03-16-2008, 08:33 PM | #101 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2035 Initial Offseason
After a very successful season, we have a few shaky things cooking, and this offseason might prove to be pretty interesting, I think. We have two retirements – LT Walt Holt and LB Darnell Abercrombie. Both have been fading rapidly anyhow, so there’s little loss of real capital there regardless. We re-hire our scout, bring aboard a new offensive development coordinator, and are ready to start looking at the player market. Here’s our list of walkyear players and free agents: Code:
So, for the franchise tag, the question is whether we want to re-sign CB Billy Shea to another multi year deal. If so, then we don’t tag him and instead just put in our offer as a FA. If we do that, which I think I prefer, then I guess we look at LG Garvin as a possible tag recipient? RT Stephens? (He’s so mad he won’t stay any other way) No great options, really. I decide to tag Larry Stephens, he’s a solid player, a strong affinity with our new OL leader Garvin (who may be back) and we may have the cap room to eat his $21m contract if he sticks for this year. We do have one exploded contract – starting LB Kelly Chancey, who has been a very solid starter for us for some time. His deal sits at $44m this year, but it’s the only one blowup deal, so we will at least try to extend it away. He wants nearly $20m a year, which is pricey, but we have been leaving cap space unused the last few years, anyhow. I start out thinking this is just too much to spend on him – and we have a fairly young ILB in Kris Devine who is still improving, and he’s ready for the job, I think. But I also note that LB Hunter Harlow is going to be gone after this year, so I’m kind of stuck. I also note that we have quite a few solid players on last-year deals, and I’d prefer to keep a guy like S Ben Terry from hitting free agency. And how about QB Jose Swartz? LB Ellis Gerald? LT Matthew Collier? We are about to hit a wall with good players on contract. Okay, we have to cut Chancey, and re-up with someone else. I decide that our contract renegotiation here will be with Ben Terry – we work it out for four seasons, and get him locked up by four more years. Last edited by QuikSand : 03-16-2008 at 08:33 PM. |
03-16-2008, 08:33 PM | #102 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2035 Free Agency
We have $21m in cap space, and another $21m tied up for the moment in RT Larry Stephens. Reneg – SS Ben Terry, 4y $52m RFA – FB Lawrance Murray, 3y $8.7m 1YR – RB Trent Sullivan, $2.4m 2YR - 3YR – LB Kris Devine, 7.8m 4YR – DE Ronald Harmon, $24m 5YR – LB Ralph Ramaswami, $80m (3y $10m) 6YR – C Pat Brierton, $166m (3y $16m) 7YR – CB Billy Shea, $238m (4y $78m) CB Billy Shea is a standard candidate for a long term deal with a few real years. So, $28m up front, a $10m base salary for four years, and then a blowup – he’ll listen. If someone moves in and overpays him to get him away from us, we’ll live. Basically the same deal with C Pat Brierton, our starting C who’s an 8th year player. LB Devine is pretty important to re-sign for us, since we are rapidly on our way to an empty roster at ILB. He’s still creeping, so we really think he makes a ton of sense to lock up and get into our lineup. DE Ronald Harmon is an interesting case. Bound for superstardom, he suffered a massive injury, and fell to a shell of his former self. I am now re-signing him largely because he is fairly affordable, and still decent. Not a star, but good enough to start at DE and do so only $6m a year. RT Larry Stephens is clearly occupying too much cap space, so our franchisee simply has to go. I go after LB Ralph Ramaswamy, who is a solid-enough LB (an all pro just two seasons ago) who can move to the inside, and ought to give us two or three solid years. I think this is still a target position for the draft, but it’s worthwhile having a guy in store just in case. Okay… so one twist that I certainly realized was possible was that CB Billy Shea would get signed away. I offered him a $35m signing bonus and four years at $11m each – but he instead accepted a deal for $36m over two years from Pittsburgh. It happens. Not often enough, really, but it happens. With the loss of Shea and ILB Chancey, we are going to see a serious talent and cohesion drop on our defense this year. I put in a 7yr offer on DT Donnell Stuart, a solid run stopper who ought to be good enough to start if needed. That settles a modest roster need for us for a few years – he’ll be cheap for three, and ten potentially affordable for a fourth year. That brings us to 48 players signed in advance of the draft – so we still have some slots to throw away if need be. |
