Posts Tagged ‘washington redskins’

Smoot Wins Cooley’s League

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

Washington cornerback Fred Smoot beat Chris Cooley to win the fantasy league Cooley put together for his teammates.

In true Smoot fashion, the corner thanked both himself and “Fred Smoot” for the title while hoisting the trophy donated to the league by Fantasy Trophies.

Anyone who has come up one game short in a fantasy league can sympathize with Cooley’s feelings in the video that accompanies the blog post on his website …


Fantasy Football Champ from Tanner Cooley on Vimeo.

Share/Save/Bookmark

Washington Already in the Playoffs

Friday, December 12th, 2008

Even if Washington continues down the path that seems to be heading toward and last-place finish in the NFC East, three of its players have already made the playoffs.

Tight end Chris Cooley, cornerback Fred Smoot and kicker Shaun Suisham can thank fantasy football for getting them into the postseason in 2008, where they will be joined by the lone female-piloted team in the league run by Cooley. The women are Cooley’s wife and quarterback Jason Campbell’s girlfriend.

(It’s worth pointing out that Cooley affectionately refers to his kicker — in real life and on his fantasy team – as “Shizam,” not to be confused with Kazaam. I, on the other hand, would’ve opted for “Sweetums.” For the record, Suisham is pronounced “Swee-sham.”)

The league’s consolation bracket does at least boast better names, led by the Chocolate Assassins (rookie tight end Fred Davis) and Lionel Richie Boys (Campbell). Safety Reed Doughty and fullback Mike Sellers round out that group, leaving receiver Santana Moss and rookie quarterback Colt Brennan with nothing more for which to play.

As we previously reported, the champion will take home a trophy donated by Dave Mitri of Fantasy Trophies.

Share/Save/Bookmark

Fantasy Trophies Takes Advantage of Publicity Opportunity

Monday, December 1st, 2008

Fantasy Trophies founder Dave Mitri seems to be making a good business decision by giving one of his handmade products away for free. According to the Washington Times, Mitri is shipping “The Throwback” — the company’s best selling model — to Washington tight end Chris Cooley to be awarded to the winner of Cooley’s fantasy league.

“It’s pretty cool. We’re excited to get it,” Cooley told the Times. “And I will also be excited to award it to myself when I win the league.”

Cooley has distinguished himself among professional as one of those most supportive of and interested in the fantasy game. He gained notoriety when a video of the draft for his league — which also includes several of his teammates as well as Cooley’s wife and the girlfriend of Washington quarterback Jason Campbell — became a YouTube hit earlier this year.

Mitri has been building his fantasy trophies for nearly 16 years and says he has played fantasy sports since 1991. According to the Times article, he has recently grown his business and is now generating publicity at merely the price of one statue ($329). He told the Times that he was drawn to Cooley’s league by the draft video.

“What was cool about his video is that anyone who watched it wouldn’t necessarily know he was a professional athlete,” Mitri was quoted as saying. “He’s totally the kind of guy I could see in my league. I think he’d really get the humor in this, and I’m totally sure that when they get it, they will be blown away.”

In case you haven’t seen the video referenced above, you can check it out below. A few of the highlights for fantasy folks include Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer apparently going fifth overall, the Hallmark moments of Cooley and Campbell drafting each other and these guys being much worse than you are at trying to pick players who have already been drafted. I’d say that Cooley could be the average participant in one of my leagues, but I’d never voluntarily include a guy who subscribes to the slightly askew style of wearing a ballcap.

 

Share/Save/Bookmark

Personal Profile: Sara Holladay

Monday, September 29th, 2008

Who: Sara Holladay
What: Fantasy Football Librarian

There are a ridiculous number of fantasy football sites out there, most of which claim to give you top-notch advice for winning each weekend. How do you sort through them all?

You don’t, and that’s part of why FFLibrarian.com has gained popularity.

Five years ago, Sara Holladay was just a football fan — a Colorado resident who rooted for the Broncos (and Redskins, from her native Washington, D.C.) and closely followed the squad from her alma mater, Northwestern.

“I certainly watched and enjoyed football before college, but it wasn’t until I got to Northwestern that I felt I had a real rooting interest,” she says. I like the pace of the game, love the athleticism of the sport … but I think it also takes some serious smarts to play the game well, and I appreciate that.”

With that fan base already built, her husband convinced her to give the fantasy thing a try back in 2004. The rest — as the cliché goes — is history … only in this case it’s chronicled, filed and available for easy referencing.

That’s because Holladay is an assistant professor at the University of Colorado, carrying the title of electronic collections and assessment librarian. She sorts through and works with the library’s electronic resources to evaluate their worth as research tools and make it easier for users to find what they need. Knowing that, one shouldn’t be too surprised to see the niche she is carving out in the fantasy football world as the Fantasy Football Librarian.

The site launched in September 2006, simply as a blog where a librarian catered to the fantasy football audience by sharing the resources she had culled from her own research.

“My vision was for it to be a site that would help a few people here and there — and I never even intended to give lineup advice,” she says. “Yet here I am, spending probably way too long every day dispensing what fantasy wisdom I have.”

She has shown enough wisdom in her blog to have Bruno Boys Fantasy Football ask her to write a weekly column and for The New York Times to bring her into the fold at the Fifth Down blog. She says that relationship started when she e-mailed the Fifth Down editor in fall 2007 about joining the site’s blogroll, not really expecting to even hear back.

“And I didn’t hear back, at least not until February 2008, when I was contacted about being a guest blogger,” she says, adding that Fifth Down brought her in to supply posts for a week. “That was a lot of fun, and they asked me back as a Friday blogger during the football season.”

Holladay sites the Fifth Down exposure as the big break that really increased traffic to her site as well as her credibility. Of course, if quality and credibility weren’t on hand already, there would have been little reason for the Times to pay her any attention.

One particular topic that Holladay says grabbed attention was evaluating the accuracy of preseason predictions from industry experts. It was an area that interested her from the start, and in 2007, she took it upon herself to evaluate the experts. A year later, it has evolved into a competition that will deliver Fantasy Sports Trade Association awards to the sites found to be most accurate in their rankings and stat projections.

When she’s not focusing on such yearlong topics, though, Holladay spends time on the blog that got her started, delivering daily posts … well, at least almost daily.

“This year I’ve decided to take the weekends off for the most part so that I remember to live the rest of my life, too,” she says.

Although FFLibrarian.com remains a part-time gig for now, Holladay says she certainly doesn’t dismiss thoughts of making more out of it.

“When you have a chance to do something you truly love and are passionate about all day, every day and even bring home a paycheck from it, well of course you’d jump at that offer, right?” she says. “If the right opportunity presented itself to me, I’d think very seriously about it. I think that might ultimately mean I’d have to diversify and try fantasy basketball or baseball or hockey or golf or whatever else the fantasy nation wants.”

Those, of course, will be considerations for another time. At present, one just has to wonder if Mr. Holladay is now kicking himself for introducing his wife to this world that seems to have consumed her to some extent.

“He’s well aware that his invitation has more or less created a monster,” the Librarian says. “Fortunately he loves football so his eyes don’t glaze over when I’m debating the merits of starting Chansi Stuckey over Torry Holt, but he does hear a heavy dose of fantasy football on a daily basis. But he’s a great guy. I can’t imagine him regretting introducing me to something that brings me such happiness.”

Share/Save/Bookmark