participating bowl games, the (Rose Bowl, Orange Bowl, Fiesta Bowl, and Sugar Bowl). However, beginning with the 2006 season, the BCS National Championship Game became a separate event played at the same site as a host bowl a week following New Year's Day.
--Results:
January 4, 1999  Tennessee (SEC) 23 Florida State (ACC) 16
January 4, 2000  Florida State (ACC) 46 Virginia Tech (Big East) 29
January 3, 2001  Oklahoma (Big 12) 13 Florida State (ACC) 2
January 3, 2002  Miami (Big East) 37 Nebraska (Big 12) 14
January 3, 2003  Ohio State (Big Ten) 31 Miami (Big East) 24
January 4, 2004  LSU (SEC) 21  Oklahoma (Big 12) 14
January 4, 2005  USC (Pac-10) 55  Oklahoma (Big 12) 19
January 8, 2007  Florida (SEC) 41  Ohio State (Big Ten) 14
January 7, 2008  LSU (SEC) 38  Ohio State (Big Ten) 24
January 8, 2009  Florida (SEC) 24  Oklahoma (Big 12) 14
January 7, 2010 Alabama (SEC) vs. Texas (Big 12)

Written by Ben Pogany

--The GMAC Bowl has been played annually at Ladd Peebles Stadium in Mobile, Alabama since 1999.
--From 1999 to 2009, it pitted a Conference USA team against a team from either the Mid-American Conference or the Western Athletic Conference.
--For the game to be played in 2010 the ACC was to participate in the bowl as its ninth bowl tie-in, replacing the Humanitarian Bowl in Boise, Idaho, in the conference's postseason lineup, but the ACC failed to have sufficient bowl-eligible teams to fill the slot. The Mid-American Conference is the other conference tie-in.
--The game was previously known as the Mobile Alabama Bowl from 1999 to 2000 until it received corporate sponsorship from GMAC Financial Services, formerly a unit of General Motors.
--The 2001 game between the Marshall Thundering Herd and East Carolina Pirates set the record as the highest scoring bowl game of all time, and Marshall achieved what was then the greatest scoring comeback in Bowl history. In this contest, Marshall battled back from a 38–8 deficit to win 64–61 in double overtime. Thundering Herd quarterback Byron Leftwich threw for 576 yards in the game.
--Results:
December 22, 1999 TCU 28 East Carolina 14
December 20, 2000 Southern Miss 28 TCU 21
December 19, 2001 Marshall 64 East Carolina 61 (2 OT)
December 18, 2002 Marshall 38 Louisville 15
December 18, 2003 Miami (OH) 49 Louisville 28
December 22, 2004 Bowling Green 52 Memphis 35
December 21, 2005 Toledo 45 UTEP 13
January 7, 2007 Southern Miss 28 Ohio 7
January 6, 2008 Tulsa 63 Bowling Green 7
January 6, 2009 Tulsa 45 Ball State 13
January 6, 2010 Troy vs. Central Michigan

