Wednesday, August 24, 2011

The Most Accurate Fantasy Football Rankings

David Kim is the co-founder of FantasyPros, a site that aggregates and organizes advice from all the top fantasy football sources. You can follow FantasyPros on Twitter.

My 3-year old daughter holds me accountable for every promise I make. She once gave me a “timeout” for forgetting to pack her Rapunzel doll. If only we could demand as much accountability in the world of fantasy football prognostication, we might have a little better guidance on how to dominate our drafts. And given all the player movement this preseason, quality advice is in high demand.

Well, one of our goals at FantasyPros is to measure each expert’s advice in a completely objective and transparent way so there’s at least some level of accountability. If all the sites say that they provide the most accurate advice, who are we to believe? And, who actually remembers all the sleepers and bold predictions from last season? We’ve been keeping score the last couple of years, so I summarized our findings in this short accuracy cheat sheet.

Top Overall Experts by Year

Top Position Experts by Year

Top Experts for 2010 Draft (Preseason Rankings)

*The Kicker position is not included in our Overall Scoring, but Mike Herman deserves attention because he lapped the field in kicker accuracy. That happens to be his specialty (in fact, it’s the only position that he submits rankings for), so kudos to Mike.

In terms of the field, we’re tracking over 70 fantasy football experts this year. This number has grown from the 21 and 41 experts we tracked in 2009 and 2010. You can easily visit the sites of these experts by visiting our main accuracy rankings.

The key takeaways from our two years of data are:

It’s probably a good time to mention that we’re not the only providers of accuracy data. Sara Holladay, another guest columnist here, has been tracking preseason rankings for several years now. I would encourage you to view her work. Our assessment uses a completely different methodology and measures both draft and in-season accuracy. We primarily focus on the latter since it provides, in our opinion, much better data to work with (since injuries and other unpredictable factors are minimized). It also provides significantly more data to work with (16 sets of rankings vs. just 1).

We’ll be providing updates during the season here at The Fifth Down. What I’m most excited about, however, is that we’ll be working with the Sablich Brothers this season to provide a way to track the accuracy of you, the readers. It’ll be a nice opportunity to see how you stack up against the experts. More details to come.

Now that I’ve succeeded at mentioning a Disney princess in a fantasy football post, I’ll just wish you all total dominance in your fantasy football drafts. Good luck!

Video: Galaxy players discuss upcoming CONCACAF match against Alajuelense





L.A. Galaxy players David Beckham and Landon Donovan, as well as Coach Bruce Arena, discuss their CONCACAF Champions League game against LD Alajuelense. For more soccer news, go to The Times' soccer page.

ALSO:

A big contract comes with big questions for Samuel Eto'o

Robbie Keane shows star power in Galaxy debut

Galaxy feels the pressure moving forward

Santana, Weaver may pitch on short rest against Rangers

Neither Ervin Santana nor Jered Weaver has started a big league game on three days' rest, and in Santana’s last two starts, he threw a career-high 129 pitches against Texas on Aug. 17 and 115 pitches against the White Sox on Tuesday night.

Weaver ranked fourth in the major leagues in pitches thrown (2,990) and seventh in innings pitched (188 1/3) entering Wednesday night's start against the Chicago White Sox.

But Manager Mike Scioscia said he is still considering bringing both right-handers back on short rest to pitch against the American League West-leading Texas Rangers this weekend.

That would enable the Angels to start their three best pitchers in the key series at Texas -- Dan Haren on Friday night, Santana on Saturday night and Weaver on Sunday night.

The Angels started a pair of rookie right-handers, Tyler Chatwood and Garrett Richards, in the first two games of a four-game series against the Rangers last week, and they lost both games.

“It will be contingent on how they feel coming out of their starts, how they play long toss in between,” Scioscia said of Weaver and Santana. “We’ll monitor them over the next day or two and make a decision.”

The fact that neither has started on short rest “shouldn’t be an issue, because this would be a one-time deal,” Scioscia said. “If we were going to a four-man rotation three or four times through the rotation, some guys might unravel.”

