| Snap, Crackle, Pop - August 2003 written by Greg Kellogg ARTICLE REPRODUCED FOR FREE AT WWW.DRAFTGUIDE.COM |
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| Well sports fans, the season is just about here. Less than a week from our first preseason game
and I know you are ready to go! Just think - 22 weeks of NFL bliss and then you get the playoffs! So send your significant other a condolences card because you are about to enter the Fantasy Zone! Where nothing matters except the games - real and fantasy. So stake out your spot in the Lazy Boy, make sure you have your fridge well stocked then sit back and enjoy the ride.
Snap Jacksonville DT John Henderson was the second Jaguars' lineman to be taken to the hospital for a heat related condition. In the wake of former Viking Korey Stringer's death, it is not surprising that teams are keeping much better track of how their players are handling the heat. But this is a concern because it was not a particularly hot day. And it is the second time in a week that Henderson has gone down. "I'm going to have to take a look at what the big guys are doing in individual practice," coach Jack Del Rio said. "I know within the body of the practice, we're not overdoing it with our team. We've just happened to have two guys that really succumbed to the heat." Henderson has already been released from the hospital but the team is uncertain when he will be cleared to return to the field. Rams Safety Jason Sehorn did what he does best. He got injured. Or at least it seems like this is what he does best. Sehorn broke his left foot and will be lost until sometime in October. "Realistically, getting back to running and cutting and being able to take the pounding, 10 weeks is probably a safe estimate," said team physician Dr. Matt Matava. While this is not as serious physically as some of his earlier injuries, time away from the field when one is learning a new position is never a good thing. Kim Herring will replace Sehorn in the starting lineup. In case you missed the news from the past couple weeks, Michael Bennett, is out, possibly for the entire season. And the man the coaches thought would replace him, Doug Chapman, is nursing a sore foot and a sprained foot. This has opened the door for recently signed rookie RB Onterrio Smith. "He had a couple of nice runs today," head coach Mike Tice said. "A couple of mental errors, going the wrong way on pass protection. One glaring one right down in the red zone, but we expected that. He's not up to speed. He can tell you he is, but he's not." Crackle WR Terry Glenn is rapidly dropping in my estimation. He has all the skills but has always been soft. And now, he has to compete with a guy willing to undergo surgery in the morning and suit up for practice that afternoon. "I said, 'Hey, this is a guy that gets operated on at 8 o'clock in the morning and at 2:50 he's playing football like nothing ever happened,'" Parcells said Monday. "I told the team it wasn't open-heart surgery, but it was something. It was a surgical procedure, an invasive procedure. That's pretty good." Don't be surprised if second-year receiver Antonio Bryant turns out to be the starter opposite Joey Galloway and Glenn ends up filling the WR3 slot. Too many people are parroting a call heard over and over again last year. That RB Garrison Hearst is done and Kevan Barlow is on the rise. Yet once again, the wiley veteran is finding a way to hold off the talented kid. "Blocking is probably the hardest thing for a back," Erickson said. "Garrison's been around for so long, he's really good at that. And Kevan's getting better all the time. From the time we were in mini-camps from what I've seen the last three days, it's been tremendous improvement. And every day he gets better." Getting better, but not good enough to unseat the man in front of him. At least not this year. Pop Last season, everyone was talking up RB Edgerrin James because he was dunking a basketball in Florida. Some of us warned folks away from him because of the seriousness of his knee injury and the fact that a bare nine months had passed from the surgery to the start of the season. Those that passed on James were very happy they did. That will not be the case this year. James may never return to his pre-injury form, but I am betting he comes very close this season. So much so that I have ranked him second only to Clinton Portis in my preseason RB rankings. And part of the reason is that unlike last year, we may actually see James in a couple 2003 preseason games. Though not totally willingly. "If I have to [play], I will," James told the Indianapolis Star. "But I really don't want to. I'll do it if it serves a purpose. I'd rather do two-a-days every day rather than play in a preseason game. If coach Dungy comes to me and says, 'I want you to play,' I'll play." In Detroit, WR Az Zahir-Hakim is coming off an injury many thought would end his career. Rookie WR Charles Rogers has suffered a fairly severe separation of his left ring finger - an injury that may cause him to miss significant training camp time. One thing you can be assured of though, is that the Lions will be throwing the ball. And they will be doing it a lot. With the expected improvement from starting QB Joey Harrington someone has to be the recipient of those passes. My guess is that Bill Schroeder will be that someone. Schroeder seemed to be developing a very nice rapport with Harrington (when he wasn't injured himself) and enters camp this year as the healthiest of the likely Lion starters. And since no one is drafting this guy, you should be able to wait until the last round of your draft and get him as a WR4 or WR5. Famous Quotes Greg Kellogg, former producer for a major media site and current owner of the Fantasy Asylum is a member of the Professional Football Writer's Association and has been writing about Fantasy Football on a national stage since 1996. |
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