Written by Ben Pogany

--The Orange Bowl is played at LandShark Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.
--FedEx has been the sponsor since 1989. 
--The Orange Bowl has been played annually since 1935.
--In 1932, George Hussey organized the first Palm Festival Game, predecessor of the Orange Bowl. With Miami suffering from both the Great Depression and the Florida land bust, Hussey and others sought to help its economy by organizing a game similar to Pasadena's Rose Bowl.  Following the success of these games, backers organized another game for New Year's Day 1935 under the Orange Bowl name.
--The Orange Bowl is the fourth-oldest bowl game in the country, behind the Rose Bowl, the Sun Bowl, and the Sugar Bowl.
--The Orange Bowl hosted the BCS National Championship Game in 2001 and 2005.
--Since 2007 the Orange Bowl has been host to the ACC champion unless they are involved in the national championship game.
--Results
January 1, 1935 Bucknell 26 Miami (FL) 0
January 1, 1936 Catholic University 20 Mississippi 19
January 1, 1937 Duquesne 13 Mississippi State 12
January 1, 1938 Auburn 6 Michigan State 0
January 2, 1939 Tennessee 17 Oklahoma 0
January 1, 1940 Georgia Tech 21 Missouri 7
January 1, 1941 Mississippi State 14 Georgetown 7
January 1, 1942 Georgia 40 TCU 26
January 1, 1943 Alabama 37 Boston College 21
January 1, 1944 LSU 19 Texas A&M 14
January 1, 1945 Tulsa 26 Georgia Tech 12
January 1, 1946 Miami (FL) 13 Holy Cross 6
January 1, 1947 Rice 8 Tennessee 0
January 1, 1948 Georgia Tech 20 Kansas 14
January 1, 1949 Texas 41 Georgia 28
January 2, 1950 Santa Clara 21 Kentucky 13
January 1, 1951 Clemson 15 Miami(FL) 14
January 1, 1952 Georgia Tech 17 Baylor 14
January 1, 1953 Alabama 61 Syracuse 6
January 1, 1954 Oklahoma 7 Maryland 0
January 1, 1955 Duke 34 Nebraska 7
January 2, 1956 Oklahoma 20 Maryland 6
January 1, 1957 Colorado 27 Clemson 21
January 1, 1958 Oklahoma 48 Duke 21
January 1, 1959 Oklahoma 21 Syracuse 6

Written by Ben Pogany

--The Fiesta Bowl is played annually at the University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona.
--Between its origination in 1971 and 2006, the game was hosted in Tempe, Arizona at Sun Devil Stadium.
--The Fiesta Bowl was born from the WAC's frustrated attempts to obtain bowl invitations for its champions.
--On January 1, 2007, the undefeated Boise State Broncos won by defeating the Oklahoma Sooners 43–42 in overtime. It has been called one of the greatest college football games ever played, due to the combination of an underdog team, trick plays, comebacks by each team and a thrilling overtime finish.
--In 1998, the Fiesta Bowl became part of the BCS.
--The 2010 Fiesta Bowl matchup of  #4 TCU against #6 Boise State is the first time two undefeated teams will face each other in a BCS game outside of the National Championship.
--Results:
December 27, 1971 Arizona State 45 Florida State 38
December 23, 1972 Arizona State 49 Missouri 35
December 21, 1973 Arizona State 28 Pittsburgh 7
December 28, 1974 Oklahoma State 16 BYU 6
December 26, 1975 Arizona State 17 Nebraska 14
December 25, 1976 Oklahoma 41 Wyoming 7
December 25, 1977 Penn State 42 Arizona State 30
December 25, 1978 Arkansas 10 UCLA 10
December 25, 1979 Pittsburgh 16 Arizona 10
December 26, 1980 Penn State 31 Ohio State 19
January 1, 1982 Penn State 26 Southern California 10
January 1, 1983 Arizona State 32 Oklahoma 21
January 2, 1984 Ohio State 28 Pittsburgh 23
January 1, 1985 UCLA 39 Miami 37
January 1, 1986 Michigan 27 Nebraska 23
January 2, 1987 Penn State 14 Miami 10
January 1, 1988 Florida State 31 Nebraska 28
January 2, 1989 Notre Dame 34 West Virginia 21
January 1, 1990 Florida State 41 Nebraska 17
January 1, 1991 Louisville 34 Alabama 7
January 1, 1992 Penn State 42 Tennessee 17
January 1, 1993 Syracuse 26 Colorado 22
January 1, 1994 Arizona 29 Miami 0
January 2, 1995 Colorado 41 Notre Dame 24
January 2, 1996 Nebraska 62 Florida 24
January 1, 1997 Penn State 38 Texas 15
December 31, 1997 Kansas State 35 Syracuse 18
January 4, 1999 Tennessee 23 Florida State 16 (National Championship)
January 2, 2000 Nebraska 31 Tennessee 21
January 1, 2001 Oregon State 41 Notre Dame 9
January 1, 2002 Oregon 38 Colorado 16
January 3, 2003 Ohio State 31 Miami 24 (2 OT) (National Championship)
January 2, 2004 Ohio State 35 Kansas State 28
January 1, 2005 Utah 35 Pittsburgh 7
January 2, 2006 Ohio State 34 Notre Dame 20
January 1, 2007 Boise State 43 Oklahoma 42 (OT)
January 2, 2008 West Virginia 48 Oklahoma 28
January 5, 2009 Texas 24 Ohio State 21
January 4, 2010 TCU vs. Boise State