-- Mike DiGiovanna 

Angels reliever Scott Downs close to return (lineups)

Reliever Scott Downs, sidelined since Saturday because of tightness in his left hamstring, did agility drills and wind sprints, played long toss and threw a 15-pitch bullpen session Wednesday afternoon.

The left-hander with a 6-2 record and 1.31 earned-run average was not available to pitch Wednesday night against the Chicago White Sox, but he should be ready for Friday night’s game against the Texas Rangers.

Downs was warming up to enter Saturday night’s game against the Baltimore Orioles when he said he “felt a pop” in the hamstring. He has not pitched since Friday night.

Outfielder Mike Trout is not in the lineup for the second straight game. Manager Mike Scioscia said struggling outfielder Vernon Wells, who doubled Tuesday night, "hit some balls hard [Tuesday], and we hope he can build on that." Scioscia said Trout and catcher Hank Conger, who also is not in Wednesday night's lineup, will play this weekend against Texas.

The Angels lineup: CF Peter Bourjos, 3B Alberto Callaspo, DH Bobby Abreu, RF Torii Hunter, 1B Mark Trumbo, 2B Howie Kendrick, LF Vernon Wells, SS Erick Aybar, C Jeff Mathis, P Jered Weaver.

The White Sox lineup: LF Juan Pierre, RF Alejandro De Aza, DH Paul Konerko, CF Alex Rios, SS Alexei Ramirez, 1B Adam Dunn, C Tyler Flowers, 3B Brent Morel, 2B Gordon Beckham, P Zach Stewart.

--Mike DiGiovanna

Video: Sam Farmer on the Saints hitting the ground running



 

Times NFL columnist Sam Farmer talks with CineSport's Noah Coslov about the New Orleans Saints, who have a loaded backfield despite the loss of Reggie Bush. For more on the NFL, check out The Times' pro football page.

RELATED:

Chris Johnson to meet with Titans GM

Hazing, a ritual whose time has passed

There's no such thing as job security for NFL kickers

USC basketball: Danilo Dragovic impressed his high school coach

USC Danilo Dragovic, the newest member of the USC men's basketball team, didn't play a single game for North Hollywood Harvard-Westlake because of some eligibility issues following his move from Serbia. 

But from what Wolverines Coach Greg Hilliard saw in practice, the 6-foot-5 combo guard was impressive.

"He was by far our best outside shooter with the most range," Hilliard said by phone Wednesday. "He could handle with either hand and finish with big dunks at the rim." 

How impressive is Dragovic is a shooter? 

To answer that, Hilliard relayed this story.

Hilliard's practices include a drill in which players have to make five shots from eight different spots on the floor in less than four minutes. Well, Dragovic made all 40 shots and then he moved into what they call "plus time," where he tried to make as many shots as he could before his time ran out. He made 25 more, which tied the drill's all-time record set by forward Renaldo Woolridge, who plays at Tennessee. 

Former UCLA football player Morrell Presley is arrested

2009 UCLA football player portrait of Morrell Presley. Morrell Presley, a former UCLA football player, was arrested last week and charged with criminal trespassing and burglary in Maricopa County.

Presley, who came to UCLA with great fanfare in 2009, left school in spring after a string of problems. He was suspended one game for violating team rules as a freshman. He was academically ineligible for the Bruins’ EagleBank Bowl appearance the follow season.

A year ago, he was suspended for one game after failing a drug test for the third time, according to multiple people in the program who were no authorized to speak on the subject.

His Aug. 17 arrest on the misdemeanor charges was made by the Maricopa County Sheriff's Department. He was released the following day.

ALSO:

Brandon Willis might return to UCLA football team

UCLA football: QB Brett Hundley practices for the first time

UCLA football: Guard Chris Ward leaves practice with ankle injury

-- Chris Foster

Photo: 2009 UCLA football player portrait of Morrell Presley. Credit: Don Liebig / UCLA Photography

Should NASCAR allow Kyle Busch to drive with a suspended license? [Updated]

Kyle Busch talks with reporters and photographers after his court appearance in Statesville, N.C.

Writers from around the Tribune Co. discuss whether Kyle Bush, who had his driver's license suspended, should be allowed behind the wheel of a NASCAR stock car. Weigh in with your comment.

