Writers Go on With or Without Tiger
Tuesday, February 24th, 2009In case you were too busy practicing your standing ovations in anticipation of President Obama’s first real address, Tiger Woods is returning to the links this week for the first time since his U.S. Open victory last June.
FSB.com asked each of the three 2008 Fantasy Sports Writers Association finalists for golf writer of the year how Woods’ status affects their job. Here’s what they had to say.
John McNamara, RotoWire (FSWA winner): I am lucky because I base my weekly article on trying to pinpoint players who are playing really well on tour and guys who seem to be struggling over the recent weeks. This allows me to find guys who fly under the radar and give their recent success and hopefully provide enough information that you can catch a flier lie with one of my picks.
Tiger could continually stay in my “Upgrade” section every week, but that would get boring and it would be too obvious. We all know the guys who we would play every time if they were on our team, but we all struggle with who the right player is after you go past the top 30 in the world.
So, Tiger being in the field or out of the field does not effect my article too much. I am always looking for the diamond in the rough every week who sets up great for a particular course and has been playing great over the recent weeks. Not having Tiger in the field just adds pressure for me to be right more than I am wrong, because people are more likely to pay closer attention when Tiger is not in the field and a certain pick is not so obvious.
Ross Devonport, CBS Sports: My job really hasn’t been that different with Tiger being out, because I always assume 99.9 percent of people are going to pick him when he’s in a field anyway. You almost just have to have him in your lineup because so many other people will jump over you in the standings if he brings home the title, and there’s just too good a chance of that happening for you to risk leaving him out. In my columns, I usually don’t even suggest picking Woods because anyone could write a column advising you to do that.
Greg Vara, RotoWire: My job gets more difficult in some ways and easier in others. I produce a top-five list each week and with the return of Tiger, the list becomes a top-four when Tiger is in the field.
With that said, when you select the same player each week it’s difficult to come up with fresh ways to describe why you are selecting him.

The Fantasy Sports Writers Association gave out its 2008 honors on Tuesday at the FSTA winter business conference, and a third of them went to RotoWire.