03-16-2008, 08:33 PM | #103 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2035 Rookie Draft
Picking at 31, we will see most of the top shelf talent taken ahead of us, but we have team needs in the next couple years at (more or less in order of urgency) at: ILB, QB, G, RB, OLB, DE, and CB. We will likely be picking BPA from among the need positions the first couple rounds, unless someone sweeps me off my feet. I had my eye on two guards I hoped might slip to the end of round one – but no dice, they go at picks 11 and 13, so I was **way** off there. But when we are up, not a single WR has yet been taken – and there’s a workout warrior sitting there who just has to be a ton better than his modest bars. Consider me swept, I had no clue this guy would fall to us. Code:
Once we got past the workout warrior QB, things fell into place okay – I had targeted the next three picks from out outset, and was glad to see LB Ward fall that far, he looks like a great fit for our willie slot. I’m pleased with the “fits” we got here, we’ll see if anyone holds up in training camp. |
03-16-2008, 08:33 PM | #104 | |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2035 Late Free Agency
We have an unexpected holdout, and that mucks up my late-season renegotiation planning. Quote:
We can’t go into the season without him, but we have a flood of key players in walk years – so I will try to hold out and get him to knuckle under. Last season in late free agency, we didn’t see much to like, and ended up just re-signing one of our own decent players. No such worries here. There are a load of quality guys out there, and my choice is whether to take a chance on an older DL who could be a major difference-maker, or just to go after a young player who could help us at a slot like ILB or OG. I decide to make a serious play for DT Jake Rolfe, an 8th year guy who is rated 83/83 overall, and has been a four-time all pro already. He’s a monster, but missed half last season with a bad injury – he looks okay now, but might be dicey. We are trying to get into the mix without compromising our ability to sign our rookies under the cap – so there is no guarantee that our 2yr $44m deal will prevail, despite a $20m bonus. If it falls through with Rolfe, we will have options elsewhere, but I am hoping to bring him aboard and to lock him up as a starting DE for us. If Rolfe can come back and play all year, he will be an impact player wherever he lands. Right away, Jacksonville had the lead for Rolfe with a 4yr, $73m offer – but mine is better per year overall. I just hope that my thin first year salary doesn’t kill me. Week three is decision time, and he signs with… us! w00t! I am a bit disappointed to see that he won’t easily move to the DE slot – it’s an 84% transition for him. So, I guess we will play him at DT – he has posted a PR% of 7 or better there, and as many as 15 sacks, so it’s not like he can’t be an impact player at DE for us. |
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03-16-2008, 08:34 PM | #105 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2035 Training Camp Results
Tampa Bay Player Report (TB 2035c - TB 2035d)
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03-16-2008, 08:34 PM | #106 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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Here’s the summary of the big movers:
Code:
Hey, that’s a much better-looking list of pluses than we have seen in a while, eh? LB Mel Goodwin gives us a +11? Been a long time since I saw a move that big. And CB Booker’s big move is right on time, now that he is suddenly our starting LCB. Rookie LB Peters gives us justification for the early pick with a +5 of his own, too, that’s solid. I confess, I am stunned by WR Clawson’s failure to break out here, though. I though he was a +5 for sure, hopefully better. This looks like it’s going to turn out to be a solid draft anyhow, but I did want more from him, I confess. On the bad side, DE Darren Newman is still holding out, and he’s asking for a monster contract, over $27m a year. I don’t see how I can pay that much for him, so I guess our only choice here is to wait him out. If he doesn’t come back, I think my backup play is to shift DT Rolfe over to play in his DE slot – not what I had in mind when I signed him, but likely our best short term option to cover for the holdout. |
03-16-2008, 08:34 PM | #107 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2035 Season