Written by Ben Pogany

--The Rose Bowl Game has been played on January 1 at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California for 95 years.
--When New Year's Day falls on a Sunday, the game is then played on the following Monday.
--The Rose Bowl is nicknamed "The Granddaddy of Them All" because it is the oldest bowl game, first played in 1902, and continuously since 1916.
--Originally titled the "Tournament East-West football game," the first Rose Bowl was played on January 1, 1902, starting the tradition of New Year's Day bowl games. The inaugural game featured Fielding Yost's dominating 1901 Michigan team which crushed Stanford University by a score of 49–0 after Stanford quit in the third quarter. The game was so lopsided that for the next 15 years, the Tournament of Roses officials ran chariot races, ostrich races, and other various events instead of football.  However, on New Year's Day 1916, football returned to stay as The State College of Washington defeated Brown University in the first annual Rose Bowl.
--Since 1945, it has been the highest attended college football bowl game.
--It is a part of the Tournament of Roses "America's New Year Celebration".
--USC has won the most Rose Bowls (24), followed by Michigan (8), Washington (7), and Ohio State (6). Michigan has lost the most (12), followed by USC (9), UCLA and Ohio State (7 each).
--The most frequent Rose Bowl matchup is USC-Michigan, occurring for the eighth time in 2007, with USC holding a 6–2 advantage.
--In 2002 and 2006, the Rose Bowl game was also the BCS National Championship Game.
--In the current BCS alignment, the Rose Bowl will host the designated Big Ten and Pac-10 representatives unless they are involved in the national championship game.
--Results:
January 1, 1902 Michigan 49 Stanford 0 notes
January 1, 1916 Washington State 14 Brown 0
January 1, 1917 Oregon 14 Pennsylvania 0
January 1, 1918 Mare Is. - USMC 19 Camp Lewis - US Army 7
January 1, 1919 Great Lakes - US Navy 17 Mare Island 0
January 1, 1920 Harvard 7 Oregon 6
January 1, 1921 California 28 Ohio State 0
January 2, 1922 California 0 Washington & Jefferson 0
January 1, 1923 Southern California 14 Penn State 3
January 1, 1924 Washington 14 Navy 14
January 1, 1925 Notre Dame 27 Stanford 10
January 1, 1926 Alabama 20 Washington 19
January 1, 1927 Alabama 7 Stanford 7
January 2, 1928 Stanford 7 Pittsburgh 6
January 1, 1929 Georgia Tech 8 California 7
January 1, 1930 Southern California 47 Pittsburgh 14
January 1, 1931 Alabama 24 Washington State 0
January 1, 1932 Southern California 21 Tulane 12
January 2, 1933 Southern California 35 Pittsburgh 0
January 1, 1934 Columbia 7 Stanford 0
January 1, 1935 Alabama 29 Stanford 13
January 1, 1936 Stanford 7 SMU 0
January 1, 1937 Pittsburgh 21 Washington 0
January 1, 1938 California 13 Alabama 0
January 2, 1939 Southern California 7 Duke 3
January 1, 1940 Southern California 14 Tennessee 0

Written by Ben Pogany

Another college football season is in the books, and we're left with a national championship most of us can feel pretty good about (minus the fact that the team they beat lost their star quarterback in the first 5 minutes of the game or that the team that currently sits at #2 team also went undefeated.)  Still, Bama is truly a great team and really can't be blamed for a broken system.  They are also now all tied up with Notre Dame for the most national championships in 1-A history with 12.  So while there may still be some debate about who really should have been the big winner this bowl season, one thing seems for certain: Charlie Weis and his Fightin' Irish were certainly the big losers....

