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How to draft the right fantasy football magazine By Brandon Funston Special to Page 2 |
| As far as I'm concerned, until they come up with a functional and sanitary way to integrate computers into bathrooms, there will always be a need for magazines. And, if the subject matter deals with fantasy football, then the value extends even beyond a relaxing "private time" read. From the moment of purchase, my fantasy football mag becomes an inseparable summer companion, the foundation for my 2001 fantasy football education and, most importantly, the good buddy that has my back on draft day.
Pro Football Weekly ($5.99) Presentation: 2.1 -- Uniqueness: 2.1 -- Insight: 2.4 -- Staples: 2.4 -- Overall: 9.0 No.1 Ranked Player (Yardage+TD scoring): Edgerrin James -- Where they ranked Aaron Brooks: No. 12 among QBs Comment: Consider the rest of the market Pepsi or Chevrolet, the Index is Ford and Coke. They were one of the first on the market and were pioneers of the cheatsheet. They've survived their rookie prediction for Randy Moss -- "Moss may go down as the 1998 version of Rocket Ismail or Desmond Howard" -- and have consistently offered strong opinions backed with supporting evidence for their claims. They get high grades for a cheatsheet that manages to squeeze in individual 2000 stats, expansive expert polls, and well-designed 2000 player game logs. Downgrade them for their player profiles, which need corresponding three-year stat tables and an overall player ranking list that extends beyond the top 25 players. Despite finishing a close second, I'll remain loyal to the Index. Sporting News Fantasy Football ($5.99) Presentation: 2.3 -- Uniqueness: 2.0 -- Insight: 2.2 -- Staples: 2.2 -- Overall: 8.7
Presentation: 2.3 -- Uniqueness: 1.9 -- Insight: 1.8 -- Staples: 2.1 -- Overall: 8.1 No. 1 ranked player: Marshall Faulk -- Where they ranked Aaron Brooks: No. 18 among QBs Comment: The self-proclaimed No. 1 rated fantasy mag is pretty solid, but they suffer slightly from an overinflated ego. I'm not ready to anoint them as my No. 1, but I was impressed with a clean and organized layout and a basic offering of all the essentials you look for. Of course, they get hurt for their lack of game logs -- of which, as you know by now, I'm a big fan. They do need a better name, but you could do a lot worse for content. Fantasy Football Pro Forecast ($6.99) Presentation: 1.5 -- Uniqueness: 2.1 -- Insight: 2.2 -- Staples: 2.2 -- Overall: 8.0 No. 1 ranked player: Marshall Faulk -- Where they ranked Aaron Brooks: No. 31 among QBs Comment: It turns out that Fantasy Football Pro Forecast is just the mothership among a slew of football magazines produced by Fantasy Sports Publications, Inc. The rest of its fleet are more singularly focused than Pro Forecast and include Fantasy Football Experts Poll, Fantasy Football Draft Book and Fantasy Football Cheatsheets. Because Pro Forecast is essentially a combination of the others, that is what I based my analysis on. The Forecast apparently prostitutes out a lot of its space to industry insiders, offering website promotion for expert analysis and rankings; I enjoyed the many different perspectives. Their presentation leaves a lot to be desired -- lots of stark pages, although the player profiles added a little life. There was a lack of organization, as features seemed to be randomly stuffed in the pages like the contents of George Castanza's wallet. With the exception of team page hubs, though, it has just about everything you are looking for. Lindy's Fantasy Football ($5.99) Presentation: 2.3 -- Uniqueness: 1.9 -- Insight: 1.9 -- Staples: 1.9 -- Overall: 8.0