[Updated at 1:29 p.m.

Keith Groller, Morning Call

We all know too well a few folks who have been, uh, shall we say, “trapped” into a few tickets over the years. But Kyle Busch going 128 in a 45-mph zone borders on the insane — even for Busch.

Maybe the police that caught him should be offered a NASCAR opportunity since they did something Junior and others have trouble doing every Sunday — catch Busch.

NASCAR and Joe Gibbs Racing should send a message here and suspend Busch for the same duration of his other driving penalty.

But this being pro sports and being more about the money than anything else, that won’t happen. NASCAR needs the antagonizing Busch, smirking smile and all, front and center all the way through “The Chase.”]

Barry Stavro, Los Angeles Times 

Yes. Any other citizen in Busch’s position would face the same challenge: arranging transportation to work. Once there, whether the job is pushing a broom or managing a hedge fund, they’d be allowed to put in their hours. It’s also worth noting that NASCAR ovals are not public streets, they are closed circuits. Furthermore, anyone else in Busch’s legal situation would also be allowed to drive a sit-down lawn mower or a tractor on their property or pilot a motorboat. Speeding over 100 mph is a significant traffic offense. But society views other traffic crimes far more seriously — such as a DUI. Busch is serving his penalty. As long as someone else drives him to work, let Busch do his job.

Disgruntled soccer fan rams ref with scooter [video]









 

A soccer referee escaped unscathed after an angry fan rushed the field and struck him -- with a mobility scooter.

The incident occurred after Oss' loss to Almere City in the Dutch league match Friday night, reports FanHouse UK.

Referee Edwin van der Graaf was walking into the tunnel after the match when the fan, riding the scooter, clipped the ref a couple of times before van der Graaf stepped out of reach.

No word on whether the unidentified fan will face any charges. On the video he appears to just scoot away after the run-in.

-- Kelly Burgess

Video credit: FanHouse UK via YouTube

Blake Griffin takes comedy intern job for Will Ferrell

Blake Griffin, left, watches a camera operator during the first day of Griffin's week-long internship at comedy video website Funny Or Die in Los Angeles. Griffin will spend the week on tasks ranging from running office errands to helping out on productions. Stymied by the NBA lockout, Blake Griffin is going to work for Will Ferrell instead.

This week, the Clippers All-Star forward is interning at Funny Or Die, the comedy website co-founded by Ferrell and Adam McKay. Griffin arrived at the site's L.A. offices Tuesday to begin three days of work in video production.

He will help write, shoot, edit and act in several videos for the site. Funny Or Die quickly creates digital comedy videos, often with celebrity guest appearances.

Griffin said he's a big comedy fan and an avid viewer of Funny Or Die. As an intern, he hopes to learn more about film production.

“Just to get an inside look at how things are run here is exciting to me,” Griffin said Tuesday. “I don't know what interns at Funny Or Die are like, but I'm about to find out, I guess.”

Mike Farah, president of production at Funny Or Die, pledged that Griffin will be treated like other interns. He noted that the 22-year-old Griffin is, after all, about the same age as most of the site's college interns. The others, of course, may not be able to dunk over midsize sedans.

“We're going to put him to work,” said Farah. “He's shooting a series of videos, and he's also coming to meetings. He's basically doing everything that an intern does.”

Griffin counts “Old School,” “Wedding Crashers” and “Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy” among his favorite movies. On Funny Or Die, he likes Zach Galifianakis' mock interview series “Between Two Ferns.”

“I'll go see a bad comedy over a good action movie any day,” Griffin said.

Griffin, who was last season's NBA Rookie of the Year and won the Slam Dunk Contest (in which he leaped over a Kia Optima), has been keeping busy during the NBA lockout. He's done a lot of sponsorship work, been active on Twitter and launched a basketball camp for kids in Oklahoma City.

Though Griffin averaged 22.5 points and 12.1 rebounds per game last season, he says he's not above fetching coffee in his week as an intern.

“I don't mind doing stuff like that,” said the forward. “It's not a problem for me.”

