Sunday, January 29, 2017
The Lewis Locker room Podcast: Episode 2
The Lewis Locker room is back with some great original content! Listen to Alan Bonneau tell the world that the Pittsburgh Penguins would trade Sidney Crosby for Tuukka Rask and David Pastrnak (claims he wasn't high but still unsure). Listen to some fiery talk about Drew Pomeranz and what he can bring to the Red Sox. Then hear some stories like how Mike Napoli fell on a coffee table and couldn't play baseball for four months (OOTP affiliated). As always, like and share, leave us a comment telling us how we did, what you would like to see discussed in the future, and enjoy!
Sunday, January 22, 2017
Remembering Andy Marte as part of the Boston Red Sox Organization
Former third baseman Andy Marte with the Braves
Rest in Peace Andy Marte Oct. 21, 1983- Jan. 22, 2017
Former
major leaguer Andy Marte died in a car crash early this morning while in the
Dominican Republic. Marte was a former top prospect, ranking in baseball’s top
prospects four times throughout his career and as high as ninth overall, per
baseball America. Marte spent a brief amount of time with the Boston Red Sox in
2005. This is a memory of Marte as part of the Red Sox farm system.
The Red Sox played to a 95-67 record
and were swept by the eventual World Series Champions Chicago White Sox. They
had signed shortstop Edgar Renteria to man the position the previous offseason.
Renteria had a decent line of eight homers, 70 RBI and nine stolen bases while
he maintained a .276 batting average in his one season with the Red Sox.
However, Renteria’s defense was horrible, committing 30 errors and garnering
boos at Fenway Park. Red Sox ownership was also disappointed with Renteria’s
performance, which lead to ownership, acting without a general manager, trading
Renteria to the Atlanta Braves for third base prospect Andy Marte.
The trade received high praise for
the Boston Red Sox. Many writers believed Andy Marte had a huge ceiling, while
hardballtimes.com quotes some saying “Marte is a future All-Star, a possible
hall of famer.” I remember the ownership group saying Marte was the type of
players you could start a team with.
I remember little about what sports
talk shows and baseball beat writers had to say, for I was only 10 at the time
of the trade and didn’t listen or read much from those two products. However, I
remember liking the trade because Marte could hit a lot of home runs and I
liked players that could hit home runs. I had never seen the Red Sox trade a major-league
player for a top prospect before. Marte was the first prospect I had ever seen
the Red Sox “sell” and acquire a minor leaguer (During the 2014 season I saw
much more of the team “selling”).
Marte’s Red Sox tenure didn’t last
long. Forty-nine days later, the team
shipped Marte off to Cleveland along with pitcher Guillermo Mota, catcher Kelly
Shoppach, and cash for center fielder Coco Crisp, catcher Josh Bard and pitcher
David Riske. This came after Theo Epstein’s return to the Red Sox as general
manager, who wanted to trade Marte to the Devil Rays for Julio Lugo (Epstein
would later sign Lugo via free agency).
Marte never panned out to his top
ten prospect in all of baseball status, struggling to stay on major league
rosters throughout his entire career. If Theo Epstein never took a hiatus from
the team, who knows what would have happened, whether he would have traded for
Marte and/or traded him away. Maybe if the Red Sox kept him, he would have
fulfilled his potential.
However short his Red Sox tenure
was, Marte played a big role in the history of the Red Sox organization. When I
and most others think of the decade of the 2000s, the Marte trade(s) come to
mind. Marte will forever remain in the history of the 2000s decade for the
Boston Red Sox. He will be missed amongst the baseball and baseball writers
community. Taken too soon, rest in peace Andy Marte.
Friday, January 13, 2017
The Lewis Locker room Podcast: Episode 1
I have created a podcast in conjunction with the blog! The Lewis Locker room is the podcast for the people about all the major sports. It features myself (Adam Lewis) as the host with Ben Lewis and Alan Bonneau featured. We hope to make this a regular thing!
Let us know what worked, what didn't work, what you want to hear and what you would like to change. This is a work in progress and we hope to make it better every episode!
Let us know what worked, what didn't work, what you want to hear and what you would like to change. This is a work in progress and we hope to make it better every episode!
Thursday, January 5, 2017
What Would a 2016 Fantasy Football Redraft Look Like?
If you’re like me, you ended your 2016
fantasy football season out of the playoffs and wishing you drafted player X
over play Y.