Here's how the top 50 finally stacked up:

  1. Alabama (SEC)-SEC Champions, National Championships (beat Texas)
  2. Boise St (WAC)-WAC Champions, Beat TCU in Fiesta Bowl
  3. Texas (Big 12)-Big 12 Champions, Lost National Championship to Alabama
  4. Florida (SEC)-Beat Cincinnati in Sugar Bowl
  5. TCU (Mountain West)-Lost Fiesta Bowl to Boise St
  6. Cincinnati (Big East)-Big East Champions, Lost Sugar Bowl to Florida
  7. Ohio State (Big Ten)- Big Ten Champions, Beat Oregon in Rose Bowl
  8. Iowa (Big Ten)-Beat Georgia Tech in Orange Bowl
  9. Penn State (Big Ten)-Beat LSU in Capital One Bowl 
  10. Oregon (Pac-10)-Pac-10 Champions, Lost Rose Bowl to Ohio St
  11. Georgia Tech (ACC)-ACC Champions, Lost Orange Bowl to Iowa
  12. LSU (SEC)-Lost Capital One Bowl to Penn St
  13. Virginia Tech (ACC)-Beat Tennessee in Chick-fil-A Bowl
  14. BYU (Mountain West)- Beat Oregon St in MAACO Las Vegas Bowl
  15. Nebraska (Big 12)-Beat Arizona in Holiday Bowl
  16. Oklahoma (Big 12)-Beat Stanford in Sun Bowl
  17. Pitt (Big East)- Beat UNC in Meineke Car Care Bowl
  18. Utah (Mountain West)- Beat Cal in Poinsettia Bowl
  19. Mississippi (SEC)- Beat Oklahoma St in Cotton Bowl
  20. Oklahoma St (Big 12)-Lost Cotton Bowl to Ole Miss
  21. Arizona (Pac-10)-Lost Holiday Bowl to Nebraska
  22. West Viginia (Big East)-Lost Gator Bowl to Florida St
  23. Stanford (Pac-10)-Lost Sun Bowl to Oklahoma
  24. South Carolina (SEC)-Lost Papajohns.com Bowl to UConn
  25. USC (Pac-10)-Beat BC in Emerald Bowl
  26. Texas Tech (Big 12)-Beat Michigan St in Alamo Bowl
  27. Clemson (ACC)-Beat Kentucky in Gaylord Hotels Music City Bowl
  28. Wisconsin (Big Ten)-Beat Miami in Champs Sports Bowl
  29. Miami (FL) (ACC)- Lost Champs Sports Bowl to Wisconsin
  30. Oregon St (Pac-10)-Lost MAACO Las Vegas Bowl to BYU
  31. UNC (ACC)-Lost Meineke Car Bowl to Pitt
  32. Cal (Pac-10)-Lost Poinsettia Bowl to Utah
  33. Arkansas (SEC)-Beat East Carolina in Liberty Bowl
  34. Auburn (SEC)-Beat Northwestern in Outback Bowl
  35. Rutgers (Big East)-Beat UCF in St. Petersburg Bowl
  36. Central Michigan (Mid-American)-MAC Champions, GMAC Bowl vs Troy
  37. Houston (Conference USA)- Lost Bell Helicopter Armed Forces Bowl to Army
  38. Montana- (Big Sky)
  39. UConn (Big East)-Beat South Carolina in Papajohns.com Bowl
  40. Tennessee (SEC)-Lost Chick-fil-A Bowl to Virginia Tech
  41. BC (ACC)-Lost Emerald Bowl to USC
  42. Georgia (SEC)-Beat Texas A&M in Independence Bowl
  43. Michigan St (Big Ten)
  44. Kentucky (SEC)-Lost Gaylord Hotels Music City Bowl to Clemson
  45. Notre Dame (IA Independents)
  46. Washington (Pac-10)
  47. Navy (IA Independents)-Beat Missouri in Texas Bowl
  48. Kansas (Big 12)
  49. Missouri (Big 12)-Lost Texas Bowl to Navy
  50. Florida St- Beat West Virginia in Gator Bowl