Rotowire Fantasy Football Guide ($6.99) Presentation: 1.9 -- Uniqueness: 1.8 -- Insight: 2.1 -- Staples: 1.7 -- Overall: 7.5 No. 1 ranked player: Marshall Faulk -- Where they ranked Aaron Brooks: No. 14 among QBs Comment: FSM publishes two fantasy football magazines during the summer, and purchasing the September issue buys you a more updated magazine than the competition. But, what you make up in timeliness, you lose in overall depth. Basically, FSM is a little more than 100 pages of player profiles, with some cheatsheets, depth charts and a couple draft strategy articles thrown in for good measure. Creative uses for stats, team tendencies and team page hubs are the most notable absent. Fantasy Football Weekly ($5.99) Presentation: 1.8 -- Uniqueness: 2.0 -- Insight: 2.5 -- Staples: 1.2 -- Overall: 7.5 No. 1 ranked player: Edgerrin James -- Where they ranked Aaron Brooks: No. 10 among QBs Comment: FFW is actually published newspaper style, like the old Sporting News. It has the advantage of hitting the newsstands much later than the others and, therefore, has fresher cheatsheets and some training camp information. They are strong on player rankings and player profiles, but statistical support tables are nonexistent. Preview Sports Fantasy Football ($6.99) Presentation: 2.1 -- Uniqueness: 1.3 -- Insight: 1.4 -- Staples: 1.4 -- Overall: 6.2
Presentation: 1.4 -- Uniqueness: 1.4 -- Insight: 1.6 -- Staples: 1.6 -- Overall: 6.0 No.1 ranked player Didn't name a No. 1 overall -- Where they ranked Aaron Brooks: No.38 among QBs Comment: My only response was a yawn. I liked the team tendencies graph on each team page hub, showing the percentages that a team ran vs. passed, as well as how often a pass went to a RB, WR or TE. Their player profiles possessed some decisive commentary, but they lacked three-year stat tables and game logs. There wasn't much candy here for the eyes either. Cliff Charpentier's Fantasy Football Draft Guide ($4.95) Presentation: 1.2 -- Uniqueness: 1.2 -- Insight: 1.0 -- Staples: 1.6 -- Overall: 5.0 No. 1 ranked player: Marshall Faulk -- Where they ranked Aaron Brooks: No. 17 among QBs Comment: Cliff Charpentier might lay claim to the first fantasy sports publication -- he's been publishing a paperback digest for 18 years and a magazine for five -- but that would be his only award in this genre. With milquetoast commentary, a 1978 look and feel and a cheatsheet that doesn't go beyond the top 15 at each position, it's safe to say this magazine is aging more like milk than wine. Fantasy Football Advisor ($4.95) Presentation: 0.9 -- Uniqueness: 1.0 -- Insight: 0.5 -- Staples: 1.0 -- Overall: 3.4 No. 1 ranked player: Didn't name a No. 1 overall -- Where they ranked Aaron Brooks: No. 36 among QBs Comment: The Advisor claims to be the "most concise draft guide on the planet." Last time I checked, concise meant "to express in brief form." Hardly an endorsement for a fantasy football magazine. Basically, with a couple of hours to spare and a Kinko's nearby, you could reproduce something similar. And, although I've recently moved past requiring a book to have pictures, it would be nice to at least see one. But I understand what they are shooting for here. Remember when you used to get your textbook in grade school, they often issued a corresponding workbook? That is what the Advisor is trying to be. Plenty of room to write in the margins and lots of forms for writing in rosters and league member information. Ten years ago this would have been really cool, now it serves just the unconnected. Fantasy Season Game Kit ($5.95) Presentation: 0.9 -- Uniqueness: 0.8 -- Insight: 0.3 -- Staples: 0.4 -- Overall: 2.4 No. 1 ranked player: Didn't name a No. 1 overall -- Where they ranked Aaron Brooks: Didn't rank Brooks Comment: Another workbook that is, ironically, more concise than the Advisor. We're talking fewer than 30 pages. Basically, you're getting a glorified place to write your roster down during the draft and some basic 2000 stats. At a price of $5.95, the Game Kit represents the biggest crime of capitalism against the fantasy football market. Save yourself the cash and settle for a pen and a piece of notebook paper. Brandon Funston is Fantasy Games editor for ESPN.com. |
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