As fantasy football participants, we all
love to discuss what we would do if given the chance to redraft. Now that the
2016 season is over, some saw the likes of second round pick Jamaal Charles
produce nothing (I fall into this category) while others reaped the benefits of
late round selections of Matt Ryan, Dak Prescott and Jay Ajayi (I drafted none
of these players).
Given
the ability to start over, who would you target with your first round
selection? Follow along as I complete a redraft of the first round in a
standard, 10 person ESPN fantasy football league.
1. David Johnson, RB Arizona Cardinals
Hard to see this 1,239
rushing yards and 16 touchdown running back go anywhere but first in a redraft.
Johnson scored 313 points on the season, scoring 10 or more points in every
week but week 17. Johnson was the most consistent fantasy option on the year
and also put up the most points for a position other than quarterback.
2. Ezekiel Elliott, RB Dallas Cowboys
It is hard to predict how
much rookies will contribute fantasy-wise, but Elliott finished as the second
best fantasy running back with 1,631 rushing yards and 15 touchdowns, good
enough for 280 fantasy points. Being a rookie, most owners took caution, as he
had an average draft position of 10 before week one. Those that took Elliott
probably reaped the rewards with a new champion trophy.
3. Le’Veon Bell, RB Pittsburg Steelers
2016 was the year of the
running backs. Bell put up 1,268 rushing yards with seven touchdowns even after
missing the first three games of the season. If he played those three games, Bell
easily would have been the best fantasy option on the year. Down the stretch, I
believed Bell to be the best fantasy option as he scored 20 or more fantasy
points in four of the last seven games he played (Bell didn’t play in week 17).
He also scored 47 points in week 14.
4. Aaron Rodgers, QB Green Bay Packers
Call me crazy for ranking
a quarterback this high, but Rodgers was the real deal in 2016. Rodgers put up
more fantasy points than any other player, scoring 365 points throughout the
2016 season. Rodgers also had three weeks with 30+ points and 11 weeks with 20+
points. He also finished the year with a 40-7 touchdown-interception ratio,
which makes for a reliable option.
5. LeSean McCoy, RB Buffalo Bills
Not much went right for
the Bills this season other than McCoy’s fantasy production. McCoy finished the
year with 238 points, the third most among running backs. McCoy also had a
pretty consistent season with his only blunders coming in weeks seven, eight
and 17 where he scored one, zero and one point(s) respectively. After coming
off a season with multiple leg injuries, it made sense that McCoy would bounce
back in the 2016 season.
6. Jordy Nelson, WR Green Bay Packers
The first receiver off
the board and surprise, surprise, it is someone not named Antonio Brown or
Odell Beckham Jr. Nelson ranked as the number one receiver in points, scoring
200 total points on the year. He also stayed consistent throughout the year,
scoring 10 or more points in a game nine times this season while another three
times Nelson scored nine points. Going off most boards in the second round,
Nelson was somewhat of a steal.
7. Matt Ryan, QB Atlanta Falcons
Not one of the more
famous names of the NFL, Matt Ryan had himself an MVP caliber season and it
showed in fantasy football. Ryan put up 334 points this season while putting up
10 or more points every week. Ryan was a consistent and reliable option this
season. Traditionalists would not take a quarterback this early, let alone two
so far, but the consistency is too much to pass up on.
8. DeMarco Murray, RB Tennessee Titans
Murray was another steal
this season as he went off the boards in most drafts during the fourth round.
He finished the year with 1,287 rushing yards and nine touchdowns, good enough
for 229 points. Murray was also consistent throughout the season scoring 10 or
more points fifteen times while scoring a touchdown in eight games. He scored a
touchdown every week from week six until week 10. Murray made fantasy owners
very happy this season.
9. Antonio Brown, WR Pittsburgh Steelers
Brown scored 193 points
this season without playing in week 17, ranking him as the third best wide
receiver. Brown was a little more consistent than Mike Evans who scored the
second most points among receivers, giving him the nod as the second receiver
off the board. Brown had nine weeks where he scored a touchdown and three weeks
where he scored two or more touchdowns.
10. LaGarrette Blount, RB New England
Patriots
Another running back rounds out this
redraft. Blount was the model of consistency (something I value greatly)
scoring one or more touchdowns in all but one game. Blount finished the year
with 218 points with only 1,161 rushing yards to his 18 touchdowns hindering
his fantasy production. Still, Blount ranked as the sixth best option for
running backs when it comes to points. Blount had a career year, which bodes
well for fantasy owners.
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