-- Associated Press

Photo: Blake Griffin, left, watches a camera operator during the first day of Griffin's week-long internship at comedy video website Funny Or Die in Los Angeles. Griffin will spend the week on tasks ranging from running office errands to helping out on productions. Credit: Chris Pizzello / Associated Press

USC football: Suspended tailback Marc Tyler practices for first time

USC tailback Marc Tyler, suspended for the Sept. 3 opener against Minnesota, made his first practice appearance Wednesday and worked nearly exclusively with the scout team.

"He's done what we've asked him to do to be able to come back and practice," said Athletic Director Pat Haden, who attended the early part of practice. "He's not playing. He's on the scout team. He still has a lot more hurdles to overcome."

Tyler, USC's leading rusher last season, was suspended during the summer after a series of off-the-field incidents. His return to practice coincides with his return to team meetings as well.

"It's the next step in the process [of] Marc hopefully coming back," USC Coach Lane Kiffin said. "This isn't a major step. He's not cleared for the second game. This is just something that we had in place as he goes through this process."

USC will go into the Minnesota game with junior Curtis McNeal, sophomore Dillon Baxter, redshirt freshman D.J. Morgan and freshman Amir Carlisle.

There remains no concrete time frame for Tyler being allowed to play in games.

"We'll just mix him in there some in practice, especially with the service team so he'll get beat up down there going against our No. 1 defense," Kiffin said.

More later at latimes.com/sports.

-- Gary Klein

2011 Green Bay Packers Season Preview

Andy Benoit is previewing all 32 N.F.L. teams. Today, he turns to the Packers, the defending champions.

These days, when a team wins a championship, it takes about 30 seconds for people to start wondering if we’re looking at the beginning of a dynasty. It’s as if we’re discussing Chinese history and not a pro sports team. The expectation of a dynasty is as unrealistic as it is unfair.

Except, perhaps, in the Green Bay Packers’ case.

O.K., maybe talking about a dynasty is no less unfair to the Packers than it was to the ’09 Saints or ’11 Mavericks or the ’08 Phillies. But it’s much harder to blame people for wading into the topic this time. Thanks to brilliant long-term roster building by General Manager Ted Thompson, this cohesive, rising team is deep and headlined by handfuls of stars in their prime. The brightest happens to play the most important position, making this the first team since the Montana-Young 49ers to replace a top shelf superstar quarterback with another top shelf superstar quarterback.

Aaron Rodgers is the primary reason people are talking about a longtime powerhouse in Green Bay. But dynasties are like Jenga towers: they can only be built one piece at a time. Thus, the focus is entirely on chasing another Lombardi Trophy in 2011-12. It will be interesting to see just how sharp that focus is. How does a young team stay hungry after  ring ceremonies, media appearances and a break from training camp to visit the White House?

Normally, defending champions can use minicamps and OTA’s to fight complacency. Even then, it’s a difficult battle (just ask the ’09 Steelers). The Packers were one of the few teams whose players did not hold their own organized workouts during the lockout. Whether that makes them fresh and alert or sloppy and satisfied is a matter of interpretation, but you can bet observers will make a declaration one way or the other come September. And that declaration, regardless of its direction or validity, will bring about more pressure.

But no need to waste our time and energy predicting whether the Packers will be “focused” in 2011. Focus is impossible to forecast without eventually resorting to pure guessing. Instead, let’s worry about how this team will tactically go about repeating its success.

The popular assumption is that having everyone healthy after 16 players finished last season on injured reserve will only make the Packers better. But that’s not necessarily true. Tight end Jermichael Finley is the only genuine difference-maker returning from I.R.. Everyone else is a role player who provides depth (Ryan Grant fans, bite your tongues here – we’ll get to the fifth-year running back later).

We often make the mistake of viewing depth as a propagator of success, when in fact, it’s really a symptom. In other words, the Packers aren’t the deepest team in football because Thompson hit home runs with many of his middle-and late-round draft picks; the Packers are the deepest team in football because Thompson hit home runs with his coaching hires. Coach Mike McCarthy is one of the most innovative offensive minds in the league today. Defensive coordinator Dom Capers might be the best 3-4 and sub-package strategist of this era. Green Bay’s coaching staff has installed great systems. When you have great systems, players are put in position to excel, making it easy to cultivate depth.  Far more significant than getting a slew of players back from injured reserve is having every member of last year’s coaching staff back in 2011 save for receivers coach Jimmy Robinson (now in Dallas). That’s rare.

