Posts Tagged ‘sports illustrated’

FSB Daily 8/12: SI.com, Pro Football Focus, Top FFers

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

A roundup of items recently posted on the FSB News page.

– The previously announced SI.com fantasy football game for Facebook — developed by Kabam (ouch), formerly known as Watercooler — is now live. According to the press release, “Fans who play SI Fantasy Football not only draft the ultimate team, but get to talk smack and socialize with all of their Facebook friends while doing it.”

– In just a few years of being online, ProFootballFocus.com has become a well-respected resource for football stats and player grading. The site has now added a dedicated fantasy section, led by the staff from FantasyDC.com.

– The Fantasy Players Association forums have the most recent top 10 rankings of fantasy football players released by the WCOFF folks. Scott Atkins also says the FPA plans to conduct interviews with each guy.

– BrunoBoys.com is looking for some help generating fantasy football articles for this season, including per-article pay.

– If you’re a freelance Web designer looking for a fantasy sports gig, this aspiring site owner is looking for someone to build.

– Procter & Gamble’s “Take it to the House” promotional campaign (a partnership with the NFL, will apparently include a “P&G Blogger Fantasy League,” comprising 12 “top sports bloggers.” If this group has been selected already, there doesn’t seem to be mention of the participants in the press release or on the campaign’s Facebook page.

Send all of your news, job postings, stories and profile ideas to FantasySportsBusiness@gmail.com. Follow us on Twitter (FSBcom).

Share/Save/Bookmark

FSB Daily 5/7: SI.com-Watercooler, WSJ, Blurb, FF Mama-to-be

Friday, May 7th, 2010

A roundup of items recently posted on the FSB News page.

– Sports Illustrated announced this week that it partnered with game developer Watercooler on a multi-platform fantasy football product. Team management and game connectivity will be available to users via SI.com, Facebook and SI Mobile.

– Nando Di Fino of The Wall Street Journal this week used Yankees middle reliever Alfredo Aceves’ ownership numbers to illustrate differences in the user bases for fantasy games at Yahoo!, ESPN and CBS.

– Andrew Garda, proprietor of ThunderingBlurb.com, contributor to Draftguys.com and Fantasy Sports Channel host, will join the Footballguys.com staff this season.

– As Mother’s Day approaches and threatens to get many of us guys in trouble, FF Librarian Sara Holladay announced on her blog Thursday night that she’s due to have her first child (a son) right around Week 3 of the coming NFL season. This guarantees that she’ll need multiple bye weeks, and a skeptic might wonder if she’s building in an excuse for failing to reprise her Super Bowl trip-winning fantasy play of 2009. Of course, we don’t think that way here at FSB.com, so we’ll just say congratulations and good luck.

Send all of your news, job postings, stories and profile ideas to FantasySportsBusiness@gmail.com. Follow us on Twitter (FSBcom).

Share/Save/Bookmark

Personal Profile: Jay Clemons

Monday, February 9th, 2009

Name: Jay Clemons
Nickname: The only ones suitable for publishing are “Sherman” and “Mystifying” — monikers I’ve owned since my hoop-playing days in high school. “Sherman” as in Sherman Douglas (the Syracuse days), which tells you how old I am; and “Mystifying,” a tongue-in-cheek alias conceived by famed Detroit Free Press writer, Mick McCabe. Little known nugget: I likely hold the Michigan high school record for consecutive three-pointers missed (237) … HA!
Job title(s): Producer/Lead Fantasy Writer, SI.com
Full-time in fantasy? On an average week during the fall, I’ll work about 60 hours for SI.com; and roughly 10-12 hours are singularly devoted to writing Fantasy Clicks/Revelations (three columns per week).
Age: 35
Education: BA in Journalism from Michigan State University; MA in Sports Administration from Wayne State University in Detroit
Family status: Engaged … to be married Oct. 3 in Atlanta
Favorite fantasy sport to play: 1. Football 1a. Baseball 3. Basketball
Favorite sport to watch: 1. Basketball 2. Football 3. Baseball
Favorite team (any sport): Detroit Pistons/Detroit Tigers (tie)
All-time favorite athlete: Isiah Thomas (Pistons playing days only)
Years playing fantasy: 7

I got my start in the fantasy industry when: The SI powers-that-be asked if I had any interest in writing Fantasy Clicks early in 2008. Until then, I had never coveted the Clicks opening (previously held by James Quintong, now of ESPN) — even though fantasy sports has been my all-consuming passion for the last 4-5 years.