Benchmarks: Roster Rating – 88 (3rd) Cohesion – 100-99-67-90 My predictions: Another solid year from Swartz – maybe tops the 30 TD mark for first time? RB Chester Kelly up to 4 yards per carry, but just barely, for 1,000 yards Jake Rolfe leads team in sacks and hurries, wherever he plays Defense slips from elite level, but is still above average against run and pass We are not a #1 seed, but we do win 11 games and the division Season narrative: We open the season with DE Newman still holding out. I am using DT Rolfe in his starting DE slot, and he delivers in the opening game with 4 tackles and a sack. We get off to a decent start at 3-2, but we simply do not have the luster from last season. Then Newman decides to come back, and we can put together the defensive front the way I had it in mind. We reel of three straight wins, two of them behind QB Murphy, to get to 6-2 at the midpoint. Two more wins, and we seem to have started to cruise – a 30-6 win over Carolina gives us a four game lead in the division already, and we are already plotting our playoff seeding and pathway. With two games left in the season, we are 12-2, but have lost WR Bryant Czyz to an injury for the year. We are tripped up in our finale with a few nicked-up starters resting, but still finish with a solid 13-3 record, another #1 seed, and a statistically superb season once again. Code:
Well, we didn’t get our running backs up to 4 yards a carry this year, but we did get our QB up to 30 TD passes, and that’s only playing 14 games. I have no idea why the passing game picked it up a bit this year, but that seems to be what happened, in any case. Bryant Czyz had another solid season, but a serious injury hurts us for these playoffs and maybe beyond, if it had lasting effects. The defense was solid – our pass rush was still pretty elite overall – but not ferocious like last season. CB Booker had a very solid first full season as a starter, and he is going to be really good for us. DE Newman came back and played well, and the front seven were solid. But our teamwide pass defense numbers were way down – with shaky numbers from guys like LB Devine and Harlow, suggesting we were a little bit soft in shallow coverage. Some work to be done there, but it wasn’t bad. |
03-16-2008, 08:34 PM | #108 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2035 Postseason Narrative:
We have one major injury on top of Czyz – safety Rusty Woodson will be playing hurt, but in the lineup. Past that we are in good shape. Divisional Playoff: Washington (11-6) at Tampa Bay (13-3) I have no idea what happened here, but it’s a field position battle early, and the Skins et a FG, and then a TD to lead by 10 at the half. We just cannot get anything going, and this team who posted 27.6 points per game on the regular season ends up with a total whiff when it counts, and cannot even muster a single point. Skins 17, Bucs 0, goodbye. Wow. |
03-16-2008, 08:35 PM | #109 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2035 Season Coda
We close the season with a new contract for QB Jose Swartz, keeping the continuity there, and locking him up for around $14m a season, which is under-market for a top tier starter, which he is by the numbers if not the red bars. Next year is going to be a big one – we have a load of good players whose contracts are ending, and if we lose one or two quality guys from this team without replacing them, we could slide back substantially in terms of overall talent. And I’m seeing some gigantic contract demands coming from guys like LT Matthew Collier, DE Darren Newman, and WR Timothy Montgomery – so perhaps we will see a cap crunch in the mix as well. And the potential to lose WR Czyz would be a major transition for us as well. |
03-16-2008, 09:52 PM | #110 |
Coordinator
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Maassluis, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands
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What happened to Bryan Clawson? I don't see him in the top (4 wide) receivers list. Even with his current overall grade of 'bars', I think you could have justified making him the #3 behind Czyz and Montgomery receiver based on his 1st round status. Or does he really look so horrid,being too ugly to believe in the beauty hidden inside the beast?
__________________
* 2005 Golden Scribe winner for best FOF Dynasty about IHOF's Maassluis Merchantmen * Former GM of GEFL's Houston Oilers and WOOF's Curacao Cocktail |
03-16-2008, 10:03 PM | #111 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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Yeah, Clawson had a net zero in training camp... and as a guy with pretty modest ratings to start out with, that made him a real afterthought for us. When Czyz got hurt late in the season, he moved into the rotation, but he simply isn't a guy who gets much action on this roster... I let the staff do the depth charting, and a 28/36 guy just isn't going to get much playing time unless other players get out of the way.