There’s a caveat, though. McCarthy’s and Capers’s systems might create good players, but the systems only work because of a few transcendent players. That’s the real key – the Packers have superstars in exactly the right places.

Offense

A trademark of Mike McCarthy’s system is its transformability. The Packers can line up in a spread formation on one down, a jumbo run bunch on the next down and any base set in between. Like the Saints and Patriots, they have more packages than opponents  have time to prepare for.

But if you had to pigeonhole McCarthy’s system, you could probably get away with calling it a “spread West Coast offense.” The Packers spend considerable time slinging the ball out of 3 x 1 receiver sets. That was their primary formula down the stretch last season and the backbone of their game plan in Super Bowl XLV.

It works because there’s a superstar in the only position that a top-flight N.F.L. offense demands one. Take history out of the equation and you could make a strong argument that Aaron Rodgers is the best quarterback right now. He has better velocity and accuracy on throws through tight windows than anyone in the game (which is why he’s borderline invincible in the red zone). His mastery in the pocket is fostered by a release that’s as quick as any passer’s. He is athletic enough to buy time and scramble for positive yardage. In fact, only one quarterback is definitively superior to Rodgers in this realm (Michael Vick). And rarely does Rodgers need to showcase his impressive improvisational skills because he just so happens to have one of the sharpest presnap minds in the league (his brilliance with dummy snap counts is a tremendous aid in this capacity). No other quarterback in the game has such a complete toolbox.

Rodgers’s excellence has enabled McCarthy to design a passing game that makes extremely clever use of receiver distribution and route combinations. The Packers prove that most mismatches are created simply by where certain players line up. McCarthy loves to put three wide receivers to one side of the field and leave Greg Jennings as the isolated wideout (the X receiver) on the other side.

This particular spread almost always forces a defense to guard at least one of the three receivers with a safety (which is a mismatch considering Donald Driver, Jordy Nelson and James Jones all have stellar speed and quickness, and could all be a No. 1 receiver for a small handful of teams). It also often forces defenses to cover Jennings man-to-man (which is a mismatch given that he’s a legitimate top-five receiver). If there’s no safety help on Jennings, that’s where Rodgers goes.

It’s scary to think what McCarthy will come up with now that he has Jermichael Finley and, if the second-round rookie develops quickly, Randall Cobb, at his disposal. From a pure athletic standpoint, the freakishly supple Finley is the most gifted tight end the N.F.L. has ever seen. Obviously, he has to stay healthy and hone his craft for several years before we can even consider talking about him in those terms, but right now, potential alone makes him a one-of-a-kind nightmare for opposing defenses. As for Cobb, he’s a lightning quick multi-tooled weapon.

Credit McCarthy for so often resisting the urge to become a pass-only offense. He understands the value of diversity and being able to control the tempo and clock if need be. It doesn’t take a dominant rushing attack to do this, which is fortunate because the Packers don’t have one. Ryan Grant is proficient, but his mechanical style allows him to  gain only the yards that the play’s design and blockers’ execution presents. He’s not powerful or explosive enough to consistently create on his own.

That’s fine – as Grant has shown before, a player like this can still rush for over 1,200 yards if he’s smart. Rising second-year back James Starks will warrant carries in 2011, but if Ted Thompson and his staff viewed him as a long-term featured back, they probably wouldn’t have drafted bruising north/south runner Alex Green in the third round. Then again, perhaps Green is here to replace Grant, who’s scheduled for free agency in 2012. The Packers can decide after the season.

In the meantime, Grant’s set to start in Week 1. Starks, an improving pass-blocker, can handle the third down duties that Brandon Jackson (now a Brown) left behind, though fullback John Kuhn may have a leg up on him here. Kuhn will also handle short-yardage carries, which means Green will watch and learn from the bottom of the depth chart.