Since then, my fantasy résumé includes: In addition to writing Fantasy Clicks/Revelations, I’ll be penning SI.com’s expansive fantasy baseball preview (running in March); and I’m slated to co-host a radio show (or podcast) on the Fantasy Sports Channel sometime in February (with SI cohort Jeff Ritter). I also won the FSWA’s Fantasy Football Writer of the Year award in January (SI’s first-ever honor in the fantasy genre).

Three questions

1) You used to be the lead writer for DetroitLions.com. Can you describe the environment of covering the team that employed you? How much latitude did you get, and how much oversight did you have to deal with? Did 0-16 happen because you left? My boss with the Lions, Bryan Bender, is one of the greatest managers of people I have ever known — and I’m including the (rare) occasions he’d read you the riot act behind closed doors. Bender gave me the freedom to pursue out-of-the box features and write brutally frank in-game stories — without fearing reprisal from the PR staff — and I will always appreciate the impact he’s had on my writing career.

Regarding the atmosphere at the Lions’ training facility … I loved jogging every night, barefooted, on the team’s Flubber-like FieldTurf at the indoor practice field, I loved sampling world-class dishes from our in-house chefs, I loved staying in four-star hotels on the road and I loved talking shop with the scouting department (especially come draft time). I even admired Matt Millen for the way he handled people on a daily basis (his record as an NFL exec, though, is indefensible). That aside, I could never work for a professional sports team again. The amount of proverbial red tape one has to endure, to effectively do their job, is staggering; and now that I know what it’s like to work at Sports Illustrated … I would never return to the dark side.

2) Sports Illustrated seems to be concentrating more on fantasy these days after not jumping in quite as quickly or strongly as some of its major-media competitors. Have you noticed a change in philosophy in your time there? How much do you think your FSWA award means to the SI.com fantasy operation? I’ve always believed that SI had the resources to compete with the fantasyland big boys (including the four-letter network — we‘re gunning for ya!). We just needed a bold plan to get the ball rolling, and in this fabulous Web age, we now have the world-renowned assistance of Facebook to help carry out our fantasy mission — especially when targeting that crucial 16-24 age demo. The FSWA award simply validates our commitment to the process, while establishing credibility for future projects and promotions.

3) It’s pretty impressive to have won the award in your first year as a fantasy writer. How did the fantasy gig come to join your other SI.com duties? On a normal NFL Sunday, I will be in the office until 5-6 a.m., putting the final touches on the award-winning Fantasy Revelations. But I would be there even longer if it wasn’t for the gracious efforts of my immediate bosses/mentors, Dan George and Lonny Krasnow. From day one, they have moved mountains for me to write Clicks in relative serenity … without it hindering my regular work duties (like running the NFL page); and I certainly owe them a debt of gratitude for that. As for winning the prestigious honor on my first try … it was a humbling experience, for sure. But at the same time, my long-term goals involve winning at least three more individual awards. That way, I could join the Mount Rushmore of fantasy writers: Christopher Harris, Matthew Berry and Will Carroll. By my count, they have taken home the hardware on 15 different occasions, with each acclaimed writer winning at least four times. Perhaps then, I’ll be satisfied with my work.

Bonus: Has it been a help or a hindrance so far to look like Brian Baldinger’s younger brother? Do you have a boomerang-shaped pinky as well? Are you referring to Gary Baldinger? I couldn’t find any pictures of him … or his mangled pinkie. Nevertheless (in my best PR director’s voice) … “this interview is over!”

Share/Save/Bookmark

The Rest of the FSWA Winners

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

Yesterday we spotlighted the companies that claimed multiple plaques at the Fantasy Sports Writers Association awards ceremony, but there were seven other honors handed out Tuesday.

Here are the victors in those remaining categories, as well as the other finalists with whom they competed:

Football Writer
Andy Behrens, Yahoo Sports
Jay Clemons, Sports Illustrated
Jeff Pasquino, Footballguys

Football Print Article
Dan Grogan, Athlon

Ginny Loveless, Football Diehards
Matt Waldman, Football Diehards

Football Print Publication
CBS Sports/Pro Football Weekly
RotoWire
Rotoworld

Baseball Print Article
Andy Behrens, Yahoo Sports
Jason Grey, ESPN
Tim Heaney, KFFL

Baseball Web Article
Jeff Erickson, RotoWire
David Gonos, Open Sports
Eno Sarris, Baseballguys

Hockey Writer
Sean Allen, ESPN
Janet Eagleson, RotoWire
Scott Pianowski, Yahoo Sports

Humor Article
Jeremy Fisher, Fantasy Football Trader
Lenny Pappano, Draft Sharks
Geoffrey Stein, Mock Draft Central

Share/Save/Bookmark