Maybe he will get more action in his sophomore season... Last edited by QuikSand : 03-16-2008 at 10:03 PM. |
03-21-2008, 09:55 AM | #112 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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Have been pretty busy this week - though I might have some time Wed to do something with this, but did not. Don't know where this lies... my next substantial pocket of free time may turn out to be tonight, and I have no idea if this is on my list of things to get into. *shurg*
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03-21-2008, 11:07 PM | #113 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2036 Initial Offseason
Well, this is our first season with a fairly lengthy list of retirements: DE Terrance Harden – affinity lyncphin and occasional reserve pass rusher LG Maurice Donhoff – former standout guard, had slipped but started last year WR Kendrick Lindsay – starting split end, had been steady but not outstanding WR Kevin Warren – veteran signing had been solid #4 receiver for a couple years So, nothing earth-shaking, but it does leave us very thing at WR all of a sudden, and with a first round pick there from last year draft who looks like he might have just been a whiff. We also have a couple of contracts that necessitate releases: ILB Hunter Harlow – decent tackler and run stopper, shaky coverage skills TE Dustin Edwards – solid veteran starter, but replaceable as he declines And with that, we are about $49m below the cap – about 17%. We have 35 players signed, and since our rules basically authorize up to 16 additions, we are a bit shy of the anticipated 53 player target. So, we may have some work to do, one way or another – not that playing through this season with only 51 players would be a major hardship. I bring about a more well-rounded scout – scratching an itch that has been at me a while. Here is his assessment of our walk year and free agent players: Code:
Okay, first the franchise tag. I know what LT Collier was looking for in his contract last year – he might be a guy we simply cannot afford going forward. WR Montgomery is a guy I want to sign long term, intending to start him at SE this year. So, we really don’t have anyone who fits this slot perfectly well, assuming we think we can ink LT Collier in open free agency. I decide to take my chances – it’s one more open roster spot this year, but I think we will be okay there. No tag. |
03-21-2008, 11:07 PM | #114 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2036 Free Agency
A bunch of key decisions here. I think the first move we will undertake is an extension with DE Darren Newman. He missed a few games last year, and his contract demands have come down somewhat – he will still be expensive, but it’s not totally out of reach. Plus, I can live with his long term deal as he offers it, giving me more flexibility for my one later-season reneg. Done – six year deal, lock him up. DT Jake Rolfe is a guy I think we will let expire, and then perhaps tag for a season or two as long as he remains productive and healthy. Solid player for sure, I’m just working the angles with the contracts. We can afford his $30m hit this year, and we’ll work on next year next year. With that, we are looking at our free agents. I really want to bring back WR Montgomery, and since we only have two WRs signed to any contract, it’s pretty urgent that we do so. He is looking for a 5yr deal, which is very good news – that can be a real 5yr offer this time, rather than a 3yr offer with a time bomb imbedded. I load the deal with bonus money, and try to get him fairly cheap and roll the dice on a future injury. We really have two choices with our one RFA re-signing – backup DE Junior Thomason, or our stud punter Skip Watson. I’m not wild about investing capital into a punter, but extending this guy keeps us from having to use a draft pick on another guy, while we might be okay at DL as it stands. I work out a new deal with Watson, who is, after all, a very highly rated player. That gets us to about $33m left to spend under this year’s cap. And LT Matthew Collier is the defining player for us. Either we sign him, and work on an economy budget for the rest of the team – or we let him walk, and look for places to spread our cap space around. He is a very solid looking player – and while I have a couple solid LT prospects behind him, none project to look like him at any point, period. We have been trying to do better on the ground game – tough to see a better player to keep us on that track than Collier. I decide to put in a huge offer to him, and try to lock him up for 4 years. Our offer eats up $20m under this year’s salary cap. Reneg – DE Darren Newman, 6y $104m RFA – P Skip Watson, 3y $7m 1YR - 2YR – RB Jack Wright, $5m 3YR – DE Junior Thomason, $5.4m (minsal) 4YR – LT Matthew Collier, $105m ($40m bonus) 5YR – WR Timothy Montgomery, $65m ($25m bonus) 6YR – QB Timothy Murphy, $115m (3yr minsal) 7YR – WR Vernon Berry, $198m (3y $14m) I was surprised to see QB Timothy Murphy at some point slip upward from “angry” to “unhappy” and therefore open to accepting a contract offer from us. I offer him three years at minsal, with three more at the end to slot it into the 6yr offer slot. That relieves me of searching through the dregs and the rookie class for a backup this season. RB Jack Wright is a pretty good 5th year guy who has been productive for Baltimore in limited duty, and I’m intrigued enough to offer him two years. He has enough endurance to carry our main load – we’ll see how well he does as a #1 back instead of a backup. By the way, I’m basically convinced that LB Ellis Gerald is out of gas, so I’m not offering him a new contract. Have two sophomores who look ready to step into the WLB role, and we will give them their shot, and let Gerald walk. With these signees, we are up to 42 players, and have our roster nearly legal – we are only short a kicker. We have holes to fill, to be sure, but we got most of our crisis spots addressed via free agency. |
