Deadlift
Hall of Famer
I'm surprised that no one has posted this. There are some outrageous stat projections for many of the affletes.
I think this thread is in the appropriate section as it will get more views.
The racial agenda gets more and more obvious when looking at the Tight End projections. For example, Owen Daniels' is projected to get a monstrous 888 yards, but only 4 TD's!! What gives?
Look at Tom Santi (Colts), he played in only a handful of games last year and had 1 TD and 64 yards receiving. If Daniels' stays healthy and gets 800+ yards, he WILL have more than a measley 4 TD's.
Seems like the Caste doesn't want Whitey to get TD's. They are very afraid of the idea, paranoid even.
Personally, I'm sticking to TE, and I'm going to break it down because there are actually White men playing this position:
Ranked
1st - Tony Gonzalez
Gonzalez "didn't do anything" until Tyler Thigpen was put in. That's the straight truth, and there's no mention of Thigpen in the above. They only mentioned Matt Cassel.
10th - John Carlson
Another "inferior" White that doesn't know what the heck he's doing... Where's Seneca Wallace?
17th - Brent Celek
35th - Todd Heap
Keep in mind, these projections are "presuming" that the athlete will stay healthy. In that context, why would he drop from 35 catches in '08 to 16 catches in '09? The above doesn't mention that Heap has excellent hands and is clutch.
http://games.espn.go.com/ffl/tools/projections?display=alt&slotCategoryId=6
The Link to the TE's. Other positions can be accessed from there.
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I realize that most of the black TE's are on the second and third page, but it would be naive of me to simply rubber-stamp the biases and subversive tactics of the Caste.
If Carlson and Shockey (and their QB's) stay healthy, I see 700 yards receiving for each of them. We already know that Jason Witten is a man and the media has acknowledged this, so I would say that Greg Olsen's write-up was the most favorable from ESPN. I think he won't meet those projections. I don't trust the Bears' O-line and their coaches.
Notice that there aren't any "new" Whites on the 2nd or 3rd page, but plenty of blacks that are going to "finally" break-out and even black rookies.
A few young Whites, and maybe a few veterans, could get 300+ yards receiving as a part-timer. The season is 16-games-long, after all. What do Caste Footballers' think?
I think this thread is in the appropriate section as it will get more views.
The racial agenda gets more and more obvious when looking at the Tight End projections. For example, Owen Daniels' is projected to get a monstrous 888 yards, but only 4 TD's!! What gives?
Look at Tom Santi (Colts), he played in only a handful of games last year and had 1 TD and 64 yards receiving. If Daniels' stays healthy and gets 800+ yards, he WILL have more than a measley 4 TD's.
Seems like the Caste doesn't want Whitey to get TD's. They are very afraid of the idea, paranoid even.
Personally, I'm sticking to TE, and I'm going to break it down because there are actually White men playing this position:
Ranked
1st - Tony Gonzalez
2009 Outlook: Rarely has so much been accomplished so unwillingly. Gonzalez openly campaigned to be traded from the woeful Chiefs before the '08 deadline but nevertheless put up a massive statistical campaign, leading NFL tight ends in receptions, yards and touchdowns. Gonzo now has back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons (the third and fourth such campaigns in his career) and can bank on his ticket to Canton. But despite his great '08 and despite the team bringing in Matt Cassel and offensive-minded coach Todd Haley, Gonzalez still wanted out. So now he's in run-oriented Atlanta, where his numbers probably will dip a little. After all, the Falcons threw all of 30 passes to their tight ends last season. Still, Gonzo is so good, we can't help but keep him our No. 1 guy at his position.
Gonzalez "didn't do anything" until Tyler Thigpen was put in. That's the straight truth, and there's no mention of Thigpen in the above. They only mentioned Matt Cassel.
10th - John Carlson
2009 Outlook: We loved Carlson's potential as a second-rounder coming out of Notre Dame, and if you look past Seattle's offensive awfulness in '08, Carlson didn't disappoint. Sure, he produced only one 100-yard receiving day and had some predictable ups and downs as departed coach Mike Holmgren tried to knock some sense into his rookie head. But he scored five times, blocked very well and wound up with more catches, yards and scores than fellow rookie Dustin Keller. The hesitation we have when it comes to Carlson for '09 is the Seahawks' offense. With T.J. Houshmandzadeh in the fold to go with Nate Burleson and a cast of several other wideouts, we're concerned Seattle might go three-wide a lot, perhaps at the expense of Carlson. We still view him as a high-upside fantasy entity, though. Pay attention to Seahawks training camp to see how he's being used.
Another "inferior" White that doesn't know what the heck he's doing... Where's Seneca Wallace?
17th - Brent Celek
2009 Outlook: Celek enters his third year in Philly as a starting replacement for L.J. Smith, who moved on to Baltimore. Smith, as fantasy owners know, was a tease who rarely could capitalize on what seemed to be good chemistry with Donovan McNabb. Celek isn't the athlete Smith is, but he's far more consistent. In the 10 games (including the playoffs) he started in '08 because of Smith's miscellaneous issues, Celek caught 38 passes for 347 yards and four scores, which isn't bad. We all know Andy Reid doesn't mind the short passing game. Celek is a good backup fantasy tight end with sleeper potential in 2009.
35th - Todd Heap
2009 Outlook: In 2008, the good news was that Heap played all 16 games. The bad news was that he caught a shockingly low 35 passes. Heap used to be one of the league's elite pass-catching tight ends, but injuries have sapped him of his speed and shiftiness, leaving behind a big, able blocker but not much else. The fact that Baltimore signed L.J. Smith this spring should tell you all you need to know. This is not a name worth investing in for fantasy leagues.
Keep in mind, these projections are "presuming" that the athlete will stay healthy. In that context, why would he drop from 35 catches in '08 to 16 catches in '09? The above doesn't mention that Heap has excellent hands and is clutch.
http://games.espn.go.com/ffl/tools/projections?display=alt&slotCategoryId=6
The Link to the TE's. Other positions can be accessed from there.
________________________________________________________________________
I realize that most of the black TE's are on the second and third page, but it would be naive of me to simply rubber-stamp the biases and subversive tactics of the Caste.
If Carlson and Shockey (and their QB's) stay healthy, I see 700 yards receiving for each of them. We already know that Jason Witten is a man and the media has acknowledged this, so I would say that Greg Olsen's write-up was the most favorable from ESPN. I think he won't meet those projections. I don't trust the Bears' O-line and their coaches.
Notice that there aren't any "new" Whites on the 2nd or 3rd page, but plenty of blacks that are going to "finally" break-out and even black rookies.
A few young Whites, and maybe a few veterans, could get 300+ yards receiving as a part-timer. The season is 16-games-long, after all. What do Caste Footballers' think?