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Written by Ben Pogany

The Humanitarian Bowl

The Humanitarian Bowl has been played annually at Bronco Stadium on the campus of Boise State University in Boise, Idaho, since 1997. The game currently matches a team from the Mountain West Conference with one from the Western Athletic Conference, typically the conference champion. It is the longest running cold weather bowl game currently in operation. The payout is $750,000, but teams are required to provide a corporate sponsor, purchase a minimum number of tickets, and stay at a selected hotel for a minimum stay.

 Results:

December 29, 1997 Cincinnati 35 Utah State 19
December 30, 1998 Idaho 42 Southern Mississippi 35
December 30, 1999 Boise State 34 Louisville 31
December 28, 2000 Boise State 38 UTEP 23
December 31, 2001 Clemson 49 Louisiana Tech 24
December 31, 2002 Boise State 34 Iowa State 16
January 3, 2004 Georgia Tech 52 Tulsa 10
December 27, 2004 Fresno State 37 Virginia 34 (OT)
December 28, 2005 Boston College 27 Boise State 21
December 31, 2006 Miami 21 Nevada 20
December 31, 2007 Fresno State 40 Georgia Tech 28
December 30, 2008 Maryland 42 Nevada 35
December 30, 2009 Idaho vs. Bowling Green



The Holiday Bowl

The Holiday Bowl has been played annually at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego, California since 1978.
The game is currently sponsored by Pacific Life Insurance, so it is known as the Pacific Life Holiday Bowl.
BYU played in the first seven Holiday Bowls, and later competed in an additional four games, prompting some to call it the "BYU Bowl."
The game currently features the 2nd place Pac-10 team and the 3rd place Big 12 team, but the 2010-2013 matchups will pit the #3 Pac-10 team against the #5 Big 12 team.
Results:
December 22, 1978 Navy 23 BYU 16
December 21, 1979 Indiana 38 BYU 37
December 19, 1980 BYU 46 SMU 45
December 18, 1981 BYU 38 Washington State 36
December 17, 1982 Ohio State 47 BYU 17
December 23, 1983 BYU 21 Missouri 17
December 21, 1984 BYU 24 Michigan 17
December 22, 1985 Arkansas 18 Arizona State 17
December 30, 1986 Iowa 39 San Diego State 38
December 30, 1987 Iowa 20 Wyoming 19
December 30, 1988 Oklahoma State 62 Wyoming 14
December 29, 1989 Penn State 50 BYU 39
December 29, 1990 Texas A&M 65 BYU 14
December 30, 1991 BYU 13 Iowa 13
December 30, 1992 Hawaii 27 Illinois 17
December 30, 1993 Ohio State 28 BYU 21
December 30, 1994 Michigan 24 Colorado State 14
December 29, 1995 Kansas State 54 Colorado State 21
December 30, 1996 Colorado 33 Washington 21
December 29, 1997 Colorado State 35 Missouri 24
December 30, 1998 Arizona 23 Nebraska 20
December 29, 1999 Kansas State 24 Washington 20
December 29, 2000 Oregon 35 Texas 30
December 28, 2001 Texas 47 Washington 43
December 27, 2002 Kansas State 34 Arizona State 27
December 30, 2003 Washington State 28 Texas 20
December 30, 2004 Texas Tech 45 California 31
December 29, 2005 Oklahoma 17 Oregon 14
December 28, 2006 California 45 Texas A&M 10
December 27, 2007 Texas 52 Arizona State 34
December 30, 2008 Oregon 42 Oklahoma St. 31
December 30, 2009 Arizona vs. Nebraska