03-21-2008, 11:07 PM | #115 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2036 Rookie Draft
Once again, we are picking late, and will settle for what we see. I figure our short term needs are more or less at: WR, G, DE, OLB, TE, S, CB, ILB. Again, I expect the top picks to go to BPA among those positions – though I think we do need to land at least one playable WR in this draft. With our top pick, we have a quandary – WR has been depleted, and the guy I liked as a 2nd rounder or so is now listed 3rd among the WRs on the big board. Meanwhile, a LG my scout likes is sitting there, and looks like a perfect need fit. I think that’s the safe pick here. When my target WR is still there a few picks ahead of us, I pull the trigger, trade away our 3rd rounder, and pick up a couple extra late rounders, which we can use this year. Code:
The one guy I was watching a long time was S Ventura, exactly the sort who creeps, but still never contributes for a team like this. So, to offset, I fiddled with a few oddball filler picks here -– LB Alexander was basically a most-developed-guy at the position, and RB Cooper is basically a curiosity pick due to his two good ratings at odd spots like the broad jump and position drill. QB Dixon is also a guy I interviewed for his great agility drill, and my scout liked him, so worth a late round flier. Hell, my best drafted QB came from round six…why not one more? |
03-21-2008, 11:08 PM | #116 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2036 Late Free Agency
Incidentally, QB Sammie Dixon turns down the cheap contract offer, as did kicker Cris Dixon. Last year the only guy who did that was my LB Goodwin, and he had a monster training camp. Maybe there’s a connection. A breakout camp from Dixon would not shock me. I’ll take note. With our last FA contract, I shore up the secondary a bit with CB Jamie Palmer, an affinity guy who can play a bit for us in nickel and dime coverages if need be. Nothing too special, but we are right up against the camp and I lack the space to afford more glamorous players. |
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lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2036 Training Camp Tampa Bay Player Report (TB 2036c - TB 2036d)
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03-21-2008, 11:08 PM | #118 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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The condensed version:
Code:
Woo boy, trouble at LB. This pushes still-creeping Cedric Peters right into a must-start position, and the unexpected hit to WILB Devine stings a bit, as he will be right in there alongside young Peters. The big plus news here is a veteran breakout from QB Swartz, which is obviously nice – he’s now looking like a pretty serious starter, after all my initial reservations. He will get help from young WR Raymond Shipp who looks to develop into a quality starter for us. And a +3 from RB Cooper… hey, that might work, too. So rookie safety Craig Ventura jumps from 10/28 to 14/35 – well, that’s nice – but will he get enough development to become useful? Tough to say. |
03-21-2008, 11:08 PM | #119 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2036 Season
Benchmarks: Roster Rating – 100 (85 is next) Cohesion – 100/98-100/98-78-84 My predictions: Swartz with his ratings boom posts 4,000yds, 33 TD and only 15 Int Running game a bit better behind Jack Wright, he posts maybe 4.4 ypc Defense slips a bit, pass rush down, but still average That’s good enough for 12 wins and another bye week Season narrative: We barrel off to two strong wins to open up, and then fall flat in a 34-9 loss at Detroit. Swartz is still playing well, though we are suffering a bit from interceptions… even when we get to 4-1, he is actually upside down at 7/8 on the year in his ratio. Halfway home, we are on track with my prediction, sitting at 6-2. Timothy Montgomery, starting at the split end position, is on track for a big season with 627 yards. Jack Wright is giving us our usual result of late – he’s up to 600+ yards, but is under 4 ypc. I will try to get rookie Stanley Cooper in the mix a bit. We wrap things up right on target, with the 12-4 record I expected, and parsed out perfectly into four 3-1 season segments. Not a bad season, overall. However, we have to play in the wild card round, as two NFC teams posted 13-3 records. Code:
I was looking for a bit more from the passing game, but tough to argue with 8.7 ypa there, even if the TD/Int ratio was a bit uninspiring. We know that’s basically what Swartz is capable of. Pretty good seasons from Montgomery and Czyz, while the supporting cast was fine as well. Our running game, as usual, is inflated a shade by Swartz’s running totals. We are not running the ball very well overall, though. With the sort of investment in the OL we are making, that is discouraging. Our pass rush was still among the league’s best, good to see. DT Rolfe is playing very well at the NT slot for us, and we are getting solid numbers all around. DE Newman is probably the best of the lot, but everyone seems to have gotten his share. Pass defense overall is only average, which I would have liked to see better. Safety was a trouble slot – Rusty Woodson was out most of the year, so we had Upshaw and rookie Ventura playing most of the year, which contributed to the problem no doubt. |
03-21-2008, 11:09 PM | #120 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2036 Postseason Narrative:
Wild Card Round: Dallas (10-6) at Tampa Bay (12-4) The kind of game we really prefer here – we get up 10-0 and sort of bear down from there. Never really run away with it, but we play tough defense, and don’t turn the ball over, and smother them over time, 22-10. Divisional Round: Tampa Bay (13-4) at Washington (13-3) Washington led by solid QB/RB tandem, like many teams. We get a couple of first half TDs from Timothy Montgomery to get ahead 21-7, and while it’s more wide open, the game plays out the same way as the last one – we are basically in charge the whole time, and wear them down. It’s 41-21 at the end, but our defense really set us up for some easy points. Conference Championship: Tampa Bay (14-4) at Detroit (14-3) The Lions shellacked us in the regular season, and get another shot here. A solid veteran QB, and a good young RB – sounds familiar. They are the defending champs, so we are the underdogs here for sure. We strike first, but cannot really keep control, and they chip away… 7-3, then 10-7, then 17-7. We get back into it with a long TD pass with about 6 minutes left, but that’s the last highlight in the reel, as we fall 17-14. |
03-21-2008, 11:09 PM | #121 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2036 Season Coda
Detroit defends their title easily over Buffalo. We see LB Gabe Samuels and G Bart Rodgers earn all-pro honors, first and second team respectively. Well, we basically know who we are. We seem to be good enough to hang double digit wins, and be “in the hunt.” A few weaknesses here and there, but overall this is just a good, solid team. I blow it with one thing – I don’t have the cap space to offer LB Gabe Samuels the 5yr extension he seeks, and that’s just bad planning on my part. The only deal I can work out is with TE Travis Buffington – not a key player like Samuels, but he’s extending cheaply enough. The team, overall, seems to be in a pretty good place – we have needs, but we are now cohesion aces to go with our generally strong roster. **sigh** Not too interesting, I fear. |
03-26-2008, 04:50 PM | #122 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2037 Initial Offseason
For some reason, I hit “end season” and continue on with this… No retirements, but we have one veteran to release: CB Harvey Madison. We could actually make a run at re-signing him later, as he is a strong affinity anchor for our secondary – but for now, he has to go. RB Chester Kelly is on a deal intended to be a “pivot” year – about $12 million. I suspect we will prefer to cut him, as we aren’t that bad off in terms of roster spots, but we don’t need to do so right away, at least. RT Leland Lester is another interesting case – he’s slated to make about $10 million this year, he has lost his starting RT job to younger Raymond Money, and he is a strong conflict with our position leader. Another good candidate for a cut. NT Jake Rolfe gets the tag and a $16m contract – not as bad as I had guessed, really. |
03-26-2008, 04:50 PM | #123 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
|
2037 Free Agency
Well, here is our list of players in their walk year, and out of contract: Code:
I guess the logical thing to do with an extension here is to work out a new deal with CB Booker, a guy we clearly want to try to keep around. We offer him the deal he is seeking, and get him locked up for three more seasons, each fairly pricey. So, our main focus among our own players will be to return RG Bart Rodgers and LB Gabe Samuels. Past that, I’m fine with role players anywhere, and perhaps a short term deal with a pricey player somewhere (like DE?). Reneg – RFA – QB Jake Caballero, 3y minsal 1YR – RT Buddy Vasquez, $2.8m 2YR - 3YR – DE Donny Burne, $10.8m 4YR – DT Lester Horst, $31m (3y $8.7m) 5YR – SLB Gabe Samuels, 120m (4y $65m) 6YR – LB Michael Wilkerson, 132m (3y $30m) 7YR – RG Bart Rodgers, 195m (4y $54m) It doesn’t take me long to discard RT Lester and RB Kelly to clear out cap space. That brings our target roster down to 56 players (assuming we use all our contract slots, etc), so we are still doing fine. MLB Michael Wilkerson looks like a perfect addition for us to the inside LB corps, where we have young guys who won’t ever be as good as he already is. Solid add, I think. Things are going fine, until week seven – when LB Gabe Samuels surprises me and out of the blue accepts a new offer from Minnesota. That was unexpected, and there’s nobody out there who can fill that “stud LB” slot for him. Tough loss. I’m thinking the right play here is to slide young Mel Goodwin to that role, but we will wait until after the draft to decide – OLB may also be a rookie target for us now. Then, my fears are doubled – as