This once-maligned offensive line has been restored and could be one of the league’s best in three years. Last year’s first-round pick, Bryan Bulaga, doesn’t have the quickness to shine on the left side. That’s also fine – the Packers quickly made him a cog at right tackle and went out and got Derek Sherrod in the first-round of this year’s draft. Sherrod could initially get a look at left guard – he’s currently trailing unspectacular but experienced T.J. Lang in a competition to replace the departed Daryn Colledge – but figures to be the eventual heir to left tackle Chad Clifton. At 35, Clifton was supposed to be washed up by now, but he’s coming off one of the best second-half seasons of his rock-solid career. Inside, center Scott Wells is a revered leader and mobile run-blocker. Right guard Josh Sitton just turned 25 and is already the league’s best at his position.

Defense

McCarthy’s offense is built around one superstar. Dom Capers’s defense, which is a versatile and aggressive 3-4-slash-2-4-5, is built around two: slot cornerback Charles Woodson and outside linebacker Clay Matthews. Without a first-class talent at each of these spots, the system wouldn’t exist. Woodson is a sublime blitzer who can also sniff out the run and cover just about any wide receiver or tight end man-to-man. His versatility gives the system its dimension. Matthews is a devastatingly fast edge-rusher who, when given an inkling of space, can slip around any blocker. His speed gives the system its potency. Of the two, Woodson is more valuable simply because so much of what Capers does is about creating disguise before the snap.

The two superstars don’t deserve all the credit. The Packer defense is what the rest of the N.F.L. aspires to because it’s rich with myriad sub packages and presnap looks. This requires smart, multidimensional players in all spots. And because so many of Green Bay’s befuddling tactics rely on zone coverage inside and man coverage outside, this system specifically demands at least one, and preferably two, top shelf cover corners.

Last year’s Super Bowl run probably wouldn’t have happened without the stunning growth of Tramon Williams. Released by the Texans just days before Week 1 as an undrafted rookie in ’06, Williams signed with Green Bay two months later and spent a few years toiling at the bottom of the depth chart. He was an unrefined, flag-drawing liability as a fill-in starter in ’08. An injury to Al Harris led to another fill-in role in ’09, and by the end of that season Williams had started to capitalize on his raw athleticism by becoming a playmaker. By the middle of ’10, he’d become a more consistent playmaker and, more importantly, a fulltime play-stopper. That prompted Thompson to sign him to a four-year, $33 million extension during the season (i.e. before the Packers could win a Super Bowl with Williams shutting down opposing No. 1 receivers and suddenly commanding near-Asomugha money).

Maybe the next man Thompson should sign long-term is defensive backs coach Darren Perry, given that 2010 undrafted rookie Sam Shields appears to be climbing the same staircase to stardom as Williams. (For what it’s worth, Perry’s name was mentioned in several defensive coordinator searches this past off-season.) Shields gives the Packers a second outside stopper, which allows less reliable 27-year-old backups Pat Lee and Jarrett Bush to play more zone as inside dime defenders.

Nick Collins’s range in centerfield also aids this secondary. Collins is given more read-and-react assignments than a typical free safety and has handled the responsibility well enough to earn three straight Pro Bowl trips. At strong safety, second-year pro Morgan Burnett is back from a season-ending knee injury, while backup Charlie Peprah has proven serviceable (though just barely – Peprah’s not the soundest open-field tackler).

Because Woodson is such an effective tackler who compensates for subpar strength by eluding blocks with quickness and leverage, the Packers are willing to remain in their 2-4-5 package even when offenses line up with two tight ends or two running backs. This isn’t to say the Packers do this every time, but the option is there. Thus, it’s not earth-shattering news that B.J. Raji – who has a thundering burst and is on track to be this D’s third superstar, if he’s not already – is moving from nose tackle back to end. He and Ryan Pickett (moving from end back to nose tackle) will line up all over the front during the course of a game.

Mike Neal, a second-round pick in ’10 who missed 14 games last season with a torn rotator cuff, will work ahead of C.J. Wilson and Jarius Wynn in a rotation at the third defensive line position. Space-eating (and everything-else-eating) veteran Howard Green will also get snaps.