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Written by Ben Pogany

The EagleBank Bowl

The EagleBank Bowl is played at Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium in Washington, D.C.
The game, which was originally dubbed "The Congressional Bowl" before sponsorship was received by EagleBank.
Prior to the game's approval by the NCAA, Navy and the ACC signed agreements to participate in the game if it was approved. Under the agreement, the ACC would provide its ninth-best team for the bowl if the league had nine bowl eligible teams. However, if the primary options do not provide two bowl eligible teams to play or another bowl chooses one of those teams, the committee can select a team from the Mid-American Conference, Conference USA, or the Big Ten as a replacement.
Results:
December 20, 2008 Wake Forest 29 Navy 19
December 29, 2009 Temple vs. UCLA


The Champs Sports Bowl
The Champs Sports Bowl is played in Orlando, Florida.
The game was played at Pro Player Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida from 1990 to 2000 and is now played at the Citrus Bowl in Orlando.
The bowl is operated by Florida Citrus Sports, a non-profit group which also organizes the Capital One Bowl and Florida Classic.
The game was originally organized by Raycom Sports in the summer of 1990. Since 2004, Champs Sports, a division of Foot Locker, has sponsored the event. Under the terms of a television deal signed with ESPN in 2006, the bowl will be held after Christmas Day from 2006–2009, and be shown on ESPN in prime time. As of this year, the game will match the third pick from the ACC against the second selection from the Big East.

Results:
December 28, 1990 Florida State 24 Penn State 17
December 28, 1991 Alabama 30 Colorado 25
January 1, 1993 Stanford 24 Penn State 3
January 1, 1994 Boston College 31 Virginia 13
January 2, 1995 South Carolina 24 West Virginia 21
December 30, 1995 North Carolina 20 Arkansas 10
December 27, 1996 Miami 31 Virginia 21
December 29, 1997 Georgia Tech 35 West Virginia 30
December 29, 1998 Miami 46 North Carolina State 23
December 30, 1999 Illinois 63 Virginia 21
December 28, 2000 NC State 38 Minnesota 30
December 20, 2001 Pittsburgh 34 North Carolina State 19
December 23, 2002 Texas Tech 55 Clemson 15
December 22, 2003 North Carolina State 56 Kansas 26
December 21, 2004 Georgia Tech 51 Syracuse 14
December 27, 2005 Clemson 19 Colorado 10
December 29, 2006 Maryland 24 Purdue 7
December 28, 2007 Boston College 24 Michigan State 21
December 27, 2008 Florida State 42 Wisconsin 13
December 29, 2009 Miami vs. Wisconsin

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Written by Ben Pogany

Another fantasy season is in the books and "Sweet Melissa" is back atop my mantle where she belongs.  Here's a look back on where it all went wrong, or right, for your fantasy squad in '09.

  
Best Picks of the Draft:
Ray Rice (Round 8) The young Raven quickly seized the primary role in Baltimore's backfield en route to an astounding 1,952 all-purpose yards this fantasy season.  The lucky few who had the foresight to select him enjoyed a solid 20-spot most weeks. 
Chris Johnson (Round 2) CJ had just about the greatest 9-game fantasy stretch in the history of the sport, averaging practically180 yards and 2 TDs ever time he took the field.  Anything less than the first pick in the draft turned out to be a HUGE steal.  Move over AP, theres a new juggernaut in town.
Brett Favre (Round 12) To think that in most leagues, the John Kerry of the NFL went outside the top 100 picks in the draft.  Brett posted an insane 104 passer rating, throwing for 27 TDs and 3,565 yards.  Perhaps most surprising was his uncharacteristic 7 picks on the fantasy season. 
Cedric Benson (Round 9)  Though he missed 2 weeks, Benson still compiled 1,362 all-purpose yards for the Bengals.
Dallas Clark (Round 7) Dallas was a beast in '09, posting 1,054 yards, 10 scores, and 93 receptions, including a league-altering 5 touchdowns in weeks 14 and 15 when fantasy owners needed him most.
DeSean Jackson (Round 15)  DeSean was a big play machine, as almost all of his 10 scores were plays of 50 yards or more.  Look for him to be to selected as an elite receiver in 2010.
Aaron Rodgers (Round 4)  Green Bay fans might not quite be asking 'Brett who?' as this point, but Rodgers put together about as good of a season as anyone could ask for.  His 4,199 yards, 29 TDs, 7 ints, and 102.4 passer rating edge out his elder counterpart by the slimmest of margins.