G Bart Rodgers suddenly turns our offer down, and he too goes to Minnesota. Wow. I did not see that coming at all, I confess, I just saw our offer leading the whole way. (Realistically, the loss of these two guys was largely my own fault – I tried to keep very close to their demands, and didn’t “overpay” either guy with my offer. I think it’s largely for the best, as we would have been committing quite a lot after these two easy-to-fill positions had they both accepted my offers) So, we have our 5 and 7 year contract slots to use now, and not much out there to use them on. OG Roy Maticic is a run-blocker only, but is by far the best interior lineman out there, and he’s cool with a 5y deal. I think he will be solid, though not the same as plugging back in the same guy who has been with us for years and years. LB Doug Farrington is a playable LB who ought to be okay in coverage – just one more guys we can use in a SLB rotation, perhaps. Not great, but cheap. We leave the 2yr slot open for a potential big money guy – as I now have the cap space for one. |
03-26-2008, 04:50 PM | #124 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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2037 Rookie Draft
Well, we pick late in round one again, so we will again wait to see what is left over for us. I’m thinking our target slots for this draft are perhaps at LB,CB,DE,RB,QB and OL… rapidly approaching “everywhere.” We are on the clock, and I have nobody really in mind here. I have a VU-rated WR who ran a 4.37 dash – is that the best place to go here – he might even slide to our round two pick. I explore trading down, but end up just taking the weird-bars CB who stands out to me – best deal we could work was to get a 3rd rounder for moving down 25 spots – too risky. My target WR is there about six picks before we are up, and I decide to pounce rather than regret missing out on him. We get the Dallas 6th and 7th, but give up our 3rd to deal up. Code:
Not much enthusiasm for the bottom of this draft, really, just filling in. If our top two picks work out, we’ll be okay overall. |
03-26-2008, 04:51 PM | #125 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
|
2037 Late Free Agency
We get a holdout from young LB Paul Ward – perfect timing, as we are so thin at LB as is. My guess is that we will go with Mel Goodwin at the weak side slot, and maybe veteran signee Doug Farrington as the strong side starter. This is not ideal, but I think it’s our best use. We will likely keep rookie Jeffrey Morrison in the fold as our weak side backup. I’m comfy enough with the LB situation that I feel I can go elsewhere for our last FA signee – and we pick up 4th year WR Rex Franklin on a short term deal. He comes off two straight 1,000 yard plus seasons, and comes to us for a fairly expensive offer of $7m per year for two seasons. A well rounded receiver, he ought to fit right in with our group, and potentially could become part of our longer term plans. That pushes us all the way to 57 players, so we have some space to clear out. |
03-26-2008, 04:54 PM | #126 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
|
The biggest camp movers:
Code:
So, young WR Rex Fanklin not only looks good, he joins just as our backup flanker falls over the cliff, and he gives us a +5 in camp himself. Wow, great timing, welcome to the fold. The defensive deterioration is rapid and pronounced at this point, that’s cause for concern – we are falling apart on that side of the ball. CB Nakamura will develop into a major asset, it seems, and CB Booker made a nice (random) jump as well. We are going to need help fro a lot of guys soon, so we’ll take all we can get. With this last drop in current skills, S Rusty Woodson has fallen out of our plans, and onto the FA pile. We expect to see both Spencer Upshaw and Craig Ventura getting playing time in the battle for the safety positions. It looks like longtime star Ben Terry is not far behind him in his decline. |
03-26-2008, 04:54 PM | #127 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
|
2037 Season
Benchmarks: Roster Rating – 100 (93 is next) Cohesion – 95-85-71-100 My predictions: More of the same with passing game – 3,500 and 28/14 RB Jack Wright posts 1,400 yards rushing on 4.1 ypc WR Rex Franklin turns out to be our best WR with 1,200 yards DE Darren Newman leads team with 12 sacks We slip a bit, but still make the playoffs at 10-6 Season narrative: We get off to an impressive 2-0 start, with a few surprises – like LB Mel Goodwin off to a great start with 3.5 sacks in just two games from the weak side. At 4-0, we look like a completely dominant team. Through 6 games, we remain prefect and our points ratio is 231-108. We make it all the way to 10-0, and are still putting together monster numbers – Swartz is at a 125 passer rating with a 27/5 ratio, and our teamwide yards/target is over 10. We finally lose one at home to Carolina, but it’s still a magical season we put together all told, as we waltz right into the #1 seed and look easily the best we ever have. Code:
Wow – Jose Swartz had a big big year for us – up to now, he was basically mister steady, good for 25-30 TDs a year (only one season over 30) and suddenly he posts 45 this season, with the same game plan. It just all came together, it seems. WR rex Franklin surely helps – he and Montgomery posted big seasons, and Czyz was still solid, playing mostly in the slot. The running game was nothing special, but Wright did post big numbers, mostly due to us having a lot of big leads. Both our guards had outstanding seasons. On defense, our pass rush was again among the league’s best - #1 with that PR% over 27. Newman did indeed lead the team, but we were good as a unit there, with Goodwin likely earning the weak side job for good now. Safety Spencer Upshaw was shockingly good, and made a case for a new contract with a great 17 passes defensed. DE Donny Burns may have been a meaningful upgrdae for us at DE over Ronald Harmon, moving quietly into that starting role and giving us a solid season. And as usual – the key ingredient in putting together a great defense is arranging to get ahead by three touchdowns. Sure thing. |
03-26-2008, 05:08 PM | #128 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
|
2037 Postseason Narrative
Divisional Playoff: Philadelphia (12-5) at Tampa Bay (15-1) Everything completely falls apart here for us, as we fall behind 24-7 at the half, and then another TD on the first third quarter possession. But we rally hard, get back into position to get into the game, and after Swartz leaves the game with an aggravated injury, we come back under Timothy Murphy to push the game into overtime, and secure the eventual 34-31 win. Hand Murphy the Frank Reich award for that one. Conference Championship: Dallas (13-4) at Tampa Bay (16-1) Okay, Swartz is again listed as Q with a knee, he is slotted as our starter, but who knows? Swartz plays, but we are not effective on offense, and fail to get thing going at all – we fall behind, and this time our rally comes up short, as we fall 17-14. |
03-26-2008, 05:08 PM | #129 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
|
2037 Season Coda
Well, great regular season, disappointing postseason – we’ve heard this one before. Dallas wins it all easily over Buffalo (heh). Jose Swartz gets his first all-pro honors, named second team QB behind Dallas’s wily veteran Frank Altenberger. K Cris Joseph and OLB Mel Goodwin are named first teamers. I decide that S Spencer Upshaw deserves a new deal after this excellent season, and we lock him up for three more years. Not the guy I had in mind at the start of the season, but he really seems to have earned it, in my view. |
03-26-2008, 05:14 PM | #130 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
|
For what it's worth, I am toying with the idea of continuing this career under some version of the rules that I have tossed out in this thread. I'm pretty much bored with these rules -- though they have done a pretty reasonable job of keeping me challenged, I'm getting a little tired of doing all the same little things year in and year out.
Just FYI... I might relaunch this career in a new thread, with a new set of rules. |
04-23-2011, 03:00 PM | #131 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
|
Placeholder thought here. Looking back at these rules, trying to decide if there's enough here to reboot with.
Contemplating tying in an old rule I used a few times long, long ago -- limiting my FA activity to no more than one outstanding FA offer at any time. Could fit with this theme, possibly even simpler to manage. For now, just a thought... |
04-24-2011, 04:15 AM | #132 |
Pro Starter
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Madison, WI
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I just spent the last few hours reading this straight through, and I think your constraints were interesting to see you work with, even if they weren't that interesting for you to wiggle inside. That said, I've never played FOF, though I have enough Madden experience / NFL knowledge to stand in for FOF know-how.
Without constraints like these, how challenging is single-player mode? |
04-25-2011, 01:05 PM | #133 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
|
I think for a brand new player, FOF single player is likely to be pretty challenging. There are a lot of things that simply require some brute force and experience to get familiar enough with to really "beat" the game.
For veteran players who have mastered the wide open game, I think the game still plays really well with some constraints. At that point, it's just a matter of how tough to you want to make the constraints, and/or what sort of decisions do you like to be making? For me, it's basically a holy grail sort of thing... the process of developing a great set of house rules is a decade-long challenge for me, and it's become sort of a meta game unto itself. I am fiddling a bit now on using this "one" concept, built around one-FA-offer-outstanding as the centerpiece, as a good and easy-to-follow rule. So far, fairly promising returns, but I don't know that I am pushing it as far as I ought to. |
05-15-2023, 03:01 PM | #134 | |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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Quote:
This proved to be among the better (or at least most memorable) sets of House Rules I developed and used in FOF over the years. I like that it introduced something that is missing in FOF compared to the real world NFL... routine bad contracts requiring dead money tails. It is just too easy to avoid that, for the most part, even in cutthroat MP leagues. In the NFL even good teams end up with them on the regular. |
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