An equally deep rotation could take place at the outside linebacker position opposite Matthews. The rash of injuries in 2010 led to Frank Zombo, Erik Walden and Brad Jones starting games at this spot. Zombo has reportedly had the best camp of the three and is in line to start in Week 1. Walden is clearly a better athlete than Zombo, but his run defense is iffy. Jones is probably the best pure pass-rusher of the bunch but isn’t as versatile as Zombo.

Saving the most mundane for last, we get to the inside linebackers. At his best, A.J. Hawk epitomizes a solid puzzle piece (which is a far less insulting characterization than it sounds). Desmond Bishop has enough pop and quickness that Capers will design a few interior blitzes for him each game.

Special Teams

Re-signing kicker Mason Crosby was Thompson’s top priority this past summer. Punter Tim Masthay was very impressive down the stretch last season. Randall Cobb is assuming the punt return duties from Tramon Williams and competing with Alex Green for kick returns.

Bottom Line

On paper this is a better team than a year ago. Having worked together in the same system for several years should be advantageous early in this post-lockout season. A prediction for the Packers comes down to a person’s gut feeling about how the team will respond to the emotional demands of defending a title. The personal hunch here is there’ll be some sort of letdown. But that’s just a guess.

Predicted Finish: 1st N.F.C. North

Andy Benoit is the founder of NFLTouchdown.com and covers the N.F.L. for CBSsports.com. He can be reached at andy.benoit@NFLtouchdown.com.

UFC 134: Ross Pearson training with champions for Edson Barboza test in Brazil


Ross Pearson

Ross Pearson


Ross Pearson will walk into a caldron when he steps into the sold-out HSBC Arena in Rio, Brazil in the early hours of Sunday morning to take on unbeaten local Edson Barboza at UFC 134.


Sunderland bricklayer turned ultimate fighter Pearson, who’s earthy approach to mixed martial arts has earned him the name ‘the Real Deal’, knows he’s going to be lustily jeered by the 16,000 Brazilians who have already been whipped into a fever with the UFC’s first event since the late 1990s. In the thirteen-year absence from Rio, the fans have never lost their love of the sport. Brazil remains the cradle of MMA.


Barboza is formidable, and is 8-0 in the sport; he’s stopped six opponents with strikes and submitted another; he is coming off a fantastic fight of the night win over Anthony Njokuani at UFC 128; he is hotly tipped to perhaps join some of his countrymen and fellow UFC 134 main carders – Anderson Silva, “Shogun” Rua and “Minotauro” Nogueira – as a future UFC title holder.


But Pearson believes two-months of training with elite level UFC fighters including bantamweight king Dominic Cruz will be the difference in this fight. Pearson is 4-1 in the UFC, and although he won’t speak of it as to not look to be making excuses, a freak knee injury during his fight with Cole Miller a year ago probably cost him his UFC unbeaten record.


Pearson is focused on this weekend’s fight, though, correctly believing this is a career-changer for him. He said: “A win here puts me on the map. I’ve had a setback but a win over Barboza in Rio will be noticed by a lot of people.


“I knew I needed to base my camp in the States, and I’ve been training with guys like Dominick, Brandon Vera and Phil Davis day in, day out and really come on. I needed to improve my game and I want to become a better fighter than what I already was, so I’ve been out at MMA Alliance training with the best.”


“The standard is right up there at the top and it’s bringing my game on so much. Everyone back home in England – my family, friends, even my Rough House teammates – said that if I want to evolve and become a world champion in the sport, I have to go out here and train with the best. There was nothing but positive vibes coming from people back home, telling me I was doing the right thing coming out here. I had sorta become a big fish in a little pond training in England, where out here, I’m just a little fish in a very big pond.”


Pearson knows he’s up against a formidable striker. He said: “Barboza does a lot of things I like to do, he’s a great puncher and he mixes his punches and kicks very well. But I am not scared of him at all. I am going to put it on him from the very first second of the fight and pressure him. He likes to kick from a distance, he’s not going to do that to me. Not happening.


“I think it’s going to be a real war and I know he’ll be fired up fighting in front of all his countrymen. I thought at UFC 105 in Manchester (November 2009) and having fans willing you to do win does help. But it also adds pressure on you and I think when he doesn’t have it his own way he’ll not know what to do.


“I’m expecting a total war, but that’s the way I like it.”



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