Best Waiver Wire Pickups:
Miles Austin- For the first month of the season, Austin was a fantasy footnote.  Then, out of nowhere, the Dallas receiver busted out a 250-yard, 2 TD performance against KC.  Two weeks later, he followed it up with 171 yards and another 2 scores, and from there Austin was inarguably the real deal.  11 TDs later, and Austin will look to be a solid 3rd round pick in 2010.
Steve Smith (NYG)- In an unprecedented move, the former USC wideout seized "The Real" Steve Smith moniker, stealing the reigns from one of the most established veterans in the league with a crushing 97 receptions.
Vernon Davis- In the year of the tight end, Davis quietly brought down a whopping 12 TDs to bring smiles to fantasy owners everywhere. 
Ricky Williams- Ricky finally put down the sticky icky and vaulted back into fantasy relevance with a heady 13 TD effort in 09.
Jamaal Charles- After his 117 yard, 1 TD performance in week 10, the rush was on to roster the Jamaal with 3 a's.  From week 10 through week 16, he averaged roughly 100 yards and a touchdown every game. A definite stud in '10.
Visanthe Shiancoe- Shiancoe thuroughly enjoyed Favre's presence en route to 10 scores for those quick enough to snatch him off waivers.
Sidney Rice- Another Favre benefactor, Rice caught 77 balls for 1,200 yards and six scores in 09.

Draft Busts:

Clinton Portis (Round 2) Portis posted 551 yards and 2 scores before going down for the count in week 10.
Brian Westbrook (Round 2) Those who decided to take the gamble with Westbrook paid for it, as injuries severely limited the aging back in 09.
Marshawn Lynch (Round 4)  Fantasy owners willing to overlook the season-opening 3 game suspension were certainly not rewarded for their patience.  Marshawn "So Easy a Caveman Can Do It" Lynch ended up with a measly 2 scores and failed to break 100 yards a single time.
Terrell Owens (Round 4)  The newly annointed Buffalo Bill had owners everywhere wondering if this was the end for Mr. TO. 764 yards and 4 scores were barely rosterable numbers for the former fantasy ace.
Calvin Johnson (Round 2) Calvin looked a lot like a Detroit Lion this year with a measly 4 touchdown receptions.
Matt Forte (Round 1) 1,276 all-purpose yards and 4 TDs isnt necessarily a bad fantasy effort, but with all the hype surrounding the former Tulane star, its hard to see this as anything but a sophomore slump.

Looking Forward to 2010:
    QBs and tight ends galore.  As good as quarterbacks were in '09, many might actually fall in the draft order next year.  This is because if you can land one of the top 9 quarterbacks, you have to be feeling real good.  Brees, Manning, Rogers, Brady, Rivers are all certified studs and Shaub, Romo, Roethlisberger, Favre all had monster seasons.  Throw in McNabb, Palmer, and Warner and we're looking at a very solid starting option for every team in your league. 
     As for tight ends, this is a position that for years has had about 2-3 top guys and then a bunch of no names that were better left to your last few draft selections. Not in 2010.  Between Clark, Gonzalez, Gates, Celek, Davis, Shiancoe, Witten and Daniels, we're looking at class of tight ends that are more valuable than all but the best receivers in the game.  Don't snooze on snagging one of these guys next year. 
    So congrats to all the winners out there and for those teams that didn't pan out this year, it's never too early to start your research.  Your fantasy draft is only seven months away...
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